I went back to my drink and prepared to pout when I noticed her grinning, and like a stream of internet porn, her smile was endless.
She put a thumb under the strap of her bikini top and casually stroked her collar bone. She did this because she knew I was a kitten, and she, a ball of string. “I’d like another drink please.”
I was obviously getting nowhere. I ordered the drinks and sat in petulant silence for as long as I could, then, in spite of myself, I blurted out another guess. “Is this a blog?”
“No.”
“No?”
“No, not exactly, it’s more of a eulogy.”
“A eulogy for who?”
“Whom,” she corrected, then pointed down the beach. “Look.”
“What am I looking at?”
“That man. See that man?”
I looked again and saw a ragged-looking man carrying a big bottle of rum and stumbling toward us. “Yeah, I see him. Who is it?”
“It’s someone just like you.”
“You mean he’s a writer?”
“Exactly. A drunken bum.”
“I can live with that.”
She looked at me with a mixture of pity and curiosity and said nothing.
“Sometimes I think about all the things I should have left out. All the edits I should have made.”
“Have you ever considered that what you really regret is all the things you never dared put down in print?”
I looked back at the ragged man stumbling along the beach. Tilting to his left and then his right, he now tried to keep his forward momentum going while taking a swig from his bottle at the same time. He fell face first into the wet sand. Upon impact, he sounded like a beach ball popping.
“I think he stopped breathing,” she observed.
The man who had fallen remained absolutely still.
“Oh, shit. We should probably try to help him. Should we help him?
“No.”
“Why not?
“Put your hand on my left breast.”
Her request should have startled me more than it did. I did as I was told. I do not regret it. My hand resting on her warm left breast, we watched the ocean waves surround the rum-soaked soul and engulf him in white foam.
“It’s a beautiful night,” she said.
“How can you say that? It’s all so pitiful.”
“I know you want to edit out the sad parts, but you can’t do that.”
I looked at her for an extended moment. Her beauty had lost its power to make me squint, so I could stare at her for a long, long time. She ordered another mojito.
“You’re right,” I said. “It’s perfect.”
We sat in renewed silence and watched as the waves lifted the man into the water and carried him out to sea.