Read Neanderthal Marries Human: A Smarter Romance (Knitting in the City) Online
Authors: Penny Reid
“
Thanks. What are you building?”
“
I don’t know.” She dropped her hands to the counter and frowned at the Styrofoam creation. “Some kind of gate, I think.”
“
That’s what I thought it might be. It reminds me of a gate I saw when I went to the Victoria and Albert museum in London. I like it.”
“
Hey.”
We both looked up at
the sound of Quinn’s voice and I gave him an automatic welcoming smile, which he returned. He paired it with that softness, the dreamy quality in his eyes that I usually found so disconcerting. Today, however, after not seeing the expression for several days, it felt like a cool, soothing balm to my itchy, uncomfortable, overactive imagination.
Quinn placed his helmet on the counter then cupped my jaw
with a gloved hand, kissing me. It was a socially acceptable kiss for our surroundings, yet I couldn’t help but want more.
He pulled away, his eyes holding mine, a gentle smile on his features, then shifted his attention to his sister.
“Hey, Shelly. Nice gate.”
“
Thanks. I like it. I think I’ll build it for real and give it to you guys as a wedding present.”
Quinn frowned—just a slight frown—and glanced at me.
“You already told her?”
“
No, I….”
“
I took one look at her and guessed. She looked like she was preparing to tell me some big news.” Shelly gave me a wide smile and the expression looked out of place on her face. For a second I thought she was going to tussle my hair with affection as if I was a dog.
“
Ah….” Quinn nodded and took the stool next to me.
His leg—hip to knee—pressed against mine. It was the closest we
’d been in days. He smelled good, like Quinn. If we’d been alone I would have attacked him.
“
How was the drive up?” He signaled for Viki, our usual waitress, as he addressed his question to Shelly.
“
Fine.”
“
Are you staying tonight?”
“
No.”
“
Did you order already?”
“Just for Janie and me. I didn’t know if you were going to eat pancakes with us or stick to that egg white omelet crap.” Shelly said this with no malice. In fact, for her, it was almost tender.
Viki approached, gave us all a wag of her unibrow, then rested her eyes on Quinn.
“What’ll it be, handsome? The usual?”
“
I’ll have the same as Janie. Blueberry pancakes, right?”
Viki nodded, scribbled on her notepad, poured coffee into our cups, then left.
I assumed all engagement talk was over and was about to change the subject to Shelly’s horses. But she surprised me—likely both of us—by asking, “Are you going to tell them?”
Quinn
stiffened. I felt the change in him where our legs were pressed together. Then I watched him stall by sipping his coffee more slowly than usual. Finally, with no other way to avoid responding, he asked, “Who?”
“
Mom and Dad. Are you going to tell them about Janie?”
I ope
ned my mouth to inform them of my conversation with their mother, but Quinn spoke before I had a chance to. “Yes.”
“
Don’t.” Shelly shook her head, her expression hard. “Don’t tell them.”
“
Why not?” I blurted, leaning back in my seat so I could watch them both at the same time. “Why not tell them?”
Shelly didn
’t look at me when she responded, her glacial glare boring into Quinn’s profile. “They don’t deserve to know.”
Quinn
’s shoulders rose and fell with a deep sigh, though his back straightened. “You need to let it go, Shell. Des, the funeral…it was a long time ago.”
Her expression grew dark, agitated.
“They disowned you, Quinn—at our brother’s funeral. You said they told you to leave, they kicked you out of the family, said you were dead to them. Why would you even consider sharing Janie with those people?”
Shelly
’s words made me flinch, and my heart hurt for Quinn as unbidden images of him suffering surfaced in my mind’s eye. Quinn, no older than twenty-one or twenty-two, being kicked out of his brother’s funeral; a brother he loved; a brother whose death he felt responsible for.
I tried to reconcile Shelly
’s words with the woman I’d spoken to on the phone, the one who taught high school calculus, who wanted to know what my favorite dessert was and insisted that we schedule dinner as soon as possible. The woman who wanted me to call her on the phone, and requested that I refer to her as Katherine.
Quinn
’s eyes flickered to mine, then to his coffee cup. “It’s up to Janie.”
I studied them both,
horrified with myself, wondering why I’d never thought to ask Quinn about the circumstances surrounding his prolonged separation from his parents before now. I wanted to hug him, kiss his neck, and tell him how I loved him. I wanted him to know how much he meant to me.
So I did.
He grew rigid again when my arms tightened around his torso, but he relaxed when I placed several quick kisses on his neck and whispered in his ear, “I love you, Quinn Sullivan. You are precious to me, and I will love you always. And if I die before you, I plan to haunt you.”
He glanced at me over his shoulder, his eyes sad but warm, and stole another quick kiss
from me. “Ditto,” he said.
I ensnared his gaze and suggested,
“Perhaps you could learn to make pottery so that posthumously we can use the wheel together in a sensual, mystically transcendent display of affection.”
I was rewarded with a grin and an expression
that was considerably less melancholy when he responded, “Consider it done.”
***
I waited until
Shelly used the bathroom to tell Quinn about my conversation with his mother. Shelly usually took fifteen minutes or more, which I felt was odd. I wondered what she did in there. It felt like a big mystery. I’d never asked her about it.
She excused herself, leaving cash on the counter for all three of our meals,
“Can you watch my hat, Janie? I’m going to leave it here.”
I nodded.
“Your hat is safe with me.”
“
I know.” She said, then turned and walked away.
I watched her go then slipped my hand under Quinn
’s arm into the crook of his elbow. “I have to tell you something. I was going to tell you last night, but you came home so late. Then, I was going to tell you this morning, but you left early.”
“
What’s up?” he asked, not addressing his coming home late or his leaving early.
I decided to ignore both for now and just get to the point
. “I spoke to your mother yesterday.”
His face went completely blank and something shuttered behind his eyes. After a beat, he said,
“I see.”
“
Was that okay? I thought it was, because on Wednesday you and I discussed it and you said ‘fine,’ which I figured meant ‘yes, that’s fine.’”
“
Yes. It’s fine. You said you were going to do it.”
I release
d a breath and studied him; still no expression in his eyes or inflection in his voice. He may as well have been a robot.
“
Do you want to know what we talked about?”
He shrugged, like he really didn
’t care. “If it’s relevant.”
“
Relevant?”
“
If I need to know.”
“
You never told me that she’s a math teacher. She teaches calculus.”
He nodded, just once.
“That’s right.”
“
Quinn….” I twisted my mouth to the side, my eyebrows pulling low as I searched his face for something, anything other than complete ambivalence. “Your mother and I scheduled a dinner; it looks like maybe two weeks from today. Is that okay?”
His eyes moved to my right, to the wall behind me.
“That should be fine. I have some projects in Boston I should check on any way.”
I frowned at him, at his complete lack of emotion, then reached for his hand with both of mine and pulled it to my lap.
It was warm even though his countenance was cool.
“
We don’t have to do this, you know. I didn’t realize about the funeral; I didn’t understand about Des, what they said to you. I could just cancel and tell her I made a mistake.”
His eyes came back to mine then moved over my face in that way he frequently employed
as if he was memorizing every detail. “It’s fine. We should do it.”
I was about to give him another out, at the very least a suggestion of postponement, when he used the hand I was holding to tug me forward and give me a kiss.
This kiss was less appropriate than the one he’d given me when he arrived. He removed his hand from mine, gripped my hips with both of his, and pulled me forward until I was standing between his legs.
His mouth devoured
mine, right there at the counter of Giavanni’s Pancake House, as if he was starving. I knew he wasn’t starving because he’d eaten all of his pancakes and half of mine.
When he finished,
and we were both breathing with some difficulty, I hid my face on his shoulder and wrapped him in my arms.
“
That was really nice,” I said. My voice was a little shaky. It was more than nice. It was necessary. After a week of almost no touching, it felt like a moral imperative.
He cleared his throat
, but he didn’t respond. I felt his fingers dig into my hips.
“
I thought you said you weren’t going to seduce me,” I whispered against his neck.
“
I said I had no plans to seduce you.”
“
But now you do?”
“
No.”
“
So what was that?”
“
Just a kiss.”
I huffed a laugh.
“That was not just a kiss.”
“
It wasn’t?”
“
No. That was a big, hot, wet kiss—with lots of tongue. I think there was even some groping. If judges were present, they would rule that a seduction attempt.”
“And where does one hire a seduction judge?”
“Well,” I glanced to the right and considered the logistics of a
seduction judge
; “I don’t think there is any central authority, but-”
Quinn
shook his head, cut me off with his movements, and gently pushed me a step away. He guided me onto my stool. His eyes were cautious, but most definitely simmering with something that resembled wicked delight.
Smirking
, he placed one hand on my leg and his other arm along the counter at my side. Leaning close to my ear, his whisper scorching, sending shivers down my spine, he whispered, “When we’re married, I’ll show you the difference between
just a kiss
and a big, hot, wet kiss…with lots of tongue.”
I spent a
lot of time in the bathroom over the next two weeks.
In fact, I started hiding my
personal laptop in the cabinet under the sink, and when Quinn would walk around the apartment in only his boxers, I’d excuse myself to the bathroom and read about Lyme disease and the pollination of vanilla flowers in Madagascar.
I trusted his insistence that he had no plans to seduce me. The problem was that his mere presence was enough for my body to react like a sex-starved sex-fiend
who was sex-deprived.
Other than existing,
he was taking it pretty easy on me.
Or maybe he wasn
’t.
It was hard to tell.
I didn’t know how to feel about the fact that he wasn’t making seduction overtures. In fact, his lack of overtures might have been worse than overt attempts.