Here to Stay (4 page)

Read Here to Stay Online

Authors: Suanne Laqueur

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Women's Fiction, #Contemporary Women, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Contemporary Fiction, #Sagas

BOOK: Here to Stay
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THE NEXT MORNING THEY slept in until ten. Then they had Warrior’s Breakfast. Daisy made bacon and fried potatoes and sunny side up eggs. She toasted half a loaf of raisin pecan bread and filled her biggest cups with strong tea. The kitchen was chilly, so they sat kitty-corner at the small table in the living room, nearer to the fireplace. Their ankles twined beneath the feast.

“Happy?” she asked.

He was too happy to answer. He pushed his plate away and pulled her into his lap. His arms wrapped around her slender body and he laid his trusting head on her heart, held her tight while she fed him the last crispy bits of potato, the burnt buttery raisins and the toast crusts. His hand worked its way up the back of her shirt or inside a pant leg, caressing her softness.

“Let’s go back to bed,” she said. “Let’s lie around in bed all day. Sleep and make love. We’ll only get up to pee or eat.”

“Let’s do that,” he said into her neck, his hand moving slower underneath her clothes.

They stayed where they were, kissing longer and deeper. She swung a leg over to straddle him. He pulled her shirt off, gathered her breasts in his hands, hungry for skin, to suck and lick and fill his mouth with her response.

She slid his shirt over his head, slid her hand down his heaving chest and trembling stomach and into his pants. His erection rose up long and hard into her palm and pulled back along the length of his spine, drawing him in both directions, a taut wire. He jerked and strained and crackled beneath her. His fingers slid into her mouth, then took the savory wet down between her legs. Past the warm pink and deeper to the hot red. Up to his knuckles in her velvet depths.

“Want to go upstairs?” she whispered.

“No,” he said, pulling her pants down her hips. “I want you right here.”

He kicked his own sweats free and turned her away from him. She pulled on the clip at the back of her head and let her hair fall past her bare shoulders. Reaching behind to help guide him in, she settled down snug in his lap.

“God,” she said, hunched a moment over the table, her fingers white at its edge. “Nobody fucks me like you.”

Through the muck and mire of emotion collected in his chest came a sword of masculine affirmation. A smug, bright blade cutting through the fog to show the sunshine of his maleness, bright and powerful and blinding.

“Nobody,” he said, his voice hoarse with longing, his hands sure and strong, drawing her to lie back on him. “Nobody will ever fuck you like me.”

And there in a wooden chair, with Daisy sprawled back on his chest, her knees open, her arm hooked around his head, her mouth wide and wanton, he finally felt the needle of his sexual compass swing around and find its true North. His wet, syrupy fingers felt the length of him gliding into her and he remembered. Remembered what it was like to throw out the hook and feel it
dig
into her edge. The tension of the line steady and perfect as he reeled her in to him. The tectonic plate of
her
rumbling into the plateau of
him
and the buckling heave of
us
as climax erupted like a new mountain chain. Coming like a cataclysm, a spine of jagged rock thrusting up into her. She went limp and liquid in his arms, the back of her neck damp on his shoulder. A nearly-silent scream through her open mouth and his eyes blurred at her beauty
oh, mine, you are mine, you are me, I am you, and we and us and this, only this
.

I am home.

Home by the fire and the feast with his naked lover in his lap. Plates rattling, napkins and forks clattering to the floor and the cat fleeing for more civilized company. The pendant light swinging over the table, throwing them in and out of shadow.

“Now let’s go back to bed,” he said. They abandoned dishes and clothing and went up to sleep like death, wrapped up in each other.

“Is this real?” one kept asking.

“This is real,” the other would answer.

They loved and napped the afternoon away, falling into each other, talking afterward and then falling back asleep.

“I keep nodding off,” Daisy said. “It’s crazy.”

“Who knew getting back together would be so exhausting,” Erik said, yawning.

“Do you feel all right?” she asked. “I mean…overall?”

“I don’t have one word for what I feel,” he said. “It’s a thousand things at the same time.”

“I know. I’m so happy and my throat has such a lump in it,” she said. “I can’t believe you’re here.” She slid closer to him then moved to lie on top of him, her heart against his. “I can’t believe you came back to me.”

He folded his arms around her, dug his hand into the tangle of her hair. “I had to.”

“I’m sorry,” she whispered. “I’m sorry about what I did.”

“Me too,” he said, a little catch in his voice. He ran the back of his hand over his eyes once, then again and pressed it still. “I’m so sorry.”

So the time passed in sleep, sex and apology.

“I’m sorry,” one whispered during lovemaking, coming together in joy and sorrow.

“I’m sorry, too,” the other whispered.

BY DAY FOUR, they were both chafed below the belt. Sore and stinging, they agreed to get out of bed, get dressed and cool it a while before they did irreparable damage.

“You look hot,” Daisy said. “Boxer briefs are the best thing to happen to men’s underwear.”

Standing in his best things, Erik swallowed, staring at the sight of Daisy in nothing but a pair of pink boy shorts. She was stepping into her jeans, pulling them up over her hips.

In college she was slender as a blade, with a ballet dancer’s uncompromisingly narrow silhouette. Clothing further diminished her. She was five feet five but looked taller and fuller when she was naked. Unclothed or not, she fit to Erik like a made-to-measure dream. The top of her head rested against the bottom of his chin. His arms could wrap neatly around her body like the bow on a present. Her small breasts and tiny butt cleaved to the curves of his hands. Her frame was spare yet it possessed a wicked, seductive strength.

With her performing career behind her, she’d gained soft weight in her breasts and a leaner weight in her legs and hips. She was sculpted and lithe, like a young jaguar. Mouth-wateringly beautiful from every angle.

“Stop staring at my ass,” she said.

“I can’t,” he said. “You never had an ass before.”

“Too bad you missed me in the nineties,” she said, opening drawers. “When I was wearing thongs all the time.”

Groaning at the visual, he sat on the bed, palm coming to catch his brow. “I am such an idiot.”

She laughed, hooking her bra backward around her waist.

“Tell me you still wear them occasionally?” he said.

“Here.” Bra fixed, she stretched a black thong around her fingers and sling-shotted it into his face. “You can take that home with you. Souvenir.”

He threw it back at her. “Wear it later so I can take it off you. Then I’ll take it home. Do you know nothing about souvenirs?”

Dressed, she picked up his shirt from the floor and walked over to him, turning it right side out. She sat across his knees and pulled the neck hole over his head. Kissed him as she fed one arm, then the other through the sleeves.

“Come on,” she said, running her fingers through his hair, messing it up. “Off the bed. Out.”

Barbegazi had three bedrooms upstairs. Daisy slept in the largest with its adjoining bathroom. The second was a guest room. The third had a barre and mirror along one wall, and her desk and file cabinets in a corner. The windows were uncovered, allowing bright, southwestern sun to stream in and throw two large rectangles on the hardwood floor.

“Is this where the magic happens?” Erik said, running his hand along the barre.

A corner of Daisy’s mouth went up, then she pointed across the hall to her bedroom. “All magic happens in there, babe.”

Smiling, he pointed at a set of double doors in one wall. “What’s behind those?”

“Ah. A tiny bit of magic,” she said, crossing the room and opening the doors. They revealed a galley room, no more than four feet wide. Ostensibly a closet, but Erik saw no clothing rods or shelves. Just the long narrow space with a porthole window at its end, sectioned like a compass rose, looking out through the branches of a tree to the lake.

“You don’t store anything in here?” Erik asked.

She was looking out the window. “No. The attic has tons of space with a cedar closet. I was thinking it would make a sweet place for one of Lucky and Will’s kids. A little hideaway. You could put a tiny desk in it. Or even build some kind of bed under the eaves.”

“Absolutely,” Erik said, tapping on the plaster walls. The studs were right where they should be. It wouldn’t be hard.

She squeezed by him and took his hand. “Come on, I’ll show you something else.”

Outside the kitchen door, a concrete foundation was along the back of the house, facing the lake. But nothing was yet built. Erik noticed it yesterday during his walkabout but forgot to ask her about it. Sex made him stupid that way.

“Was this supposed to be something?”

“A screened-in porch,” Daisy said. “It was their last planned project, but it never got past the foundation. They left me the plans they had drawn up. It was going to be pretty spectacular.” She gestured to one side of the kitchen door. “All this side would be a table and chairs area so you could eat out here in summer without being bitten up. Then over on that side, wicker furniture. Three ceiling fans along the length of it.”

“Strings of lights around all the windows,” he said, seeing it manifest before his eyes.

“A door out to the yard here,” she said, pretending to open and close one. “A path down to the water. And then on either side, all below, flowers.” Hugging her sides, she paced the length of the concrete slab, tracing imaginary curved beds. “Drifts of color.”

“Daisies,” he said.

She grinned up at him. “Of course.”

He looked out at the icy lake, squinting into the past. “Being on the water like this, it reminds me of where I grew up.”

“That’s right, you were on the river.”

He nodded. She waited to hear more, but his train of thought sat idling in the station and he shook his head. “I don’t know where I was going with that.”

Shivering, Daisy came back inside and shut the kitchen door.

He folded his arms around her. “What should we do?”

“I need a Christmas tree,” she said.

A window shade snapped up in his heart, flooding him with joy. “Yes, you do.”

They took a ride. Sunglasses on, music blasting, they drove up Route 101 toward Fredericton, singing their faces off. At Heighleau Farms, Daisy picked a tall Douglas fir and Erik cut it down. As it was wrapped in netting and trussed with twine, Daisy bought an apple pie, chatting in French with the proprietor as she paid.

Erik had been hearing a lot more French out here in the rural areas of New Brunswick. But even when they drove closer to Fredericton to get some lunch, his ears continued to pick up the language. In parking lots, on the streets, on overheard cell phone conversations. Hostesses, waitresses and bartenders trilling a double greeting, “Bonjour. Hello.” Always the bonjour first.

“This must be a treat for you,” he said, as they sat in a booth at a café. “Speaking French all the time.”

“It’s not the French I grew up with,” she said, laughing. “I call home and my mother is appalled at my accent.”

He spun his spoon on the tabletop. “What did your parents say when you told them I called?” He looked up at her. “I mean, I assume you told them.”

She set her chin on the heel of her hand. “Are you worried when you see him Pop will sic the proverbial dogs on you?”

“Yes.” He smiled. “But I like ‘when’.”

Her other hand slid across to twine with his. “They’re happy for me,” she said. “For us.” But then her fingers were tight between his and he saw some of his own unease mirrored in her eyes. “What did your mother think of this trip?” she asked.

He let go of her hand and slid his palm along her cheek. “She told me love doesn’t give a shit about geography. It’s not a thing you can abandon at will. She said what I had with you deserves a second chance. I should come here and take it. And then we’d both be free.”

She smiled, but her lips were pressed too hard to make it much.

His hand kept caressing her face. “It was long ago,” he said softly. “And everyone sees a lot of things we didn’t see back then. Including our parents.”

She nodded. “So many young relationships… They exist in a vacuum. A little self-centered bubble. We were never like that. Do you know what I mean? To me, it always felt our little love story was part of a larger epic. Which sounds really smug and big-headed except so many people told me when you and I broke up… It broke a lot of other things.” She leaned against his palm. “Not that us speaking again is going to fix the world, but…”

He nodded, adoring her. “It’s going to make my little world feel a lot better,” he said. “I know what you mean. What you did hurt my mother as well. And what I did hurt your parents. And I hurt Will bad. I really need to make time to talk to him alone. Or listen.”

She took a deep breath and let it out along with her full, beautiful smile. “We’ll get to it all.”

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