rock (23 page)

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Authors: Anyta Sunday

BOOK: rock
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“Jace!” I moan as my orgasm rushes over me, zipping from my groin to my fingertips. Jace lets out a cry and his body jerks. He spills warm come between us.

I collapse on top of him, his breath panting at my ear and tickling me into a shiver. Jace wraps his arms around me.

“Beautiful.”

I shift to look at him. He’s looking right back at me. No shame, no doubt, no question in his eyes.

Perhaps he sees one in mine, because he touches my cheek. “I’m sorry I was such a fool. I’m sorry I thought it had to matter. It doesn’t. All I Want Is You.”

pounamu

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Pounamu—also known as nephrite, greenstone or jade—is a balancing stone used to ensure harmonious relationships.

Uplift and erosion bring these metamorphic stones to earth’s surface. Heartbreak, loss, grief, friendships, family, and love have led me to this moment. Have brought me home.

Jace and I sit at the dining room table with Dad, Annie, and Mum, who we have invited over here.

Dad’s brows furrow as he cradles one of Lila’s favorite china teacups.

“We asked you here because we want to share something with you,” I say carefully, glancing at Jace next to me.

He smiles at me, nervous but determined. We’re on our balcony, staring at each other as flickering flames devour the envelope. “This is the truth,” Jace says.

I glance at Mum and Annie, who give me a soft, understanding nod. They know what this is about. Annie gives me an encouraging smile, while Mum carefully lifts the teapot and refills Dad’s cup.

“Share?” Dad says, looking between us. “What’s that?”

Jace’s Adam’s apple juts out with a swallow. “Do you have those stones?”

I pull out the stones Jace asked me to bring downstairs, and I line them on the table.

Jace’s lips twitch and he murmurs, “Already in chronological order.”

I smile, rubbing his thigh under the table. He shifts nearer as if to absorb my strength.

He picks up the first stone, small and round. “The first stone I gave Cooper.” He rolls it between his fingers. “This is when
we
began.”

Dad frowns but doesn’t say anything.

Jace picks up the blue lazurite, stone of universal truth and friendship. “This was the stone Cooper collected on my seventeenth birthday.”

“You’ll have to explain better,” Dad says, and sips his tea. “I don’t understand what exactly you’re sharing.” But his hands are shaking a bit, and I think maybe he’s guessed after all.

Gently, Jace sets the blue lazurite down and gestures to the next stones: limestone, quartz, granite, amethyst, aquamarine, moonstone. “I gave these to Cooper, too.”

I pinch his thigh, lean over and whisper, “Finally, you admit it!”

His cheeky grin makes it feel like he pinched
me
. “You knew. I knew you knew. It’s always been that way.” The spark of his smile ignites me deeply. “When I look at your stones, I remember.” Jace glances over to Annie, Mum, and finally Dad. “I remember what each of these stones mean because I was with Cooper for a lot of them. Falling in love with him.”

Dad draws in a deep breath. “I don’t understand,” he says. “You’re brothers.”

“Stepbrothers,” Mum and Annie say together.

Dad opens his mouth and shakes his head. He presses his mouth into a thin line. “I understand this has been a stressful time for you boys. We do strange things when we grieve, but—”

I rise out of my seat. “No, Dad. This has been happening since the beginning. Since the divorce started. I love Jace.”

“Are you sure it’s love and you’re not confusing it with—”

“Dad!” Jace’s chair skids over the floor as he stands next to me. He takes my hand and links our fingers together. “Have you ever had that feeling of teetering at the edge of a precipice? Ever been so afraid to fall, even when falling is all you can dream of? Ever looked at Mum and taken a steadying breath, not because she’s holding you back from falling but because you know she’ll catch you when you do?”

Dad hesitates and rubs his head. “I think I’m too tired.”

“Answer us,” I say quietly. “Please.”

Dad looks at us, then at Mum and Annie, who are watching him carefully. He sinks back in his chair. “You know about this already.”

“I suspected,” Mum says, shifting so she’s facing Dad.

“I didn’t.” Dad rubs his forehead as if he can smooth out the frown. “I don’t.”

“Sometimes love doesn’t work out the way you hope it to.” Mum smiles wonkily at Dad. “Sometimes, you think you’re in love but you’re not.”

Her gaze shifts to Jace and me. “Sometimes you hope you’re not but you are.”

She laughs gently. “You don’t get to choose your family, and you don’t always get to choose who you fall in love with.” Mum looks at Annie and back to Dad. “You may hate it and wish you could change it, but in the end, you have two choices: cut yourself off from everything or accept it and embrace it because love doesn’t disappear.”

Mum nods. “Our sons are always going to be welcome in my home.”

Jace lets out a slow breath, and we both face Dad. Waiting. Hoping.

“How is it that you’re only together now?” Dad says. “Why not then? Why not tell us—me—earlier?”

“Because I was a fool,” Jace says. “Because I was scared of what you and others would think.”

“And now you don’t care what I think?”

“No,” Jace says. I shake my head.

Jace carefully passes the stones back to me. I put them in my pocket and resume my seat. Before Jace sits, he pulls out five more stones from his pocket.

“What are these—?”

I try to touch them but Jace stops me, saying in my ear, “Let me explain first.”

He takes the first stone. “Germany, in an old town called Lubeck. A dropstone from the ice age.” He lifts my hand from his thigh and sets the stone on my palm. Then he picks up the next one. “France, Paris by the Seine.” The third. “Turkey at the Göreme Fairy Chimneys.”

It touches my palm, lurching me into the past where I am sitting with him at Lila and Dad’s wedding drinking whiskey. I know what the next stones are.

The fourth. “The Giant’s Causeway in Ireland.” The fifth, a bluestone like the one he got his mum. “And of course, Stonehenge.”

Jace closes my hand around them. “I have a hundred more I couldn’t bring back with me but they all represent the stupidest thing I’ve done: not taking you with me.”

Dad sighs. His teacup rattles against the saucer as he puts it down. He glances out toward the patio and the brightness outside.

“Your mother wrote me a letter, Jace. It took me a while to open it, and it was hard to read, some things I never knew and she never told me.” He shifts, glancing toward his tea. “She hinted that you two have a special love and she wants you both to be happy.” A few beats of silence. “Your mum is right. Love doesn’t just go away.” He stares at us, his expression growing stern. “I’m not turning my back.”

He pushes his chair back, and I call out, stones digging into my palms. “Dad?”

He walks toward the patio. Stops in front of it.

“We love you.”

He nods, then opens the doors and lets the sunshine in.

Mum follows after him, and Annie makes an excuse to leave the two of us alone.

I place Jace’s confession into my pocket. Bathed in light, Jace pivots his chair toward mine.

“Do you regret it?”

“Only that I didn’t do it earlier.” He stands, pulling me up with him. “Come.”

I follow him upstairs to the gaming room. He leads me to the piano and pats the stool. “Sit next to me.”

I raise a brow. “Going to play me another song?”

He shakes his head. “Well, maybe. After.”

“After, what?”

He pulls a small black pouch from his pocket and opens the drawstring. “This is for you. I got it in Coober Pedy. You’ll love it there.”

He pulls out a small stone and presses it against my palm. It glitters all shades of color in the light.

Opal
.

I hold it tightly, and I can’t hold back anymore. I grab his T-shirt, hauling him against me. He twists around and straddles my lap, the weight of the greenstone hook under his T-shirt resting on my thumb.

“Are you offering to take me around the world? To Australia?”

He smirks. “What if I am?”

I laugh. “Would it just be travel?”

He kisses me. “What else would it be?”

 

epilogue

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Music stirs in the air, pulling me out of my sleep. I turn over, sheets sliding silkily over my body. Jace’s side of the bed is still warm. Though he said he’d try, I knew tonight would be too hard for him to sleep.

I crawl out of bed and pull on a pair of boxers that were puddled on the floor from earlier, when Jace grabbed me tightly and kissed me deeply. Afraid.

Afraid that I might not be there when he wakes up.
Don’t leave me
, he whispered. Just as he had the night before his mum passed.

Three years ago now.

I walk the hall of our modest flat, opening to a living room that’s dimly lit. Jace is at the piano playing his mum’s melodies. I slide on the stool next to him and revel in the music vibrating around us. A prayer. Or perhaps, a conversation. Jace telling his mum about the things she missed this year: his first teaching job at Newtown High, my earning a doctorate in geology, us traveling to Stonehenge again like we did the first year after she passed.

The music grows softer. Gentle notes linger even after Jace has stopped.

He wraps his arms around me, kissing my neck. “Hey, beautiful. Sorry I woke you.”

“Sorry I fell asleep.”

The opal Jace gave me is set into a wristband, and it glows against my skin. I fiddle with it now as I think of something comforting to say to my man.

Jace smiles as if he knows exactly what I’m thinking. He touches the opal, rubbing his thumb over it.

“My favorite rock,” I say.

“I know.”

I shake my head, taking his hand and balling his fingers into a fist. I hold his fist tightly, like I did once a long time ago. I whisper, “Not the opal. You.”

 

~ THE END ~

Acknowledgments

 

As always, thank you first to my wonderful husband for being supportive and not hesitating to entertain our son when I was riveted to writing a scene—or three.

Big hearty cheers to Natasha Snow for the cover art! I love how well it captures the mood and themes of the story. Thanks also for helping me come up with a more satisfying end to the story.

Teresa Crawford, thanks for helping me to structure this story, especially during those first developmental stages.

To editor Lynda Lamb, for going through and tweaking all those spelling errors and missing words, and for working me in your tight schedule while you were moving!

Thanks to HJS Editing for copyediting. Your edits helped to really tighten the narrative, and helped the story achieve a nice flow.

Another thanks to Vicki for reading and offering valuable feedback, and to Sunne for catching those inconsistencies. And big smiles to Maria and Mishyjo for test reading and catching final slip-ups.

Oh, and a shout out to Carolin, who listened to my story idea and worked me through some of the kinks.

 

 

 

 

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