Authors: Amanda Carpenter
snooze. She watched him for a long time, noting the restless nose, the
twitching tail. He whined once or twice, picturing, no doubt, some
running rabbit, some past glorious chase. How simple life was for
him! she mused. Life, for him, was to be enjoyed in a mad, dashabout
way. He would gallop through his early years, trot happily through
his middle years, and walk sedately at the last of his life, by his
master's side. Greg was steady, gentle and firm with the dog.
Beowulf had no worries beyond the enticing smells carried on an
afternoon's breeze. How marvellously simple and carefree!
All the same, she was very grateful not to be living that kind of life.
She wanted all the pleasure and the pain that her own life would give
her. She felt a brief spurt of compassionate affection for the dog's
simple mind, and then forgot it. It slipped away as easily as the
summer days slipped into autumn, leaving behind perhaps a gentler
and more understanding view for the animal's confinements and
liberties, for his unswerving loyalty to his master.
She poured herself a cup of coffee and, finding herself in need of
serenity and some sort of comfort, went into the den and put on some
music. She picked classical and then looked through Greg's other
albums, curious to see if he had any of her own. He had several; in
fact, he had the greater part of her work, and she felt touched by this
somehow. It seemed that without even knowing it, he was attracted to
that other part of her personality. She curled up on the couch and
tucked the ends of her dress neatly around her. Beowulf settled on the
floor, having followed her closely into the next room.
After a while she put some logs on the fire and was soon staring
deeply into the flames that were constantly shifting and changing.
The fluid movement of the yellowish-red fire was mesmerising,
hypnotic. It freed her mind from troubling thoughts and left her
relaxed and mellow.
When Greg came quietly into the room to sit beside her, she didn't
even start.
As if they had never stopped having an easy conversation, she asked
him idly, 'What do you do for a living, Greg?'
Silence for a while. She felt him relax as the warmth of the flames
seeped insidiously into his chilled limbs. A quick glance showed that
his hair was ruffled and blown about his rugged face. A reflective
mood seemed to have settled over him, and he looked to be more at
peace with whatever had been bothering him. She reached out a hand
and his strong cold fingers closed over it.
'I was a criminal lawyer for several years,' he said quietly, leaning
back against the couch and closing his eyes. 'I also inherited some
money, and have been retired from the actual court practice. I've
written two books, one on the American criminal justice system, and
the other on the political structure hampering the justice system.'
'It sounds utterly fascinating, and a little frightening,' was her
response. She looked at him, realising how much of his personality
was wrapped up in the lawyer part of his life. It affected his whole
thought processes. His mind was so clear and sharp and quick. She
shuddered to think of his formidable intelligence used as a weapon.
'Did you defend or prosecute?'
'Both, eventually. My last case was defence.' His replies were brief,
but not necessarily dampening. He was just being as simple and as
straightforward as he had always been, getting quite devastatingly to
the heart of the matter.
'Do you think you'll ever get back to it?'
'No.' He turned his head as it lay on the back of the couch and looked
at her. His dark brown eyes caught the glow of the fire, and it made
them brighter than usual, like twin dark flames. Sara could see into
the depths of the colour, and it wasn't as dark as she had thought, but
instead a honey shade, warm, compelling. 'Sara, I -'
She spoke at the same time. 'Greg, there's something you must know
-' They both stopped and just looked at each other. Her heart began to
thud in slow pounding strokes. His fingers were lightly stroking her
wrist; he must feel her heart race, feel how fast her pulse was going
now.
Then he was saying huskily, 'No. No, we'll talk later. But now, Sara,
I've got to kiss you, I've just got to, I -' He shook his head
impatiently, hauled her over to him in an abrupt manner, wrapped his
arms around her tightly and brought his mouth down on hers.
An emotion swept over her so strongly that she was carried away by
its tide. She didn't even struggle. This was what had been started, she
thought hazily, this is what I wanted all along. Something came to
her then, and she struggled both to sit up and to clear her mind
enough to be coherent. 'Greg, I've got something to tell you,' she
began, but was effectively cut off by another deep, long, mind-
weakening kiss.
'Not now, Sara,' his voice came to her, spoken low against her
temple, roughly, urgently. He was pleading with her for something
and she didn't know what. With every caress, every movement to pull
her bodily closer, he was telling her an immensely important message
without words. He needed her. He needed her now, tonight.
Tomorrow faded away like morning mist. He wanted her physically,
yes, she could feel that, but emotionally he needed her.
It was all out of control when it had started. She had lost all desire to
withdraw before he had even re-entered the house. All she had been
doing was waiting for him to come back to her, and he had come, just
as she had known he would. Whatever devil he had gone to exorcise
had vanished for the moment, the wall left completely behind. His
mouth was inside her blouse, searching, caressing, kissing, and she
was lying back on the couch with his hard weight on top of her. He
raised his head, looked into her eyes, and she knew she was seeing to
the core of the man. It was a naked look, more so than any naked
body could appear. She knew him in that moment and then knew
herself. This was no infatuation.
She loved him.
Greg carried her upstairs, her head falling against his shoulder, her
hair draping them both like black satin. There was no hesitation in his
steps; he didn't have to ask. He had asked her with his eyes down on
the couch, and she had already given her answer, as wordlessly as he.
He paused at his closed door, expression lost in the darkness, and
quietly reached out a hand. He carried her in and put her very gently
down on the large bed that was his. She had never been in his room,
had never seen what it looked like, and she now waited in the strange
darkness with an odd trembling in her limbs and a weakness
pervading her mind and body.
She couldn't tell him the truth. She opened her mouth to tell him and
she couldn't. He undressed her carefully, with many caresses and soft
tantalising kisses. Then he undressed himself, standing by the bed to
shed his clothes, and Sara remembered the odd feeling from long
ago, from only a few days ago, when she had seen him as being a
monolith in the night. It came back to her when she saw the faint
gleam of his powerful body in the near total darkness. He was
strength.
It was a night of giving.
He was so gentle with her, as if he knew, and at the same time so
urgent. There was warmth and tenderness and emotional sharing.
There was intense, earth-shattering, wrenching passion.
He stopped when he found she was a virgin. His whole body froze
into a shocked stillness, and he began to say very quietly, 'Oh, my
God, oh my dear, sweet God—Sara!' Then he was loving her, and the
world dissolved into the rhythm of his loving. Afterwards, she
thought she could feel a single drop of wetness slide down her neck,
where he was resting his head.
They fell asleep…
Greg woke her in the middle of the night; she didn't know what time
it was. She opened her eyes to darkness and the safe, delicious
feeling of being held very close. Her head was on his warm hard
shoulder and his arms were wrapped tightly around her. His hand was
cupping her head.
'Sara.' The whisper barely reached her, and she sensed it rather than
heard it. She felt the movement of his chest come out like a sigh,
when he whispered her name, and she opened her eyes. Her hand
came up without her even realising her own impulse, and she was
delicately tracing his face in the dark, like a blind person. Her fingers
came to his lips, and he kissed each one.
'I wish I'd been a virgin too. I wish I'd known that you were. Did I
hurt you?' The question sounded anxious, and she had to smile.
'Only a little physically and not at all emotionally,' she told him
gently. 'And you were a virgin in a way. It was the first time you'd
ever made love to me.'
That made him groan deep in his throat. Sara had to laugh aloud at
that, huskily, and his bare arms squeezed her until she coughed a
protest. He let her go for a moment, then rose above her and began to
kiss her neck. She responded immediately by running her hands over
his long torso in a sweeping caress. He said just one more thing.
'Dear heaven, how you got to be twenty-eight years old and still be a
virgin with this body, I'll never ever know . . .'
She pulled back. 'I never really wanted to before.' Of course, after
that, she didn't have a chance to say anything for a long time.
Sara woke up first in the morning.
The curtains were pulled together, but a sliver of light still managed
to slice through, and it streaked blindingly across her eyelids. She
moaned and rolled over and really woke up with a shock when she
came against a large warm, hard body as naked as her own. Her eyes
flew open and she surveyed Greg's sleeping form with tenderness
flooding through her at the thought of the night before. Her body
ached strangely, and she could no longer ignore the urge to move in
an effort to relieve some cramped muscles. Carefully sliding out of
bed and standing with a painful yet luxurious movement, she stood
staring down at him. He was on his back, with his head turned to one
side, and her heart lurched as she looked at the glossy brown hair she
had stroked, the strong, graceful curve of the neck, his broad brown
shoulders and the fuzz of hair on his chest. He was wonderful to look
at. She let him sleep.
After a quick shower in her own room, she dressed and, driven by
some restless urge, clicked her fingers to an eager Beowulf after
leaving Greg a note. She needed to clear some things up in her mind.
She sat restlessly at the piano in her cabin, later, and played a few
bars of one of her favourite songs. Why was she feeling such agony
and regret this morning? Why was she wrenched with feelings she
didn't want to acknowledge?
She was beginning to understand not just the morality of the decision
to wait to have sex until after marriage, but also the emotional
reasons. She had just made love to the man she loved. She loved him
more than anything, it seemed. But there had been no word of love
from him. There had been many tender murmurs and the memory
was good, but there had not been one word of love. It must be nice,
she thought sadly, to know that every morning when you got up you
would see the one you love in the bed beside you. That assurance,
that long-term faithfulness—she craved it. It could make for a whole
lifetime full of the kind of loving from last night, manifested in
different ways and not all of them physical. Now, the morning after,
all she felt was loneliness. She was so unsure of him. It was the
saddest feeling in the world.
She came to a decision then, and made several calls. The first was to
Barry, and Sara listened to his news patiently, with some relief. The
man who had written her the crazy fan letters some time back had
broken down and confessed to breaking into her house, and he was
being dealt with. Also, the contract had been argued out, and all it
needed was her signature. She promised him, 'I'll probably be there
by this evening, Barry. See you.' Her next call was for a plane
reservation.
Some time later, after a long refreshing walk on the beach, she