Every so often he swings through town and makes his way into my bed, broad trunk filling the void this empty mattress reaffirms on the nights I sleep alone, which is most.
I appreciate the infrequency with which he comes to visit, my door kept ajar, my heart kept comfortably closed, as he strolls in in his designer sneakers or boots, the noncommittal conversation flowing freely between us.
Once I recall he rolled over, his hand sliding up my forearm, wrapping himself around my frame as I pulled out my phone to show him a photo, and he noticed his number wasn't saved, guffawing at my nonexistent concern for his permanence, or lack thereof.
I like the way he laughs and the rare moments when we exchange something deeply personal about ourselves, complicated words and phrases transplanting simplistic nonverbal communication.
He is handsome without being too ****; he is smart without being argumentative; he is wealthy without being ostentatious; he is shy without being withdrawn; he is a lot of things, my finely filed fingernails not even beginning to scratch the surface of his otherwise intriguing layers, having tied my own hands behind my back.
I need the way he doesn't need me, and him I. Sometimes I need his body heat, the gentle weight of a man's arm hanging on my curvy hip. There are moments when I need one of our witty but empty texting conversations, simple enough to read after too much Bordeaux.
I need the something that exists in the nothing that he brings me.