Chapter Nine
Dave patted Sam’s head. “Love you too, Sam the Man. Now, go with your dad, measure that fish, and see if you can keep him for your supper.”
Sam scampered off.
The bluegill was a keeper, but he’d let Sam learn for himself. Dave retrieved his empty beer can from the water and set to gathering the fishing gear.
New yelps and squeals confirmed the fish’s keeper status. Nothing like a boy’s first fish.
Footsteps crunched behind him.
“That was great to watch.” Livie handed him a fresh beer.
“Totally unexpected. A fish that size shouldn’t have been where those lines were, but that’s fishing for you.”
He shifted, trying to ease his leg’s bitching.
“Are you okay?”
“Got kind of a wet ass, but…” He tugged her close, arm around her shoulder. “Now I am.”
Fighting the accompanying rush of sensual memories and hungry grip of his body was a lost cause. He flushed, relieved the boys were off with their dad. Only so much biology he was up for explaining today.
Livie relaxed into him with a laugh. “This has been a great day.”
Worry slapped in—the day hadn’t been all rosy for her. “All of it?” He immediately kicked himself for his downer tone.
She paused after a quick sip from her cup, eyes contemplative. He liked her thoughtful nature, among many things. Her smile bloomed. “Yes. All of it.” She pressed a kiss to his cheek.
A long, weighty silence swelled between them, and he shifted uncomfortably against the urge to kiss her and lay her back in the sand.
Livie broke the quiet. “So what made you want to be a firefighter?”
“Doesn’t every boy want to be a firefighter?” He grinned, even as his pleasure cooled. Did he tell her one of the usual flippant answers or the truth?
Delaying the decision, he patted her and lowered himself to the sand, stretching his feet out into the water.
Livie joined him. “Hey, I dreamed of being a ballerina. It didn’t happen. Why did you make it happen?” Those luminous brown eyes of hers waited expectant, interested.
He sighed and fixed his gaze on the boats gently bobbing on the sparkling water. For Livie, the truth. “When I was a kid, we lived in California, outside Malibu, on a big piece of property up in the hills. I remember an awesome place to play and run. Dad had his carpentry business there and his woodworking shop. Mom was a potter and stained glass artist. My folks were…different, sort of the bohemian-hippie type. They’d hand-built the house in the sixties. Really hand-built. Dad forged most of the hardware himself, even down to some of the nails.
“Sounds wonderful.”
“Yeah, it was. My parents loved that house.”
In a way, the place was more their child than Dave. They’d collaborated on every detail, while he’d been an unplanned addition.
“When I was eleven, the care Dad took to protect the place from the wildfires wasn’t enough. Too much fire, too few firefighters. I was safe at school, but almost lost my folks because they ignored the evacuation order and tried to save the house. Despite their efforts, it burned to the ground, nothing left but foundation, fireplace, metal, and ash. Dad got burned. At the end of the day, they had me, the clothes on our backs, Mom’s car, our dog Barney, one box of papers, and two boxes of photos. There was insurance and all, but my parents were never the same again.”
None of them were. The house had died and taken his family with it. He swallowed a slug of beer.
Do it. Keep going.
“After Dad got out of the hospital, he took a job offer from a friend of a friend and we relocated to Oregon. Mom and Dad kind of folded into each other.”
His throat tightened. And they’d folded hard into the pills and alcohol and become utter strangers. Superficially functional, not so bad that the law got involved, but self-absorbed addicts all the same. Only recently had he considered their backgrounds and the times and that their addictions might have had roots in place decades before the fire.
“I ran wild and got good at getting into trouble. That’s also when I learned to cook. Mom wasn’t much of a—”
A mother. He couldn’t tell Livie all. How life was then, learning to swipe money from their wallets, hit the store to feed himself, or go without far too often.
He cleared his throat. “A cook. Then I met Nate and Lloyd. Nate’s mom stuffed me full of pie, sucked me into their family like I was a fourth son, and taught me how to study. Nate’s and Lloyd’s dads, instead of writing me off as a bad influence on their kids, got me under their thumb. Mr. Quinn hooked me on fishing and climbing. Mr. Sayer had been a volunteer firefighter and got me involved with the local department. Nate’s brothers taught me boxing and pounded the worst of the chip off my shoulder—not so gently at times. I stopped flunking and being a complete jerk.”
“What started you with music?”
“We had an old upright piano in the Malibu house. I played by ear from the time I could hike myself up on the bench. They never replaced the piano in Oregon. I missed it bad. Nate’s parents also dragged my ass to their church. They had a cool music director. Ms. Elliott played the organ and the guitar. She ignored my being a wiseass and had me busting my butt with odd jobs and yard work to earn lessons and buy my first guitar.”
A rush of happiness filtered in over the bad memories.
“Nate played trumpet and Lloyd trombone, and damn, they sucked, but they had fun and I was jealous. I stopped trying to be cool, joined band, and soon I was having fun too. That Christmas, Nate’s and Lloyd’s parents gave me a small keyboard. Our high school music teacher played bass in a heavy metal band and proved you could love Beethoven and Tchaikovsky without being a musical elitist. I dropped football for track, put my need to run to good use, and the coach nudged me into cross-country.”
He dragged in a heavy breath, drowning under the intense memories. “Looking back, I was a lucky kid. One, that I had all these people willing to ignore my bad attitude and help me, and two, that I actually paid attention to them. My parents and I never clicked back together as a family. I think they were mostly surprised I didn’t end up in jail. Mom died my sophomore year in college.”
Accidental fucking overdose, my ass. He swallowed the sick anger.
“Dad followed her five months later.” What a lame statement for that hellish day.
Livie gasped and tightened her arm around him. “I’m so sorry.”
“Yeah.” He couldn’t find the words for the truth: how he’d slammed through the front door in a fury because he’d yet again stupidly trusted Dad to keep his promise to pick him up from the airport, only to find him on the living room floor, eyes empty, already going cold from a heart attack.
He stared out at the boats, hating the old body blows of grief and rage. Bad year that year, but the Quinns and Sayers had been there for him, as always.
“So, back to why a firefighter: partly thanks to Nate’s and Lloyd’s dads being more stubborn than me, partly because I found I could stop what happened to me as a kid from happening to other people, and, yeah, partly for the rush. It’s a hell of a rush.”
Echoes of that rush made him grin and ache.
“I discovered skydiving my freshman year in college. Some kids had jobs for beer money or for a car. I worked for skydiving money. When I learned I could combine the skydiving, the firefighting, and being out in the wilderness—hell, smokejumping was career love at first sight.”
“I’m sorry.”
“Yeah. Can’t get my head around that it’s over.”
Was this gutted, silent void what his parents had felt after the fire?
“What did you study in college?”
“Biology. Went to the same school as Nate and Lloyd. That’s where we met Christopher and Scott. Got decent grades, but I should have applied myself more. I was too into firefighting to consider the future. I liked composing and I crammed in every music course I could, but didn’t apply myself there either.”
He shrugged and took a long draw of beer. What was with his motor mouth? The last time he’d spilled so much personal stuff was to Kay, and that had taken getting drunk first. Enough.
Dave patted her hip. “Let’s join the others.”
****
Act normal.
The next morning, Olivia repeated this order all along her walk to Spider Camp. However, acting normal was difficult with the amazed blushes ambushing her and the pleasurable achiness from yesterday’s lovemaking.
As she walked down the trail, Dave left the table and greeted her with a casual kiss to her cheek. “I’ll get your coffee for you.” He headed to the coffee pot, stretching lazily, shoulder and back muscles rippling.
Desire’s frustrated surge drowned common sense. She wanted more than one passing kiss.
She’d just settled into the chair beside Margie, when he returned carrying two travel mugs.
“Let’s go fishing?” He caught her hand, grinning as he tugged her from her seat.
Anticipation sparkled and zipped. “Sure. I’d like to learn to cast properly.”
“Grab your bag then. We’ll eat breakfast onboard. Everything’s loaded.” He turned to the others. “We’ll see you later. Supper.”
He towed her to the boat, barely pausing for her to grab her bag, hat, and vest, and wave goodbye.
As he backed out the boat, she settled into her seat. Besides the fishing equipment, he’d loaded a cooler, duffel bag, sun shelter, and beach blanket.
“All this for fishing? Or are we running away from home?”
He laughed sharply and broke into a broad grin. “Breakfast is in the cooler.”
Two thick sandwiches rested at the top, oozing peanut butter and strawberry jam.
She laughed. “Peanut butter and jelly?”
“Breakfast of champions.”
They ate their sticky sandwiches and sipped coffee, enjoying the cool, leisurely cruise over glassy water. Like yesterday, Dave checked out several locations before settling on a sheltered cove with a small clean beach.
Frustration curled through her as they set up their picnicking site. But for the heat in his eyes as she’d licked jam from her fingers earlier, she’d almost think yesterday was her imagination. Truthfully, she had no desire to fish or swim or lounge in the sun. She wanted one thing: Dave.
However, Dave opened the tackle box. “A couple things I should have showed you yesterday to make casting easier, but we were mostly dropping the line over the side. Okay?”
“Sure.” She sighed and joined him.
He selected an odd-shaped sinker, removed the hook from one fishing line and added the sinker. “Casting plug.” Dave was a puzzle. He’d gone to such effort to get them alone when they could have fished at camp. Perhaps this was best. Yesterday had been wonderfully crazy. Today was time to take this whole—affair, relationship, thing—slow and sensible.
But she craved more.
“Grip the rod in your right hand.” He turned the long rod so the reel hung below and adjusted her grip. “Get the base of the reel between your middle and ring fingers and grip firm. How’s that feel?”
Her grip felt strange, but more balanced. “Good. This reel is different from yesterday.”
“That was just a spincaster. Good for the kids. You’ll like this spinning reel better.” He nudged her, sliding a slow hand over her hip. “Move that foot a little, there. Good.” He caressed her rear and let go.
“Now, you want about six inches of line there free between the tip and the lure. Then, pinch the line between your finger and rod.” He adjusted her index finger. “There. Nice and firm. That keeps the line from moving when you open the bail. You’ll flip open the bail with your left hand. Ready?”
“Ready as I get.”
“We’re going to cast overhand first. After we get this way down, I’ll show you sidearm. Keep that finger tight on the line, and you’ll cock the rod back over your right shoulder, so the reel’s kinda pointed up.” He skimmed callused fingertips over her, and drew her into the gentle cage of his arms and hands, his chest brushing her back, sun-warmed bare skin meeting bare skin. “Like this.”
As he guided her through the move, needy heat swiftly turned resolve to be sensible to melted fudge, and focusing on his lesson and off pressing her body into his took effort. Oh, yes, how skillfully he’d used those hands yesterday…
“You’re ready to cast. Now, feel the motion. Most of it’s in the wrist and forearm.” His breath feathered over her cheek as he led her into bringing the rod back, their bodies swaying together. “You’re going to do that, but fast, and when you stop, here”—he paused with the rod pointing nearly vertical—“take your finger off the line and let her fly.”
Oh, she wanted to fly. She sighed, body softening into his as he reset their position.
“Ready to do it?”
Do…Oh, right. Casting, not…the other. Focus.
He patted her hip. “Livie?”
“Yes, sorry.”
“For real this time. Here we go.” He slid his hands, easing her into position. A swift draw back of the rod, a swift flick forward and, at his “Now!” she released the line and the plug whizzed through the air to plunk into the water.
“Great job. Reel on in and try it on your own.” Teasing a kiss to her neck, he patted her rear, and stepped away.
Wanting to whimper at her heightened frustration, she frowned at the line spooling onto her reel.
Well, he did ask if you wanted to go fishing.
The toughest parts of casting, overhand or sidearm, were pinching the line hard enough and letting go at the right time. However, with Dave’s cheerful coaching, she landed the plug where she intended more than she miscast. Even when she snarled the line, he helped her without criticism to untangle and rewind while he shared funny stories of past fishing mishaps.
Despite her frustrations, sharing this peaceful time together and seeing Dave at ease lightened her heart. After his opening up yesterday, she better understood his need for quiet and escape that seemed so at odds with his restless energy. She’d felt the strain snapping in him as he spoke of his family, and she ached for him and his losses. She had an uneasy sense he’d glossed over deeper troubles.
Casual touches and brushes of his hands kept her simmering in desire. Yesterday had been amazing, a defining learning moment for her that she would always treasure. She wanted that again: sex being what she’d always imagined. He’d cared about her comfort, her pleasure.
Yet, doubts slithered. Weeping all over him…so not sexy. Maybe yesterday was just a fluke. Maybe she was misinterpreting—
Stop. Just enjoy the day.
She frowned, reviewing how perhaps their morning interactions might seem to Dave. She’d passively enjoyed his every touch, but not once asked for more. How would he know what she wanted?
Why couldn’t she let Dave know?
Curious, she deliberately bumbled her next cast. As before, Dave stepped right in, steadying her hand on the rod and repositioning her arm. However, this time, as he grazed his hands over her, she twisted around and pressed her body to his, halting against one very hard erection.
Make that a yes on his interest. With a sizzling blush, but very amused and excited at how easily she diverted his attention, she rose up on her toes, and nipped at his jaw, brushing her lips over warm skin and new stubble, drawing herself over the solid length of him. If that wasn’t clear…
Dave groaned. “Do that again.”
Catching her free hand onto his hip, she rode up and nibbled more kisses to his jaw and throat as he tilted his head and arched his body into hers.
“Yes!” He ran his hands over her back, fingers hard and searching over her bare skin. “Damn, sweetheart, what you do to me.”
On a ragged draw of breath, he plucked the fishing rod from her hand and dropped it aside on the beach chair. “Fishing lesson’s over.”
Then his mouth crushed down on hers, and he gripped her rear, drawing her closer than close, a greedy, hungry kiss, the kiss she’d been craving all morning. In Dave’s hard grip, she felt desired, not controlled or trapped.
Sliding her hand down his belly, she slipped beneath his waistband to graze over the hot hard length of him, relishing how he groaned and arched his body. Loving how he let her play and explore.
She tore her mouth from his. “I want you so much.” She gave him another slow stroke of her hand just to make things perfectly clear. She needed her bare skin sliding against his, him filling her, pressing her into the blanket.
“You’ve got me.” Stepping backwards, Dave pulled the tie to her top. They reached the sun shelter between more hurried kisses and caresses, where he shucked away his trunks and stripped her bare with a pleasing impatience.
This time, when Dave caressed her breasts and murmured roughly in her ear, “Perfect, delicious,” she trusted that in his eyes she was the perfect size. In his hands, she felt perfect.
Oh, he was so good with his hands.
He carried her down onto the blanket. Still he teased, grinning hard and eyes intent burning amber, making her ride his fingers, taking her to the edge without letting her fall. The sensual scrape of his teeth over her skin stoked the spiraling waves of pleasure.
“Please, please, please, Dave!” Laughing and sobbing from need, she rocked into his hand, eyes shut, melting, chasing ecstasy. Her breath came in a charged rush. She arched, reaching. Close, so close.
“More, sweetheart, you can take more. Damn, I love watching you.”
****
Livie was so beautiful when she came, shivering, her breath hitching, and her back arching. Dave nearly lost it himself then just watching her surrender fully to pleasure beneath him, loving her throaty, “Please, please, please.”
Keeping his hands mostly off her while coaching her through casting had been challenging as hell. However, he’d been determined to let her decide what she wanted today, even if his eyes were about to cross from aching for her and his fingers itched to pull the strings to her sexy wine-red bikini.
No more waiting now. He covered himself quickly. Then, with the care he should have taken yesterday, he eased into her, filling that sweetest, tightest place, slow and slower. Sinking ever deeper left him deluged in pleasure and the peculiar sense of having come home. His smile broadening, he rose on his arms to watch Livie, intent on savoring every second.
Eyes hazy with desire and a teasing lift to her soft smile, Livie stroked her hands down his arms and pushed up on her elbows. She brushed her lips to his. “You look comfortable.”
“You look beautiful.”
The arch of her body brought her breasts temptingly near his mouth. He closed his mouth on her, tonguing the taut nipple, enjoying her shiver and catch of breath as he withdrew and returned, again and again.
She flung her head back, rocking and rising with him. Droplets of sweat glistened over her flushed skin, pearling between her breasts.
Streaks of heat raced through him. Entranced with the feel of her, loving the pleasure glazing her eyes, he glutted his senses on loving Livie, filling his hands with her softness, his mouth with her taste, his ears with her sighs and moans, breathing in the perfume of Livie, of sunscreen, sweat, and her own unique scent.
“I love how you growl in my ear.” She nipped at his ear, her breathy voice and hands tightening on his hips kicking a sensual clench through his body.
At her next sharp bite, the last of his strained resolve to go slow snapped. He dragged her close into a devouring kiss, sinking deep into her mouth, tongues matching strokes hot and wet as he drove into her body. Her hands gripped his ass, and she cried out with each stroke, shaking, urging him on, keeping time with him. “Dave!”
No longer holding anything back, surging hard, then harder still, his body burned. “Come for me.” He slipped his hand between them. “Come for me.”
“Yes. There, there, yes. Now, please. Please!” She jolted, her fingers bit, and her eyes flew open, glowing deep and dark with passion as her climax rocked them both.
So beautiful.
Dave threw his head back, groaning, driving into her welcoming body, again and again, bursting, grabbing onto every second of pleasure, lost in the release, lost in her, scorched and consumed.
And then they were still, wrapped in the quiet, baking heat.
He rolled off, both of them sighing at the disconnect, and collapsed onto his back, shattered from pleasure. He shut his eyes against the glaring blue sky as he caught his breath. Drying sweat cooled and prickled over his skin. He wrapped Livie’s hand in his, relishing her contented little squeeze.
When his head stopped spinning, he dragged over a water bottle and downed a long swallow of warm water, and then passed the bottle to Livie.
His stomach growled.
Livie giggled. “I guess it’s time for lunch.”
He grinned. “As soon as I can move again.”
Movement beyond sharing the water bottle took them longer than planned, but after a dip in the water to cool off, they lunched on BLTs, potato chips, and apple slices, with JoAnn’s sun tea to wash everything down.
Stomach full and body happily worn-out, he sprawled out on the blanket, enjoying the hot, dry breeze sweeping over his skin.
Livie stretched out on her belly beside him, arms folded to pillow her head.
“Just lying around on a summer afternoon feels so good, doesn’t it?”
“Mmm.” She nodded, her drowsy smile full of bliss. She stretched again, reminding him of a cat purring in the sun.
Dave woke an hour or so later, but he was too comfortable to bother moving in the breezy afternoon heat. A swim would feel good, but lazing around with Livie tucked against him was better.
Livie stirred from sleep, sighing sweet and slow. “Thank you for a wonderful day.” She pressed drowsy kisses to his chest. “Thank you for showing me how good making love can be. Used to think something was wrong with me. Wasted so much life, believing him—”
Her breath hitched as she woke fully and realized what she’d said. She stiffened.
“There’s nothing wrong with you.” He rubbed her tense arm.
Pain filled her eyes and her brows and mouth drew tight. “It’s no secret our marriage wasn’t good. You saw that.”
“You should have kicked his ass. He treated you like crap,” he blurted. He locked his jaw and tucked her into his side. Livie wasn’t the sort to ever kick anyone’s ass.
Her heavy sigh wrenched his heart, but she rested her head against his shoulder and settled her arm over his chest. He slipped his hand around hers and gave a squeeze. He didn’t want to know, but if she needed to talk, he owed it to her to listen and keep his opinions to himself.
“I know that now, but mistakes are so insidious. Day by day, falling without knowing, until one day you wake up and everything hits, and you have no idea how you reached this horrible, wrong place in your life.”
How fucking true that was.
“Did he hit you?” Dave growled. He should have pounded R.J. into the sand.
The tremor that ran through her in the pause before her answer set him on edge.
“He never raised a hand to me, ever, until that night last summer.”
Bullshit. With images of the brittle woman he’d met last summer filling his brain, he rolled to his side and propped up on an elbow to look down into her sad eyes. You didn’t get to that level of misery without something wrong going down. He stroked her cheek and fought to speak gently. “Livie, tell the truth. Did he hit you?”
“No, no. He used words, not fists.” She swallowed hard. “Our marriage was a mess, in and out of bed. He didn’t care that the sex didn’t work for me. He wasn’t…patient in bed. He wanted things—It was always my fault. I didn’t even know what I needed. He was the only man I’d been with and learning from books isn’t much use when your partner doesn’t care. But I was his wife, and I wanted a baby…”
So you put up with that crap. “Why the hell did you marry him?”
“My parents introduced us.” Her voice wavered. “They’re old-school and, while they’re loving, they’re not very…prone to public displays of affection. R.J. dazzled me with his attention. I never had a clue that it would go wrong. I wasn’t oblivious to the world—I must seem horribly naive, but my parents raised me to be a good girl, to believe that marriage was forever.”
He stroked her head. “That’s not a bad thing.”
“Back then, I was so miserable at my job. I couldn’t talk to my parents about it, I didn’t want to disappoint them—they still don’t understand—and then R.J. strode into Mama’s party. He could be so sweet, and when he focuses on you and opens up his charm…Everyone loved him. He reminded me of Daddy, competent, successful, hardworking. Everyone told me he was the man for me. My parents were delighted. I thought he was the man of my dreams saving me from my unhappiness, like some perfect knight in shining armor.”
Livie hid her face against his chest. Her tense words spilled in a rasping purge. “Only that shining charm and charisma was a glittering shell. I was so love-blind in the beginning, so accustomed to living up to expectations, lying to myself and everyone was easy. What did I have to complain about? I lived like a princess, and I was freed from the job I hated. Too many people have it so much worse. So what if sex was bad—no marriage is perfect. So what if he was abrupt sometimes—he worked hard. So what if he was critical—he had high standards. So what if he was domineering—he was decisive. The hectic social whirl and the challenge of his business entertaining let me pretend I was happy. The reality was I was simply another acquisition. He didn’t want me, Olivia. He wanted Mrs. R.J. Harper, a trophy wife to decorate his arm, an event planner and hostess who couldn’t quit.”
She dragged in a gasping breath.
“And what was really crazy? I kept believing he could change. Up to that very last day, I still clung to the hope that somehow I’d finally do something right, and he’d be that man I first met again.” She scrubbed at her eyes with the heel of her hand. “So that’s the whole sorry story. One stupid girl. One selfish man. One miserable marriage.”
Dave tipped up her chin to look in her eyes. “Stop. You’re not stupid. He’s the idiot for not cherishing every moment of being with you. Crap happens. The important thing is you got out and you’re moving on with your life in a good direction.”
“I wasted so many years.”
“Stop. No more looking back.” He brushed away the stray tear and nipped lightly at her mouth. “Now, I think we’ve thoroughly proved that there’s absolutely nothing wrong with you.” He caressed her cheek, loving her sexy blush and shy smile. “But I’m very happy to show you all over again in detail just how perfect you really are.”
He couldn’t fix her past, but he’d happily give her that assurance.