A loose wool-knit sweater had holes in the pattern, through which her skin was visible both above and below the dark sports-bra wore stretched across her *******. I could see the thin straps draped over her collarbones, and thought about the lines they leave in her skin.
Yoga pants squeezed her legs underneath of thigh-high socks, and both were layered below tall leather boots with low heels. An olive green fatigue jacket hung open around her and was adorned with a colorful scarf that lay claim to her neck, its tassels curled and bounced with each step she took mirroring precisely the loose curls in her fair hair.
Finger-less gloves left her free to feel the texture of the pages she turned one by one in a book pulled from the shelf. She had sat down right in the aisle, planting herself in front of the poetry section inside of a crowded Barnes and Nobles. Sitting there with such an elegance, I lack the words for it, completely unnoticed and free from the numerous holiday shoppers that were carefully stepping over her, books in their own arms, and heading for the cash registers.