Cutler - Midnight Whipsers - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"I figured since you've been through considerable pain yourself, you'd understand," he said.
"I do."
"1 gotta grease this truck," he declared. "It's due. In case Charlotte asks after me," he added.
"We'll tell her," I said. Gavin took my hand and we headed back to the house.
Charlotte met us in the entry way and told us Jefferson had been so tired from his hard day's work, he fell asleep on the sofa.
"And Homer carried him up to bed again," she added. No matter how gentle and sweet Homer seemed, I couldn't help being worried and hurried upstairs with Gavin right behind me.
We found Jefferson fast asleep in his bed. He was dressed in his nights.h.i.+rt and the blanket was tucked in neatly just under his chin. Homer startled us, sitting quietly in the corner of the room in the dark.
"I was just watching him to be sure he was okay," Homer explained. "Until you got here," he added.
"Thank you, Homer. That was very nice of you."
"I best be getting home myself if we're gonna rise early to paint the barn." He started away.
"Good night, Homer," I called.
"Night," he said and slipped away as quickly as a shadow under the moonlight.
"He's all right," Gavin said when I went to Jefferson's side and stared down at his angelic little face. I couldn't help but smile recalling what Daddy used to say: "Jefferson's an angel at least eight hours a day because that's when he's asleep." Gavin came up beside me to whisper in my ear.
"How would you like to try that lake Luther spoke about? It's hot enough tonight, hotter than a henhouse in heat," he added. I felt a hot blush stain my cheeks.
"We'll take some towels, take a lantern to light the way," he continued.
"Jefferson might wake up and be frightened," I said weakly.
"He's not waking up so fast and he knows where he's at by now. Come on," Gavin said. "We earned some fun."
"All right," I said. "I'll get the towels."
Even though we weren't slinking about, I couldn't help feeling we were sneaking of in the night.
Gavin didn't light the lantern until we were a dozen yards or so from the house. We found the path Luther had described and followed it over a small hill. There below us was the lake, inky and still in the darkness, but the water catching the stars here and there on its surface.
We walked down to the dock and took off our shoes and socks to test the water.
"It's cold," I complained.
"Only until you get in, I bet," Gavin said. "Are we gonna go skinny dippin'?" he asked. "I can put out the lamp, if that will make you feel more comfortable."
"No," I said quickly. "You should leave it on."
"Fine with me," he said and started to undress.
My heart was pounding. We had slept side by side naked to the bone the night before, but we had been in the darkness. Now our bodies glistened in the light of the lantern under the stars. Despite how intimate we had been, I couldn't help but be bashful and yet terribly excited. If my heart beat any faster, I would surely faint, I thought. Gavin was naked, his back to me, and I had only slipped out of my skirt.
He turned and looked at me.
"I'll go in first," he said and lowered himself off the edge of the dock. Then he splashed into the water.
"It's great," he called back. He was only a dark, silhouetted head. "Come on, bashful."
"Don't tease me or I'll turn around and run back," I warned.
"My lips are sealed," he said quickly and kicked up his feet, churning water as he swam backwards.
I unb.u.t.toned my blouse and then slipped off my bra. By the time I stepped out of my panties, I was covered with goose b.u.mps. I dipped my feet in the water again and looked for Gavin, but he was gone.
I didn't hear him swimming, nor did I see his head bobbing about.
"Gavin?"
Fireflies danced over the water, their lemon-colored tails flas.h.i.+ng on and off. In the branches of trees leaning over the water, birds twittered sleepily in their nests. A soft breeze played in my hair and made some strands tickle my forehead and the tops of my cheeks. All the way across the lake, an owl hooted.
"Gavin, where are you?" I called in a loud whisper. "Gavin, you're scaring me," I said and then he suddenly popped out from under the dock and seized my ankles. I screamed and fell forward into the water, the shock of it making me squeal and scream some more. He laughed and quickly embraced me to keep my head from going under.
"You all right?" he asked, laughing.
"That was cruel, Gavin Longchamp," I cried.
"You were taking so long, I nearly fell asleep waiting," he said. "Besides, now you're in and isn't it wonderful?"
"I'm not speaking to you," I said petulantly.
"All right," he declared, pulling away from me.
"I'll go under and stay under until you do." And with that he submerged. I waited. it seemed like minutes.
"Gavin?"
The water was so still, its surface barely lapping against the sides of the dock.
"Gavin?"
"Does this mean you're talking to me again?" he said right behind me.
I spun around on him.
"Gavin. You're terrible. I was so frightened."
"If you refused to speak to me forever and ever, Christie, I would stay under," he said softly and then leaned forward to press his lips to mine. Under the water, I felt his hands find my waist and slowly draw my body closer and closer to his until our thighs grazed. I felt him harden between my legs and pushed myself off, both frightened and shocked by the speed with which his manliness announced itself.
"Hey," he cried, laughing.
"We're here to swim," I declared and stroked away. He laughed again and came after me. Even though he could catch me any time he wanted, he remained half a foot or so away, swimming behind or alongside. I went back toward the dock until I could stand. Then he caught up and took my hands into his.
"It's great, isn't it? Luther was right," he said.
"So refres.h.i.+ng."
"Yes, but it's cold enough to wake you up all over."
"All over?" he said and brought his hands to my b.r.e.a.s.t.s. Then he drew me to him and we kissed again, only this time when I felt him harden against me, I didn't pull away. We kissed again and again. Naked, under the stars, every part of me felt more alive, more aware than ever. All my senses were sharper, keener.
Our kisses were more electric; my b.r.e.a.s.t.s tingled and my knees weakened. Suddenly, Gavin lifted me into his arms. I buried my face against his cool, wet chest and let him carry me out of the lake.
"Oh Christie," he whispered after he set me down gently on our towels on the dock, "I can't stop myself from wanting you."
"We can't do it again, Gavin. We've got to be careful. I could get pregnant."
"I know," he said, but he didn't lift himself away from me. He continued to plant kiss after kiss on my face, on my neck, on my shoulders and b.r.e.a.s.t.s.
When he kissed my nipples, I moaned and closed my eyes.
We're losing control, I thought, but the realization didn't put enough panic in me to push Gavin away. I was hoping he would know when to stop. Just a little more, I thought. We can do just a little more and still rescue ourselves from each other.
"I love you, Christie," he whispered. "I love every part of you: every dimple . . ." He kissed my cheeks. "Every strand of hair." He pressed his lips to my head and then took my hands to his mouth. "The tips of your fingers. Your b.r.e.a.s.t.s . . . your stomach . .
"Gavin!" I cried. "If we don't stop, we won't stop." I seized hold of his shoulder and kept him from going any lower. He rested his cheek against the small of nay stomach.
"I can hear your heart pounding," he said.
"Your skin feels so cool."
He moved himself up so he could kiss me on the lips again and then we lay there beside each other, both of us breathing hard and fast. He cradled my head in his arm and we lay on our backs looking up at the stars.
"You're not cold, are you?" he asked.
"When you look up at the night sky like this, you can feel the earth moving," he said. "Can't you?"
"Yes."
"If you try hard enough, you can imagine yourself falling into the sky, into the stars," he said.
"Gavin," I whispered, turning to him. "I want you to . . I mean, I love you, I really do, but I keep thinking about Luther and Charlotte and what happened and what could happen to us."
"I know. It's all right," he said. "After all, I'm the one who's supposed to be the realist, right? I'm supposed to be the sensible one who knows we can't live in a dreamworld forever. Only, when I'm with you, Christie," he said, turning to face me, "I want to throw all logic and reality away and live in dreams. I don't care about anything else."
"You'd better care, Gavin Longchamp. I've been depending on you to be the sensible one up until now."
He laughed.
"Okay," he said. "I'll be anything you want me to be." He sat up. "We'd better get dressed and go back," he said, looking out over the water.
Silently, we dried our bodies and put on our clothes. Then Gavin took my hand and we started up the gravel pathway toward the house. At the top of the hill, we turned and looked back at the lake. It seemed unreal, more like a mirror than a body of water. For a while the trees, the stars, every cloud pa.s.sing lazily above it was captured and locked in its reflection.
That was the way the lake held onto its memories, I thought. And now it had the memory of us as well: two young people struggling to understand a world that could be so beautiful and so cruel. Forever and ever the lake would hear our laughter and recall our warm desire in the lap of its waters. Perhaps it heard our heartbeats.
Gavin lifted the lantern so the light would fall ahead of us. We followed the finger of illumination that pointed our way back to the house, both of us still clinging to that coc.o.o.n of t.i.tillation. The memory of our bodies tingling took its good time to fail back into the vault behind our hearts. Both of us were in such a daze, neither of us noticed the strange vehicle parked in the driveway until we were practically on top of it.
"Whose car is this?" Gavin wondered aloud and lifted the lantern so the light would wash the darkness off all of it. Neither of us recognized the car.
"I don't know, Gavin."
"Whoever it is has come some distance," he said, nodding toward the license plates. "They're from Maryland."
"Jefferson," I said, suddenly afraid for him.
"Let's get inside quickly."
We hurried up the walk and the front steps, practically charging into the house. The moment we walked into the entry way, I heard familiar laughter and then the laughter of a stranger, a man. It was coming from the sitting room on the right.
Gavin and I stepped into the doorway and Aunt Fern turned toward us, her hands on her hips, her face molded into her characteristic smirk. Her tall, blond boyfriend sat on the sofa with his legs crossed, smoking coolly, the corners of his mouth lifted so sharply they cut into his cheeks. Charlotte was sitting on a ha.s.sock, her hands clasped and pressed against her chest, a look of worry on her face, and Luther stood by the chair behind her looking very unhappy, his face ashen.
"Aunt Fern!" I finally cried.
"Well, well, well, if it isn't the princess and her little prince," she said, stepping toward us. Her eyes drank us in quickly from head to toe and came back to our faces sharply. She saw the towels in my hand.
"And where were you two?" she demanded.
"We went for a swim," Gavin said quickly. Her smirk folded into a licentious smile and she turned to her boyfriend.
"Hear that, Morty, they went for a swim." Her boyfriend's smile duplicated her own. "Skinny dipping is more like it. My, my, my, what have you two been up to?"
"Nothing," Gavin said sharply. "We just went for a swim."
"Sure." Her smile disappeared and was quickly replaced by a sharp, hard glare. "I wasn't born yesterday, you know. You two might fool everyone else, but don't think for a moment you can pull the wool over these eyes. They've seen too much."
"That's for sure," her boyfriend quipped, smiling. He had a very nasal-sounding voice. Now that I took a longer look at him, I saw his eyes were rather close together and his lips were thin and long under a sharp nose. I thought of all the men Aunt Fern had had as boyfriends, this man was the least attractive.
He had big ears and a long neck and his cheeks sank in like the cheeks of an old man.
"Shut up, Morty," she replied without taking her eyes off us. Then she smiled again. "Morty and I were on our way to Florida to Morty's beach house when I had an idea you two might have come here, and decided we should take a side trip. Sure enough, I was right.
"You two have got everyone wringing their hands back home, you know. Uncle Philip even made a personal visit to see me because he thought you might have come to me. Fat chance of that, I told him.
So," she said, s.h.i.+fting her weight from one foot to the other and bringing her hands to her hips again, "why'd you run away?"
I would never tell her the truth, I thought. If anything, she might just laugh. It was the sort of thing she would be happy to hear.
"Never mind," she said quickly. "You don't have to tell me why. I can see it written on both your faces," she said, looking from Gavin to me and back to Gavin. "You've gone beyond spin the bottle."