When She Was Good: Best Lesbian Erotica
By Cleis Press
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Reviews for When She Was Good
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- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Steamy erotica on every page. This is definitely a book that will keep your eyes open! Buy this book if you are looking for an extremely exciting read.
Book preview
When She Was Good - Cleis Press
York
INTRODUCTION: DUMPSTER DIVING
Ali Liebegott
I spent the summer I turned nine riding my bicycle in circles in the small streets of an industrial park behind my house with all the kids in my neighborhood. My best friend Natalie, a huge daredevil and troublemaker, had the idea one day to look for lost treasures in the industrial park Dumpsters. I don’t even know what we were expecting to find. Maybe beer. Or some type of portal to a universe that didn’t have divorce or molestation or loneliness. Natalie climbed into the Dumpsters, one at a time, while the rest of us waited in clusters, watching her head dip up and down over the green metal side as she sifted through garbage.
After climbing in and out of three or four Dumpsters Natalie cried, No way.
Her head disappeared and she sat down in the Dumpster. We all waited and listened to her rustle through what sounded like trash.
What’s in there, what?
we begged to know.
Then one at a time, Natalie started hurling what she had found over the side of the Dumpster to us. Each magazine landed with a slap on the pavement and featured a close-up cover of some disembodied female mouth sprayed with a face full of come.
There’s like hundreds in here,
she cried. They must make the magazines in one of these offices.
I’d never seen hard-core porn before and stood quietly next to the other kids as they flipped the pages. I remember being astounded at how glossy the pictures were. The pages were thick and the paper seemed really expensive.
Let’s get out of here before we get busted,
I said.
Natalie climbed out of the Dumpster and we all divvied up the magazines and crammed them in our pockets. Then we rode our bicycles to a nearby park to further examine our literal booty. There were pages of huge pink pussies spread open and spilling pussy innards and giant veiny cocks and huge pancake-sized nipples dripping with buckets of milky come. In other words, the pages were filled with what seemed to be exercises on how to use a zoom lens. When I think about that day I can distinctly remember how the sun felt on my arms as we sat in the park flipping through those magazines, our bicycles scattered on the grass around us.
So this was sex. Giant floating body parts. I felt confused.
Natalie instructed us to bury the magazines in the park so we could come back and look at them whenever we wanted, so we all started burrowing tunnels into the hillside like gophers. Then we rolled up the magazines and shoved them into the holes we’d made. The next day when we came back, we couldn’t find them.
Someone probably stole them,
Natalie complained.
I loved the idea of someone randomly coming to the park and digging up the landscape to pull out our porn stash. My father had spent my entire childhood walking across parks and beaches with a metal detector, finding thousands of pulltabs and a few nickels. I could understand the desire to find things. Except for my confusing yet long-standing crushes on Bob Barker, Gumby and Aquaman, even at nine I had a sinking feeling that I might be something weird like a lesbian. I wanted to find lesbians in the way that a nine-year-old could want that. I wanted to find something that felt true like the smell of dirt on my fingers after we’d dug the holes for the porn. Or something real like the amazing sun on my arms as we sat in the park, or the honesty of how concrete smells when it gets hot and wet and we all lay down on it after swimming at the public pool. Truth and realness and honesty. What can I say: I still had a tiny fire of hope at nine.
The next few years solidified each demon in our varied neighborhood kid souls. The future alcoholics made sure to start drinking every day. The eating disorder girls started looking at food as an enemy. The runaways got really good at packing their duffel bags and the future wife beaters and rapists practiced tying girls up in toolsheds and shooting the heads off lizards with BB guns. Natalie’s older brother was a future wife beater. One day he promised to show us his porn magazines if we agreed to lock him in a lay down freezer in the garage and sit on the top of it while he tried to get out. He was thinking about becoming a Marine and this was his version of physical fitness training. Everyone knew locking a person in a freezer was stupid, but Walter was convincing when he insisted he was strong enough to get out of it. So we sat on top of the freezer, feeling afraid, as Walter scrambled on top of bags of frozen vegetables inside the freezer beneath us. As long as we could hear the bags of frozen vegetables shuffling around then he must still be alive, I reasoned. It was a miracle when Natalie’s older sister came into the garage to get a soda. She’d been inside the house watching soap operas while we were about to kill her brother, if you can even imagine that.
Where’s Walter?
she said.
We sat stunned for a second and then thank god we pointed to the shuffling sound of vegetable medley bags beneath us. We were big-time busted, but Walter was alive and not brain damaged, and he did keep his promise and showed us his porn collection. The lesbians
in his Playboys sat naked across from each other and touched each other’s nipples with their snowcone-pink acrylic nails. I remember pages of women with really round asses. I wanted real women. I wanted women with dark sunken eyes who would sit despondently with me on a curb and understand the beauty of fingertips that smelled like the earth after digging holes in the park to bury found porn. I wanted the obvious signs of fucked-up train-wreck women. But it seemed the train wreck in every woman I found in porn magazines was airbrushed out.
When I was eighteen I got the courage to buy my first bit of lesbian erotica. I was nervous so I just darted into A Different Light Bookstore in Santa Monica and then darted out. Unfortunately, I ended up with lesbian erotica poems. Tons of dolphin and mango imagery. Dolphins simultaneously leaping and diving into waves. Couples creepily, catatonically sucking on mangoes in front of each other. I remember trying to jerk off as I was driving home with my new book, but I was unable to find anything stimulating as I turned page after page. I thought that drive home had marred the words lesbian erotica in my brain forever…until I started reading the submissions for this anthology and that idea was smashed. When I got the email from Tristan asking me to be a guest editor I was a little skeptical of my ability to do the job, as I haven’t read much erotica in my life. I expected to find hundreds of pages of leaping dolphins in my mailbox. Maybe the dolphins will eat mangoes, I thought hopefully.
But it turned out even better than that—the stories were filled with the real lesbians I’d been looking for my whole life. Peggy Munson makes me want to push my tongue into each of Ellie’s cigarette burns in her brilliant story The Storm Chasers.
Roxy Katt makes me wonder why I’m not congregating more often with spoiled upper-class poolside mothers in giant ant costumes. Reading Anna Watson’s Chronic,
I remember the gift of health and desire. Shanna Germain reinforces the sexiness of wordless affairs. It was an honor to read and select the stories in this anthology. I feel like I’ve waited my whole life to see the many sides of my lesbian self reflected like this in literature.
Happy reading!
Ali Liebegott
Los Angeles, California
DIFFERENT GIRLS
Tamai Kobayashi
It is on the third day at Japanese language summer camp that Susie meets Yoshi, one of the tough girls who smoke behind the equipment shack by the lakeside. They are counselors from the city school but from different sides. Sues is Westside cardigans and saddle shoes, Yoshi railway denim and sneakers. Sues has always fancied the tough girls, feared them, their careless mockeries; uncertain of their loyalty, as if in a high stakes game of angel/devil. Yoshi has muscles, and a scar on her shoulder, like a gladiator or some kind of ancient warrior. She’s not like the girls who squeal at tadpoles, who shriek and shrivel at cobwebs floating on the ceiling of the dorms. Yosh plays chicken with her jackknife by the canoe shed. Yosh plays chicken but Sues is afraid.
Sues is not a tough girl. She steels herself against the lake scum that squishes between her toes and tries not to flinch at the spiders floating down from the rafters. Her skirts are pleated and her pencils are always sharp. Sues knows all of the rules but watches with envy the tough girls’ swagger, their fearlessness and pride. Sues is afraid. Sues is afraid of Yosh. She tries not to notice as Yoshi swings the canoe easily onto her solid tanned shoulders. She glances away as the soap suds bubble down the groove in Yoshi’s back. Yoshi is two months older, her breasts blossoming out; the hairs dark between her legs, under her armpits. Sues at seventeen feels the shifting time. The Beatles sing Yeah yeah yeah on the flickering television and She’s got a ticket to ride. At seventeen, Sues is lost and far from home.
The fourth day at camp, Sues asks Yosh for a cigarette behind the equipment shack. The other tough girls laugh but Yosh holds out the cigarette, lights it with a wooden match struck from the tread of her shoe. Sues sputters with her first puff, the girls scoffing, but Yosh just smiles.
Yosh has the most beautiful smile.
After that day Sues follows Yoshi everywhere. Shadow, the other girls snicker but Sues pays it no mind. Yosh teaches her about the curl of the canoe paddle, pull of water and motion, the art of steering and the nature of currents. Sues is lost in the ripple of muscle, the curve of Yoshi’s shoulders, the quirk in Yoshi’s eyes.
Yosh carries Sues’s lunch tray, holds her a place in line. The other girls growl and mutter; one of them has left the fold.
That night the storm blows in, midsummer heavy, the air humid and burdened with the strain. Thunderclouds towering but Sues can only see the darkness; the sky cracks open in a blinding, slashing wrench. The lake is dark and the lights in the cabins wink off, on, then off. Black night. Even the sky has fallen.
Sues shivers. She can’t see the palm of her hand and the air quakes and rumbles. Too dark, then flashing, too bright, ghost sheet white, her eyes cannot leap between the extremes. Sues has never liked the thunderstorms, fears nature out of control, she feels like crying and she wants to go home.
An arm slips over her shoulders, Yoshi’s arm. Warm and strong and muscled. The scent of cedar and cigarettes. Sues’s heart is pounding, over the clouds that clash above, her nerves jump and scatter as Yoshi stands and holds and leans. Sues can feel the swell of Yoshi’s left breast pressing along her arm, the cup of her hand against her shoulder. She is touching me, she is touching me, Sues repeats, her mind flooded with the miracle, and she wonders at such fearlessness.
Yoshi is tough, Sues thinks, and needs nobody.
At least not until the day they set the snare traps.
Tough girls need each other. To be tough against each other, to be tough against the world. Tough girls are their own measure, bitter enemies, bosom friends. Tough girls know their weaknesses and their strengths are never enough.
They set snare traps in the meadow and the next day they catch a baby raccoon. The snare twists around the hind leg, breaks it, and the tough girls gather around. Sues, no tough girl, starts crying, and the girls jeer, Baby, going soft. Yosh takes in Sues, the girls, the cry of the small, furry animal and sees no way out of it. She takes a rock and smashes in the raccoon’s head. Yosh feels her stomach pitch into her mouth but she masks it with a snarl.
Sues runs.
The tough girls sneer after her but Yosh only stares at the creature she has killed. Blood speckles the rock and she throws it into the river. Later Yosh tracks down every snare trap, smashes it in two. She gets a welt from the guide wire, her fist bloody from the bark.
That night, Yosh sits in the canoe shed, playing with her knife. Sues comes in.
Chicken—
Its leg was broke—
Can’t do anything without your gang—
It was gonna die—
Coward—
But Sues begins to cry and hates herself for it. Tough girls never cry. But Yosh’s arm is around her shoulder, her hands wipe away tears, Yosh’s lips brush lightly against Sues’s cheeks, her closed eyelids, her mouth, and deeper, kisses deeper, a tongue shivering ache into belly, their clothes are off, an awkward shedding, off and on the floor, their bodies slide, playing chicken without knives, this game all broken rules and Yosh’s mouth kisses Sues’s breasts, kisses nipples standing out, afraid but sucking harder. Sues’s whimper is caged in her ribs, watching Yoshi come up for air, Sues still afraid but chicken chicken, smoke in Yosh’s hair. Yosh’s eyes, asking as her fingers trace down to those fine forbidden hairs, circling, afraid but it feels so good, dampness faster, fingers deeper, wetter inside the cleft, circling the hard little bud round and round and round, Sues’s hot, she’s burning, her shivers not from tears, a sudden shudder, rising, rising, that ripple-shock from there—
Sues, Sues—are you all right?
Sues holds her, clinging, braces her coming in Yoshi’s clasp. She’s still fearful of this newness, this game she does not understand but she trusts so completely that Yoshi is undone. Sues doesn’t know that tough girls bruise easily but hide under a thin-skinned bravado, under tough girl bluster and pride. But Yoshi still holds her, rocking comfort, soothing caress, a silent appeal for forgiveness, for tough girls, who blunder, even as they win.
Shy girls excel as they try not to be noticed. They know the square root of three thousand and three. Sometimes they know Latin or French and their good shoes have buckles, or eyelets or some kind of fancy strap. They blossom in shadow, waiting for the world to come to them. They try and they try, however awkward and painful it is, but when they come forward, they seem to retreat. Shy girls are forever hopeful, skirting anger and a vague sense of dread. They seethe and they smolder, on the cusp of forever, unaware of the heat they give off.
Sues lies in the canoe shed, her head on Yoshi’s shoulder. Her thoughts spin in darkness, her stomach in a knot. It
has happened. It
has occurred. Sues has no words for the lightness in her chest. But her body still hums from that burst between her legs, the tingles in her breasts. Sues is all open and she wants to know how.
Yosh, on her elbow, whispers, Are you cold Sues? Are you okay?
But Sues’s heart is exploding and she kisses Yoshi, pushes her back, her mouth, taking her own time now, traveling over lips, tongue, teeth and Yosh cannot say a thing. Sues slips lower, feels Yosh tremble beneath her. Sues presses hard but can’t keep herself still. Yoshi’s breasts, Yoshi’s breasts, and Sues exploring every bump, every curve, every slope, every dip. Sues kisses, caresses, her tongue on a quest, ever lower, ever lower, until her lips—
Yoshi sits up on her elbows.
Sues?
Sues opens Yoshi’s legs, pushes wide her shaking thighs. Light kisses below the tangled hair and Yoshi almost cries. Sues remember Yosh’s fingers but she wants to kiss some more. She kisses and she kisses and she kisses, her face, wetter, tasting deeper, she wants to crawl inside. But Yosh’s jerking, helpless now, her legs don’t know what to do. Her chest is bursting, her lungs are gasping and her hot palms smack the floor. Sues thinks of her own building rush, and she wants to ride Yosh into that center, to ripple out this storm. Her mouth latches on to that little bud rising and she begins to lick and suck. Sues loves this taste, this feeling, like holding candies in her mouth, her lips pouring out, Yosh beneath her; Sues sucks her in as well, how can this be, but no time to think, Yosh’s breath faster now, hips rising, legs wide as Sues presses her mouth down, tongue swirling and Yoshi comes, Yoshi comes.
The morning light begins to sneak through the cracks of the canoe shed. In the shadows Sues can see what she has done. Wet curls back from Yosh’s vulva, pink lips waving, spiraling down. Sues knows the words for this place but the name is just the beginning. Shy girls know their Latin, shy girls know their French, but Sues, still shy, wants to know more. The square root of three thousand and three will never be enough. Sues’s finger slides into vagina, rippled muscle, contracting space and Yoshi arches, a choking surrender, as Sues begins all over again.
Shy girls aren’t so shy now and tough girls aren’t so tough. But what they need they will find in each other, as they imagine themselves as different girls.
PARADISE
Valerie Alexander
Our mouths were rubbed raw where we kissed. Nights were sleepless aches of devouring each other, tumbles of animalism and grief. We didn’t eat, we were too anxious, and we could not sleep except for exhausted afternoon slumbers in each other’s arms. There was little differentiation in time. Street-lights came on and went off, different degrees of light filtered through the apartment blinds. She sobbed when she came; I came all the time. I loved her.
We barely went to class. Always I was rubbing my eyes, bleary, dizzy, I did not hear if spoken to. The sheets went dirty and cartons of takeout piled up in the kitchen. Sleepless and dazed, my hands shook too much to grasp a pen. There was much to say, years to cram in nights. We had no idea how long we had together. Every second was vital.
We could not even shower apart. Rubbing shampoo into her hair, bare of makeup, she looked so innocent. Our kisses tasted of soap and water. I shaved her legs for her, pulling them around my waist from behind and lathering them up well. Her pussy was also my domain and I sculpted it with the obsession of a lesbian Rodin. Her briny sweetness graced my tongue like nirvana. The tang of her walls clung to my fingers. Like a love-struck dog I couldn’t stop licking her, until her screams bounded off the walls and drowned out the rushing water.
The first time with her was awkward but potent. It was after class and I was facedown in her mattress. She was unhooking my bra from behind. Then taking it off. A CD was playing; it emphasized the silence between us. I stared straight into the black of the sheet but I was seeing her room in my mind, the bamboo blinds and framed poster of Virginia Woolf. Her hands, smooth and cool, slid down my hips. My throat was tight with anticipation. She pushed at me and I turned over to see her long dark hair hanging in her face. Her perfect, inscrutable face.
My dress was crumpled in the corner. She hooked two fingers under the elastic of my panties and pulled them down my thighs. My navel looked brand new, like someone else’s, under her gaze. She leaned over me and paused. Then she unsnapped her dark blue lace bra. I looked at the ceiling, closed my eyes. Quick, harsh breathing sounded in my ears. It was mine. She crawled over me on all fours. We were naked now, both of us. Her cool soft breasts melted against me like heaven descending to earth. Our mouths met like two halves locking together in a delirious whole. We rolled over and over, kissing, her knee slowly rubbing my pussy until I moaned in her mouth.
Earth ascended to heaven. Everything was pink and brown and like silk. It was ice-cream sex, vanilla and sweet, but I held her shaking body tight when she came and in her honey I tasted the venom of our potential.
At night we’d go into the club like angels, pretty and glittery and messy. We would enter into the humid darkness crisscrossed with neon laser beams; would pause to take in the pleasurable scandal of hundreds of girls dancing with girls, kissing girls against the wall; then quickly we would scan the crowd, taking in who was and was not there. We were superior and haughty, but interested in the crowded female heat. And both of us enjoyed the gossip.
(Girlworld gossip can eat your romance alive. We learned that on our second night. Her roommate told my ex who told her roommate who told her lab partner who told her ex; and that night when we met at a Mexican restaurant as arranged, our ears were ringing with untrue and hostile rumors. We were casual and distant with each other until the truth emerged. Then we realized how tight, together and impregnable we had to be. We got drunk on margaritas and kissed sloppily in front of the restaurant and then we went out and fucked in the alley, in the falling snow. It was November and the first snow of the season. I pushed her jeans down and backed her bare ass against the brick building, her pussy burning against my hand in the cold night. My fingers teased her clit, circling lazily, lightly pulling at her delicate hood, until she stood with her legs strained apart in her jeans, wordlessly begging to be fucked. Finally I slid my fingers deep inside her as her pussy sucked at me like a feverish animal, and more than anything I wanted to taste her but instead I watched the snow melt over her flushed cheekbones and closed eyelids as she groaned with her first orgasm of the night. I knew as I held her snow-flaked hair that I was on to something.)
In the club:
Topless girls gyrated and shook on three platforms. Huge projection screens were suspended from the ceiling, offering a