Текст книги "Native Affairs"
Автор книги: Doreen Malek Owens
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“Would you like anything else?” Fox asked, as she set down her fork.
“Oh, no. I couldn’t eat another thing. Everything was fantastic.”
“Except the oysters,” he reminded her, smiling.
“I’m sure an oyster fan would have loved them,” she said, and he grinned.
“Would you like to go outside for a while? There’s a deck along the back, and a nice breeze.”
“That would be lovely,” Cindy said, standing up. Fox pulled out her chair and spoke to their waitress as they passed. He led the way to the rear door, which opened onto a wooden platform above the water. The wind whipped her hair around her face and flattened her thin skirt against her legs.
“Too cold?” he asked, as she pulled her jacket closer around her.
“Not at all, it’s delightful,” she replied, lifting her chin and drinking in the sea air.
“Do you mind if I smoke?” he asked, and she shook her head. He extracted a pack of cigarettes from his breast pocket and lit one, dragging on it until the tip glowed. He leaned back against a mooring post and held out his arm to her. It seemed the most natural thing in the world to step into its circle, and when he pulled her against him, she couldn’t resist. She relaxed into the curve of his shoulder, inhaling the clean, sharp scent of his skin.
The wind dropped off as if to accommodate them, and became a whisper, touching them gently as it passed.
“I love it when it’s like this,” he murmured, his voice rumbling in his chest beneath her ear. “It reminds me of a poem I heard when I was in school, by some woman, I forget her name. In the last line she describes something that ‘blows by like music’. That’s the way this breeze is, like music heard from a distance, or the faint scent of flowers when you pass a stall.”
“Sara Teasdale,” Cindy sighed, slipping her arms around his lean waist.
“What?”
“That’s the name of the lady who wrote the line you just quoted.”
He laughed softly. “You would know that.”
“You’re not at all what I thought you would be,” Cindy said suddenly, surprising herself.
“I don’t know how to respond to that,” he said. “What were you expecting?”
Cindy lifted her head to look up at him. He was smoking slowly, looking out across the water. One big hand was splayed in the small of her back and his eyes were narrowed against the sting of the smoke.
“Well, from Paula’s description, I was expecting...”
“A bone-crushing Neanderthal?” he suggested sarcastically, glancing down at her.
Cindy didn’t answer, snuggling against his chest again and closing her eyes.
“You must disregard much of what Paula says about me,” Fox went on, as if she had agreed with what he’d said. “I’m not at my best around her. She has some preconceived ideas about me and at times I can’t resist fulfilling her expectations.”
“Why?”
She felt him shrug. “Just to be perverse, I guess. I don’t like being considered an uncivilized boor, some savage who just discarded his loincloth yesterday.” He held her off and turned her chin up to look into her eyes. “You don’t see me that way, do you?” he asked.
“No,” she answered simply. He tucked her back into his arms and rocked her gently.
“How do you feel?” he asked, his voice low and husky. “Are you warm enough?”
“I’m warm and wonderful and perfect,” she answered, sighing.
“Then I’m glad I asked,” he said, the tug of laughter in his tone.
I must be drunk, Cindy decided. She was saying things she knew she shouldn’t, but couldn’t seem to make herself stop, or care.
He finished his cigarette, tossing the butt into a wire receptacle on the dock. The wind freshened again and Cindy shivered.
“We’d better go in,” he said, and she straightened reluctantly, not eager to lose the enchantment of his embrace. He kept one arm across her shoulders as they went back inside and he didn’t release her completely until she sat in her chair.
“Coffee?” he said.
“Um, yes.”
“How about some dessert?”
‘‘I don’t think so. I’m stuffed.”
He smiled. “Okay.” He gave the order to the waitress and then leaned across the table, touching her face.
“That wind put roses in your cheeks,” he said.
“Then I’m glad we went outside. I’m usually too pale.”
“Paleface,” he said, and their eyes met.
“Does it matter?” she asked softly.
“Does it matter to you?” he countered, watching her closely.
“The only thing that matters to me is how I feel,” she replied, her voice trembling.
“And how do you feel?” he asked quietly.
“Now?”
He nodded.
“Happy.”
The coffee came, and they parted, sitting back to drink it. But the moment hung between them. When he asked her to dance she stood without replying, anxious to feel his arms around her again.
They came together the instant their feet hit the dance floor. Cindy clung to him silently. They were barely moving as they drifted to the music in a world of their own. They danced until the band packed up for the night. As Fox released her and stepped back, her lips brushed his throat accidentally, and she felt his whole body tense. He drew a shaky breath, exhaling slowly.
“Time to go,” he said ruefully. “They’re going to be handing us brooms pretty soon.”
They walked slowly back to their table, holding hands. Fox paid the bill and left a tip, then helped Cindy into her jacket.
Darkness enclosed them as they left the restaurant and headed back to his car. There were only a few vehicles left in the lot, and the starting motor sounded loud in the late night stillness.
“Looks like we shut the place down,” Fox observed, pulling out of the parking space.
“I wish we could have stayed longer,” Cindy said wistfully.
“Not unless you wanted to wash the dishes,” he replied, laughing softly.
“Don’t make fun of me,” Cindy answered. “It was a wonderful night and I didn’t want it to end.”
“I’m not making fun of you, princess,” he said, his tone changing. “You’re just more honest than I am, I guess. I joke about my feelings to hide them.”
“You don’t have to do that with me, Drew,” she said.
“I’ll remember that,” he murmured.
The trip back was a quiet one. They shared the companionable silence that falls between two people who know they don’t have to fill it. The drive across the causeway was as spectacular as promised, but too short. They were back at Paula’s complex in what seemed like record time.
“I’ll walk you to the door,” Fox said, as he helped Cindy out of the car.
“You’re going away this week?” Cindy asked him during the climb to Paula’s apartment.
“Yes, out of town on a job.”
“Is it dangerous?” Cindy inquired.
He looked down at her. “No, of course not.”
She smiled sadly. “You’d say that whether it was or not.”
He didn’t comment and she knew she was right.
“I’ll be back Saturday. I’ll call you then, to arrange the visit to my grandfather. He doesn’t get a lot of company these days.”
“Will he see me?” Cindy asked anxiously.
“He’ll see you, don’t worry,” Fox replied. “When I tell him there’s a beautiful shankree girl dying to meet him, I don’t think he’ll require much persuasion.”
“Shankree?”
“Not Seminole. Non Indian.”
“Oh.” They stopped outside Paula’s door, and Cindy unlocked it with the extra key Paula had given her. She turned to face Fox, her heart pounding.
“I want to kiss you,” he said tightly. “Very much.”
“Yes, oh yes,” she whispered.
“But after the other night...” he began.
Cindy put a finger to his lips, and he kissed it. “I know you better now,” she said.
“I think you know me too well already,” he whispered, bending his head to hers.
The touch of his mouth was light, exploratory, then quickly became insistent as Cindy slipped her arms around his neck. Her hand crept into his hair, which flowed over her fingers like thick black silk. His lips took hers hungrily, moving, caressing, never still, until she was kissing him back just as avidly. Never before had she been filled with such a desire to cling and submit. His mouth traveled to her neck, her ears, as he reached behind her and pushed in the door.
“What are you doing?” she asked against his lips.
“I’m too old to make love in hallways,” he replied huskily, almost carrying her with him so that her feet barely touched the floor.
Once inside, he lifted her against the wall, pinning her between it and his body. She felt engulfed by him: his mouth that devoured hers, his hands that molded her waist and hips, his thighs that held her in a viselike grip. She couldn’t move and didn’t want to move.
“How do you feel now, princess?” he murmured, pulling her against him, running his hands down her back.
Her soft moan was his answer. When he lowered his head to kiss her throat, she threw her head back, exposing the tender flesh to his caress. His lips parted, and she felt the moist heat of his tongue trace her collarbone. His hands came up to grasp her shoulders, and he held her steady as he explored lower, laving the valley between her breasts made available by the scoop neckline of her dress. His readiness was all too apparent through the thin barrier of her clothes, and she felt her control going , chasing after his, which was already fleeing and almost gone. He groaned deeply, pushing her skirt up, and sought her mouth again wildly, promising and asking for more.
Cindy knew she couldn’t handle this; he was too primed, too close to carrying them both away. Summoning her last shred of willpower she tore her mouth from Fox’s. He tried to kiss her still, his eyes closed, but she evaded him deftly. His eyes opened, the lush lashes lifting. Silence hung between them, punctuated by their harsh, ragged breathing.
Cindy swallowed. “You have to go,” she gasped.
He leaned in to her, his gaze smoky with passion. “Do you want me to go?” he asked lazily, knowing the answer.
“No,” she whispered.
He bent his head. She pushed back on his shoulders, not hard, but firmly enough to show that she meant it.
“Please. These feelings are too new,” she said, “and this is moving too fast, Drew. I have to think.”
‘‘One more kiss,” he said, ‘‘and I’ll go.”
“One more kiss and you’ll never go,” Cindy answered.
He relented, straightening and moving away from her. She arranged her disordered clothes, her glance averted.
“Hey,” he said, turning to tip her chin up with a long dusky forefinger, “you’re not sorry?”
She shook her head, unable to look at him. “No, I’m...overwhelmed; I just need some time, that’s all.”
“How about a week? I’ll see you Saturday?”
She clutched the lapels of his jacket, suddenly frightened. “You will be careful?” she said anxiously.
“I always am,” he replied lightly, smiling.
“I mean it, Drew. If anything were to happen to you...” She let the sentence trail off, unable to complete it.
He pulled her into his arms, seeking only to comfort now. “Nothing is going to happen to me, princess.” He released her, prodding her chin gently with his fist. “Buck up. A week isn’t very long.”
“Okay,” she replied, her tone subdued.
“You won’t run off with some passing stranger while I’m gone?” he asked, only half kidding.
“Oh, Drew, don’t be ridiculous,” Cindy answered, inexplicably near tears.
“All right. See you Saturday, then.”
“Saturday,” she echoed, and watched as, with a final wink, he slipped quietly through the door and was gone. Cindy sagged against it, feeling almost too weak to stand.
In the course of one evening, her whole life had changed.
Chapter 4
Cindy was in the bathtub when she heard Paula return about half an hour after Fox left. She belted her terry robe around her, padding out to the kitchen, where Paula was preparing a midnight snack.
“Want one?” Paula asked, looking up and brandishing a cracker in Cindy’s direction. “Low salt, low sugar, low taste.”
Cindy smiled slightly, shaking her head. Paula had been on a diet since the day Cindy had met her and was convinced that if she could just lose eight pounds she would lead armies and rule the world. Her conspicuous lack of success in this enterprise never daunted her; she was certain that her failure was due to a mere technical glitch in finding the right plan. The fact that nobody else thought she was overweight never affected her determination either. Eight pounds thinner, and she would be perfection.
“What are they?” Cindy asked, nodding to the box of biscuits on the table. “A new diet?”
“Yup. You eat nothing but these for the first five days. What do you think?”
“I think a nurse should know better.”
Paula shot her a disgusted glance. “Just what I need, moral support.” She eyed her friend critically. “So how was the big date?”
Cindy smiled mysteriously.
“Hmm,” Paula commented. “Just remember that Drew isn’t the noble hero in one of those legends you love to read. He’s a modern guy with modern problems, no matter how mythic he looks.”
“I think we’ve already covered this ground,” Cindy replied quietly, folding her arms.
Paula threw up her hands. “Okay, okay. What’s next on the agenda?”
“He’s bringing me to meet his grandfather next weekend.”
Paula looked impressed. “Really? He must like you. He’s not much for mixing family and friends.”
“Well, I think it’s really more that he’s doing me a favor. I told him the subject of my paper, and he said that his grandfather knows a lot about the old legends and might be able to help me.”
Paula shrugged. “Still, he didn’t have to volunteer, right?”
“Right,” Cindy agreed, eager to get off the subject of Drew’s idiosyncrasies. She treasured the impression she had of him from their evening together and didn’t want Paula to ruin it. “Did you like the rodeo?” she asked quickly.
“I’m not sure,” Paula replied, popping another cracker into her mouth. “It was different, all right, but the whole place smelled like a stockyard.”
“It was a stockyard, wasn’t it?”
Paula thought that over. “I guess it was,” she conceded, giggling. She gestured toward the kitchenette. “Do you want something to eat? I promise I won’t restrict you to these sawdust wafers.”
‘‘No, no. I’m tired and I think I’ll turn in.”
“Okay. Good night.”
Cindy was walking down the hall when Paula’s voice stopped her.
“Cindy?”
Cindy looked over her shoulder.
“I didn’t mean to discourage you about Drew. Good luck with him. Really. Somebody’s bound to get through to him sooner or later, and maybe it will be you.”
Cindy nodded slowly and then went on her way to bed.
* * * *
On Monday, Cindy saw the department chairman at Gulf Coast University, who gave her the preliminary information she needed. He also gave her a pass to use the reference room in the library, where she spent the rest of the week, immersed in the extensive folklore section. But despite Cindy’s best efforts to keep busy the wait for the weekend was interminable. She kept wondering where Drew was and what he was doing, if he were safe. It was ridiculous, because he’d been courting danger long before he met her and had managed to survive, but she couldn’t dismiss the nagging feeling that he might be in trouble.
Saturday finally arrived. Cindy was up early, unable to sleep, and was making coffee in the kitchen when the doorbell rang at seven-fifteen. Yawning, Cindy wondered who might be calling at that hour, but when there was no response from Paula’s room she shuffled to the door in her nightgown and slippers.
Drew was standing in the hall, rumpled and weary in jeans, boots, and a wrinkled navy T-shirt. He looked about to pass out on his feet, and he was the most beautiful sight Cindy had ever seen.
“Hello, princess,” he said, his voice low and husky. He opened his arms.
Without a second thought, Cindy rushed into them.
He caught her to him and lifted her off her feet, swinging her in a half circle. With her arms around his neck and her eyes closed, Cindy drank in his presence like a heady draught.
“You feel wonderful,” he murmured, his big hands caressing her body through the thin material of her gown. “I missed you.”
“I missed you, too,” she whispered, reaching up to touch his hair, her head still pressed to his shoulder. “I’m sorry I’m not dressed, I didn’t expect you so early.”
He laughed, withdrawing slightly to look down into her face. “I would have been earlier still, but I didn’t think Paula would appreciate a visitor at three o’clock in the morning.”
“What?”
He ran his finger along the bridge of her nose. “I’ve been sitting in the truck across the street since then, and I fell asleep.” He bent to kiss her forehead. “I should have gone back home to clean up but I couldn’t wait to see you.”
Paula emerged from her bedroom, shrugging into her robe. She paused when she saw Drew.
“I thought I heard voices,” she said. “Hi, Drew. Have you taken over the morning paper route?”
He grinned at Paula, and even though it was directed at her Cindy could feel the force of his charm.
“Sorry, short stuff. I just wanted to see your roommate. Didn’t mean to wake you.”
‘‘Well, this is touching, I must say,” Paula observed dryly. “Care to stay for breakfast?”
“No, got to get home and change.” He looked at Cindy. “I’ll be back for you around nine, would that be okay?”
“Fine,” she said, watching him move toward the door.
“So long, Paula.” His voice dropped an octave. “See you later, princess.” The door shut behind him and he was gone.
The silence lengthened as the sound of his footsteps faded down the corridor. The percolator steamed as it finished the coffee, and Paula helped herself to a cup of it before she said quietly, “He’s quite taken with you, isn’t he?”
“I hope so.”
Paula sipped thoughtfully. “I originally thought that this was sort of a one-sided thing. I thought you were fascinated with Drew because he seemed to embody those traits you find so attractive in his culture. But it’s more, isn’t it?” She shook her head. “I’ve never seen him look so...smitten. And showing up here, at this hour, just to talk to you…” She let the sentence trail off and then cleared her throat. “So where does his grandfather live?” she asked brightly, changing the subject.
“I don’t know. Don’t you?”
“Not any more. When we were kids Drew’s family lived in the old shantytown near the river, but I heard he moved them all out once he began to make some money. His father’s dead now, but he still has some cousins and aunts in addition to the old man.”
“And he supports all of them?” Cindy asked.
“As far as I know. He helps out, anyway, even if he doesn’t keep them entirely. I know a couple of his younger cousins have jobs in town, and one of them is in college. He’s probably paying for that too.”
“He’s very generous with them, isn’t he?” Cindy asked softly.
“But not, I think, with many others,” Paula replied meaningfully, and Cindy was still considering that statement as she removed the bread from the keeper and started breakfast.
* * * *
When Drew returned he still looked tired, but his clothes were fresh and his hair was combed neatly, something she had rarely seen during the time she’d known him. Though cut in a fashionably layered style, his hair was so thick and soft that it flew into bangs and wings around his ears as soon as he moved his head.
“Do I look all right?” Cindy asked nervously, gesturing to her denim skirt and short sleeved sweater.
“Of course you look all right; you look lovely,” he answered, laughing. “Why do you ask?”
“Well, I’m meeting your grandfather.”
“It’s my grandfather, Cindy, not the Emir of Katmandu,” Drew responded dryly, shutting the door of Paula’s apartment behind them.
“I want to make a nice impression,” Cindy said, smoothing her skirt.
He stopped walking and turned her to face him. “How could you do anything else?” he asked quietly, and she dropped her eyes, touched beyond words.
“Now come along and stop fussing,” he said briskly, bypassing the awkwardness of her reaction. “I hope you don’t mind my bringing the truck but it’s better on some of the roads than the car.”
“Is it difficult to get there?” Cindy asked as they descended the steps to the outside door.
“Not really, but it’s a dirt track for about the last two miles. My grandfather resisted moving to a new house for a long time, but when it became clear that the move was necessary he agreed only on the condition that it be built in the woods. It isn’t exactly the Glades, but I bought the property on a lake near my uncle’s spread and the climate is about the same.”
“The reservations are in the south, aren’t they?”
“Yes, but my people never lived on one,” he answered proudly.
“Have you seen them?” Cindy asked, aware that she was venturing into dangerous territory, but so thirsty for his thoughts that she took the risk.
“I’ve seen Big Cypress, not Dania or Brighton,” he answered, glancing at her as they walked toward his truck.
“What is Big Cypress like?”
“It’s a swamp,” he said bitterly. ‘You don’t think the government would give good land to a bunch of Indians, do you?”
“But it’s reclaimed, and arable, isn’t it? I thought that was a provision of the treaty.”
He paused next to the door on the passenger side of the cab and looked down at her.
“I forgot for a moment that you’re an expert,” he said, smiling narrowly.
“Hardly that,” Cindy responded. “But I know something about Seminole history. It goes hand in hand with studying the literature.”
Fox took her hand to help her up into the cab. He didn’t reply to her statement, and she thought he had dropped the subject until he slid behind the wheel. “Tell me what you know,” he said flatly.
Cindy thought for a moment before she spoke. “The Seminoles are Creeks who migrated from Georgia and Alabama to Florida. The word ‘Seminole’ means ‘runaway’ in Creek. They lived in the Everglades and surrounding areas peacefully until, in the 1800’s, they started harboring escaping slaves.”
“We have always loved freedom,” Fox responded softly, starting the motor and guiding the truck into the stream of morning traffic.
“In 1817 Andrew Jackson invaded Seminole territory, on the pretext of tracking down fugitive slaves, and used that excuse to decimate the Indians. It was the costliest Indian war in U.S. history. Seven generals failed to conquer the tribe, which never surrendered.”
His green eyes sought hers briefly, and then returned to the road. “You’re well informed,” he commented quietly.
“I became fascinated with the history when I began studying the folk tales,” Cindy admitted. “How could anyone fail to sympathize with the plight of such a brave, independent people?”
“Quite a few of your compatriots failed to sympathize with them at the time,” he said tightly, his strong brown fingers tightening on the wheel.
Cindy felt her stomach muscles knotting. “You can’t blame all of us for that, Drew,” she said evenly, trying not to betray her emotion. “Would it be fair for me to hate present day Englishmen because their ancestors starved mine during the potato famine?”
He sighed heavily, pulling to a stop at a red light. “Sorry,” he said huskily, reaching over to cover her hand with his. She smiled at him, and the bad moment passed.
“I’m curious as to why your family is still in Florida,” Cindy said, daring to breathe again. “Weren’t most of the Seminoles removed to Oklahoma during the westward development? The ‘Trail of Tears,’ it was called, because so many died.”
Fox nodded. “All but about fifteen hundred left for the West. The Foxes are part of the group that remained. They never gave up and they never left.”
“Paula said something about that.” She studied his profile as the light changed and they moved forward again. “So I guess you’re a renegade, huh?” she asked him.
He lifted a hand off the wheel and pointed his forefinger at her. “There’s another theory about the origin of the word ‘Seminole.’ Have you ever heard it?”
Cindy searched her mind. “I don’t think so.”
“It comes from the time when the Spanish ruled in Florida, before Jackson and company took over. The story goes that Seminole is a corruption of the Spanish word ‘Cimarron.’ Know what it means?”
Cindy shook her head.
“Wild,” he said, and grinned at her.
She believed him.
“Did you really live in a lean-to?” Cindy asked suddenly, remembering something else Paula had said.
He took a left and headed out of town for the open road. “It wasn’t a lean-to, it was a chiksee.”
“One of those open houses used in the Everglades?”
He shot her an admiring glance. “Right. I wanted to see if I could build one from the ground up, and when I got finished I liked it so well I lived there for a while. The chiksee is very well adapted to Florida weather, with a raised floor and a roof of bark and palmetto leaves. But it got kind of buggy in the hot weather and I eventually traded it in for an apartment.” He laughed softly. “I guess I don’t have the stoic endurance of my forebears.”
“You must share my fatal weakness for air conditioning,” Cindy commented, and he laughed again.
They were traveling on a thin strip of paved road through the scrub pines and date palms that comprise most of the vegetation of northern Florida. Occasionally a cypress would sweep its lacy tresses to the ground, creating a cool pocket of shade within its drooping branches, but the landscape was mostly covered by the tough cow grass that could survive for long periods without water. Cindy opened the top button of her lightweight sweater; it was already hot, and promising to get hotter.
“It’s only June,” Fox said, noticing her action. “Wait until August.”
“I think I’d rather not,” Cindy replied faintly. “I melt in the heat.”
“I think it’s heredity,” Fox observed. “Northern Europeans seem to thrive in a cooler, wetter climate.”
This statement made Cindy think of his mother. “You’re obviously very fond of your father’s people,” she said carefully. “Don’t you identify at all with your mother?”
“Why should I?” he answered simply. “She didn’t identify with me.”
“You’ve never had any contact with her?” Cindy persisted, wondering if she might be pushing him too far, but eager to understand everything about him.
He was silent for a few moments, considering her question, or his answer to it. Then he said, “When she left me with my father, she said she didn’t want to be bothered about me in the future. ‘Bothered’ was the exact word. I gather that I was an embarrassment, not exactly the right bloodline, you understand. As a small child I was curious, of course. Once I became old enough to understand the implications of the situation, I realized that contacting her would be futile, and probably painful. I don’t want anybody who doesn’t want me,” he concluded in a defiant tone that brought quick tears to Cindy’s eyes. In those words she heard the child’s rejection and the man’s determined vow to overcome it.
“It was her loss, Drew,” she said to him, with a catch in her voice that she hoped he missed.
He didn’t miss it. He glanced at her and smiled briefly. “Don’t be unhappy, princess. It was a long time ago.”
“I can’t imagine a mother abandoning her child that way,” Cindy added slowly.
“No, I’m sure you can’t,” he replied, in a tone which made her turn her head to look at him.
“Don’t hate her, Drew,” Cindy said. “She was weak, and you’re not. It’s always difficult to understand a flaw in someone’s character when you don’t share it.”
“I don’t hate her anymore. When I was younger, her leaving me was sad, but now it’s only... interesting.”
“Interesting?” What an odd choice of words.
“Yes. I felt sorry for my father, when he was alive, because he loved her. He carried that sorrow to his grave. But now that he’s gone, so is the reason for the emptiness she left. I never knew her and so I never missed her.”
“What was he like?”
Fox glanced at her. “My father?”
“Yes.”
A small smile played about his lips. “Quiet. Very smart, but not showy about it. He loved me, and I miss that. In anyone’s life there are only a few people, if that, who love you that way—completely, selflessly. He was that person for me and I know I’ll never be loved like that again.”
Cindy was silent, unable to get words past the lump in her throat. This was the man Paula saw as aloof and uninvolved? She didn’t know him. She simply didn’t know him.
Her reverie was interrupted by a chuckle from Fox, low and self-conscious. “Wow. You sure are getting me to talk. I don’t think I’ve blabbed that much about myself in twenty years. The FBI could use your services.”
“I didn’t mean to pry,” Cindy said, surreptitiously dabbing her damp lashes with a fingertip.
“You didn’t. Something about you gets me going. In more ways than one,” he concluded dryly, and she could feel her face growing warm.
He glanced over his shoulder and pulled off the road into a grove of orange trees. A fruit stand stood at the edge of the orchard.
“Would you like a drink?” he asked. “It’s great stuff, fresh squeezed, the best in the state.”
“Oh, yes, please. I’m getting awfully thirsty in this heat.”
Fox helped her out of the truck and she sat at an oak table under the trees while he went to get the drinks. He returned with two tall wax cups filled with orange juice swimming with pulp. He handed her one and watched with amusement as she swallowed half the contents in one gulp.
“Fabulous,” she pronounced, pausing to take a breath. “Delicious.”
He shook his head as he drank from his own glass. “It doesn’t take much to please you, does it?” he asked rhetorically.
“Cold juice on a hot day would please anybody,” she answered.
“That’s not what I meant,” he said, but when she looked at him inquiringly, he merely shook his head again and didn’t elaborate.
Cindy watched him as he stood a few feet away from her, one leg up on the bench where she sat, an elbow propped on his upraised knee. His shirt was open at the neck, exposing the strong column of his throat. The honey tan skin glowed with the dull finish of polished marble warmed by the sun. His eyes, narrowed against the glare of the sun, were emerald slits outlined by black lashes as thick as a child’s. A slight breeze ruffled his hair and scattered the wisps, like drifting black feathers, across his forehead.
“Why do you look at me like that?” he asked abruptly, and Cindy started, chagrined that she was caught staring.
“I...” she said and stopped.
“You what?” he prompted. “You can tell me.”
“I like to look at you,” she answered simply.
His expression changed, became intent, listening. “Why?”
“Your features are different, intriguing, a combination of traits that shouldn’t go together but somehow do. You don’t look like anybody else.”