Present Perfect

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Present Perfect Page 31

by Alison Bailey


  “NOAH!” I screamed as wave after wave of sensation had my body convulsing. He pulled back slightly and I could feel the puff of air against the area as he chuckled.

  His lips traveled up my body, slowly, finally landing on my lips. Looking down at me, he said, “You’re my favorite taste in the world.”

  “You didn’t get those moves from Wal-Mart,” I said, my breaths coming out heavy as if I had run a ten mile race.

  “I had to up my game for my number one girl.” The look in Noah’s eyes was heart stopping. It was the perfect combination of hunger and love.

  He climbed off the bed and quickly stepped out of his jeans and boxers. My breath hitched when I first saw him. I had never seen completely naked Noah before. His body was as perfect as his heart and I was mesmerized. Sucking in my bottom lip, my eyes ran up and down his body.

  Noah caught me staring and asked, “What are you looking at, Tweet?”

  “What?” I looked up and saw the biggest sexiest grin I had ever seen. The blush ran across my cheeks and I shifted my gaze away from him.

  Crawling back on top of me, he said, “I like looking at you too… and undressing you… and kissing you… and running my tongue all over you, tasting you.”

  Turning my head to the side, I closed my eyes, enjoying his words and how he felt between my legs.

  His warm breath drifted over my neck. “Tweet, look at me.” I opened my eyes gazing up at him. “I need to see you, hear you, and feel you, so I know this is real, and I don’t have to pretend anymore.”

  I swallowed a big gulp of air. The other guys I had been with, we never made eye contact. I kept my eyes closed when we had sex, because I always pictured Noah. Looking at each other seemed too intimate to share with anyone, but him.

  His hips began to rock as he slid into me, slow and gentle at first then faster and faster, always holding eye contact. “You feel incredible, baby. We fit perfectly,” he panted against my lips.

  “I love you so much, Noah.”

  We came together. It was the longest and most powerful climax I had ever experienced. By the look on Noah’s face, it was the same for him. We laid there, still, our foreheads resting against each other, trying to calm our breathing. All of a sudden a wave of sadness crashed over me and tears started running down the side of my face. “I’m so sorry,” I whispered.

  “There’s nothing to be sorry about.” He kissed my tears. “Don’t cry, Tweet.”

  “I wasted so much time and hurt you.”

  “Nothing has ever been a waste when it comes to you. Not my time, my thoughts, or my heart. I don’t regret anything about my life with you, even the times we were apart. Those times showed me how much I belonged to you. I knew we would be together one day. I just had to be patient and wait. And you were so worth waiting for.”

  Noah and I were a perfect fit. In fact, we managed to fit together three more times before leaving the bed. My life was perfect. I still had cancer and a few more chemo treatments, but life was beautiful. By my side, I had the love of my life, my soul mate, my hero and what could be more perfect than that.

  “I love your hair like that.”

  “It’s just piled on top of my head and pinned. It’s a mess.”

  “I like you all messy,” he said, as his lips skimmed up and down the side of my neck.

  It took some convincing, but I finally talked Noah into taking a bubble bath with me. He was all onboard with getting naked in the water with me. It was the bubble part that he wasn’t sure about, but he did it for me. My tub was a fairly large one, so he was able to stretch out in it. I was on his lap, facing him. Bubbles were splashing against us.

  We were eating the chocolate cake. I had just given him a forkful with lots of frosting. I noticed a little bit still on his lips. I leaned in and sucked his bottom lip into my mouth. “This is the best way to eat cake,” I said as I continued to devour his lips. A deep moan escaped him. I could feel him getting hard underneath me. He brought his hands up to my cheeks and pulled his lips away.

  “Is everything alright?” I asked.

  “I’m with the woman who I love and adore, who also happens to be hot as hell. There’s nakedness and cake involved. What could be better?” He paused for a few seconds. “You never got a chance to answer the question I asked earlier about what changed.”

  “My perceptions. I’ve wasted a lot of my present holding on to past perceptions and trying to second guess the future, so it wouldn’t catch me off guard. It’s like I grew up, but my perception of myself and other people never changed. I always felt everyone else was better than me, that they had all the answers, but wouldn’t share them with me. Then I got sick and met a friend who shared his answers. The only thing perfect is our present because we’re breathing, moving, loving, feeling. And we’re able to let the people in our lives know how much they mean to us.”

  “Every time I’m around you, you touch my soul. I didn’t think I could love you more, but when I found out you were…” He swallowed hard. I saw a tear trickle down his face. I raised my hand and touched his cheek, wiping away his tears.

  “Noah…” My voice was shaky and tears began to pool in my eyes. “I don’t want another day to go by and you not know how much I love you. I’ve wasted my life up to this point not letting you know that I’ve loved you ever since March 23, 1990. I don’t know what the future holds, but I’ll never stop loving you. I don’t know how.”

  “Tweet, put it down.” The look in his eyes was determined and full of desire.

  “Huh?”

  “The cake, put it down. Now.”

  I sat the cake on the side of the tub. Noah reached behind my neck, pulling me against him. Our lips came together and our tongues knew exactly where to go and what to do. Grabbing his shoulders, I lifted myself up and then slowly sunk down on to him as his mouth and hands found my already hard nipples.

  “This is the best bubble bath in the history of bubble baths,” I moaned.

  Noah has 99.9% of my heart. The rest will always belong to a special boy who changed my life forever.

  I still spent time with Dalton on the Sundays before chemo. It gave me comfort and strength to face another treatment.

  “Dalton, I did it. I told Noah I loved him and he loves me. I wasn’t too late.”

  I knelt, placing the flowers down and ran my hand over his name. Dalton Michael Connor.

  The night I danced with Dalton was the last time I saw him. When I went to chemo the next morning, I found out he had died in his sleep, just a few hours after leaving me.

  Dalton was the first cancer funeral I went to. He had planned it himself. There was a cover band that played The Stones, AC/DC, and of course, Whitney Houston. There wasn’t a day that went by that I didn’t miss him. I realize now that what I felt between us that night was Dalton giving me my thank you and goodbye. But most of all, he was giving me my life with Noah.

  See ya, goodbye, adios, sayonara, good riddance, ciao and good night to you.

  My chemo finally came to an end just before summer. To say I was ecstatic would be an understatement. Other than my memories of being in treatment alongside Dalton, I wanted that part of my life over with. I still believe that everything happens for a reason, even the bad stuff. And I’ll always be grateful for the lessons cancer taught me, for the people it brought into my life and the bright light it cast on those already in my life, so that I could see how deeply their love for me was. I was ready to start back at school and make a life with Noah. Cancer had given me a second chance and I wasn’t going to waste it.

  Noah and I were inseparable. Other than when he was in class, we were together. I guess we were trying to make up for all the time we weren’t a couple. We decided to move into together. His dad had left him enough money for a sizable down payment and then some, so he bought a condo in the same community as his friend Carter, which was great because we weren’t far from Emily. Emily and I were closer than ever. The support and strength she gave me during the worst
of my treatment was incredible. I couldn’t have survived this without her.

  Noah and I moved into our place the first part of the summer. It was one of the happiest days of my life.

  He was eager to graduate early and start medical school, so he took classes over the summer and worked a full time job as a transporter at MUSC, the medical school he would be attending. Noah was incredible.

  I decided to take a couple of core classes when the fall semester started at the College of Charleston. I was going to research schools that offered a major in journalism through online courses. I wasn’t going to leave Charleston, my family, and of course, Noah. Charleston was full of locally published magazines besides the newspaper. Over the summer, I had done some freelance writing for a local magazine. It was great because I was gaining experience and making contacts. Life was good but busy. Busy is good because it shows you’re alive. That sounds like something Dalton aka Mr. Miyagi would say. That boy made quite an impression on me and my outlook on life.

  I reached my one year anniversary of being cancer free. I went in for monthly checkups at first, then it turned into every three months, and since I hit the one year mark, I’ll go every six months unless I have any trouble. I couldn’t believe it had been a year and a half since the diagnosis and amputation. My artificial leg finally started to feel like a part of me. Not that it will ever feel like an actual leg, but you’d be amazed how your mind adjusts to it.

  I think about Dalton every day and miss him. Even though my chemo is over, I still go visit him on those Sundays before what would be our on week. I started volunteering once a week at the Hollings Cancer Center. I’d never be someone’s Dalton because what he and I had was special and unique, but I could hold the hand of a scared child or listen to a teenager talk about their concerns regarding what lies ahead for them.

  Noah graduated from the College of Charleston in three years with honors. I don’t know who was more proud of him on his graduation day, me or his mom. Most likely, it was a tie. He was beyond excited to start medical school.

  The second anniversary being cancer free came and went without a lot of attention. I was glad. That meant I was no longer defining myself by the cancer. Noah and I celebrated quietly with a dinner cruise around Charleston Harbor. It was nice spending an entire evening together. He’d been so busy with classes that he rarely had a free night. Medical school was more demanding than either of us thought it would be. I mean, they tell you up front that it will be your life, day and night, but you think they’re exaggerating. They’re not. But we would get through this together, piece of cake.

  I was sitting in Dr. Lang’s office waiting for him. When Noah and I finally became an official couple, he went with me to the remaining chemo treatments and to every follow-up appointment, except for today.

  He was up late last night studying. He didn’t have classes until later today, so I wanted him to catch up on his sleep. He’d be pissed when he woke up and discovered I snuck out of the condo and came here without him, but it wasn’t necessary to always have someone by my side at every appointment. Everything had been going well and I felt great. Dr. Lang walked in and sat behind his desk.

  “Noah didn’t come with you today?”

  “He was up late last night studying, so I let him sleep. He’ll be mad, but he’ll get over it.”

  “He’s been with you at every other appointment. I assumed he would be with you today.” He looked up at me.

  I had gotten to know Dr. Lang pretty well over the past few years. I could tell in his eyes he didn’t have good news.

  “Amanda, I think Noah needs to be here so we can talk. I’ll have Gayle call him.”

  “No. Don’t call him. He’s sleeping.”

  “He’d want to be here.” The door opened and his receptionist Gayle walked in. “Gayle would you call Noah Stewart and…”

  I stood up abruptly and said, “Do not call him. He is sleeping.” The tears stung my eyes.

  That underwater feeling that I had almost forgotten about came rushing back. The doctor motioned to Gayle and she left us alone. I sat back down.

  “Amanda, you’re in no condition to drive yourself home. We need to discuss our plan of action. Noah needs to be here. We can call your parents too, if you like.” I simply shook my head.

  A half hour later Noah was sitting by my side, clutching my hand. “There were a couple of suspicious spots that showed up on your chest x-ray. The other tests show that the cancer is back. I’m sorry. I think another round of chemo is advisable,” the doctor said.

  Another round of chemo echoed in my head. Another round of chemo with the nausea and exhaustion. Another round of chemo, but without Dalton.

  Even though I knew the stats and Dr. Lang never hid the fact that the cancer could come back most likely in my lungs, I still fooled myself into believing I was free and clear at this point. My anxiety level had shot through the roof during the first year of checkups, but I had started to relax after the second anniversary.

  “My recommendation is that we do what we did last time, ten cycles and…”

  “I’m pregnant,” I blurted out.

  Dr. Lang looked up at me and Noah. He knew already.

  “Yes, I realize that.” He exhaled a deep breath. “I know that the recurrence comes as horrible and unexpected news. You’re still early into the pregnancy.” Noah and I glanced at each other. I think we were both still in shock because neither of us were understanding what he was suggesting. “You’re both young and still have plenty of time to start a family.”

  “I’m having our baby.”

  “Amanda, you know how strong the chemo drugs are. The baby would be at an extremely high risk.”

  “Then I won’t have the chemo until after the baby is born,” I said

  “Tweet…”

  “I’m not going to kill our baby with chemo or any other way.” Dr. Lang stood and rounded his desk.

  “I know this is a difficult decision. I’m going to step out for a bit, so you can have some privacy.”

  Once I heard the door click shut, my sobs poured out of me. Noah rushed over and knelt in front of me. We wrapped our arms around each other, holding on tightly, I melted into him.

  He kept repeating, “I love and adore you.” His voice cracking as he held me and stroked my hair.

  My only response was, “I’m sorry for getting sick again.”

  His arms tightened around me. I don’t know how long we stayed like that. I was exhausted from the sobs, but I couldn’t seem to stop.

  “Tweet, you know I want our baby, but I need you. I want to have a life with you.”

  “If I don’t have our baby and I don’t survive, then you’ll be alone. I don’t want you to be alone. I know it will be a lot, but my mom will help, and so will your mom, and Emily…”

  “I could have the entire fucking city helping me, but if you’re not with me I will be alone.”

  I looked into his beautiful light blue eyes with tears flowing from them nonstop, drenching his face. Those beautiful eyes were overflowing with love and fear.

  Hours must have passed sitting there weighing all our options. When Noah and I left the office, we had made our decision. We knew it was going to be hard, but there really was no other option for us.

  I love all the gadgets we have now to communicate. Cell phones, texting, emailing, Facetime, Skype, but there’s still nothing quite like a handwritten letter or note. They’re warm, cozy, and personal. Sure, it might take longer for them to get to you, but some things are worth the wait.

  I was in the nursery curled up in the huge glider, my parents had given us as a baby gift. I had two more months to go before I would meet this little one. I hoped that if my time here was coming to an end, that I would at least get to meet my child first, even if it was only for a brief moment.

  Noah walked by and stopped in the doorway. “There you are. What are you up to?” he asked.

  “I’m writing more notes.”

  “Why?�
� It was a knee jerk reaction. I smiled up at him. He understood why I was doing this, but he wasn’t comfortable talking about it.

  “Don’t do that,” I said.

  “Do what?”

  “Play dumb. You’re no good at it.”

  “Slapped in the face by my own words.” He chuckled as he came over to me. Bending down, he kissed the top of my head. “Good. You can read them to her when she gets old enough to understand.”

  I looked up at him. It never ceased to amaze me how much I loved him. I’ve known him all my life and every day that passes, I love him more and even if I’m not here, I will never stop loving my knight in plastic armor.

  I knew Noah was terrified of the future. He didn’t talk about it, but I could see it in his eyes every time someone brought it up. I wanted to still be a part of raising Halle even if I wasn’t physically here. The day we walked out of Dr. Lang’s office, we had decided that I would wait and have chemo immediately after Halle was born. It was very risky, since before, my cancer was very aggressive, but it was a risk I had to take for our daughter.

  I started writing notes to Halle later that night. I needed to make sure I gave her, her thank you and goodbye, just in case I didn’t get to meet her, and I knew that the present was the perfect time to make sure she would have that.

  Halle,

  I love you and I’m sorry I’m not able to be there to watch you grow into a beautiful intelligent woman. I’m writing you these notes for two reasons.

  Reason one: Even though your daddy is a wonderful man, and you grandmothers and aunt Emily will be there to answer any questions, there are certain things that only a mother can teach her daughter. I will do my best to cover the most important topics.

 

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