Touch & Go (11 page)

Read Touch & Go Online

Authors: Mira Lyn Kelly

BOOK: Touch & Go
2.74Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
Chapter 21

“Sam?” Ava asked, sliding her skirt down as she turned toward the man who'd been a hairsbreadth from being inside her just seconds ago but now stood with his back to her, as if he actually thought it could put some distance between them in the tight stairwell.

“Ava, I need a minute, here. I'm sorry. I just—” He broke off with a rough curse and shoved his hands through his hair.

It didn't make sense and she didn't understand. And even though Sam was telling her he needed a minute, she couldn't make herself give it to him. Not when they'd been the way they'd been, and now all kinds of panicky thoughts were bubbling to the fore.

“Is this because of what happened at the club?” She thought they'd worked it out, thought he'd been okay with what they'd done. But what if he'd been doing what he always did, giving her what she wanted, and really he hadn't been okay at all? Had she been so caught up in her desperate attempt to live out every sordid fantasy she could squeeze in before Sam came to his senses and this little interlude ended that she'd been blind to Sam's feelings about what was actually happening?

“I thought, once we talked and you knew how much that connection between us meant—”

“No, Ava,” he cut her off, turning back to her and starting up the stairs. “It's nothing like that. The club thing—
shit
—it was hot. Inferno hot. And I was on board, believe me.”

Okay. But there was definitely something wrong. She could see it in the way his jaw was bouncing and how the lines around his eyes looked like something other than laughter had put them there. That, and he'd zipped up his fly and redone his belt.

Slipping into place under Sam's arm, she walked with him the rest of the way up to her apartment.

Inside, she went to the kitchen and got them both a glass of water from the tap.

“So what just happened?” she asked, leaning against the counter beside Sam, who was scowling at the floor. “Because I'm not going to lie—it's freaking me out a little.”

His head came up. “Yeah, I'm a little freaked out too. But I think I just need to cool off some. In the stairwell, I wasn't totally in control. It was probably just the culmination of all those texts and whispers and knowing exactly what was under your skirt and what wasn't.”

“You weren't in control?
How?

He'd seemed to have the situation pretty securely in hand from where she'd been kneeling over the stairs, but possibly she hadn't been in a position to judge.

He ran his palm over his mouth and jaw, and suddenly she recognized what she was seeing behind that worn-denim stare.
Guilt.

“I wasn't thinking. At all. I couldn't see anything beyond getting inside you and I was a fucking blink away from being there—” He broke off, swallowed, and met her eyes. “And I wasn't even thinking about protection. I didn't have a condom on.”

Her breath caught.

“That doesn't happen to me, Ave. Ever. I'm not some irresponsible asshole without enough respect and consideration for the women I'm with to suit up. And for it to happen with you, of all people. Fuck, I'm sorry.”

Ava nodded, getting it now. Safe sex was a big thing for Sam and he was religious about his use of protection, and had been from the very first. She supposed if she were forced to find one thing Sam's father could be thanked for, that might be it.

She didn't want to think about it now, but the day his father had shown up in town was one she'd never been able to forget. She'd been sitting with Sam eating an ice cream outside the Dairy Queen when his dad pulled up to the liquor store across the street. Ava probably wouldn't have even noticed him except suddenly Sam had gone stone-still beside her and when she followed his eyes, she found Mr. Farrow careening toward them, wearing the same hateful snarl she'd seen on his face that first night.

Sam told her to go, that he'd catch up, but she wouldn't leave.

His dad started in on Sam right there in the middle of Chestnut Avenue, reaming him out for being a worthless waste of space and going on about how Sam needed someone to knock the man into him. Calling him a chicken-shit pussy for running away. Getting closer and closer as he asked if Sam was going to run then. If he was going to hide.

She'd been so scared. Scared for Sam, scared his dad was going to make him move back home, scared he was going to get violent. But Sam just sat there silently, taking whatever his father had to say. After a few minutes, it looked like Mr. Farrow was running out of steam, only then his bloodshot eyes landed on Ava and crawled over the length of her.

Sam shot to his feet, putting his body in front of hers.

She'd grabbed his sleeve and tried to pull him back, but Sam had been immovable.

And then his dad pulled something out of his pocket and tossed it at Sam's chest.

“Word to the wise, girl,” he'd sneered, looking past his son to her. “Wouldn't have been saddled with this worthless piece-of-trash kid nobody wanted if I'd bothered with one of those. Wouldn't have been stuck raising him myself when his whore mother took off and ditched us both. Do yourself a favor.” He sucked something from his teeth and spit to the side. “If it ain't too late already, don't let this boy in without one.”

Ava stared at the dirty square packet lying on the sidewalk beside the cone she'd dropped. It was a condom. She was only fourteen, but there were a couple of boys at school like Brady Dugger and Phil Reese who'd been showing them off one day the year before, so she knew.

Mr. Farrow had been done then. Stuffing his hands into his pockets in what he probably considered was some superior posture, he meandered back toward the building with the banner for sale-priced beer and cigarettes sold by the carton.

Sam used his napkin to wipe up the ice cream and condom packet, too, throwing both in the trash. His cheeks were dark red, his eyes looking anywhere but at her.

Without a word they started back toward her house, Ava wishing she knew what she could say to make Sam feel better. And then just wishing she could think of anything to say at all.

After another half-block, she took his hand in hers and pulled Sam left when he would have gone right. Taking him back to the woods where their oak tree was and he could have some quiet, or maybe she could think of something to say.

But once they were sitting in the crooks of their favorite branches, it was Sam who spoke first. “My mom isn't what he said. And she didn't ditch us both.”

Ava turned to him, but Sam was staring across the clearing. “I'd never believe anything that came from that man's mouth. He proved himself a liar with the things he said about you. We take the trash out at our house, we don't invite it in, and hope it'll stay.”

Sam's jaw shifted, the corner of his mouth pulling to the side in something less than a smile.

“He wasn't wrong about the not-wanting-me part. My mom got pregnant by accident and didn't think she could take care of me on her own. That's why she stayed with him for so long. Until she couldn't stay anymore.”

More than anything right then, Ava wanted to swing down from her branch and climb over to Sam's. She wanted to sit close to him the way she had when he'd first taught her to climb and was afraid to take his arm from around her shoulders, thinking she'd fall. She wanted to look into his eyes and let him see all the things she'd been hiding for too long. Let him know how completely wanted he was. How she would want him forever.

But instead she stayed where she was and asked what she'd never been brave enough to ask before. “Why didn't your mom take you with her?”

Sally Farrow had been gone for eight years. And Ava remembered from the way Sam talked during those first years she'd known him that he'd thought she was coming back for him. He hadn't mentioned her much and changed the subject whenever anyone else brought her up, but every now and then he'd get excited about something and start rattling on about a time when she'd be back for him and how great it was going to be. Only as one year rolled into another, she never came.

Eventually Sam stopped mentioning her at all.

The field grass rustled, undulating in the warm breeze blowing through.

Ava thought he might not answer her, and when he did, she almost wished he hadn't.

“She needed to escape, and if she took me with her it would have given my dad ‘leverage.' She didn't have any people to go to, people who could have helped us. So she needed to figure things out. Get on her feet.”

Ava couldn't imagine it. Her mom would throw herself in front of a truck before letting someone get between her and one of her kids, Sam included.

But there was no sense in pointing out the differences between her parents and Sam's. It wouldn't be kind, and it wasn't like he wasn't aware of them himself.

“Did you ever hear from her? You know, after she left?”

This time Sam didn't hesitate. “No.”

He jumped down from his branch and walked over to stand beneath hers. Lifting his arms, he waited for her to drop down so she was hanging from her hands and then helped her the rest of the way, his eyes steady with hers as her feet touched the ground.

“She didn't have a lot of skills, Ave. It's why she was trapped with him in the first place. I don't know what happened to her. I only know she never came back. I'm afraid to think about what that means for her.”

Ava swallowed past the knot in her throat and nodded, because what else could she do? Only one thing.

She hugged him as hard as her arms would let her.

Ruffling her hair, he gave her a wink. “Let's go home.”

Now, standing together in her kitchen, Ava looked down into her water. “Sam, you know I'm on the pill, right?”

Rubbing at the back of his neck, he nodded. “Yeah, I know.”

“So that's pregnancy. And as for the other risks—you also know, like you, I've never done it without a condom. And like you, I've got a clean bill of health less than three months old. Even if you hadn't stopped—which you did—it wouldn't have been a problem.”

Brows still drawn in a deep frown, Sam cast her a disconcerted look.

Those details were meant to reassure him, but she understood this man well enough to get that it wasn't exclusively the risk of pregnancy or disease bothering him about this. It was his lack of control. It was that he'd been about to act without thinking. And for all Sam's surface-level easygoing and fun, deep down, the guy needed control. People thought he rolled with everything. But he didn't. Sam was a lightning-fast decision-maker. He was smart and quick, and if anyone bothered to ask him about some seemingly casual action he'd taken, he could lay down the pros and cons in short order, along with whatever tipped the scales in one direction or another.

And tonight, he'd been about to let impulse dictate action.

So yeah, she could see it eating at him. But she didn't want it to. She didn't want him to think himself out of whatever this was between them because for an instant, he'd been closer than he was comfortable with to giving up control. A control he'd ultimately maintained.

Sam cut her a look. “What are you saying, Ave?”

She took a sip of water, and then set her glass unsteadily down on the counter. “I guess I'm saying, maybe subconsciously you know we have the kind of trust between us where we could do something like that. And it would be okay.”

Chapter 22

Sam shoved his hands into his jeans pockets, thinking it had to be the best course of action as far as keeping from reaching out and grabbing Ava with both hands and—
Jesus
—doing what he was pretty fucking sure she'd just said they could do.

It had to be a bad idea.

Sure, she'd just listed the reasons why it wasn't.

Her rationale was solid, and in his head it made sense. He wasn't going to accidentally get her pregnant and steal her chance at the life she should have. She couldn't catch anything because his body and blood were clean.

Still, the alarms were clanging, warning that what she'd suggested would be trouble. A mistake.

Shit
—more than they should get into.

Only the idea of skin to skin, that purest contact, sinking into the tight, wet heat of Ava's body and for the first time in his life experiencing the ultimate form of connection—he wanted it. He wanted it with Ava.

She was right about the trust between them.

Down to his soul he knew she would never lie to him. Couldn't betray him. And that was some powerful stuff.

But unprotected sex?

“Sam, forget I said it. In fact, let's just forget the whole thing. The night, even.” Ava was smiling stiffly, shaking her head too quickly as she looked anywhere but at him. “Tomorrow's a new day. How about we go our separate ways for now and tomorrow we'll—”

For the second time that night, Sam was acting without thinking, dragging Ava into his arms, kissing her hard and hot and deep as he lifted her off her feet. And then he was walking them down the hall while she kissed him back. Thoroughly. Completely.

He licked into her mouth and slid against her tongue, the kiss coming slower and slower with every step until he was laying her on her bed. Until her knees where skimming up his hips and ribs. Until they were rolling across the pink floral terrain of her comforter together, with the sounds of Ava's pleasure whispering past her lips.

And when their clothes were gone, when there was nothing between them but all the years and all the trust and all the love he didn't have to worry about turning to poison because it was safe in all the ways other loves were not, Sam braced himself on his arms and looked down into Ava's waiting face.

Her cheeks were flushed, her eyes hazed with lust, her lips parted as her breath came in soft little pants. She was beautiful. Waiting.

Ready.

Jesus,
she was so ready. He could feel her heat where he rested against her, and the slickness of her sex when he slid through. The pulsing of her need beneath him.

He wanted it. But this was Ava and what they were about to do, they couldn't take back.

So he had to ask again, “Are you sure?”

Ava's fingers sifted through the hair at the back of his neck, stroking up the base of his skull and making his eyes nearly roll back into his head.

But then she was talking, and all he could do was get lost in the sound of her voice and drown in the deep pools of her eyes.

“Sam, I've never been more sure. I want this. I want you. I want us to do what we've never done with anyone else. I want us to have something special.”

He let out a low laugh. “Everything we've done is special. All of it.”

“But this is different.” Her spill of dark hair shifted against the pillow. “You know it is.”

“I know.”

Her fingers tightened. “I want you to be my first in this.”

Sam groaned, remembering the last time she'd offered him that chance. She'd been eighteen, sitting at the edge of her narrow dorm bed in a pair of low-waisted jeans, refusing to meet his eyes as she offered him the thing he'd been scowling down assholes for years to protect. As she told him it didn't have to be a big deal—it didn't have to mean anything.

He'd shot across the room, choking on too many four-letter words fighting to get free at once. Because everything she was saying was wrong.

She wasn't supposed to ask him for anything like that. Didn't she know about the promises he'd made to her brother and her dad? The promise he'd made to himself?

And to have her say something like her first time wouldn't be a big deal—that it wouldn't mean anything? Screw that. For him, sure, that's the way it had been. But Ava deserved more.

But then Ava was up flapping her hands in front of her, shrieking at him to calm down because it had only been a stupid idea, and he knew when he yelled at her, she couldn't help yelling back and she'd just been looking for a simple way to take care of the pesky little problem of her virginity, and she'd thought he'd have the decency to help her out with it since he and her brother were the number one and two reasons, respectively, she was still burdened with the stupid thing.

Sam hadn't figured out what to say by the time she stopped. So for a minute he'd just stared as she stood there, her foot tapping a mile a minute. Her fists balled at those narrow hips. Her big brown eyes shooting daggers at him as if somehow he'd been the one to start all this. So he did the only thing he could: he got back in her face and started to fight like his next breath depended on it.

Like it was the only thing keeping him from saying yes to the one thing he knew he couldn't have. Didn't deserve.

And soon enough Ava threw up her hands in a huff and stormed over to her mini-fridge, where she pulled out a Frappuccino and cranked the lid. Downing half the bottle, she turned toward the window and stared out over the quad. “I guess I was just thinking we'd been there to help each other through so many awkward first things, you know? I mean, my first period? My mom was out of town and you bought the box of pads for me because I was too embarrassed to go to the counter. And when you were going to sleep with that nasty Charity Linden, I went into the pharmacy and bought the condoms. I just thought this could be like that.”

He laughed, remembering how he'd thought he was being so mature walking down that forbidden aisle. He'd grabbed a box of tampons because that's what all the girls talked about. But then he'd looked at the box, thought about the “application” process, and stuffed it back on the shelf, grabbing a box of pads instead. There'd been a million things between them like that.

Walking up behind her, he wrapped an arm around her shoulders and pulled her into his chest.

“I'm sorry, Ave. But this would be different. I can't.”

Ava had given him an affectionate jab to the ribs with her elbow. “Yeah. I know.”

So they'd laughed it off and put it behind them.

But a part of him couldn't let it go. A part of him wished he'd been the right guy to do it—and that part went a little off the deep end when he found Ava's birth control pills and an open box of condoms the next month.

That part of him, even years later, wanted to get as close to the
first
he'd given up as humanly possible.

Sam dropped a kiss to her lips, lingering there for a long minute. “I want to be your first in this. I want you to be mine.”

Jesus,
her smile.

Rocking back, he dragged his shaft through all her silky heat. The heightened sensation of pure, unfettered contact nearly blew his mind and left them both groaning, tensed and ready.

And then he was positioned at her opening. Eyes locked, he pushed slowly inside, grinding down his molars as he worked through an onslaught of pleasure like he'd never experienced before. Yeah, he knew Ava's body, but not like this. Tonight each inch he took was like a new discovery, and even the soft moans slipping past her lips sounded new, unfamiliar to his ears.

“Sam…oh God, Sam…this is
crazy,
” she gasped, her eyes wide, her breath breaking around the words.

Crazy
didn't begin to cover it.

“I know…so fucking good,” he answered, pulling his hips back and about losing it on the reverse stroke, because it was
crazy, fucking good.

She was wet and slick and tight, and there was nothing between them to mute the experience. This was everything.

Everything there was.

Everything there could be.

And they were sharing it together.

And then Ava's body was clenching around his thrusts, the sensation shocking and electric.

Her lips were parted, her cries sweet and sexy, fragile and demanding all at once. And if he wasn't fucking careful it was going to be over all too fucking fast.

He sank deep and pulled back, indulging in the kind of long strokes he'd meant to hold that gathering pressure within him at bay. But the feel of Ava's body parting around him and then clinging as he withdrew—
Christ
—he was barely hanging on.

And then she did it.

Ava broke eye contact, propping herself up on her elbows…
so she could look down the length of their bodies.

Holy fuck.

“Ava,” he bit out her name, his hips working faster and harder as he wrestled with the brutal choice of where to look himself. Because the sight of his uncovered cock, slick with her cream as he shafted in and out of her body, had the caveman in him wanting to throw back his head and roar, but compared with the equally chest-thumping vision of Ava's glazed eyes fixed on the point of their union, the soundless movement of her lips as she sucked and held one breath after another with his every driving thrust—
unfuckingbelievable.

Like the soft sway of her breasts. He wanted those berry-red nipples in his mouth, ripe against his tongue. He wanted them teasing his palms, then caught between his fingers while he took her from behind. He wanted them hard and rubbing his chest as he made her come against the wall.

He wanted them just like this, freaking perfect as they bounced while he pounded harder into the body he never wanted to leave.

“Sam…yes…oh please!” And she was there, her sex gripping him like a fist, pulling him fast toward the edge, and then her cries broke off and her body arched hard beneath him, taking him right over with her.

The pressure gathered at the base of his spine released like a current running to his extremities and back, before pumping hard and deep into Ava's body.

Marking the deepest part of her with the deepest part of him.

Fuck. Talk about caveman.

But he couldn't help it. Like he couldn't help the words he'd said to Ava so many times before, but never like this. Never with this depth of connection underscoring the emotion pushing them past his throat.

Knowing she would understand, he stroked the side of her face and met her soulful brown eyes. “I love you.”

Other books

B00BY4HXME EBOK by Lankov, Andrei
Gift of the Unmage by Alma Alexander
Bridge for Passing by Pearl S. Buck
Alpha's Mate by Jana Leigh
Mortal Suns by Tanith Lee
Love Gifts by Helen Steiner Rice