Chapter 11 Holden #2
For Uncle Reg, I bought a new set of golf clubs, and for Aunt Mags, a gift certificate to a two-day retreat at a luxury spa up in the redwoods. Sterile, unemotional gifts that were more of a thank-you for putting up with me these last few months than anything else.
They were departing for Seattle the day before Christmas; I planned to leave the gifts in the living room that morning and hightail it out of the house before they could find me and make a scene.
Shopping done, I stood on the street corner. “River.”
“What was that, sir?” James asked, the leather golf club bag strung over his shoulder.
“Nothing,” I said and spied an independent bookstore across the street. “I’m going to have a peek in there. Why don’t you put the bag in the trunk and meet me in twenty?”
“Yes, sir.”
I crossed into the bookstore that was brightly lit, tables spaced out over hardwood floors and huge floor-to-ceiling shelves lining the walls. The place had that clean, fresh paper-and-ink smell that a bookstore should.
My eye was drawn to a section of reference books with colorful photos.
One with a 1965 red Ford Falcon Sprint on the cover jumped off the table at me.
The book was a glossy collector’s style manual of car restoration.
Not a how-to but a before and after, showing old junkers on their last legs and then the same car, gleaming and healthy.
I shut the book and took it to the register.
“Gift wrap?” the clerk inquired.
I hadn’t worked out how to give River the book except that it had to be done in person. But him tearing open the wrapping paper while I waited would be excruciating.
“No,” I said. “It’s not a gift. It’s just…a thing. Nothing, really.”
The woman raised her eyebrows. “That will be eighty-five dollars for nothing, please.”
A smart-ass. I’d have to remember to come back to this store more often.
James met me on time, back on the sidewalk. “Where to next?”
“I have to drop this off,” I said, hefting the bookstore bag. “Won’t take but a second.”
“Whatever you need, sir.”
“I’m just saying, it’s not a big deal. A quick errand, and then we’re done.”
James frowned. “Is it unprofessional of me to say that you seem nervous?”
“Yes. Highly unprofessional. How dare you.” I ran my hands through my hair. “Have you ever been in love, James?”
“Yes, sir.”
“What’s it like?”
“The sweetest agony. A torture from which you never want to escape.”
“Sounds terrible.”
His eyebrows rose questioningly.
“God, no,” I said, waving my hands. “I’m not capable. I just want to know the warning signs. For…science.”
“The warning signs are part of the thrill, sir,” James said as he opened the car door for me.
“It’s like skiing down a mountain. You’re scared shitless, dodging moguls, the wind whipping through your hair, and adrenaline coursing through your veins.
Before you realize it, you’re at the bottom, and you don’t remember the fear. Only the exhilaration.”
I gaped. “Good grief, James… You’re a romantic.”
“I’ve been told, sir.”
“A question: what happens if, while you’re racing down the slope, you hit an ice patch, go veering off course, and slam into a tree?”
“In that case, you hope the ride was worth it.”
***
I directed James back to the Whitmore residence where he’d driven me months ago on homecoming night. As I did then, I had him park a short distance away to wait for me. I walked toward River’s house under a heavy sky that threatened rain, my nerves lit up like a switchboard.
He might not even be home. Did you think of that? You’re going to leave the book with his dad, perchance? “Hi, Mr. Whitmore. Your son tongue fucked me at school the other day, and now I’m thoroughly ruined. Here’s a car book. Have a nice day.”
Suddenly, I was at the front door and knocking before I could talk myself out of it. River answered.
He had on jeans and a tight-fitting dark green sweater that was smooth over his broad chest and highlighted every muscle in his arms and shoulders. But it was the smile that automatically came over his face when he saw it was me that was my undoing. I felt it in every damn molecule of my body.
River Whitmore is one big warning sign.
“Hey,” he said.
“Hey,” I parroted back.
“You want to come in?”
“Is that wise, given your predicament?”
“My dad and sister are out shopping. Mom’s asleep.”
“Just for a minute. I can’t stay. I have…a lot of stuff to do and…”
Jesus, I was rambling. I never rambled.
River grinned like a bastard and opened the door to let me in, then shut it behind me.
We stood in the wide entry, him on one side, me on the other.
He crossed his arms and leaned against the wall, unnerving me with his relentless good looks.
The long sleeves of his sweater were pushed up, and a large silver watch was strapped around his wrist, making his forearms obscenely sexy.
“I didn’t know if I was going to see you again,” River said, keeping his voice low. “You bailed fast the other day.”
The other day, he said. Casual and plain, as if it hadn’t upheaved my life in every possible way. And maybe his too. His first kiss with a guy.
And it was with me.
My composure returned on a tide of arrogant pride. “I suddenly remembered an urgent appointment and had to run out.” I held out the bag. “This is for you.”
He pushed off the wall, took it, then retreated, both of us staying in our corners while a sucking pull, like a tide, wanted to crash us together again.
River took the book out and let the bag fall. “Holy shit, this is awesome,” he murmured, flipping through the pages. He raised his eyes to mine. “Thank you.”
I tucked my hands into my coat pockets to give them something to do that wasn’t grabbing him. “It’s nothing.”
“It’s not nothing,” he said and tucked it under his arm. “Hold on a sec.”
He left the hall entry and took the stairs up two at a time. I sagged against the wall and scrubbed my hands over my face.
“Leave,” I whispered. “Leave now. Save yourself.”
River came back holding a rectangular box with Montegrappa embossed in gold.
“I didn’t have time to wrap it,” he said, handing it to me and resuming his lean against the opposite wall.
I wondered if he’d had the same aversion about unwrapping gifts while someone watched. If so, it’d be one of the few things we had in common.
He’s the calm. You’re the storm. This is never going to work.
Quickly, I opened the box to another glossy wood box inside.
In that was a Montegrappa fountain pen in deep blue with a gold-plated nib.
The pens weren’t cheap, and the idea that River had spent a few hundred dollars on me brought back that weak-in-the-knees-my-heart-is-going-to-burst feeling I’d had in the band room.
“Hold this for me, would you?”
I shoved the box into River’s hands, made fists in his sweater, and kissed him. I kissed him hard, driving him back against the wall of the entry, silencing my thoughts at the same time.
River froze, dazed under my onslaught as I pillaged his mouth, taking and tasting with wild, deep sweeps of my tongue. Taking charge of my emotions for this beautiful guy and channeling them into lust.
Blindly, River fumbled to put the box on the entry table, and then his hands went to my waist, hauling our groins together.
My erection sought his through my pants as our mouths mauled with biting, ferocious kisses.
His masculine essence was mine; I drank it down, knowing I was the first. Reveling that no one had been here before, not the way he’d always wanted.
“Fuck,” he groaned, sounding pained.
I felt it too. Our impossibility battling with the fiercest want as our hands roamed and grasped, surrendering to the white-hot lust that ripped like a current from me to him and back again.
Finally, River gripped me by the collar, physically prying my mouth from his and holding me inches away, our breaths gasping over wet lips.
“I want to see you tonight,” he growled, his eyes heavy and lidded and dark as they dropped down to my mouth again and again.
I could only nod mutely and flicked out my tongue to lick his lips. He groaned in barely restrained hunger, holding us back from destroying each other in the entry of his family’s house.
“Where?”
“My place,” I said, feeling like I had at Chance’s party. Tempting fate. Stripping my chest bare and daring River to plunge a knife straight into my heart. “I’m in the guesthouse. It’s private.”
River’s eyes filled with thoughts, and I wondered if it was too much, too soon for him.
Tell me to fuck off, River. Kick me out of your house, out of your life, once and for all.
He inhaled deep and tilted his chin.
“What time?”