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K R I S T E N' S C O L L E C T I O N
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Archive name: wesleyan.txt
Authors name: Holly Rennick (jlrennick@yahoo.com)
Story title : Wesleyan Partners
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This work is copyrighted to the author © 2004. Please
don't remove the author information or make any changes
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Wesleyan Partners
by Holly Rennick (jlrennick@yahoo.com)
***
To everything there is a season. Physicians should
never self-diagnose and attorneys, never represent
themselves. So an author saying that this is her
favorite to date probably isn’t that smart. But if I
were smart, I wouldn’t be a writer. Come be one of us
at Wesleyan. (MF, rom, 1st)
***
AUTHOR'S NOTES
Society spends a lot of effort belittling kids who
delay having sex. We say it's about personal choice
because we're liberal, and then let MTV dictate.
Come be one of us at Wesleyan.
PREFACE
I was twelve and knew. He'd slapped me twice, but I
wasn't crying from that. I wasn't even crying from the
pain. I was crying because I was going to die.
My parents, the nurse at the hospital and the
policewoman were the only ones with whom I ever talked
about it. The officer was nice, but they never caught
the man. I was glad, as I'd have had to talk some more.
It's a long time not to talk.
WESLEYAN
Some of my classmates went to places like Ohio State or
Purdue, but Wesleyan was right for me. Smaller classes;
Dad researched the statistics. Safer, my Mom's prod.
Both true, but from the perspective of a 20-year-old,
also more fun. Hayes Hall was definitely the place to
live, not in some snotty sorority. We did stuff as
dormies, made popcorn, bought a six-pack one time. A
half-can was enough to give me a hangover, sort of a
headache, anyway. People who think Wesleyan's pretty
straight can think that, if they wish.
Junior year was when I'd have to decide between English
and History. Or even a double major if I chose enough
classes that counted both ways. Maybe I'd go to
graduate school in American Literature, but if I did
that, wouldn't it be smart to have the background in
American History? Keep thinking ahead.
The problem with Liberal Arts, of course, is that it's
liberal. Science, for example: a full year of
something. In my opinion, a semester of Intro to
Astronomy, followed by, say, Intro to Environmental
Awareness is "Liberal". But something both 101 and 102?
Punishment.
The survivable sequence was Chemistry. I'd aced it in
high school and everybody said that Chem 101 was the
same material, balancing chemical equations and
learning to use graduated cylinders. 101 would bring
back what I'd learned in high school and I'd be more-
or-less set for 102. I'd memorize my notes, of course,
and probably hardly jeopardize my grade-point. But who
really cares about valences?
I probably should have knocked off science my Freshman
year, but what Freshman thinks ahead? It's, where's the
bookstore?
Plan of Study: Chem 101, Fall Semester. Chem 102,
Spring. Science requirement, goodbye.
But the first 101 lecture made me realize how old I
was. I'd just come from "Writing in Postmodern World".
Really interesting and there were Seniors taking it
too! I'd hardly known an author in the reading list,
and I read a lot! Postmodern would be so much fun!
Then this! Almost everybody in the Chemistry lecture
was an underclassperson. (Not "underclassman". Wesleyan
women are not "men". Am I already a postmodern writer?
Maybe not, as I see I said "Freshman" a couple of
paragraphs earlier. )
The smirks of fellow note-takers when the professor
defined "chemistry" dispelled my hope of academic
advantage. Half these kids were probably just out of AP
class last year. I wrote down the definition, "the
branch of natural science dealing with the composition
of substances, their properties and reactions." She'd
probably ask it in a test.
At least the text appeared to emphasize current issues.
Global warming, reproductive health in Africa and
aquaculture merited mention in the first chapter. No
electrons, though they'd be coming. When I thumbed up
to the diagram of Nitrogen doing different things with
Oxygen, it looked sort of familiar.
*****
Lab was once per week. The first order of business was
safety: Safety glasses; Reagent labels; Never suck a
pipette; How to light a Bunsen burner; Excess chemicals
don't go down the drain. Maybe I should have tried
Astronomy, I wondered? Telescopes are pretty safe and a
lot less boring.
Only at the end of the session were we told to pair up
for locker assignment.
I looked around for a girl, realizing too late that the
candidates were vaporizing. By the time I'd figured out
that much, it was down to me and a guy in a red and
white Wesleyan sweatshirt. Why would anybody wear one
to class? He was still looking around the room.
Well, it's just once a week, I figured. "Need a
partner?"
When he looked at me, I saw it. It's not something most
people catch, because they don't know. It's your flash
of relief when you realize that you're not totally
alone. You got chosen, at least this time. If you're
not alone a lot of the time, you wouldn't know it. It's
not about being where nobody else is. It's about even
if they're there.
"Sure. I mean if you need one."
"Why not?" It wasn't as if we had much choice. "I'm
JoAnne." Being a Junior made me a little more socially
adept.
"I'm Arthur," sticking out his hand as probably his
parents instructed him. "At least I had this stuff last
year," he added, "You?"
"Three years ago and never thought of it since," I
admitted as we headed toward an open bench.
"No sweat. So how come you're in here," acknowledging
my seniority.
"English major," seeing no reason to note that it might
be History too.
"Pre-med," he confessed. "My Dad's a doctor."
"Cool." My dad sells Ford tractors, but I didn't say
it.
"I guess," his halfhearted response, then changing the
subject. "Know Barbara Kingsolver?"
He read her? "Absolutely. You wouldn't want to study
American Literature if you just had to study Washington
Irving."
"I sorta feel like she's writing about me, in my head,
I mean." He paused, probably remembering that I was in
English. "But maybe I missed some stuff."
"Prof. Gillespie uses her in Creative Writing. You see
how her characters make each other real."
"But my dad's a doctor," explained my Lab partner as we
practiced titration for the instructor check-off. He
looked around. "You got a calculator? We can figure out
how much of this stuff we'll use and just write that
many milliliters in our books. Not exactly, just
close."
Arthur seemed sort of like whom you'd want for a Lab
partner.
"I bought one for this class. It says it does
exponents," I was pleased to reveal. I wasn't that sure
Chemistry used exponents, but it didn't cost any more.
My acquaintance indicated his sweatshirt. "Need my lab
coat so I don't mess it up. Graduation present, free
from this place for doing early admission."
Maybe once a week in Lab would be enough, I realized. A
Junior wouldn't in a million years admit she'd done
early admissions.
*****
The semester chugged along, Chemistry Lab being a
manageable part: "Formula of a Metal Oxide", "An
Equilibrium Constant", "LeChatelier's Principle". Not
that I understood LeChatelier, but I'm pretty good at
reading. Chemistry was just a requirement, nothing
related to my life.
But maybe I liked Lab just a little bit. Lab was where
we'd do something more than take notes and balance
electrons and protons. Lab was where we'd see things
happen.
"Partners" was how the instructor named us, not our
doing. All it meant was that we did a job together. But
Arthur's being there was a thing I came to appreciate.
Doing something together is more than doing nothing
alone, if that makes sense. Arthur and I were good
partners, taking our turns measuring and note-taking,
adjusting the flame, washing our glassware. Despite his
insight into fabrication of believable results, we
always did the whole experiment to make sure we had the
technique. We'd always wear our safety glasses.
And maybe he didn't mind my presence. Sometimes it's
just nice to have someplace to go, knowing that
somebody's counting on you to do your half.
Once Arthur brought two brownies. We might get hungry
"waiting for the precipitate." Why was that so funny?
His mom had sent the brownies by mail, a mom-type
thing. I ate mine, even if it was a bit dry, and told
him we could maybe brew herbal tea in a beaker. But we
didn't want to jeopardize our grade, the instructor
being serious about glassware.
One time we were recording temperatures to see if
energy was being released ("Exothermic", the answer to
a certain quiz question) and I ended up with Arthur's
pen, one of those ballpoints that make you want to
doodle.
"How 'bout you keep it and write a story about
Chemistry someday."
Anyway, I kept the pen. Nobody had every just given me
their pen before. Birthday presents, sure, but not
their good pen. ("Nobody" and "their" are grammatically
incongruent, according to Prof. Stewart, but an
acceptable alternative to "his or her". Want a fun
assignment? Inclusive Hemingway! I got a 94.)
I put the pen in the inner pocket of my backpack where
I'd not lose it. How'd anybody write a story about
Chemistry? Na plus Cl makes salt.
"Thanks," I replied, rather pleased. "So here, you keep
my yellow highlighter, then." I couldn't think of why
he'd need it, but suddenly I wanted him to have
something of mine.
He didn't ask why, just seemed pleased as well.
*****
We were converting a carbonate to a chloride, according
to the handout, when Arthur and I bumped, an accident
on both our parts, me leaning to get the flask, him
reaching for the stirring rod. It couldn't have been
more than a second.
But it didn't take the second for me to jerk away, so
quickly, in fact, that I nearly spilled the solution.
It took Arthur more than the second to register my
reflex. By the time he linked having accidentally
bumped my breast and its consequence, I was appallingly
embarrassed. JoAnne once more the fool!
"I'm sorry, I didn't realize..." he volunteered.
"My fault. I wasn't..." interrupting to erase the
moment. "I don't think I spilled any," I assured, maybe
just assuring myself that it was already behind me.
Arthur started to say something more, then tried to get
me to smile. "They wouldn't want a klutz like me mixing
up the formula for a Plutonium bomb."
He must think I'm a real jerk!
Leaving Lab, though, I guess I felt I owed Arthur
something. It wasn't his fault. "Sorry about that, me
being weird."
"It's not weird to want your space. Everybody does."
I thought about it. My space?
He must have guessed what I was thinking. He could have
just done the easy thing and not helped me put on my
backpack, me being apparently big into some kind of
personal space fixation.
But I guess he saw the strap was twisted.
*****
Wesleyan's not that big a campus, but it's big enough
to fade to where people who see you didn't really see
you. But when someone sees you every week, you get seen
more often.
I'd be climbing the steps to Appleton Hall and down
would race Arthur. "Hi, JoAnne," rushing onward to
wherever Freshmen rush to. They don't know to work out
efficient schedules.
Or in the Library. There would be Arthur laden with
atlases. "Hey, JoAnne. I'm parked up by the fire exit.
Plenty of space if you want to spread out." I'd follow
and we might share little more than, "Gotta go. See
you," when the time came.
Or in Chemistry lecture. Arthur liked sitting up
towards the left. We'd even sit side-by-side so I could
check his notes for the +'s and -'s on the ions. I'd
had lectures in that hall before, but sat wherever, not
by a partner.
Sometimes I'd get to Appleton a little too early and be
on the steps. "Hey, Arthur. Fire's that-a way!"
The thing about Wesleyan is that it can sort of work
out to see somebody a few times per week.
*****
It was heading into the corridor after lecture that
Arthur noted the looming midterm. We might want to
drill each other on at least the inevitable vocabulary.
I guess it was all the hype about "inclusiveness" that
sparked my suggestion that we study in the Women's
Center. It's probably the most comfortable lounge on
campus. I'd go there a lot and almost decided one time
that maybe I could talk to someone about when I was
twelve. But all the posters were about more important
issues.
Arthur balked, but I told him it was "Women's Center"
in its name, but it's about removing boundaries. None
of the women in the inner sanctum had nerve enough to
expel us. Maybe they thought he was a journalism
student. Actually, I kind of liked knowing they were
pissed off, that maybe we'd interrupted a discussion of
menopause, or whatever. I didn't tell Arthur, though.
They invented this place to empower girls like me, so
they love to say. And here I am getting empowered by
waltzing a guy right into their Goddess study area! I
hoped Arthur didn't mind pictures of women giving
birth. He says he's going to be a doctor.
We ran through the vocabulary until we knew the
definitions cold. Me, literally; Arthur, conceptually.
Having assured one another that we were first-class
chemists by midterm criteria, at least, we pulled
ourselves up to go.
But Arthur wanted to add something. "I'm really glad
we're Lab partners, JoAnne. It's kinda fun sometimes,
even." Did the Georgia O'Keefe posters empower him too?
I wouldn't think so.
Well, shoot, Arthur, I thought, it's kind of fun for
me, too. But so what? I countered. We're just Lab
partners. It's good to know with whom you'll be
working, that he knows what the experiment's about and
does his share at cleanup. It just made good sense.
But my voice outpaced my analysis. "Arthur, that's so
sweet!" Why did I say that? Sure, he's a nice person,
but why'd he be sweet? To me, anyway?
But, damn it! (And I never swear like that, but I know
that's exactly how it flashed through my brain.) It was
sweet what he said and he is sweet and it's OK to know
it.
But where do you go after you admit to someone that
he's sweet.
When he helped with my backpack, I know I protracted
that extra instant when his hand was between the strap
and my shoulder. My space.
*****
I suppose most real dating starts out seeing enough of
someone to decide to make it more deliberate. In my
case, though, Dating 101 (what we called it in the
dorm) was more of a theoretical issue. I hadn't done
much lab-work, so to speak, unless you count Methodist
Youth Fellowship outings. In high school, I'd always
been super busy with things like Yearbook to even
notice that the Prom was coming.
At Wesleyan, there was always lots to do around the
dorm on weekends. Maybe some of us would go out to a
movie. Maybe we'd order a pizza. Once we even had a
sleepover in the hallway, which makes no sense, which
was why it was so fun.
Besides, I was two years older than Arthur. Besides, I
was really busy with my reading lists. Besides, I
probably knew so much about Barbara Kingsolver that I'd
bore him to death. Juniors don't date Freshmen.
So when Arthur asked me if I wanted to watch the
women's volleyball game, I said, "Yes" before he got to
"game". I should have at least asked whom we were
playing, but I'd already accepted.
Maybe he'd figured I'd be busy or something, or at
least have some convoluted response, because the
brevity of my acceptance left him with no more follow-
up than a sheepish grin.
Probably that's how I looked, too, except it probably
wasn't sheepish.
Wesleyan's the "Battling Bishops". Tall girls diving
for saves are Bishops? It's possible one or two of them
will become Bishops in the United Methodist Church
(almost obligatory, to make up for historical
imbalance, they argue), but basically it's a bad name.
We won, even!
And every girl on my floor knew that I got asked out
and did things like giving me high-fives in the hallway
and nobody cared if he was a Freshman.
*****
The walk to the football stadium (Homecoming against
league-leading Wabash, pure animals) was how Wesleyan
recruits. Fall skies, yellow and orange and red
foliage, fans toting picnic baskets, the marching
band's drums. Come be one of us at Wesleyan!
It was just two idle hands, Arthur's left and my right,
that found each other. Come be one of us at Wesleyan!
It was the long pass, half the length of the field,
that got the Battling Bishops on our feet. Thousands of
eyes watched the ball loft into the hands of the
receiver already behind Wabash's defense.
I grabbed Arthur's arm in the frenzy of promised
victory.
The band was blasting when I realized how tightly I was
holding. Ten times, no twenty, more than when we'd
bumped doing the experiment. I guess he knew. He didn't
mind, anyway, still cheering about the Hail Mary. (You
can't say Methodists aren't ecumenical. We'll use
whatever theology gets us across the goal line.)
I stayed like that all the way through the extra point.
Wesleyan's about excellence in education, not necks
bigger than hat size. We scored decisively, just not as
many times.
Walking back, we again held hands, but I didn't take
his arm, not having a touchdown for context. You can't
just take the arm of a guy, though with the briskness
of autumn, maybe you could.
We promised to meet at the Library tomorrow, but not
for Chemistry. We agreed that we had that under
control. It's easier to study if somebody else is
studying hard too. That's what I said, anyway, but
wasn't sure what I needed to study.
That night I put my arm against me the way Arthur's had
been. I can't really claim I fooled my body, that I
didn't know it was my own arm against the side of my
breast, but something happened that wasn't only me.
The Women's Center bookshelf says that some victims
have difficulty with orgasm in their adulthood.
Something got stolen. Me, though, I could masturbate
maybe even too easily. It hardly took more than just
two fingers. I suppose it wasn't too healthy, but I
didn't really care. It wasn't the penis that the man
made me watch. What I envisioned making love to me
wasn't like his at all. His was forgotten for a few
minutes.
Thinking about Arthur, his arm against my breast, was
different yet. Nobody was making me naked, making me
watch. Arthur and I were jumping together, cheering.
When I came, Arthur and I weren't even nude together. I
was just holding his arm while autumn leaves whirl-
winded around us with every convulsion.
*****
Every girl in Hayes was happy that I had a boyfriend.
Maybe I said earlier that sorority girls are sort of
snots sometimes? Not all of them, just some. Well, dorm
girls are really nice! Arthur said that it was so
embarrassing how he'd be walking across campus and some
girl he hardly recognized would call out, "Hey,
Arthur." But I knew he liked it.
I've no idea at all what the guys in Arthur's dorm
thought, but I suppose they figured that an older girl
would probably really put out. Guys think more that
way.
But I didn't do anything I shouldn't. I let Arthur kiss
me when he'd drop me back at Hayes and I'd let him kiss
me behind the Library. There was a bench there and I
could kiss him back better.
I didn't mind if we touched when we walked. You just
take their arm. Some girls say to go without your bra
so he'll know you like it, but I never did that. He
knew anyway.
When we hugged, wherever he touched was fine. Even if I
were sitting on his lap in the dark and he'd have his
arms around my chest, it was OK. We were hugging.
But I just didn't want Arthur reaching for me. The man
had reached and I'd just stood there.
After a few deflections (which left me uncomfortable,
too), Arthur realized where my space started. He
accepted it, but he wasn't dumb. "Dumb" means "stupid",
right? He wasn't stupid. But he also wasn't dumb the
way I was, where "dumb" means "silent". Partners
sometimes just ask.
"You got hurt, right?" He didn't seem sure of how to
ask, but at least he tried.
"I guess." Sometimes a partner knows what's being
queried.
"Well it doesn't change anything, but it makes me sad,
too."
"Who says I'm sad? You don't even know." We were just
Lab partners, I made myself remember. And it wasn't
like I went around looking glum all the time.
"No, but I guess I care."
Nobody had ever really cared except for my folks and
the policewoman.
"It was a long time ago, anyway," I concluded, looking
for my pack.
But I started to cry. Right there in front of somebody.
It wasn't what the man had done that I most remembered,
though everything he'd done I could list. Those
memories were film from the eyeholes of an empty
statue.
No, it was knowing I'd let the man make me touch him.
That after I'd done that, I'd just lain there, too
scared to even say no. That I'd moved the way he'd made
me, knowing that I was going to die naked.
Mine weren't large, purging tears, but stingy ones
congealing the sadness.
"Jeeze, JoAnne. I didn't know. It's so sad."
I stared at my Lab partner, not remembering how my hand
got to his. What did he know about it? None of the
facts. Not that I saw the man's face every day,
wherever I was. For guys, it's about ten minutes, not a
lifetime. Why would I ever share that with someone I
measure pH with? Someone maybe I'd made out with a
little. But even that, anybody could see, was just what
a lonely Junior would do to the first boy that paid her
any attention.
But I didn't pull my hand away. Maybe he really was
sad.
Maybe he cared. I put his hand on my breast, just the
outside of my blouse where he could feel my heart. He
didn't do anything to make it sexual, though of course
it was. It couldn't have been more sexual.
Once a boy holds your breast, it's real. Most girls,
though, get felt up by lots of guys before they get
there. I just happened to find one that cared the first
time.
*****
We'd just submitted our last experiment,
electrochemistry, which couldn't have been under-
exceeded in terms of generating enthusiasm for Chem
102. We'd wandered behind the Library, feeling good to
have it behind us.
"JoAnne?" Arthur had something to say, something that
must have been confused in his own mind. He started
again. "JoAnne, you're as sexy as hell. You really
are!"
Sexy? Sure, he'd felt inside my bra by now, played with
my nipples. It was nice of him to not complain about
the under-wire and all the hooks and everything else
about me that probably frustrated his intention. The
guy was a guy, after all.
Sexy? Not by my self-assessment.
But at least I felt a little bit sexy around him. The
girls in the dorm told me about loosening my hooks
beforehand.
"Thanks, Arthur." The guy was so sweet; that much I
knew. "As hell," was probably the top of his
superlatives.
He paused another moment, then plunged ahead. "But
maybe I'm not too ready yet... I mean I'm not that
experienced or anything. I don't want to mess things
up."
What's he trying to say? That he's a virgin? Like I
thought he wasn't?
"I like us just the way we are," a truthful answer.
"And what you do makes me feel very sexy."
"I think about it, though," he pressed. "Us, I mean."
The irony didn't escape me, though I'd not have called
it ironic. We're talking about sexual intercourse, but
don't have a word with which we're comfortable. We're
at the point in a relationship where it would commonly
begin. And he wants me to know he's not there yet. Like
he's weird, or something.
"Sure, me too," I admitted to help him out. "Just not
specifically, maybe," to dodge admitting too much.
I guess most girls just haul off and do it, but the
more I listened in the dorm, the more I realized that
girls serious about themselves want to talk first.
That's not to say it doesn't just happen, but shouldn't
that be the exception? But wanting to talk isn't the
same as able to talk.
Arthur maybe recognized my own reluctance. Making love
isn't that easy a subject. But clearly he wanted to
bare his own persona, to make me see his own
imperfection. "I can't help it sometimes, I want to so
bad."
"It's natural," trying to deflect his admission, too
much like my own.
He looked at the floor. "Sometimes I come," just three
words, not in boast; but rather in confusion in
something beyond his will.
He didn't expect me to understand, but of course I did.
He had a space, just like I had mine, but he didn't
want to hide in it. But what was I suppose to do with
that information?
"I'm not very experienced," he repeated, as if in
explanation.
Then I knew what I wanted to say. "Arthur... Nobody's
ever said I was sexy before. I've never had anybody
come, I mean."
He looked back up. "Nobody's ever come before?"
recognizing the virgin in me, too.
We didn't need to talk. Maybe we didn't even know each
other that well in some ways. But we knew we were the
same. Unsure. Our spaces almost touching.
"Arthur, thanks." It sounds so pompous, written. But I
meant it. Not that he'd come; that was his business.
That he'd tell me.
But me being the older, I knew. "Meet me in the Library
at 8:30."
We didn't even bring books. We just went to our bench.
I'd sat in his lap enough times to wonder. I probably
felt his erection, but it was accidental.
A bench isn't that great a place to learn, but we
managed to twist ourselves to where our legs touched.
It's not "probably" when he's around your thigh. It was
the first erection I'd ever felt. (It should be
obvious, having admitted my inexperience, but I want to
write it on paper. But no, of course, it wasn't the
first. But that was so long ago. Not like Arthur's.)
I was probably pushing more than rubbing, but maybe the
anticipation was all it took. I know he came because he
held so still at the end, not like some girls say the
guy shoves you around.
I was so happy afterwards! I'd done something for
Arthur, something real against my leg. He'd let me. It
wasn't his secret now; it was ours.
******
But I still had my secrets. The impossible one was
about when I was little. But maybe having that one,
plus now knowing his, helped my other secret to come
out.
Arthur never made me rub against him, but I knew how
much he liked it. If nobody was wandering around our
bench and it was a little bit dark, we'd mesh ourselves
together. I'd always be happy, learning to feel the
start of his shiver.
The women at the Woman's Center would have chided about
symmetry, though. Another male orgasm. I was winning
too, in my view, but maybe not the way they'd define.
Of course I orgasmed, just not there. Mine was later,
the way I knew how.
The odd thing (to me anyway) was for being in the
Woman's Center only that one time, maybe Arthur wanted
symmetry, too.
"JoAnne, it's not fair, I don't think, anyway." He
didn't know what to call it, but knew I knew. "I get
to, you know, and you don't. I don't have to. It
doesn't matter," he offered.
"Criminy, Arthur!" (A high-order expletive for me) "I
love it when you do. It's for both of us."
I must not have sounded too convincing, to myself
anyway, because I surrendered one of my two secrets.
"Besides, I have afterwards."
Did I mean to say that? Not consciously.
"Afterwards?"
Like guys don't? "By myself," for the closer leaves to
hear. Why pretend?
"You masturbate?" with such lack of guile that I knew
it had never entered his mind. He wouldn't have said
"masturbate" if he thought one word ahead. Maybe he
didn't know that we can?
There's even an instruction book at the Women's Center
with all the pages dog-eared. And I don't mean, "Our
Bodies, Our Selves". I mean a photographic how-to. Two
hands with different nail polish so we know it's
another woman helping. But Arthur wouldn't know.
"I guess," I admitted which gave me the extra power to
be bold, "Yes."
"By yourself?"
Maybe they have that book in his dorm or something?
"Oh Arthur, of course, by myself." I should have been
appalled, but even at the time thought it almost funny.
"OK." I'd not have told him more anyway.
That night it even seemed funnier, so funny that I even
told my floor-mates. Nobody was laughing at poor
Arthur. We were just laughing at the idea of a boy
realizing that we at least can.
The next time Arthur and I got together, he held back.
"JoAnne. If we sit different, I don't mean really
different, just a little bit, maybe?"
The fullness of the somewhat said! "Sit." Interlock and
rub, I translated. "I don't mean really different."
Still dressed, nothing direct. "Maybe?" Me climax.
"Maybe." I wanted him to feel me come. I wanted him in
my space.
From what other girls said, you might want to just be
in your panties and he'd have to be aimed just right
and not come first. Usually it doesn't even work. And
then, pretty much they all agreed, even if you promise
each other you won't, your panties get out of the way
and you do it for real.
"It's better for me, just my by myself," I lied.
"I can be with you." The "with you" made it so
different.
Our spaces, Arthur's and mine, were as close as they'd
ever been.
He immediately sought retreat, sensing rejection. "I
mean, not for real... Not 'with you' like..."
But I wanted to. I didn't even know it, but I wanted
him next to me, feeling it grow, crest, diminish. I
wanted Arthur to know me.
"Feel my heart," pulling his far hand into my sweater.
I let the beats draw him like the band's drums beckoned
us to that game where we made the long pass and
touched.
Had he wanted me to strip, I would have, right there on
the bench. But had he wanted that, it would have been
about just the physical.
My jeans were loose enough to slip my hand into. He
watched my knuckles play against the denim. He'd know I
was already wet. They say that boys get wet too.
He felt my heartbeat as I brought myself through my
preparatory motions: parting the fold, unhooding my
erection, provoking, pressing, needing, reaching, the
tingling upward from the feet, the totality, the
rediscovering. The superficial would have been
apparent. Certainly the movement. Certainly the
wetness, though not by touch. The thrashing.
But he couldn't have known that even with my eyes
closed, I still saw him. Under my sweater, I felt his
warmth, warmth that flowed.
He kissed me when I'd returned, his hand still on me;
mine, still between my legs.
"It's good, right?"
"With you," I agreed, holding my other breast to feel
my nipple.
*****
It was inevitable that I'd want him to touch me. Our
bench would have worked, but a campus has so many
places for lovemaking.
At first he only put his hand on my pants to sense my
manipulations. If I were in a skirt, I'd pull it up so
there would be just panties between our fingers.
I knew he was ready when he didn't let go of my hand,
but rather rode on its back when I reached down. His
fingertips on one side and his thumb on the other
brushed my pubic hair.
When he interlocked his fingers between my knuckles, he
touched first my labia and then my clitoris. From
watching, he knew the center of my excitement. The
extrication of my own hand left him in command.
He kissed me all the while.
Later, I faced away, letting him reach around, his free
arm stilling me, his other hand stroking while I
struggled to hold still. Sometimes his finger would
enter my vagina, my orgasm more visceral.
It was no mystery why Arthur himself climaxed. I could
feel his hardness against my hip, driving ever so
slowly at first, then firmer and faster. I could hear
his breathing. I could feel his wetness, though it must
have been my projection.
*****
When I first helped him with my hand, I'd never held an
erection before. (What I'd held when I was twelve, I
didn't feel.) Probably my inexpertise confused his
libido, but he drew in his stomach to make way for my
wrist. As soon as I freed him, he ejaculated gobs onto
my abdomen, sticky rivulets trailing some to the left,
some to the right, and some between my legs.
I'd not yet even touched his testicles.
Was it lovemaking? It's not a stupid question. Arthur
and I made ourselves complete, not just by friction,
but by knowing each other.
Everybody says that having intercourse is what it's all
about. Wrong.
Being partners is what it's all about. Not everything
is paced by semesters. We could have had wonderful
intercourse right away, I'm sure. But maybe it's better
to know the other's body, really being naked, by being
more deliberate.
Why rush to where contraception's an issue? Where (not
with us, but too often), someone's exposed to other
consequences?
If you're interested in liberal education, at Wesleyan
we have Chapel. It is one of our places. (For a few
others from Hayes, too, since we're pretty close, but
Arthur and I have never slipped in when it was
occupied.) They leave the building unlocked, since
we're really well behaved at Wesleyan.
PROLOGUE
When I was twelve, a man did a very bad thing to me. He
raped me.
Now I'm 20, almost 21. I'm a second-semester Junior at
Wesleyan, a top ranked university. I have a double
major.
I'm taking Chem 102. It's good to take a whole year of
a subject that complex. 102's Lab syllabus lists "An
Enzyme from Pineapple". Hardly-measurable chemicals
help big reactions occur.
I have a Lab partner whom I doubt will become a
physician. He's going to take Creative Writing next
year from Gillespie.
I have a pen he gave me that is very good for learning
to write stories.
Here's a song -- "Turn, Turn, Turn" by Pete Seeger,
recorded by the Byrds. The words are adapted from the
Book of Ecclesiastes.
"To everything (Turn, Turn, Turn),
"There is a season (Turn, Turn, Turn),
"And a time for every purpose, under Heaven.
"A time to be born, a time to die,
"A time to plant, a time to reap.
"A time to kill, a time to heal,
"A time to laugh, a time to weep."
We've sung it in Chapel.
I posted the first bars of it at
http://www.asstr.org/files/Authors/Holly_Rennick/Turn_T
urn_Turn.wav. It's a 12-string guitar. Pete Seeger's
Jewish and Roger McGuinn's guru was Muhammad Subuh
Sumohadiwidjojo. Wesleyan's about Liberal Arts.
HOLLY ON THE WEB
Wherever you found this story on the web, thank you to
the server. My problem is that I've no systematic way
to update the various servers. As literary errors (or
just poor word usages) are made known to me, I'll
repair that which is salvageable on
http://www.asstr.org/~Holly_Rennick/. My website's not
much graphically, I admit, but HTML isn't my native
language.
You can contact me via the site's message form, that
HTML code by the smart people at ASSTR.
I won't be changing the story significantly, so if you
didn't like it before, that much will remain the same.
But if you did like it, an update may read a bit more
cleanly.
Holly
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Please keep this story, and all erotic stories out of
the hands of children. They should be outside playing
in the sunshine, not thinking about adult situations.
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Kristen's collection - Directory 28