by Alison Kent
King reached for another beer. “The only thing I’ve come up with is that he wanted you and me out of the way. And he promised her the moon if she helped him make it happen.”
It was a decent theory; it mirrored Simon’s own, though neither cousin had come up with a motive. They needed more. “It’s good, but it’s not enough.”
“Well, it’s not like I’ve been sitting on my thumbs thinking it through. I’ve had crops to plant and tend and harvest and sell. Equipment to keep running since replacing it’s been out of the question. Then there’s the house I’ve been trying to get finished so I can get out of that goddamn tin can I’ve been baking in all this time. This place doesn’t run itself, and the only manpower I can afford is my own.”
“You ought to consider reducing your rates,” Simon said, tossing his empty bottle toward the burn barrel at the back of the house and reaching for another beer.
“Look, about the money—”
“Did you put any of it into the well? Did you buy new pipe? Arrange for water disposal? Anything at all?”
Beer foamed up the neck of the next bottle King opened. He sucked it down as if it were gold, then shook his head. “I had something come up.”
“A gambling debt? A round-the-world vacation?”
“Sell the land, Simon. Put me off it. Surely that would give you ninety thousand bucks’ worth of pleasure.”
It was hard to believe this man was the boy Simon had grown up with, the one who’d been his best friend, his worst enemy, the one he’d fought with as often as he’d talked sports and girls. Then they’d always found their way back to a common ground. Now he didn’t think they shared anything in common at all. And he couldn’t deny the resulting sad twist in his gut.
He was through here. He’d had all of the past and of his cousin he could take. He’d been screwed over by Lorna Savoy and was getting nowhere figuring out what had happened to Micky, much less Lisa.
He headed for the porch, never looked back. “Good-bye, King.”
“Hey! Can I have the rest of the beer?” King called.
Simon slammed the door on the question.
Twenty-seven
M icky hadn’t been able to hear everything from the second-story window at the back of the house, though she’d given her best effort to eavesdropping. She didn’t move after hearing Simon come in, waiting to see if he was going to seek her out or if he would take out his frustrations by pounding on the porch some more with his hammer.
She had no intention of hiding her snoopy nature, or denying her curiosity. In fact, if he did come looking for her, she planned to bombard him with questions about what was going on between him and his cousin. But only another minute or two passed before the kitchen door slammed on his exit and on all her answers.
She wasn’t patient enough to let him work things out the way men seemed prone to do. If she expected him to tell her the raw truth rather than give her the rational explanation he reached after time alone in his man cave, she had to get to him before he’d put the incident away.
She scrambled down the stairs, dashed through the kitchen, and pushed open the door to the porch. Once outside, she heard the sound of running water. She followed the noise toward the storage shed that sat near the tree line at the edge of the clearing. On the far side of that structure and hidden from view was where she found Simon.
Naked.
At least she assumed he was naked, since he was standing under the spray of a shower. An outdoor shower. Naked. Water raining down. She suddenly couldn’t remember why she’d come looking for him; she was too busy looking at him.
He had his eyes closed, his head turned up to the downpour, his hands slicking his dark hair away from his face. She could see the thick tufts of hair in his armpits, the wet mat of hair in the center of his chest, his spiky lashes like spider legs against his cheeks.
The enclosure’s wooden fence stopped her from seeing anything below his first few ribs, though his legs were visible from the knees down, and his feet large enough to tempt her to open the gate for a peek at all the good stuff between.
“What do you want?” he asked.
She had no idea how she had given herself away—unless he could hear her heart racing, or feel the tingle in the well of her stomach, the suffocating belt of lust squeezing the air from her chest.
“What happened with your cousin?” she came up with as she climbed onto the stump of a long-ago felled tree to sit.
“He left.”
“I saw that much.”
“You didn’t hear the rest?”
Damn him. “Only bits and pieces. Not enough to answer all my questions.”
“He won’t be coming around here again. That’s the only answer you need.”
That’s what he thought. “You’re not going to tell me about the money you gave him?”
“No,” he said, sputtering water.
“You’re not going to mend your broken fences?”
“I didn’t bring enough tools.”
“I’m not talking about property fences.”
“Neither am I.”
Apparently he wasn’t into sharing his feelings. Or thinking confession good for the soul. “Did he take all the beer?”
“Every last bottle.”
“And you didn’t tell me you had an outdoor shower, why?”
That was when he looked at her. When he finally stopped being an island unto himself and let her see how much he wanted her and was struggling to keep her at bay.
She hadn’t known a man’s eyes could steal her breath from her body. That a man could look at her and grind everything she thought she knew about herself to dust. That desire could come alive and exist on its own, a being more powerful than she had ever pretended to be.
“Why do you think?” was what he finally said when she’d expected him to invite her inside.
He didn’t want to make the first move. She’d never known a man who’d cared if she was ready, who’d asked himself if seduction was what she wanted. She’d known this man less than two days and had stopped counting the ways he’d surprised her. All she knew was that she was as comfortable with him as if she and not her one-dimensional self had been engaging him in conversation since the billboard had gone up.
“Because the woman you thought I was wouldn’t care? But the woman I am wants nothing more than to strip to her skin and join you?”
He looked away, a visible tic in his jaw, another in his temple, his throat flexing as he swallowed his response. And then he gave up the fight, swearing to himself but loud enough that she could hear when he came to get her. He pushed open the enclosure’s gate, stalked toward her bare and dripping, grabbed her by the wrist, and hauled her fully clothed with him into the small space and the spray.
It was the most caveman thing she’d ever experienced, a more intoxicating staking of a claim than any she’d ever imagined—and she had imagined plenty, but nothing like this…his hands holding her face, his fingers sliding into her hair, his wrists pressed to her temples as his mouth came down on hers.
This was the kiss she’d been waiting for all of her life, one that desperately tried to be tender and failed. She didn’t care. Not about the effort or the outcome. She was too caught up in learning his touch, his taste, his mouth, his body…all the things he was feeling but wouldn’t say.
His tongue played with hers, because when he’d pushed at her to open, she hadn’t been able to say no. He tasted earthy and warm, like beer and water, and his lips pleased her. They were smooth and soft where they pressed against hers, and that came as a surprise. She’d expected hard, because he was hard, because he refused to take shit from anyone, because he insisted on things going his way.
But he was also hard in other ways. Oh, was he hard. His shoulders beneath her hands were like baseballs, his thighs bracketing hers like logs. And even wearing her clothes—granted, now stuck to her like her own skin—she could feel the hard length of his cock like a branding iron making his mark
against her belly.
He let go of her mouth, moved his hands to the hem of her shirt, and pulled the shirt and her scarf over her head. She toed off her new sneakers, stepping onto the warm, wet concrete while he released the button of her jeans and unzipped them. She shimmied her way out of the heavy, wet denim.
He reached around and unhooked her bra. She would have pulled off her underpants, but he had both of her breasts in his hands, squeezing, kneading, tugging at her nipples, molding her weight, and she couldn’t think to move.
When he dipped his head, took her into his mouth, she grabbed at him to hold on. The pull of his lips, his teeth, the heat of his tongue, the late afternoon breeze, the stinging spray of water…they all combined into a flood of feeling that left her gasping and overwhelmed.
Her fingers slid from his biceps to his elbows. She shivered and moaned, closing her eyes and letting the water rain down on her chest as Simon dropped to his knees, nibbling at her belly as he slipped his fingers beneath the elastic of her panties and pulled them to the ground.
She stepped out of them, kicked them away, lifted her arms, and pushed her fall of wet hair from her face before spreading her legs for Simon’s hands. He settled his mouth over her sex, slicked his tongue through her folds, sucking gently on her clitoris and bringing it to life.
She felt suspended in sensation. The water sluicing over her, the wind blowing in gusts through the trees around them. The warmth of the sunshine. The warmth, too, of his breath.
And now his fingers as he pushed one inside her, using his thumb as a complement to his mouth. Unreal. She was drowning. The things he was doing, the pressure, the length of his stroke, opening her, stretching her.
It was all too much, yet it wasn’t enough. Having him this way felt too strangely detached. She wanted so much more than an orgasm. She wanted, she needed, to have Simon, his body pressed to hers, head to toe, and filling her.
And so she put her hands on his shoulders and backed away.
Twenty-eight
S imon looked up to see Micky shaking her head. If that wasn’t a bucket of cold water…
“Don’t get me wrong,” she said, easing the sting with the softness of her voice, her fingernails stroking his wet hair from his face. “I’m about to burst out of my skin.”
“Then what?” He gained his feet slowly, skating his palms from her thighs to her armpits before he settled his hands on her shoulders and stared down into her eyes. “What do you want? What don’t you want?”
He knew he hadn’t read her wrong. What she’d said about the woman she was…if she hadn’t wanted this, wanted him, she wouldn’t have come with him, wouldn’t have helped him get her out of her clothes as if they burned her, wouldn’t have let him kiss her, or kissed him back as if it was the only thing in the world worth doing.
“I don’t want you to give me just an orgasm. I want you to give me sex.” She kept her gaze locked on his and took hold of his cock. “I want you to give me you.”
For a moment that seemed to go on longer than he should have been able to hold his breath, he did just that. Stopped breathing. Waited. He was pretty damn sure his heart stopped beating, too.
He’d fantasized about her fingers more than a few times, but the reality of feeling them wrapped around his shaft, of having her palm warm and cupped over the head of his cock, blew all his imaginings to hell.
This was Michelina, his Micky, the woman who was real and vibrant and couldn’t have been more gorgeous standing in his shower had she been decked out in the dark jewels and glittery glossy colors of the billboard branded on his brain.
“Sex you can have,” he finally said when he felt in control of his voice. “Me you can have, too. However. Wherever. As many times as you want. Except for this first time. I can’t promise I’ll be able to wait long enough—”
“I don’t want you to. I don’t need you to. I don’t care if you promise me anything.” She tightened her grip, teased his weeping slit with her thumb, smoothed his sticky release around his head to use as lube.
He groaned, dug his fingers into her skin. “I want to make sure you—”
“I will. Trust me. I’m as close as you are.”
That he seriously doubted. If she opened her mouth just right, looked at him just so, he’d be done.
“Bet you a back rub that I’ll get mine first,” she said, and he swore her eyes promised she’d be rubbing more than his back and using more than her hands.
“I’ll take that bet,” he said, because no way was he going to blow his load until he felt her convulse around him. “You don’t need to worry about being safe with me. I go into some really nasty places around the world, and I value my dick too much not to keep it in my pants.”
She nodded, then reassured him. “I’ve got pregnancy covered, and my reputation is a lot more sexually active than I am. It’s been a while for me. A very long while.”
He shouldn’t have liked knowing that as much as he did, but he couldn’t deny his feelings. He was staking a claim, and he was doing so with his body. He couldn’t think of what that meant beyond the moment. Being here with her couldn’t be about the future. It was only about the now.
He grabbed her shirt from the shower’s cement floor, spread it out on the utility shelf of one-by-eight planks attached to the enclosure’s wall. Then he lifted her up to sit and stepped between her legs. The height was perfect. He hooked her knees over his forearms and let her guide him home.
She circled him around her opening, smearing her juices until he was slick with both of their fluids, then placing him where she wanted him and looking into his eyes. She waited, as if wanting to see his face the first time he pushed his way inside her.
He thought that this would be easy, that he could keep this casual, make it all about the sex, think of their encounter as the culmination of a fantasy living like reality for weeks in his mind. But he couldn’t. It wouldn’t work, his efforts at pretending that this didn’t mean a thing, that it wasn’t a beginning rather than an end.
He was too far gone to stop, and she was giving him no reason to want to, unless he counted her unexpected expression of hope. It was fierce, possessive, giving him as much grief as his own expectations, so he willingly, mindlessly, let his body have its way.
Holding on to her hips, he drove forward. She closed around him, a sheath so tight he could feel the texture of her flesh with each pulse of blood engorging his cock. He groaned, the rumble vibrating from his body into hers. He knew she felt it because of the smile that blossomed on her face, and he told himself the moisture welling in her eyes wasn’t tears but the spatter of the shower.
The lie tore into his heart as he began to move, thrusting slowly, setting a steady rhythm, picking up the pace when her eyes rolled closed and the water beading in the small of his back was mostly sweat.
She came like a butterfly, tiny flutters of her pussy kissing the head of his cock. She shuddered, shivered, a strangely gentle release that floated around him teasingly, playfully, inviting him along.
He came like an elephant stampede, trumpeting, pounding, a brutish completion that nearly crushed him into a pile of broken bones. They collapsed, finished at the same time, leaving him to wonder how sex with a virtual stranger could be the best sex he’d ever had.
Twenty-nine
C helle was standing at her kitchen counter, forming a mixture of crabmeat and seasoned stuffing into balls she would wrap with bacon and bake, when she heard King’s truck rumble into her driveway and stop. She cringed when he cut the engine, jumped when he slammed the door.
She braced herself, waiting for him to materialize behind her the way he so often did. But he didn’t, and when she finally saw him, it was through the window over her kitchen sink. He was standing downhill from her back porch, the grass up to his ankles, the moss from the live oaks hanging to skim his head.
She sighed, reached for a paper towel to clean her hands, then turned on the faucet and used soap. This was when it was t
he hardest to deal with him, when he was moody and broody, when he had a need to be with her but still kept her in the dark. This was why it was going to be so hard to send him away—because she knew she gave him something no one else could. She just didn’t know what it was.
He didn’t owe her anything. She had no right to expect him to confide in her, though she wished he would. Theirs wasn’t an emotional relationship. Or it wasn’t as far as King was concerned, and her wanting it to be was why she’d made the decision to tell him good-bye.
Drying her hands on a red-and-white gingham towel, she pushed open the kitchen’s screen door and walked outside onto the porch, leaned against one of the column supports, and wrapped her arms around her middle, holding herself tight. She wouldn’t be the first to speak, not this time.
He’d come to her house. Now he had to come all the way to her. Her pride was ragged, her willpower weak, but she’d given in to him for the final time. If there was anything here to salvage, King would have to be the one to dredge.
“I know you’re there,” he finally said, slurred, then lifted the bottle of beer she hadn’t seen him holding and drained it dry. “I can smell you. On the wind. Your shampoo smells like honey. Your soap smells like peaches and almonds. It’s all over you, that sweetness. It’s in your skin, your hair, fresh, like an orchard.”
He turned, looked up at her. Even from across the yard she could see that his eyes were red from emotion more than from the alcohol he’d consumed. She wanted to know what had happened, to ask him what was wrong. But she kept her promise to herself and didn’t say a word, not a single one, though her heart, breaking, was filled with poems and sonnets and odes. There was so much she wanted to say.
“I’ve always liked that about you, Chelle, did you know?” He began walking toward her, not quite steady on his feet, his jeans and T-shirt dirty, though he couldn’t have worked a whole day. The sun hadn’t yet left the sky.