I did not move my hand. I had no plans to.
She did not ask to.
The hand stayed where the hand was, slow, claiming, no announcent about it, the warm working firmness of her under my palm, and after a beat she pushed back into the hand the small private way she does when she is not properly awake and is letting her body answer for her, and I shut my eyes against the side of her hair because she has been doing this to on quiet Saturdays since the first quiet Saturday.
She had been getting up early. Six in the morning, in the spare room, on the machines in the gym downstairs. Months of it.
I had not said anything about it because the rule in this house was you do not comnt on the woman’s mornings, but I had been noticing, the way a man notices the woman he sleeps next to.
She had co out of the shower in a towel three Wednesdays ago and the towel had done sothing different than the towel had done at Christmas. She had crossed the kitchen on Friday morning in front of the window in the leggings she wears for the school run, and I had stopped pouring the coffee.
The work was showing. The body of the woman I had picked off a tal bench in the cold three years ago was no longer the body I had picked off the tal bench. It had beco sothing else, slow, on purpose, for her own reasons, none of which were , and the fact that none of them were was sohow the thing that did in worst of all.
I held her where I had her.
I gave it a slow squeeze.
"You’re not subtle," she said into my throat. The smile was in it.
"I am not trying to be."
"You were not subtle at the kitchen window on Friday either."
"You knew."
"I know everything you do, Daniel."
"Mm."
"You spilled coffee on the Guardian."
"It was a price worth paying."
She laughed, low, into my neck. The bare warm of her chest pressed flat against my ribs, and the dal that had been mine eighteen hours ago shifted between us, and her hand crept up to the side of my face and turned it down to her.
She kissed .
The slow one. The deep slow one we never get on a Wednesday because we are both out the door by six. Three years of practice in it. She knows where my mouth goes and I know where hers goes and there is none of the small clumsy work of two people figuring it out. We stopped figuring it out a long ti ago.
She ca awake under it the way she has been coming awake under it for three years.
The whole of her, all at once, arching up into before her eyes had properly opened, and I had both hands on her then, the one I had not moved off her in fifteen minutes still where I had put it and the other one finding the back of her neck under the heavy fall of her hair, and she made a small oh against my mouth that was a sound I have been chasing since the second weekend.
"Off," she said against my mouth. Her hand was already shoving the dals out of her way because they were in her road. "All three. I want you. Not the cabinet."
"You knew the deal on the bench."
"Mm. I knew the deal."
She hooked a leg round .
I rolled her under with the easy certainty of a man who has done this exact roll on this exact mattress more mornings than he has counted, and she went under the easy certainty of a woman who has been letting herself be rolled there for three years and has decided to keep letting herself be rolled there for a fair stretch more. Her hair went out on the pillow.
Her hands went up the inside of my T-shirt the way her hands always go. Mine had stopped being polite about half an hour ago and were not going to be polite from here.
"Daniel."
The way she does it. The second syllable warm and Yorkshire and slow. The way she has been doing it since the second weekend, the way I have not been able to hear without losing the thread of whatever I was doing.
"Mm."
"Danny,"
"I know."
"You took your ti about it."
"I had three dals in the way."
"Two are yours."
"All three are mine. You’re wearing one of them."
She laughed against the side of my throat, and the laugh went into the kiss, and the kiss went into the rest, and the rest is ours and not theirs.
I will tell you she does not lie still for anybody and never has. That she gives as good as she gets and then so. That at so point near the end she said my na like it was the only word she had ever bothered to learn, the Danny with the warm Yorkshire on it, and I felt it in the bottom of my spine the way I have felt it since the second weekend.
I will tell you we took our ti. Twelve months of every minute titabled to the second, and the most luxurious thing on earth on a Saturday at the end of it is the hour you do not have to give to anyone.
I will tell you she is the best thing I have ever woken up to, and that she still takes the air out of a room just by crossing it, and that she did it first to a broke lad on a bench in the cold who had nothing but a notebook and a left-back nobody else had bothered to co and watch.
She picked when I had nothing. Everything since has just been showing up to a decision she already made.
She fell back asleep after. Dropped off mid-sentence, the way she does, the back of her hand against the side of my neck, the warm dead weight of her on my chest.
I pulled the duvet up over her shoulder because she gets cold after, and she made a small approving sound into my throat without waking up, and I lay there in the orange off the window and looked at the ceiling, and after a while I looked down at her, and after a while I closed my hand on the back of her hair and held her where she had landed.
The cabinet at Selhurst could fall into the sea.
The dals on my chest could go with it.
I would not feel the loss of either of them the way I would feel the loss of the small warm sleeping weight of the woman who had decided, on a tal bench three years ago, that the lad with the notebook was worth sitting next to.
Sunday was tomorrow.
I had things to do tomorrow.
I closed my eyes.
Today was Saturday. Today was a long quiet Saturday with nowhere to be and the woman I had been waiting all my life for asleep on my chest. Today was the kind of day a man saved for. Today was the kind of day I had been working three years to get to.
I went back to sleep with my hand in her hair.
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