of his car, till the windows steamed and both of us were
laughing at the cliché. We"ve ridden together, this summer;
herded cattle and tacked up fencing and fixed the combine
harvester when it chewed itself up. My freshman engineering
class actually helped me there, first time anything learned in
school ever really did. I didn"t let Oro hear the end of that
one for days. He"s not an immodest man, but he likes to
learn things by trial and taste and feel; he"s skeptical of
book-learning in a measured way that means he"ll read these
things before he dismisses them. On that occasion, he
certainly didn"t dismiss me, but he didn"t look too happy,
either. The twist of displeasure in his mouth is weirdly
attractive; something cute about it, like a wounded puppy. I
told him that, too, and he snorted and disagreed vehemently.
I sucked him off behind the mechanical store till he came
round to my point of view.
I"d been here maybe four weeks when I let the words
slip. I could have understood it, maybe, if it had happened
during sex—if I"d panted it into his ear when my mind was
offline, body writhing under its own power, thrusting and
jerking desperately for closeness. But in the event, it wasn"t
anything like that. Wasn"t even afterward, in that quiet space
when things are still hazy, your muscles lax and liquid with
afterglow. No, I said it when he was grooming Reuben in the
stable, stroking his mane and making stupid faces with his
fingers twined through the dark strands. He"s so ridiculous,
the way he treats that horse. His eyes get this
glow
, all
coppery under the dark. “God, I love
you,” I told him, my
head on one side. He turned toward me, coppery glint
undimmed.
This Red Rock |
Louise Blaydon
50
“I love you, too,” he told me, brushing back my hair.
I think it took us both a whole day to realize what we"d
actually said. In my case, it had been true for at least a
fortnight already, but God, I hadn"t meant to
say
it. Guys
don"t come out and
say
stuff like that to the rancher they"re
fucking and obsessing over for the summer. These things are
called “summer romances” for a reason.
I guess, between us, we"ve kind of forgotten the reason.
It"s been eight weeks, now, and I"m barely the same
person. I flatter myself that Oro isn"t, either. He talks a hell
of a lot more than he did when I met him, which is surely
due to my bad influence. I hope he"ll manage to keep this up
when I go back to California. I"ve informed him in no
uncertain terms that I expect him to actually speak when I
get him on the phone. My mother says I can rack up phone
time like a girl, and I"m not about to deny it. I need to hear
voices; I need to hear the people I love. And that means Oro
has to tie me to the red rock state; wish me goodnight and
good morning and remind me he loves me.
I have a suspicion he"ll turn out to be excellent at phone
sex.
Packing up my car, I"m quiet, uncharacteristically so. I
haven"t actually driven her since I got here, all those weeks
and a lifetime ago. I think I get, now, why Uncle Frank"s so
fond of his horses. Cars don"t
support
you the way a horse
does when you ride him; there isn"t the same sense of
respectful give and take. There"s only this massive hunk of
metal and you careering it at stupid high speeds through the
dirt, and every mile you go is a mile in the wrong direction.
This Red Rock |
Louise Blaydon
51
I guess that last part is only true when you"re driving
away from home.
Oro kisses me long and hard in the quiet before I leave,
after I"ve said my goodbyes to Frank and his household, and
the guys on the ranch, and Sasha. Sasha"s eyes were large
and accusing, wanting me back, telling me I shouldn"t be
leaving.
Oh, Sasha, believe me, baby, I know. I"ll be back for
winter break, I promise.
When I had set off for San Diego to start my first
semester, I"d thought I wanted rid of the Southwest forever. I
wanted to immerse myself in the thrum of generica, the easy
acceptance of Everytown, USA. Now, I"m driving with the
dust of home on my feet, and I don"t want to have to shake it
off. My mom"s out there, and Uncle Frank, and Oro. My
grandfather always said we were Southwesterners at heart. I
guess I"ve remembered why everyone thought he was such a
wise old man.
Two more years, Alex. Two more years.
The road speeds under my tires, inexorable and red.
Two more years, and I"ll be driving home in the right
direction.
About The Author
An avid reader of everything from New Scientist to the back
of the cereal box, LOUISE BLAYDON has been writing,
encouraged by her father, ever since she could hold a pen.
Her writing, like her reading, has wandered erratically from
genre to genre, but has settled firmly on gay romance, to the
mild bemusement of Dad. Louise also writes sporadically for
various journalistic publications and has been known to
print the occasional poem.
She owes much of her inspiration and support these days to
an amazing network of friends, whose willingness to listen to
her rail against life, the universe, and everything she could
not live without. Louise"s pursuits beyond writing are
worryingly few, chief among them being Worrying About Not
Having Pursuits Beyond Writing. However, this has long
been the case, and after many abortive attempts to pad her
leisure-time resume with everything from hiking to yoga, she
has pretty much given up. She does enjoy singing, country
walking, making deep-voiced sardonic remarks, and tasting
the rain, but has a horror of organized activities.
Louise has altogether too many academic qualifications and
can only dream that her list of published works will one day
be equally long.
Also by LOUISE BLAYDON
http://www.dreamspinnerpress.com
Western Romance from DREAMSPINNER PRESS
http://www.dreamspinnerpress.com
Copyright
This Red Rock ©Copyright Louise Blaydon, 2011
Published by
Dreamspinner Press
4760 Preston Road
Suite 244-149
Frisco, TX 75034
http://www.dreamspinnerpress.com/
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the
authors’ imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead,
business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Cover Art by Reese Dante http://www.reesedante.com
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