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Isabelle dragged me into the middle of the bed, she mounted me, she lifted me up, let the air flow around my armpits.

You rode me: this wasn’t new. You lit a powder keg of memories. Encountering you, I found a sense in my abyss.

Isabelle sawed at my shoulders, braced and bucked, scaled me, opened herself, drove deep, rocked from side to side and made me rock. The watchers revived, the octopus recommenced its struggle.

“Don’t leave me anymore,” I said.

Night, belly of silence.

Isabelle rose slowly, slowly, her inward lips closing on my hip. Isabelle toppled.

I felt for her hand, I laid it on my back, I moved it down to below my waist, I put it down by my anus.

“Yes,” said Isabelle.

I waited, I gathered myself.

“This is new,” said Isabelle. Shy, it entered, Isabelle spoke:

“My finger is warm, my finger is happy.”

The anxious finger did not dare.

We listened, we were ecstatic. The finger would always be importunate inside the greedy sheath. I contracted, to encourage it, I contracted, to imprison it.

“Further, I want further,” whimpered Isabelle, her mouth squashed against my neck.

She pressed into the impossible. Again the knuckle, again the prison around it. We were at the mercy of the poor, diminutive finger.

The weight on my back meant that the finger was not giving up. The furious finger stabbed and stabbed. A maddened eel was dancing with death against my insides. My eyes were listening, my ears seeing: Isabelle was infecting me with her brutality. Let the finger right through the town, let it rupture the abattoirs. The burning was hurting me, our limitation hurt even more. But the dogged finger awakened my flesh; but the blows made me keener. My intoxication was layered in thick brushstrokes, in a warbling of spices, I opened myself up to the hips.

“The bed is shaking too much,” said Isabelle.

The dilated flesh was grateful, severe pleasure spilled out among the petals. Sweat dripped from Isabelle’s forehead onto my back.

“Don’t move. So I can stay inside you,” said Isabelle. We abided. I squeezed, in my turn.

“Oh yes!” gasped Isabelle.

I was sucking it in, driving it back, I changed it into a dog’s phallus, naked, red. It reached up to my esophagus. I was listening to Isabelle who was pressing lightly, who was following the growing tide, enjoying the outward ripples. The finger emerged from a cloud, vanished into another. My ardor claimed Isabelle, a crazy sun whirled in my flesh. Alone, Isabelle’s body ascended the calvary of my back. I was suspended in my intoxication. My legs weakened in their paradise. Refreshed, my calves were ripening. I was softened to the point of ineffable decay, I was unendingly dissolving into happiness after happiness in my own ashes. Isabelle’s finger slid out methodically and left pools of pleasure behind in my knees. It dropped me. Its going, slow ship of harmonies. We listened to the last of the cadence.

“You had nothing.”

“Had nothing, I!” said Isabelle.

She laughed into my neck. The hilarity in her face was tropical.

“Had nothing!”

She pressed my hand between her lips, then my mouth dodged hers. We did not let these moments run together.

“Suffocate me,” said Isabelle.

She lay back while I smothered her and while I labored to turn her into a beauty spot on my left breast. I was squeezing her, I was shivering like blades of grass in winter.

“Yes, you love me,” said Isabelle.

I sat up, I had diamonds of frost on my shoulders.

I was remembering, I saw myself under the apple tree: my mother was taking me into a meadow for our own, intimate party, when the winter wind used to overthrow April, when the summer wind dulled November’s edge. Twice a year we would settle down under the same apple tree, set out our picnic while the wind and its retinue of airs blew into our mouths and whistled in our hair. We would spread foie gras on crusty bread, drink champagne out of the same glasses as our beer, smoke a Camel or two, watch the youthful quivering of the wheat in the blade, the aged shivers of the thatched roofs. A merry-go-round for gulls, the wind spun above our love and our picnic.

I wrapped Isabelle’s name in velvet before pronouncing it, I listened in my head to the intonation of the sentence I would say to her.

“Won’t you turn to me?” I asked.

Isabelle turned around. I threw myself into the Vale of Roses. The tiny lights in my skin desired the tiny lights in Isabelle’s skin, the air grew thinner. We could do nothing without the meteors that would carry us in their wake, that would toss us one into the other. We were in thrall to irresistible forces. We dropped from consciousness but were still the unit of us against the night of the dormitory. Death dragged us back to life: we returned by many ports. I could see nothing, hear nothing, yet my senses were those of a visionary. We were entwined: a miracle was fading instead of shining forth.

“Together, together. .”

She was stroking her chest with my hand:

“Lean in. Together, together. . No, no. . not right now.”

She dropped back.

“Your hand, your hand,” moaned Isabelle.

We worked from memory, as if we had embraced already in a world before our birth, as if we were reforging a link. Isabelle’s hand against my hip, arousing me, was my own; my hand on Isabelle’s side was hers. She was my reflection, I her reflection: two mirrors making love. Our joint excursion did not falter when she threw her hair back from her face, when I pushed back the sheets. I listened in her fingers to what my fingers were singing to her. We were learning, understanding that buttocks are responsive creatures. Our hands were so light that I could follow the down on Isabelle’s skin curving against my arm, the curve of my down against hers. We explored down, we climbed back up the crevice between our clenched thighs with hidden fingernails, we were provoking, we were suppressing our quivering. Our skin was leading each hand and its double. We carried off the velveteen rains, the waves of muslin from crotch down to instep, we went back on ourselves, we were prolonging a rumbling of sweetness from our shoulders to our heels. We stopped.

“I’m waiting for you,” said Isabelle.

Her flesh was flaunting pearls everywhere.

“I’ll never find it,” I said.

Her arm lifting beneath mine made my arm lift. Isabelle was examining her body. She replaced my hand; she began the motion with her hand on mine; she left me to my motion.

“Concentrate,” said Isabelle.

The air was heavy, the air was barbaric.

I rocked it, sharpened it, released it from the folds of its decline, I gave it confidence. I would not recall it all like this had I not given it my soul and my life. The pearl made the finger keener and the finger became flesh of our flesh: the motion was also there in our heads. Flesh was polishing my finger and my finger polishing Isabelle’s flesh. The motion was happening in spite of us: our fingers’ dreaming. I loosened the departed, I was anointed through and through with pagan oils.

Isabelle sat up, she chewed at a lock of my hair:

“Together,” she said.

Infiltrations of languor, fissures of delight, wetlands of trickery. . The leaves of lilacs rolled out their sweetness, the spring began its death throes, the dust of the dead was dancing in my light.

I was at last myself while I was ceasing, at last, to be.

The visit to my paradise was near.

“Tell me when.”

“I’ll tell you.”

I was leaving my skeleton behind, floating above my dust. At first the pleasure was rigid, difficult to bear. The sensation began in my foot, it flowed through flesh once more grown pure. We left our fingers in the old world, we burst open with light, we were flooded with bliss. Our limbs crushed with pleasure, our guts incandescent. .