Read In This Moment Online

Authors: Autumn Doughton

In This Moment (32 page)

   
Cole shifts and the sheet falls so that the top of it cuts a line right through that vee in between his hips. God.
“As Good as it Gets,”
he says.

   
I pull my hand away and starting just above the edge of the sheet, I slowly crawl my fingers up his chest like a spider.

Haven’t seen it.”

    He chuckles and I watch my hand mo
ve with his body. “It’s basically about this OCD guy who meets a woman and gets his life turned completely upside down.”

    “Oh, so do you think that’s true?

    Cole
grins and pulls me fully on top of him so that he can see my face. “Is what true?”

    “
That this is as good as it gets?”

    He thinks about it. “Honestly, Aimee? I’m not sure that my body can handle
much better than this.” He touches his hot mouth to my neck and I shiver.

    I scoot
a little lower so that my face is level with his navel. I run my tongue over his smooth skin and he moans.

   
“I’m not done,” I whisper, pulling away to trace the words into his thigh. Our words.
This is real.

    “You know,” I continue. “
I think you
can
handle better. You’re young. You’re an athlete. I’ve heard that runners have great stamina.”

    Cole’s breath is coming fast now. He’s struggling to keep his eyes open and
trained on me. “Huh,” he manages. “Why don’t we prove that?”

   
So we do.

 

EPILOGUE

 

 

 


A Feast for Cows.
It’s a book about different factions of warring bovine, each one intent on seizing control of the pasture.”

    She tucks her face into the crook of his neck and laughs
softly. He feels the moisture of her mouth against his skin and instinctively tilts his jaw into her. The pilot’s voice comes from overhead and they both pull apart and look forward to where the flight attendants are doing the safety spiel at the front of the cabin.

   
Cole makes himself take a breath. Unfortunately, the lady jammed up next to him prescribes to the idea that full-on bathing in perfume is perfectly acceptable. He chokes, sputters, looks at his girlfriend with wide eyes and flared nostrils.

   She rolls her eyes and peeks over his shoulder at the older woman in the twill brown pants and loud orange-patterned blouse.
The plane is packed. It’s just before the holidays so he guesses that people are making visits to loved ones, going home.
Home.
That’s where he and Aimee are headed. Home to Nebraska. Home to his dad and sister. Babs. His mom. The unknown.

   
Nervous energy churns deep inside of him, but at least he’s not running and at least he’s got Aimee with him. He picks up her hand and turns it over so that he can trace the lines etched into her palm.

    First they’ve got two stops. One
in Atlanta and then one in Dallas, so realistically they won’t make it to his house until nearly midnight, and that’s counting on all the flights being on time. But his dad is footing the cost of the tickets for both of them so Cole’s not going to start complaining about the flight plan now. He’s not going to whine about having to spend more time with Aimee, even if it means being stuffed in a shiny metal tube and sent hurtling through the sky. No fucking way.

    “Back to the game. I’ve also got
Harry Otter.”
He taps his head with his free hand. “Now you’re two behind me.”

    Aimee lets her eyes slide to the top of the plane cabin and back to Cole’s face. “Okay, wiseass. How about…
Fight Cub.”
 

    The
engine whines beneath them as the plane punches down the runway. He feels the slight pressure of her fingers tightening around his. “Uh-uh-uh. That’s a movie.”

    “No… i
t was a book first.”

   
“Huh.”

    The look on her face can only be described as smug.
“So, you don’t know everything after all?”

   
He seeks out her eyes and smiles. “Apparently not.”

    “
Well, wonders never cease.” She leans back into her seat and grips his hand to her chest as they pitch upward. “You know, we could play the game with movies too. Let’s see…
Aging Bull, The Fat and the Furious,
and…
Finding Emo.
That one’s about two guys who both fall in love with an emo chick. They band together to find her when she goes missing and an unlikely bromance develops.”

    The dimples deepen.
He can feel them cutting into his cheeks. “This could go on forever, yeah?”

    The world slips away beneath them. The greens and browns are replaced by a blue so complete and true that it almost steals his breath.

    Aimee lifts one eyebrow. “Is that going to be a problem?”

 

 

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

 

 

Lately I’ve been getting asked one particular question.

   
What’s the best part about writing?

   
I could say something really deep but, if I’m being honest, the best part is staying in my pajamas until two in the afternoon. Shallow, right?

    Now… The
second
best part? That’s you—the reader! And I’m not just stroking your ego so that you go online and write an awesome review or find me on Facebook and like my page (wink, wink)—I’m being serious.

   
I know that your time is short and your to-be-read lists (if they’re anything like mine) are long, so if you’ve shared in Cole and Aimee’s journey—I thank you. This is a figurative hug from me to you. You are the reason my kids will get popsicles tonight and you are responsible for all the pajama wearing, which makes you pretty much my favorite.

   
That being said, my life is full of folks that deserve a thunderous round of applause, and though it’s probably ridiculous to attempt to single people out, I’m going to try…

    M
y husband, Dave, read
Harry Potter
for me while we were dating all those years ago and is not a douchebag. He puts up with the laundry and the moods and the dogs sleeping in bed with us. What more can I say?

   
I’d like to thank my friend, Brittany Walters, for graciously allowing me to use a version of her story about having a bird shit in her eye. As with most of her tales, it made me laugh so hard that I almost peed my pants.

   
While writing the
In This Moment
I played the book name game on Facebook with my friends and I want to thank the always witty, Ben Westermann-Clark and Tripp Ruding for letting me paraphrase their fake book blurbs.

   
I was lucky enough to have an extensive group of beta readers this time around. These women cheered for Aimee, swooned for Cole, and gave me direction and a reality check when I needed it. Here they are (in no particular order): Jackie Hillman, Stephanie Dean, Ana Boza, Summer LoDuca, Nelle Minich, Cindy Smith, Erica Cope (author of
Lark
), Mimi Sall, Michelle Flick (author of
The Owens Legacy
), Elizabeth Hilburn, Peggy Warren (Le’ BookSquirrel—blogger and reader and person extraordinaire), Renny Shuster, Jennifer Lyons Smyth, Kristy Shuster, Sarah Baldwin and Heather Doughton (that’s my mom).

    I’d
also like to thank Komal Kant (author of the
With Me
books) for reaching out to me, answering so many writer-ish questions, being a reader and friend, and hooking me up with other indie authors in my genre. I am indebted.

    Lastly, my family
members (this includes pets) deserve a parade or some sort of grand gesture. They are tremendous. They make me better. They make me
want
to be better.

    Until next time… Cheers!

MUSIC NOTES

 

Music is a big part of what I do. Sometimes a song will inspire me or get me in the mood to do a scene. Other times, I actually find myself using the words of the song. In this book, I think I’ve quoted lyrics twice.

 

I’ll be the bottles on the beaches

You’ll be the waves that wash them all ashore.

 

If you’re curious, the song is “No Nostalgia” and the band is
Agesandages. And they really are out of Portland, Oregon. (As are the maple syrup and bacon donuts from Voodoo.)

 

I also quoted a Papa Roach song called “Last Resort.” The beat, the words, everything, matches up with how I wanted Cole to be feeling that night.

 

Cut my life into pieces,

I’ve reached my last resort.

Suffocation, no breathing,

Don’t give a fuck if I cut my arms bleeding.

Do you even care if I die bleeding?

 

There’s one more song that I feel deserves a mention. I listened to “What You’re Thinking” by Passenger (featuring Josh Pyke) almost every day that I was writing. The lyrics, the melody, the rhythm… I think they flow through this book. I can’t imagine a better song for Cole and Aimee’s story.

 

If you’re itching for more, I actually have an entire IN THIS MOMENT playlist. You can find it through my website
www.autumndoughton.com
or on
Spotify.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

 

 

My first love is reading. My second love is pizza.
Currently, I live in Gainesville, Florida and I write books. Fun books for you, your sister, your best friend and your hairdresser. I think of writing as a sort of therapy, and the results tend to be feel-good odes to my youth, which is exactly how I like it.
When I'm not working or chasing after my two daughters, two dogs, two cats, three ducks and one lovely husband, I can be found skulking around the movie theater or local bookseller. Generally with chocolate somewhere on my person, because I never leave home without a treat.

 

Find me on Facebook, Goodreads, or through my website: www.autumndoughton.com

 

 

 

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