A soggy, hard-nippled mess. I’m glad she’s gone, so she doesn’t see the fact I got hard the minute she showed up at my front door and I saw her like that.
As soon as she disappears down her hallway, I push off the flooded floor and pick my tool bag up. Tossing the wrench inside, I lay it on the counter and look around to survey the damage.
It’s not overly bad. It appears she actually reacted pretty quickly, and with a straight head, by trying first to shut the water off under the sink and then attempting the main valve. There’s a lot of water on the floor, but if it gets cleaned up quickly, it probably won’t cause any floor damage.
I slide my gaze into the living room, seeing a quilt draped over the back of the couch. I slosh through the watery linoleum and nab the quilt before dropping it to the floor right where the open kitchen meets the living room. The water has already started streaming past the linoleum and onto the hardwoods, and those need protected the most. Luckily, the quilt is large enough that it quickly absorbs the bit of water that had reached the wooden flooring, while temporarily stopping the stream from going further.
I turn back into the kitchen, intent on raiding her drawers for at least dish towels, when I hear her gasp. I turn to see her standing just inside the kitchen—adequately dressed, so I can’t see her breasts anymore—her arms loaded with towels, but her eyes are pinned on the quilt I’d just tossed down.
“You didn’t just throw that quilt onto the water, did you?” she asks in disbelief, her eyes rounding in horror.
“Yeah, why?” I counter, quite grumpily because a thank you would have been nice.
Jane turns and stomps toward me, splashing water as she crosses the kitchen. She threw on a pair of gray sweatpants and a navy sweatshirt, but her feet remain bare. Her nails are painted a pretty light purple color.
She shoves the towels toward me, actually pushing them hard into my chest, as she snaps, “That’s a quilt my grandmother made me.”
Fuck.
Just… well, fuck.
I cautiously watch as she scoops the sodden quilt from the floor and just stares at it. I have no clue if I ruined it or not, but it looks okay to me. Just… wet.
Without another word, Jane turns to the front door and carries the quilt outside. I busy myself laying down the towels she unloaded on me, sopping up the mess, while throwing glances at her through the open door. She takes the quilt and stretches it across the front porch rail, which is already bright with the eastern sun that just rose above the Atlantic not long ago.
The minute I get all the towels laid out, I turn to the first one and pull it up. I take it to the sink and wring as much of the water out as I can before throwing it back down to sop up more. I repeat this process a few times, and then Jane comes back in and starts to do the same. We work side by side in silence, and I have to wonder why I’m still in this house helping her. I fixed her immediate problem, and she’s well equipped to deal with the rest.
“Thank you for helping me,” she says quietly, but I don’t bother to look at her. I merely pick up another sodden towel and take it to the sink. “And sorry I snapped at you about the quilt.”
“Did I ruin it?” I ask gruffly, not liking this feeling of guilt bubbling in my stomach.
“I don’t think so,” she returns, and I risk a look at her. She gives me an encouraging smile and says, “It should be fine.”
“Good,” I mutter and wring out the towel. “You own this place?”
“I rent,” she says lightly. “I’ll have to call the landlord.”
“The pipes probably need replaced,” I observe. “This place looks pretty old.”
“That’s gonna suck,” she mumbles as she pulls up a wet towel and walks toward me. “But after all, tomorrow is another day. Gone with the Wind. 1939.”
She gives me a cautious smile, filled with hope and optimism that this mess won’t be as dire as it seems.
“Did anyone ever tell you that quoting movie lines is annoying?” I ask bluntly, because I suck at polite conversation with a normal person.
Jane chuckles at me as she puts the wet towel over the sink and wrings it out. “All the time.”
I feel my lips start to curve upward, so I turn away from her before she can see. I should just throw the towel down and make my excuses to go, yet I find myself pulling another one up from the floor.
“I’m just glad it was confined to the kitchen,” Jane says. It’s clear she has no problem making conversation. “I’d be devastated if my art supplies had been ruined.”
It’s painfully clear she’s throwing out information to me, probably in an effort to get me interested. I clamp my mouth shut and don’t bother to inquire.