Authors: Amanda Carpenter
swiftly, and she saw something burning at the back of his eyes. He
said, very low, 'Get over here.' His hand snaked out, grabbed hold of
her upper arm, and dragged her to him.
He held her head, fingers pressing their imprint against her skull as
he passionately took her mouth. She moaned involuntarily as his
tongue drove deep, without preliminaries. Deeper, and yet deeper,
driving into her with frustration, with something impelling him on,
with his hands shifting her weight uncomfortably over the gearstick
so that she was sitting in his lap, off-balance, and clutching at him.
Her head now lay nestled against his shoulder and her weight was
carrying her back. She was staring blindly up at the car's ceiling as
his mouth left hers, and he emitted an audible, small groan as if it
were torn from him, slanting his mouth hungrily along her throat as
his hand dragged away the shoulder of her wrap and dress. She was
barely aware of her hand sinking deep into his hair as he found her
breast and suckled excitedly. All his muscles were rigid, and
throbbing hard. His whole body radiated his tension, bewilderingly.
This wasn't the man who was so cool and controlled last night. This
was the man of last weekend, exuding unleashed, powerful passion.
This was the man who scared and excited her half to death. Her head
came up and leaned into the straining, bent muscles in his neck as she
whimpered, without even realising it, from the force of her confused
emotions and desires.
He stopped gradually, leaning his face into her bare chest, breathing
harsh and deep. His muscles relaxed, and he raised his head,
expression blank, intent. He was in full control once again, and she
didn't know if she was disappointed or not. He cradled her briefly
against him, and only then seemed to realise how awkward her
position was, and he helped her back to her side of the car, waiting
until she had straightened her appearance.
Then he walked her to the door, saying quietly, 'This week is going to
be hectic for me, so I can't say exactly when, but I'll give you a call.'
'Sure,' she said, and she hadn't meant it to come out so sarcastically.
'I will,' he insisted, staring into her eyes hard. He looked troubled and
seemed about to say something when he caught himself up and shook
his head, slight and quick, as if impatient with himself. 'I promise.'
As there was nothing left to say, he pressed her already swollen lips
with another hard kiss, and sprinted back to the car. Her fingers went
to the cool metal of the front doorknob, and she dragged herself
inside, knowing full well she had no intention of taking the call he'd
been so adamant about promising.
SHE basked in the mellow golden sun's rays, clad in her briefest
swimsuit and stretched comfortably on a lounge chair, with
sunglasses perched on her nose and a frown between her brows. It
was a valiant effort to concentrate on her book. Several more, brand
new, were stacked on the grass beside her .
Thursday already, and he hadn't called. Perhaps he never would.
Well. She had resolved not to take the call, anyway, if he did. She
had also changed her mind half a dozen times in the last four days.
He wouldn't come up this weekend, without encouragement. That
was best.
The problem was, if she had no intention of taking his call, why did
she refuse all social invitations just to stay home? And there was the
party Roxanne's mother was giving on Saturday. She had already
been asked by several of her acquaintances, and she'd turned them all
down. She was a fool for expecting him to fly down to Virginia. It
had to be a clean break, with Pierce. With some men, it didn't have to
be that way, but with him, it was different, as it had always been
different.
Her heart was tangled into knots over him, and she didn't know how
to get herself out of it.
Lazy movement from her left made her look up. Ricky strolled her
way, in shorts and tennis shoes and nothing else, and he flopped
beside her in the grass. 'Whew! My muscles are melting.' He turned
his head and squinted up at her. 'You don't need those sunglasses.
Hand them over.'
'Take a hike,' she muttered serenely, turning a page in her book. He
grinned, and then peered closely at her paperback.
Suddenly he was all concern, as he came up on both knees and
pressed the fingers of one hand against her forehead. 'Do you feel
sick? Good God, I think you have a fever.'
She shrugged his hand away laughingly. 'What's got into you? Cut it
out!'
'I think I should be the one to ask that!' he retorted. He shifted to the
other side of her chair, and picked up her stack of books. 'You're
seriously reading this stuff, for fun? Kierkegaard, Pierre Teilhard de
Chardin's
Hymn qf the Universe,
ye gods! Karl Marx, Franz Kafka—
what has got into you?'
'Just because I've graduated from college doesn't mean my education
has to stop,' she said waspishly, and gave up trying to concentrate on
her book. She closed it with a snap, bringing Ricky's attention to it. It
was Kafka's
The Metamorphosis,
and he picked it up from her lap to
leaf through it.
'You're not just skimming, are you?'
'Of course not! I'm close to finished with that one.'
'Have you read any of the others?'
'Not yet. That's the first I've read. I picked it because it's the shortest,'
she confessed, with a grin.
He laughed, and handed it back to her. 'Well, is it any good? What
happens?'
She shrugged. 'Some guy turns into a bug.' She listened to his snort,
and then she became serious, picking up the book and fiddling with it
absently. 'It actually isn't as stupid as it sounds. It's bizarre, certainly,
but very haunting.' Her voice turned dreamy. 'Think about it for a
moment. Changing into something new, something alien, something
different. Your life is changed forever. Your family and friends shun
you. You pine away from lack of proper nourishment, and then
you—die.'
'Mmm. But is that a realistic portrayal? I mean, not of course in the
physical sense, but mentally people change all the time.'
She shook her head slowly. 'No. People grow, but to
change
, Ricky,
is something entirely different. It's like taking a leap sideways,
leaving accepted patterns of behaviour, making people realise that
their concept of you is no longer accurate. Think of what it would do
to your life. It's an utterly terrifying thought.'
Silence, settling over them and the scene like a sprinkling of
windblown pollen. A bird winged by with the enthusiasm of a mad
bomber. An immense grasshopper bounced his way across the
immaculate lawn. 'But Caprice,' said Ricky quietly, 'unless someone
changes from Doctor Jekyll to Mr Hyde, it's perfectly acceptable.
Nobody changes so completely that there's nothing left in them that is
recognisable. It might even be for the good.'
* * *
consequences. She longed to see him. She couldn't get last Sunday
evening out of her mind. The memory of his mouth on her breast
nipple stirred her to sexual excitement; his passion brought her a
wave of heat. She had never been so tugged by physical sensation
and emotional desire. They were one and the same, intertwined so
that she couldn't distinguish between them. It boiled down to pure,
unadulterated lust, and she winced away from the thought, disturbed.
She wanted his mouth, his hands, and his affection. She was
beginning to want it past all thought of future happiness.
But then he didn't call, and by late' evening he still hadn't called,
leaving her to stew in a welter of feverish emotions. Just as suddenly
as she'd decided to take his call, she swung back to refusing it in a fit
of pique. Nobody could be that busy. He could have called even for a
minute or two any evening during the week. She didn't know what he
was thinking or planning, but she'd had enough. This prolonged,
intensified anticipation was extremely wearying and certainly not
pleasurable.
Saturday morning, she was dressed in casual shorts and tank top,
sipping listlessly at her coffee while trying to decide what to do with
herself before the party, when Liz walked into the dining room.
'You've got a phone call,' said the housekeeper.
Her cup went to her saucer with a cacophonic clatter. 'Who -' she
began, but decided she didn't want to know. Her jaw tightened. 'I'm
not home.'
'Are you sure?' asked Liz, clearly puzzled. 'He said you were
expecting it.'
She pushed her coffee away, and jerkily stood. 'I'm positive. I'm not
talking to anyone today.' Ignoring the other woman's speculative
stare, she stalked out of the room. She stopped dead, turned back to
take the call and, cursing, turned around again.
'Before, I had my doubts, but this definitely clinches it,' said Ricky
from the stairs. He descended the rest of the way. 'You're going crazy
so fast, you can't keep up with yourself. Like spinning in circles?'
'Oh, shut up!' she said savagely.
He pretended to be frightened and drew back from her with a
shudder. 'Well! I was going to ask you if you wanted to play tennis,
but you might bite my head off, instead of answering in a civilised
manner.'
'Always knew you were a coward,' she grumbled, with a partial
return of good humour.
'Like to play tennis?'
'Not really. Oh, I guess so. There's nothing else to do!'
'A split personality, forming before my very eyes,' he marvelled.
Then, sagely, 'They're quite rare, you know. I'll write a book about
you, and astonish the psychology world.'
'Get the racquets, smart ass,' she said, grinning reluctantly.. 'I'm going
to plaster you all over the court.'
'Bloodthirsty to boot!' he exclaimed, delightedly.
Ricky made her laugh with his clowning, and she was nearly light-
hearted, tossing her tennis ball up in their air while sending an evil
glare to her unaffected opponent. Then she glanced casually over
towards the house, as she was facing in that direction, and froze into
rigidity.
Pierce was dressed in faded jeans, tennis shoes, and a light blue,
sleeveless T-shirt. She'd never seen him so carelessly dressed. His
hair was windblown and in glossy disarray, and he was staring
intently at her as he strolled her way.
She abandoned her serving pose and stood with bent, averted head
and grim expression as she bounced the ball hard upon the court,
catching it with a swipe of her hand. 'What's up?' called Ricky,
obviously not seeing Pierce yet.
'We'll play later,' she said shortly, and watched as his head turned
towards Pierce, and then back to herself.
'Yeah, sure,' he replied, shifting from foot to foot in uncharacteristic
uncertainty. He sent her one more questioning look, and then silently
headed bade for the house.
Pierce approached in an indolent manner, hands is pockets, and then
looked about him appreciatively, eyes squinted against the glare of
the sun. She avoided meeting his eyes. 'You didn't have to quit
playing,' he said. 'I'd have waited.' She didn't say anything, feeling his
quick, sharp regard. 'Of course, you didn't have to lie, either.'
'Would you have accepted that I didn't want to talk to you?' she
retorted, striding over to the edge of the court to throw down her
racquet and the tennis ball. When she glanced back over her
shoulder, she was amazed to find that he didn't appear angry.
'I don't know. You didn't give me the chance,' he pointed out, his
gaze steady. At her raised, sardonic brow he relented. 'All right.
Probably not.'
An awkward silence fell over them both. She longed to walk away,
but didn't know where she would go, for he would certainly follow.
She longed to turn around and greet him with the pleasure she
wouldn't let herself feel. What she did was to say, 'I didn't know
you'd be coming this weekend.'
'If you'd taken my call, you would have,' he retorted, the snappiness
revealing at last his frustration. He walked over to her side and stared
down into her rebellious, miserable expression with a frown between