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She was one of the vaudeville dancers he supposed. He had drawn back the curtain and she was sitting there on the stall one leg crossed over the other, in that skimpy dress, white lace up shoes. He had apologised, blushed, was about to draw back the curtain when she said: Oh, no leave it be. And he had and stood there, slightly open mouthed, mind ticking over, eyes stuck on her fine legs crossed. They were nice legs he thought. Her dark hair, parted in the middle was not well brushed; it seemed as if she’d just got up from a bed. Maybe she had. She gazed at him, her eyes looked foreign. Odd to think that, he thought. He wanted to drink her in. Take in each aspect of her just sitting there. I’m on soon, she said. Yes, definitely an accent, he thought nodding. I’m a dancer, she said. O right, he said. He thought as much; the dress and shoes, the way she had about her. White ankle shoes. Lace ups. Not the sort to wear out in the street, he supposed. Are you to watch the show? She asked. Yes, I am, he said, looking at her lips, the way they spread under her nose, held in place by her cheeks, he thought. What would his mother say about her short dress? Far too short, shows her backside almost, she’d have said scornfully. Yet he still gawped at her. Her ankles, knees, thighs. What a feast for the eyes, he mused, trying to look away, but held bound, fixed as if by some glue. The tassels on the end of the short dress moved as she stood up. She stretched her arms. Shook her legs back into life as if they had died. Must be ready, she said. Warm ups. Yes, of course, he murmured, and turned away, walking off, carrying the image of her and her shoes and dress and her dark hair into his mind. Fixed there. Captured each aspect of her being, placed in some room of memory, for later viewing, in his secret seeing.
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Apr 29, 2013
Apr 29, 2013 at 2:16 AM UTC
ONE OF THE DANCERS.
She was one of the vaudeville dancers he supposed. He had drawn back the curtain and she was sitting there on the stall one leg crossed over the other, in that skimpy dress, white lace up shoes. He had apologised, blushed, was about to draw back the curtain when she said: Oh, no leave it be. And he had and stood there, slightly open mouthed, mind ticking over, eyes stuck on her fine legs crossed. They were nice legs he thought. Her dark hair, parted in the middle was not well brushed; it seemed as if she’d just got up from a bed. Maybe she had. She gazed at him, her eyes looked foreign. Odd to think that, he thought. He wanted to drink her in. Take in each aspect of her just sitting there. I’m on soon, she said. Yes, definitely an accent, he thought nodding. I’m a dancer, she said. O right, he said. He thought as much; the dress and shoes, the way she had about her. White ankle shoes. Lace ups. Not the sort to wear out in the street, he supposed. Are you to watch the show? She asked. Yes, I am, he said, looking at her lips, the way they spread under her nose, held in place by her cheeks, he thought. What would his mother say about her short dress? Far too short, shows her backside almost, she’d have said scornfully. Yet he still gawped at her. Her ankles, knees, thighs. What a feast for the eyes, he mused, trying to look away, but held bound, fixed as if by some glue. The tassels on the end of the short dress moved as she stood up. She stretched her arms. Shook her legs back into life as if they had died. Must be ready, she said. Warm ups. Yes, of course, he murmured, and turned away, walking off, carrying the image of her and her shoes and dress and her dark hair into his mind. Fixed there. Captured each aspect of her being, placed in some room of memory, for later viewing, in his secret seeing.
terry-collett
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Apr 29, 2013
Apr 29, 2013 at 2:16 AM UTC
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