“Jessica, I…” he whispered, starting then stopping. It was enough.
I moaned in response, higher pitched this time, and again not a sound I recognized as one I’d ever made before. Nonsense words and promises I didn’t know I was going to say tumbled from my lips.
He didn’t respond, just continued his delectable conquest, spreading my legs wider and bringing my knees to my shoulders.
“Duane. I need you, I love you so much, so much…”
He cursed, tensed, growled in a way that sounded like a surrender, burying his face against my neck and biting my shoulder. I was tossed skyward again. This time he was with me.
And we held on to each other, like the world was ending and beginning, long after our shared ecstasy was over.
CHAPTER 22
“The three saddest things are the ill wanting to be well, the poor wanting to be rich, and the constant traveler saying 'anywhere but here'.”
― E.E. Cummings
Jessica
“Can I ask you a question?” I asked, breaking our hour long silence of touching and petting and kissing.
“Sure…” he said, his voice sounding drowsy and not at all sure.
We were cuddled together in the bed, my back to his front. I faced the interior of the cabin, the fireplace directly in front of me. I was completely relaxed. Really, malleable was the right word for my present state, caught in that dreamy world of satisfied to the point of exhaustion, but too excited for sleep. Not yet. Again, I wanted to hold on to the moment.
“Do you always have condoms in your wallet? Or only when you come to your fortress of solitude? Are there random wood-women who come to the cabin and service hillbillies?”
I felt his tension ease, and he chuckled while nuzzling the back of my neck. “That’s three questions.”
“Okay. Forget the last two.”
“Yes. I always have condoms in my wallet.”
“Hmm…”
“What? What does ‘hmm’ mean?”
“It’s just that, I never took you for an optimist.”
His renewed laughter made me smile.
He clarified while stroking my hip possessively beneath the covers. “I’m not. Billy does random wallet checks. And every year for Christmas he stuffs our stockings with condoms. I think he’d sterilize us all if he could.”
Now I was laughing, and that meant we were laughing together.
My laughter tapered and I spoke as I thought, “I really like your brothers.”
Duane was quiet for a beat; his beard tickled my shoulder when he finally spoke. “Yeah. They’re okay.”
I smiled at his affectionate and dismissive remark, letting the subject drop. I wasn’t ready to invite anyone else—not even via discussion—into our lovely slice of heaven pie. Not yet.
The fire was burning low, just coals at this point, embers of red glowing in chalky black cinders. I loved how wood fires smelled, tart and smoky. They reminded me of dessert, s’mores and hot lemon curd baked in a pie iron. My daddy was my Brownie pack leader growing up; he’d taught me all the campfire dessert shortcuts.
“How did you get here, Jess?”
“Pardon?” I’d been lost to my thoughts, desserts and campfires. Now I’d associate wood fires with Duane. This thought made me happy.
I felt him shift behind me, lean up on his elbow. “Did someone drive you?”
“No. I drove. I have…well, I have a car now. It’s a long story.” I frowned, remembering I hadn’t spotted his parked car when I arrived. “By the way, where’s your car? Where’s the Road Runner?”
Duane dithered, his body tensing behind me. At last he cleared his throat and said with a sigh, “I wrecked it.”
I choked on nothing, my eyes bulging, certain I’d heard wrong. “You…you what?”
“I wrecked it, last weekend at The Canyon.”
I twisted in his arms so I could see his face, a rush of alarm making my muscles tense.
I rested my palm on his cheek, needing to touch him, as my eyes moved between his. “Are you okay? Are you hurt?”
“No. I’m fine.”
I wanted to search his body, see for myself. But then I reminded myself of the sex cartwheels we’d just finished. If he’d been injured then he could hardly have accomplished such a physically demanding activity.
He didn’t look sad or mournful about the car, and his lack of reaction did not compute. “You loved that car.”
His expression didn’t change, not really, but he shrugged. “It’s a good car.”
“Why aren’t you more upset?”
“It’s not a person, Jess. It’s a thing. Things can be fixed. Eventually, maybe, I’ll fix her up.”
“But…that car is awesome. And you never lose.”
“I wasn’t quite myself last weekend,” he mumbled distractedly, his attention dipping to my chest as his hand lifted to cup my breast. He touched me like he appreciated my texture, using his thumb to draw circles on my skin.