I crave you endlessly —
not mere desire, but skin to skin,
fingers trembling, impatient,
a desperate need to feel you
in every nerve, every muscle, every breath.
I want to touch you slow, relentless,
press your body close —
to hear your breath,
the heartbeat beneath your skin,
muscles tightening at my touch,
the flinch you try to hide.
I want to be your senses,
to slip inside the places
you have not yet named,
to catch your quiet moans,
to feel your shivers and trembles,
to answer every whisper of your skin
with my own.
I want to dissolve into you,
merge until no edges remain,
become your echo, your shadow,
your silent mirror.
You are my pleasure.
I want to hold you in my hands —
the weight of you, your resistance,
and your surrender.
I love to bite your neck —
feel your tremble run through me.
Your thighs clench beneath my touch,
fingers entwined with mine,
the language of our bodies
spoken in tightening grips and breathless sighs.
I want to feel you as myself —
to taste tears and screams,
to carry your pain like my own,
to take every blow, every whisper,
alive, raw, unfiltered.
No words, no masks —
just feeling.
Just you.
Just us.
I want you to drink my emotions,
strong and wild, bright and dark.
To share, to spill, to shout and scratch —
to live inside this storm with me.
My words live in sighs, in bites, in touch.
I want to feel.
I am kinesthetic —
my soul breathes through my body.
When your emotions flood over —
I want to swallow them whole,
to live them in silence,
without words,
through touch alone.
I want your hysteria.
Your moans.
Your blows.
Your body.
Your blood.
Your every feeling.
I live because I feel.
—
He turned slowly.
She pressed against the cold wall,
her eyes following his retreating footsteps,
swallowed by darkness.
The keys clinked, the door slammed —
and she was alone.
Alone in the damp, dark basement.
Silence pressed in, heavy as mold,
a metallic taste lingering on her tongue.
How many days had passed?
Her hands trembled,
fingers still remembering every touch,
smearing pale, bruised-gray slime
across her cheeks.
Her eyes stared into nothingness.
She still whispered — barely audible:
“It’s not me… It’s not me… It’s not me…”