Authors: Amanda Carpenter
knowledge of sex was that of a textbook kind. She knew all about the
facts of sexual frustration and fulfilment, but she had never
experienced them for herself, and her body was an untapped vessel.
She had never before considered herself to be a prude. She had
kissed, and indulged in some petting with a few of her dates, but it
had always been a light, mild sort of pleasure that did not stir the
heart and mind to uncontrollable recklessness. In consequence, she
had found it almost too ridiculously easy to refrain from going to bed
with anyone, and had gradually come to assume that she would wait
until she could give her virginity to her husband. It had seemed, in
the cold-blooded light of day, to be one more asset she could bring to
a marriage, especially in today's society when the indulgence of
casual sex carried its own dangers.
But Matthew called upon something ingrained and atavistic in her.
Effortlessly they seemed to strike right at the heart of each other's
archetypal instinct.
Him. Making her crazy, infuriating her, pushing her, pursuing her,
driving her where he wanted her to go. Sian's tousled head turned
restlessly on her pillow. She was tired of running, tired of denying,
tired of reasons and fears. She was tired of being pushed too far
without culmination. What to do about it? Pare to the essence in the
hunt for resolution, damn the consequences, and shove him back.
She smiled slowly, green eyes glowing, and for the first time since
meeting Matthew felt at peace.
Decision was a wanton lady.
After a time, she stirred herself to prosaic action, tidied and made her
bed, searched through her luggage for the small cloth bag that held
her cleansing cream and toothbrush. When she slipped down the hall
to the bathroom, it was empty, so she entered, locked the door behind
her and stood for several minutes under a stinging, cool shower
spray. It soothed her hot, flushed body and cleared her mind and,
after shampooing and soaping all over, she went back to the study
and pulled on a black vest top and a loose, comfortable pair of sky-
blue bermuda shorts.
She'd had time to remember why Matt had come to wake her up, and
went to the kitchen in search of him. The scent of fresh coffee filled
the air as she rounded the corner.
Matt had donned a white T-shirt and was busy at the butcher block
counter, halving grapefruit. Though she had moved silently, his
tawny head lifted and he turned to the doorway.
His expression was very serious, the hazel eyes overshadowed in a
way she had never seen before. They moved over her pale, carved
face and steady gaze, and, with a slight shake of his head, he sighed
and said, 'Sian, I am sorry.'
The deep self-accusation in his voice cut her to the quick, so she cut
back, with verbal stiletto. 'Ooh,' she cooed sweetly, 'regrets so soon?
That doesn't augur well for any future visits, does it, darling?'
His head reared back. He stared at her narrowly. 'Are you all right?'
She gave him a tight, sour smile and strolled into the room. 'I won't
pretend that I'm not—disturbed.'
He laid down his knife and took a step forward, and stopped dead
when she jerked back in instant reaction. 'Do you know,' he said then,
sounding so very odd, 'that I wouldn't want to hurt you for anything?'
'What's the matter, Matthew,' she mocked, cocking her head to one
side, 'are you afraid I'll break? Going to handle me with kid gloves?
It's a trifle late for that, don't you think?'
He averted his face sharply, nostrils flared, and admitted harshly, 'I
guess I deserved that.'
Her eyes gleamed with the liqueur of excitement. Push him again.
'Humility, no less,' she drawled, and he jerked towards the counter to
hold on to the edge with both hands. 'This is getting fun. If you lie on
the floor, I can kick you some more.'
'For God's sake!' he growled, lowering his head as if in deep labour.
His knuckles were white. 'Why don't I just point out my jugular so
you can lunge for that?'
She took a step closer, hackles raised to the intoxicating sense of
danger. How far was his limit? 'OK by me,' she said insolently,
watching with immense satisfaction his ivory jaw, his goaded eyes.
'Since you feel so obliging.'
Just the tiny neat inclination of his head gave the impression that he
rounded on her like a snarling animal at bay. Nearly there now.
'Watch what you say, lady,' he growled softly. 'You were a willing
participant in that little scene.'
Her eyebrows raised. 'You mean you were in a state to actually
notice?'
He hung his head, bared his strong clenched teeth. He looked
drugged. 'Just what the hell do you want from me?'
Ah, there was the edge. Time to push him over. She shot forward,
slapped a hand on the counter beside his and snapped, 'I wondered
when you'd get around to asking me that!'
'Back off,' he whispered, hazel eyes wide.
'I want to fight,' she told him throatily, and pushed her face into his;
ah, but she'd learned from an expert.
He couldn't help but read the evidence in front of him: the ruthless
glitter of her eyes, the dark colour along her cheek-bones, the angle
of her wand-slim neck that was both taunt and offering. She smiled
sexily, and enunciated in intimate provocation, 'And then I want a
good—hard—rousing -'
He gasped, and whirled, and suddenly they were together, holding
each other in a tight, bruising hug. Her head fell back as she smirked
at him. He shook her, his eyes ablaze, and she reached up to cover
those hazel orbs with one hand that slipped, and stroked his darkened
cheek, and his mouth fell ravening on to hers. He thrust his tongue,
and she suckled it, and he crushed her aching breasts with shaking
hands, and she writhed against him in fierce ecstasy.
Then they heard doors open and close, the distant sound of the
shower starting in the hall bathroom.
They leaped apart as if scalded, and ended up at opposite ends of the
kitchen. She stared at his back as he presented it to her. He gripped
his head with both hands and hissed, 'Did I ever say I liked your
friends? I hate them, so passionately -'
The sound of Jane's sleepy voice came down the hall, '—don't know
what time it is. Somebody's awake, though. I can smell the coffee.'
By the time Jane emerged on the scene, Matt was back at the cutting
board, while she was busy pulling margarine, bacon and a carton of
eggs from the refrigerator. Such a bland and domestic scene, but the
margarine fell on the floor from her nerveless fingers, and Matt, she
noticed, did not cut any more grapefruit, but spun one half in
repeated circles.
'Good morning, sleepyhead,' he said to Jane without looking at her.
He almost sounded normal.
Jane blinked like an owl and yawned noisily. 'God, you both look
disgustingly alert. How long have you been up?'
'Forever,' muttered Matthew in despair.
Sian walked drunkenly to the stove, her arms full. 'Not long,' she said
to her friend. 'I just took a shower. Want an egg?'
'Mmm, please. I'm going to jump in Matt's shower first, if his water-
heater will hold up with both going.'
He growled, 'It'll stay hot.' Sian was laughing like a crazy woman,
and he shot her a speaking glare.
'I'll bring you in a cup of coffee, then I'll cook your breakfast,' she
offered, wiping damp hands on a towel and reaching for the cups in
the cupboard.
'Isn't she wonderful?' murmured Jane affectionately to Matt. 'I just
love her to bits.'
His knife clattered as he threw it into the sink. 'Oh, she's peachy, all
right.'
She slammed the cupboard shut with a resounding bang, and this
time he laughed. With a pained wince Jane left the noisy pair.
Soon Steven and Joshua were lured into the kitchen by the aromatic
smell of bacon sizzling under the grill, and buttery eggs frying, and
Sian was kept busy cooking for everyone for the next half-hour or so,
until Jane claimed the skillet and made her sit down to eat.
Jane and Sian decided to go shopping that morning, which none of
the men seemed too keen to go along with, so they arranged to meet
for lunch. The group parted in the street; Sian watched as Matt
strolled away with Joshua and Steven.
In the strong sunlight, he looked casual and relaxed. Joshua turned to
say something to him, at which he shrugged. Then before they
disappeared from sight around the nearby corner, he stared back at
the girls, shading his gaze with one hand.
She turned quickly back to Jane, who had asked her a question.
'That's fine with me,' she said, having no idea what it was she had
agreed to.
'Then Marshall Fields it is,' said the blonde with satisfaction. 'After
all, they're such a big department store, they'll have everything under
one roof, and we only have a couple of hours before we meet the
others.'
They saw an empty taxi and hailed it. It promptly slewed across the
lanes, to the annoyance of the other drivers, and whisked them away.
Then, at the store, they browsed through sportswear, lingerie, and the
perfume and accessories counters.
Sian trailed along behind Jane like a ghost, stopping when the other
girl stopped. After she had stood, staring fixedly at a rack of
garments for several minutes, Jane noticed her preoccupation and
came up to her.
'You don't really want to buy that, do you?'
At the doubtful question said softly into her ear, Sian started and
looked about. She was at the edge of the maternity section of
clothing, and the dresses she'd been gazing at were huge tent-like
things designed more for comfort than high fashion.
'God, no!' she exclaimed violently and swung away. 'I was just
thinking, that's all.'
'Oh, thinking, were you?' replied Jane wisely. 'I'm relieved. For a
moment there, I thought you might be in love.'
'With those?' She looked comically horrified. Jane merely raised her
eyebrows, and she hunched one defensive shoulder and sidled over to
a display of scarves, running the shimmering, patterned material
through her fingers. The silence was eloquent, and too prolonged.
To break it, she said belligerently, 'Well, what if I am in love?'
'With the maternity dresses?' Jane assumed astonishment. Sian's
breath whistled inwards, a high, beleaguered whine, and the blonde
relented. 'Honey, I'm sorry. I won't tease any more.'
She lifted her chin. 'Doesn't matter. I'm not, anyway. In love, I mean.'
'Of course you're not,' Jane soothed.
Her fingers rubbed on the scarf, back and forth, back and forth. 'After
all, I've only known him a week.'
'Not at all a reasonable time schedule for falling in love,' her friend
agreed. 'And he did save your life.'
She was outraged and befuddled. 'What the hell does that have to do
with anything?'
'Oh...' the blonde girl waved vaguely '... saviour infatuation, or
something.'
'I happen to think that what Matt did that day said a lot about the
man!' Sian bristled, glaring at her friend. 'He acted in a selfless and
courageous manner, putting the boy's and my safety before his own!
He was gentle, and considerate, and competent, and attentive and—
and—oh, God.'
'Yes, love?'
Sian dragged the scarf to her face and hid in it. The rack on which the
scarf was hooked clattered to the counter, and attracted the attention
of a sales clerk, who hurried over. 'I am in love with him, aren't I?'
she whispered.
Jane said gently, 'Yes, love.'
'That makes it sound so simple,' she said to the scarf.
'It sounds simple enough, but even simple things aren't always the
easy ones.' She lifted her head, and Jane pried her fingers from the
scarf to hand it back to the disapproving clerk. The clerk scowled at
Sian, who smiled back at her bewilderedly.
Jane guided her through the department store and out to the street. It
was nearly one o'clock, so they went to meet the others in a
fashionable brasserie that had high French windows along the front
which opened to a wide expanse of pavement where tables and chairs
were set in a continental style. The men were already relaxing outside
with cold drinks.
Sian could feel Matt's thoughtful, brooding gaze on her but, in an