Authors: Joey W. Hill
She blinked. Was he about to ask her
out on a date? The
very idea could make her legs buckle
beneath her, even as
her mind scrambled for a way to deal
with it. Saying she
was knitting boots for an expected
grandchild might be
sufficiently off-putting, except of
course she didn’t have one
of those. And she didn’t know how to
knit. “I’m not sure.
Why?”
“There’s a Tantric yoga workshop
for couples at
Independence Park that weekend. If
the weather’s nice,
they’l have it in the botanical
gardens. It’s going to be
taught by a visiting guru from
Bangkok.” At her nonplused
look, he lifted a shoulder. “You
mentioned that some of your
married students have been asking
you to teach that form,
but you needed to brush up on it. The
setting is beautiful, of
course, and we could go have a
coffee at a café afterward,
maybe somewhere on the riverfront.”
She didn’t know what to say to that,
but Jon shrugged
casual y at her silence, offered her
that sleepy smile again.
“Just give it some thought. You can
tel me your answer at
the end of class. Though I’m not
taking no for an answer, so
you might as wel say yes now.”
She didn’t know how to respond to
that either. However,
his easy manner about it helped make
her noncommittal
nod feel not so awkward. Stil , to
discourage further
conversation, she folded herself into
a sitting position on
her mat and initiated
pranayama
, the
breath control
exercises.
In through the nose, pul ing energy up,
then out through
the mouth, trying to release tension in
her shoulders.
Though yoga required focus and
concentration for
maximum benefit, within three breath
cycles she knew that
was a lost cause for her today. But an
intensely physical
workout would be good. She’d work
both their asses off,
and then she’d be too exhausted to
think. Saying no to that
Tantric class would be automatic, no
more than a reflex
she’d conditioned and used countless
times to maintain her
privacy and solitude. That was best.
They went from breathing to standing
and stretching
asanas
as warm-up, and then from
there she worked them
into the more difficult poses.
Unfortunately, it was hard to let
exertion numb her when Jon gave her
a yoga experience
like she’d never had before.
Even in advanced classes, she
couldn’t move at this
pace, not at this level of difficulty,
because the class
couldn’t read her mind. But he
seemed to anticipate her
every choice and moved easily with
her, so it was almost
as if they were bridging the gap
between a
hatha
approach
and
ashtanga
, which used flowing,
dance-like movements
to transition between postures. It was
exhilarating.
And no level of exhaustion could
help her overlook how
wel those poses displayed the male
body. It made one that
was already beautiful even more so.
When they transitioned
into Sleeping Thunderbolt, she found
herself studying him in
the corner of her eye. As he folded
himself to the floor on
his knees, he aligned his feet on the
outside of his hips,
planting that fine ass on the floor
between his calves. His
torso elongated in mouthwatering
display as he arched
back, his knees remaining on the
floor as his upper body
became a crescent and the back of his
head touched the
floor, his hands settling into a prayer
pose on his open
chest.
She’d put herself at a diagonal
position to him so that
she could watch his posture as his
teacher, but that was an
unnecessary adjustment, because his
form was flawless.
Watching those taut buttocks resting
on the floor, she
wished she could see the strain of his
thigh muscles
beneath the loose pants. She was al
too aware of the
camber of cock and testicles
emphasized by the upwardly
canted position of his hips. She
wanted to crawl over there,
slide her hands under the baby soft
cotton of the tank,
caress his abdomen, fol ow it with
mouth and fingers…
Sleeping Thunderbolt was a
misnomer, because it
awakened a storm inside her. Giving
herself a fierce
internal shake, she brought them out
of that for the next
phase, the inverted
asanas
, head and
handstands. When
she used the wal for hers, he waited
until she pushed up
and balanced. It was the only time
during the class he
hadn’t been in sync with her, and she
realized he was
spotting her, ready to catch her if
needed. It wasn’t one of
her personal y easier moves. Though
most of her students
wouldn’t have noted that, he
obviously had. While she was
qualified to teach yoga, yogis could
spend decades
perfecting the moves, and she’d only
been doing this for a
few years.
She’d turned up the room temperature
to maximize the
benefit of body heat for their
practice. It had put a loving
sheen of perspiration on his muscles,
which became more
pronounced as he stripped off the
shirt, put it aside and
then pushed up into a ful handstand.
He had no need of the
wal , those gorgeous shoulder
muscles creating a work of
art as he held his weight and balance
on his mat.
The ache in her limbs after that
sequence and a glance
at the clock, showing they’d been
going at it for ninety
minutes, told her it was time to take it
down. She moved
them back into a few sun salutation
repetitions, then down
for some floor stretches, easing into
the closing
nidra
. Her
limbs had turned to spaghetti, such
that she wobbled when
she went from a standing pose into a
half-lotus.
“Al right?” He was watching her so
closely. That, plus the
gentleness of his tone in the quiet
room, made her feel like
his question was directed to
something far beyond her
mere physical state. She had to swal
ow before she
answered.
“Yes. Just overdid a bit. Joints aren’t
as resilient as they
once were.”
“You look superbly flexible to me.
But sometimes we
push ourselves too hard when we’re
trying to outrun things.”
He had a way of saying things like
that, with such
unruffled calm, as if it was
completely normal to venture
past the intimate edges of a person’s
psyche.
“Like time?” The halfhearted joke,
the attempt to turn him
away from the sharp boundaries,
didn’t do the trick. His
attention didn’t waver.
“Things you’re afraid to want.”
Candlelight, heated room, heart rates
slowly evening out.
At his words, hers stepped up a pace,
making her feel a
little lightheaded, though she was
already sitting down. She
made what she hoped was a
noncommittal noise, gave him
her practiced distant smile that
warned he was stepping
over a line. As she put her hands on
her knees, she
adjusted the fake wedding band with
one finger, knowing
the sparkle would catch the
candlelight. When his attention
went to it, she shut him out further by
closing her eyes,
starting their breathing sequence
again.
She kept her ears attuned to it, knew
when he was
matching his breath to hers, fol owing
her deep inhale, the
slow exhale. She focused on her
posture, on grounding and
centering herself. Supposedly yoga
practice helped a
person connect to divine energies.
Today her focus
cavorted outside her grasp like a not-
so-playful poltergeist.
The demons she’d hoped to leave
behind had only swel ed
in size, such that instead of peace and
calm, her stomach
had been invaded by flesh-eating
beetles from
The
Mummy
movies.
Al because of one simple, utterly
truthful statement.
Things you’re afraid to want.
Damn
him. Didn’t he
understand she couldn’t afford these
types of games?
She’d long ago lost her ability to risk
the playful nature of
romance. Like a child who pretended
to play dead during
heroic games, but then saw actual
death, she knew what
such games meant now. The reality of
love was dark and
damaging, a morass she couldn’t face
again.
When she lay down on her back,
straightening out her
arms and legs for the
savasana
, the
Corpse pose, the sad
irony wasn’t lost on her. She refused
to let herself look
toward him, until she heard the
shifting of his mat. She
cracked open an eyelid to see that
he’d aligned his mat
next to hers and was now lying down,
emulating the stretch.
His spread fingers were within an
inch of hers.
She wasn’t sure how to react, what to
do. He was doing
nothing at al wrong. Maybe he was
inside the personal
space margin, considering there was
the whole classroom
floor to use, but he wasn’t touching
her. Not technical y. In
the space between their paral el
bodies, she felt the
compressed heat of two auras, and
was hyper aware of
every long, lean portion of the body
next to her.
“Having trouble hearing?” Another
weak joke, delivered
with a touch of desperate acid. She
wished she could take
it back, because she didn’t want to be
mean to him. She
just needed him to leave her alone.
But she also needed
him to never stop coming to her
class, so she could stil
have the guilty pleasure of dreaming
impossible dreams.
“I wanted to be closer to you.”
She turned her head then, but he had
his eyes closed.
“Walk us through it like you normal y
do,” he said. “I want to
hear your voice.”
Rachel resolutely closed her eyes.
She took them
through the steps of putting the body
in a neutral position,
pushing out the legs, lifting and
flattening out the pelvis,
softening the groin area. Lifting the
skul to push the neck
toward the tailbone, then bringing the
head back to the
floor, in al ways easing the body.
Then she enhanced the
effect by mixing it with a relaxation
exercise. “Starting at
your feet, relax your toes, one by one.
The arches of your
feet, your ankles…”
She progressed up the body, one
muscle group at a
time, and for each he relaxed, she
was sure hers tensed
and quivered further, because her
mind was fol owing that
progression up every inch of his
body. Things were
throbbing between her thighs that
never throbbed. Or hadn’t
in recent memory. She wasn’t going
to survive this. She
became vicious with herself,
imagined the humiliation of
jumping him like some sex-starved
spinster… She wasn’t
able to be anything like what he
would want. She wasn’t
young, beautiful. Her breasts weren’t
bad, but they certainly
didn’t sit up high and firm as they
once had. She had
stretch marks, as wel as the soft
pouch at her stomach
many mothers and post-forty women
had, only she didn’t
have the child to show for it.
Most importantly, she wasn’t able to
have an orgasm.
That cinched it, right? Faking one for
her fantasy would
shatter her soul.
Thank God, the five minutes were up.
Rol ing away from
him, she went into the fetal position.
It was supposed to
comfort, a symbolic return to the
womb, a lovely way to
finish a practice and come out of it
energized, as if newly
born. Instead, it reminded her of the
many days she’d spent
in that position beneath her covers
after Kyle was kil ed,
after Cole had left her for good. She
hadn’t bathed, hadn’t
brushed her teeth. She’d embraced
her malodorous self. A
shower was an offensive mockery, a
dead heart pretending