WolfWant

Desire is not failure.
It is the body remembering it was made to be touched.
A wolf prowls Porto—
not vicious, but hungry—
moving through stone and salt and old iron streets.
This morning he finds himself still,
at a hotel bar,
the city passing through him rather than the other way around.
His usual den—the bank where wild thyme grows,
where oxlips and violet nod beneath woodbine and musk-rose—
This dawn there are others here,
And it belongs now to those.
The flower room, the mortals call it.
It fills with silk and chiffon,
with the soft architecture of bodies in motion.
Bare shoulders. Open backs.
Arms meeting torsos without shame.
Hems rising like a tide that does not ask permission.
The wolf does not consume.
He observes.
His gaze is sufficient.
Peeling from the dense joinery of bodies, a man slips away to the bar.
He is suited, befitting a man of some renown, though the wolf knows nothing of it—only the sense that he carries a certain gravity.
He takes a seat and drinks as if he has run aground,
as if breath itself might be returned to him through glass and foam.
Perhaps it is less thirst for spirits
and more the calm draw of the tender—
a young woman whose skin glows in the low light,
smoked honey, warm and quiet,
with a smile that could hold a Rabelo steady against wind or current.
The man mutters something, coyness flickering in his eyes.
Smoked honey answers with that smile and a single word.
“Nepal.”
A moment opens.
Will the man hunt?
Or is he only being kind?
It hangs, full and unresolved—
no bridge built, only the long chasm of silence
where two observers stand stunned
by the distance and depth between them.
A distant wind, like a dream,
sprinkles the whispered word Namaste.
But the moment has passed.
Smoked honey returns to polishing her crystal treasures.
Nothing passes between them,
and so the air holds what might have been.
There is a pressure now that did not exist a moment before—
sustained, contained,
with nowhere yet to go.
Then the room changes.
Not suddenly.
Not loudly.
But profoundly.
A woman enters, and the space rearranges itself around her.
Energy shifts outward, displaced,
as her presence stirs a wind that moves the sage
and trembles the wheat.
Even the wolf, in his quiet corner, feels it.
Gravity has slipped—
just a little.
She does not drift.
She does not search.
She approaches with intent.
Her dress—midnight blue, scattered with small white flowers,
like a third-watch meadow under a full moon—
clings to her skin without effort,
remembering her shape as she moves.
She comes to rest beside the man,
close enough that breath becomes shared.
The wolf senses the change in him—
a soft yielding, almost imperceptible.
He is opening.
She unarmors him with little more than awareness.
Her hand rises.
Not to seize.
Not to hold.
To settle.
Fingers find the back of his head,
knitting briefly into short dark hair.
A palm rests at the nape of his neck,
where a pulse answers without words.
And in that answering,
the room dissolves.
This is not conquest.
Nor possession, asserted or implied.
It is awareness without declaration.
The wolf is awed by the slow, unmistakable alignment
of want and permission.
The resonance reaches him.
His breath deepens.
His weight shifts forward a fraction,
as if his body remembers this language
without ever being addressed.
And there, behind his ribs,
the wolf finds it—
a longing oft felt and long quelled.
Not the sex—
but the recognition.
The unfiltered want between two.
Desire moves like heat through matter,
lingering, spreading,
until something softens
and opens enough to receive it.
The wolf realizes he is open and unnamed,
still wanting—
not because he lacks,
but because the wanting itself has warmed him,
has replaced ache with presence,
and left him altered by what passed through the room
when someone disarmed
and let themselves be found.

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Into every life a little light will shine. Thank you for being my luminance in whatever capacity you may. Shine on, you brilliant souls!
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