The zeal of the morning shine struck and carried beneath the bloody clouds, tearing shadows across the whispered landscape. The sand shown orange as I slithered and slicked beside my towering shadow, and the waves sang
The cold of the vanquished night held refuge within the sand, and fastened to our feet as we stirred upon the roof of its abode. She shivered slightly, her skin tightening across her bare arms that lightly brushed like a winter breeze upon my own skin. I quivered, despite me, and I hid the delight as she grasped to the warmth of my core.
We stood a moment and gathered bodies with arms. I breathed warm life into her hair and held it against the Pacific chill. My neck pressed against hers, a warm tributary, passing and sharing with each pairing pulse. Blood surged and crashed in my ears, prelude, countermelody to the rhythmic roar of the sea, rising and pushing to a crescendo of sonic static, drowning deafening, fuzz thick and slow as sand.
I said something to her, and she looked into me. I doubt she heard, but it did not matter. She wrapped warm arms around my neck and burrowed fingers into my hair and I leaned in and kissed her and I felt her smile briefly against my lips before we mixed, gathered and twisted there on the sand
The sun did its work too slowly to save us that morning, and we were forced to gather and carry ourselves to her hulking old truck, conceding to the vestiges of ocean cold and beating a gritty retreat.
“You’re covered in sand,” I told her.
“Imagine that,” she said, brushing absently at the damp.
It was the first we’d spoken since arriving in the twilight and submerging ourselves in the ocean’s song. Her voice was smooth as a smile, hiding a laugh and singing the glint that lived in her eyes.
3 comments:
It's good, but I found the beginning, before the dialogue, to be a little too ethereal. It definitely became the right amount of substantial for the feel in the second part, once the few lines of talking came in.
All in all, I'm jealous of your writing ability and inspiration. Hehehe...
To correct myself, it was at the part where "she" looks away, and where the cold of the sand is noticed, not the dialogue, because my brain's not there, particularly last night, and it got mixed in my head.
You should write a short series.
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