Naked Love

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Naked Love Page 16

by Ann, Jewel


  “Eek!”

  Swarley barks.

  “Shh …” I hook her waist and drag her to me.

  She grins as I hover above her. It makes that thing in my chest hurt because I think I fucked up. In my effort to strip her down to just Avery, I may have gone too far—gave her too much of myself.

  Avery widens her legs, positioning my newly aroused dick right at her entrance. When she pulls her knees back, I feel her wet and warm against me.

  “Again,” she says on a breathy whisper.

  My conscience screams to get out of here. Buy her a plane ticket to L.A. and deliver the dog at a later date.

  Right now, that screaming conscience falls on deaf ears.

  “Again.” I push into her as our mouths collide.

  * * *

  Welcome to New Mexico

  The Land of Enchantment

  “Hi, Daddy,” Avery slips off her sandals and plants her sexy feet onto my dash. The windows are down. The breeze is warm.

  Not a diva in sight.

  Holding my phone to her ear, she glances over at me and winks. Yeah, she’s going to ruin me.

  “We’re in New Mexico. No … my phone battery isn’t dead. The whole thing died. There was an incident, but I don’t need it. How’s Deedy?”

  She says Deedy’s name like she’s sucking on a piece of hard, bitter candy. I have a feeling it’s a mix of her being a daddy’s girl and Deedy being close to her age.

  “Jake’s … fine. I guess.”

  I give her a sidelong glance with a raised eyebrow. Avery smirks, keeping her gaze pointed at the road ahead.

  “Oh … she’s going to wear an actual wedding dress? That’s … interesting.” Her smirk drops into a solid frown. “Even though it’s just the two of you and witnesses?” She picks at the frayed hem of her jean shorts.

  After a few more uh huh’s, okay’s, and I supposes’s, she says “I love you” in a very honest way and ends the call.

  “Just to be really, really clear … you’ve never been intimate, sexual, flirty, or anything like that with Deedy?” Avery glances over at me. “Have your lips ever touched any part of her body?”

  “You really want to have this conversation?”

  “JAKE! You lied to me! Eww …” An exaggerated shake shimmies her whole body. “It’s cross contamination. You can’t do what you’ve done to me and have a history with my dad’s fiancée. It’s all kinds of wrong.”

  I laugh. “You realize you’ve done a few things to me too.”

  “But I didn’t screw your mom’s boyfriend.” She wrinkles her nose. “That’s my bad. Your parents are probably happily married. I’m not seriously suggesting she has a boyfriend. And I certainly haven’t slept with him. Oh god … at least I hope not.”

  “My mom is not alive.”

  Avery covers her mouth with her hand and shakes her head, closing her eyes. “Shit … I’m sorry. I just shouldn’t … speak. I should stop talking indefinitely.”

  “It’s fine.”

  She doesn’t respond for several miles. I must not have sold the fine so well.

  “Can I ask how she died?”

  I clear my throat, keeping my eyes on the carless road in front of us. “She was sick.”

  “Oh. I’m sorry. Cancer? That’s how my mom died.”

  I shake my head. “Not cancer.”

  “Oh … um …”

  I hate that this is so fucking hard. I always thought it would get easier. It hasn’t. Years of physically fighting away the demons, and I’m still filled with anger when I think about it too long. “She battled depression.”

  Avery nods slowly, not saying a word for several miles. Finally, she breaks the silence. “How long ago did your mom die?”

  “I was fourteen.”

  “What do you remember about her?”

  “If I don’t want to talk about this, does that make me an asshole? I know you shared about your mom, but—”

  “No. Doesn’t make you an asshole.” Avery’s reassurance sounds anything but reassuring as I hand over five dollars for parking.

  I bite my tongue from making up a million reasons for why I don’t want to talk about my mom, since the real reason isn’t ready to come out. By the time we reach Santa Rosa, Avery seems to be fine. I think. She’s hard to read when she’s so quiet.

  “Are we good?” I reach over and squeeze her leg after I shut off the truck.

  “Yeah. Everything is fine.” She returns a tight smile.

  I scratch the start of a beard growing along my jaw. Her fine sounds like anything but fine.

  Avery unfastens her seat belt and tosses me a smile. It borders on a cringe, clearly a forced smile. “So, what are we doing here? What is Blue Hole?”

  “It was once known as Blue Lake. It’s just a blue gem in the middle of the desert. Great place for scuba diving, but we’re just going to cool off for a bit since it’s insanely hot.”

  She nods slowly. “I don’t have a swimsuit.”

  “I’ll grab your sports bra and shorts from this morning. They’ll work. You let Swarley out.”

  Avery nods slowly again, face tense with apprehension. Bringing her out of her comfort zone is my new high.

  After Swarley does his thing, we do a quick change into swimming attire, grab towels, and put him in the truck with all the windows down and his travel bowl of water on the floor.

  “It’s blue. Really blue.” Avery’s eyes widen as we approach the rock cliffs around the swimming hole.

  “Together?” I give her hand a squeeze.

  “What? Wait …” She tries to pull away. “I’m an ease-it-in sort of girl.”

  “Yeah, I know.” I smirk.

  She rolls her eyes.

  “But this is not an ease-it-in kind of lake. It’s a heart-stopping-take-the-plunge kind of lake.”

  Her head shakes. “Nope. I like my heart beating.”

  “Ave …” I don’t release her hand, no matter how hard she tries to wriggle out of my grasp.

  “No.”

  “Yes.”

  “Nooooo!” she shrieks when I toss her into the lake and quickly follow her.

  “Oh my god! Oh my god! COLD! COLD! COLD!” She slaps at the water, making her way to the edge.

  Not gonna lie. It’s cold as fuck. A crisp sixty-five degrees. I grab her waist and pull her back out.

  “Jake!”

  “Shh …” I laugh. “Lie back and float.”

  “C-c-cold.” Her teeth chatter.

  “Thirty seconds.” I relax my body and float on my back.

  She does the same thing.

  I close my eyes and just breathe. This … this is the good stuff in life. My hand brushes hers, and I latch a finger to hers so we drift as one. Thirty seconds pass … then several minutes pass. She’ll never admit it, but she knows it too … this is the good stuff.

  “T-times … u-up.” She swims to the edge and we get out. “B-b-brrr…” Avery hugs herself as I grab our towels, wrapping her up first.

  “Your lips are blue like the water.” I fist the towel by her chin, keeping it wrapped tightly around her.

  “E-evil. Y-you’re p-pure e-evil.”

  I envelop her in my arms and kiss the cold from her lips, sucking on them until they’re warm again. “I’ll warm you up.”

  “H-hypothermia …”

  “Nah.” I squat down and slip her flip-flops on her feet.

  When I stand again, her eyes shoot to mine, a bit wide.

  “Were you checking me out?” I cock my head to the side.

  She shakes her head.

  “I think you were. You’ve seen me naked.”

  “I w-wasn’t. And e-even if I w-was … s-so what.”

  I think she has an actual smile on her face, but it might just be a residual grimace.

  “Let’s go dry out in the sun. I’ll grab something to make for lunch. We can eat over at the park.”

  I clasp my index finger with hers and guide her to the truck just as another vehic
le pulls in next to us. As the couple gets out, I stop, tugging on Avery to stop too. She glances back at me with confusion wrinkling her brow.

  “Let’s go over to the shop,” I mumble, turning back the other way.

  “What? No. I-I’m cold.”

  “Jake?” A gratingly familiar voice says my name.

  I stop and close my eyes, releasing a long sigh. How the fuck did this happen?

  “Son?”

  I turn slowly. “Call me that again and it will be the last word you speak in this lifetime.”

  He shuts the door to his black SUV, slipping a baseball cap on over his black and gray hair. Pulling the toothpick from his mouth, he lets his gaze sweep over Avery, a slight grin tugging his lips. I want to kill him.

  “Ave, get in the truck, please.”

  “Ave is it? Is that short for something?” he asks, his fucking smirk doubling.

  Avery’s wide-eyed gaze bounces between us. “Um, Avery.”

  “Jake, nice to see you.”

  Grinding my teeth, I ignore the woman rounding the vehicle.

  “It’s been too long,” the sperm donor says.

  “Funny …” I take my towel and wrap it around Avery’s waist because I’m not going to stand here and watch this man stare at her. “I was just thinking it hasn’t been long enough.”

  “You still baking?” He enjoys this, mocking my profession. “How does one go from a fighter to a baker?”

  “He’s a chef.”

  “Ave …” I grab her hand and tug it toward the truck. “Don’t correct him. He’s too fucking stupid to remember anything.”

  “I’m Francine … Frannie.” She holds out her hand to Avery. I still don’t look at her. “Are you Jake’s wife?”

  I let go of Avery’s hand and grab her bag out of the back of the truck to get her dry clothes.

  “No.” Avery doesn’t elaborate.

  “What do you want out of here?” I ask in a clipped voice.

  “I’ll get it.” Avery takes the bag.

  “Nice Louis Vuitton. I have the same one in black.” Francine’s voice claws at my nerves.

  I slide on a T-shirt.

  “Thanks. I love it. Just got it a few months ago.” Avery seems quite pleased that someone noticed her overpriced bag.

  Clearly her need for that shit is hardwired.

  “Nice watch.” Avery points to the chunky gold thing on Francine’s wrist.

  “Thanks. Howie gave it to me for my birthday.”

  Howie smirks at me. He’s trying to lose all of his teeth with one fucking grin. I clench my fists.

  “Looks like we have the same taste in women, Jake.”

  That’s it. I grab his shirt and shove him up against his SUV.

  “Jake!” Francine and Avery yell at the same time.

  “I hate you and I hate your fucking materialistic whore. So don’t you ever think we have one goddamn thing in common.” I release him with a sudden jerk and step back.

  Francine shuffles in her heels to his aid.

  “Jake …” Avery starts to grab my arm.

  I pull away. “For the last time, Avery … get in the fucking truck.”

  CHAPTER SIXTEEN

  Avery

  “I’m not going to jump just because you tell me to jump.” I tighten the towel he tied around my waist.

  The muscles in Jake’s jaw pulse several times.

  “Good for you,” Frannie says as she and Howie squeeze behind Jake to open the back of their vehicle.

  Jake gives them a quick glance over his shoulder. I’m sure he’s scowling even harder at them as they get their wetsuits out of the back. His dad scuba dives. I find that very cool.

  “Good seeing you, Jake. Look me up when you want to make amends. We’re just outside of Albuquerque. Good luck, Avery. You’re going to need it.”

  I expect Jake to attack Howie again, but he doesn’t. When his dad and Frannie are out of earshot, he returns his attention to me. “This is a hard limit for me.” He hands me his phone. “Call your sister or your dad. I’ll get Swarley to L.A. for you. I’m sorry if you don’t like the way I need to protect you. I’m sorry if it’s not delicate and polite enough for you. But it is in fact for you.” He pushes his phone into my hand, punctuating his point like a fist punched into my heart.

  “You wanted me to stand up for myself, and now that I’m doing just that, you want me to submit to you?” I take his phone.

  “I’m not the enemy.” Jake walks around the truck and grabs his wallet from the bag behind the seat. He retrieves some cash from it.

  I shake my head. “I don’t want your money.”

  He tries to shove it toward me. “You’re not going to get very far without it.”

  I stare at it. “Please,” I whisper.

  “Please what?” He exhales a sharp breath.

  I look up, feeling on the verge of either laughing hysterically or crying. “Please get in the truck, Avery,” I say, settling on a simple, defeated shrug. “That’s it. One tiny word.” Turning, I toss his phone on the driver’s seat and grab my clothes from the bag I unzipped a few minutes ago. After slipping on a sundress, I worm my way out of my impossibly tight and wet sports bra and bottoms, then I slip on my panties.

  Before I can turn back toward him, his hands slide around my waist, hugging my back to his chest as his lips brush along my ear. “Please forgive me.”

  Blinking back the pain, I drag in a shaky breath. “Francine … I remind you of her. That’s why you hate me.”

  “You’re not her.”

  I turn in his arms, leaning back to get a clear look at his face. “No. I’m not. But do you really believe that, or do you have to talk yourself into seeing past the part of me that is like her?”

  His gaze falls to the small space between us.

  Sometimes silence feels like the coward’s truth.

  “It’s fine, Jake. You fucked me good today. Hope that helped you work out some of your issues. I know I figured some shit out today. My days of trusting men are over. At least my fancy bags and expensive shoes make me look good. Men are so much worse than anything materialistic. You say the right things for the wrong reasons. You lie to get what you want. You make me look bad. You make me feel bad. There’s nothing wrong with my taste in fashion. It’s my taste in men that’s fucked-up.” I push his hands off my waist and climb into the truck.

  Swarley rests his snout on the console like he’s trying to show me some sympathy. How ironic that my K9 nemesis has become my source of comfort. I run my hand over his head, and he sighs.

  I don’t care that Jake’s still standing at my open door. There’s no way I’m looking at him. After a few moments, he shuts the door.

  Anthony and I were together so much longer than I’ve known Jake. We discussed marriage. He said he loved me. Yet, this hurts more than the chocolate incident because I allowed Jake to see me emotionally stripped. It’s embarrassing. It’s degrading. It’s just … fucking painful.

  When he gets in the truck, I angle my body away from him, keeping my gaze affixed to the road outside my window.

  * * *

  “Do you want to stop for lunch?” he asks after several hours on the road.

  I don’t acknowledge him.

  We stop for Swarley. I get out, not giving Jake a single glance. Not a single word.

  We drive until after dark, making one more stop for Swarley to get out of the truck and do his business. When we do stop for the night, it’s a small motel in Sedona, Arizona instead of a campsite.

  Still, I don’t give him a glance or a word. Even my hunger wanes under the shadows of my anger. Swarley and I sleep in one bed. Jake sleeps in the other bed.

  The next morning, I wake early, slip back on my sundress, and catch a pretty spectacular sunrise from the wood bench outside our door while Swarley sniffs the surrounding area. When the sun hits its halfway point on the horizon, the motel room door opens. I lift my knees onto the bench and hug them to my chest, trying hard to ignore
Jake in his jeans and naked inked chest. I try to ignore his sexy, messy morning hair and his scruffy and equally sexy face.

  He stands directly in front of me, blocking my view and replacing it with his well-defined abs and low-hanging jeans.

  Blink.

  Blink.

  I’m not going to look at his face. Nope. He can block my sunshine in every sense, but I’m not going to acknowledge his existence.

  He squats in front of me, resting his hands on my bare feet, sans toenail polish. As soon as I get back to L.A., I’m going to get a mani and pedi. I’m going to get hair extensions. And I’m going to sell some jewelry to buy new clothes because I like that stuff. Screw Jake and his bullshit. I don’t want to be his perfection. It’s an impossible role. I’ll take the designer handbag.

  I just …. I just wish his touch stopped at my feet. It would make it easier to step on it—to walk away. Why do I have to feel the ache of his touch behind my ribs?

  “Please …” he whispers.

  My eyes betray me. They meet his gaze. It’s so sad, just like the slope of his lips.

  “Please what?”

  His forehead rests against my bent legs. “Please everything. Just … please …”

  “This is messed-up, Jake,” I say slowly … with little fight left in me. “I remind you of a woman you obviously despise.” My fingers find their way to his hair. When I run them through his thick, blond strands, he lets out a soft sigh.

  He’s in pain, but I can’t fix him when I’m still scattered in so many pieces. And as much as he might like to put me together to fit the mold he desires, I can’t bend that way anymore.

  “Good job, Ave. Stand the fuck up for yourself. You said that to me. So this is me, standing up for myself. I have no job, no money, no car, and I probably won’t have a home by the time we get to L.A. But … I’m going to stand up, even if the only thing covering my naked body is an itty-bitty piece of self-worth.”

  Jake lifts his head. I hold my breath as he gives me an unreadable expression. Bravery isn’t a trait, it’s a few moments of time where we pretend that we’re not vulnerable. My chin tilts up a fraction. If he doesn’t say something soon, my bravery will slip, and once again I’ll be nothing more than a hot mess.

  “You don’t want to go home.”

 

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