Deeper (Caroline & West #1)(54)
It’s just that neither of us seems to know how.
You would think we were both virgins, rather than an Internet naked-picture sensation and … whatever West is. Not a virgin. I’m pretty sure.
Ninety percent sure.
He sits down on the mattress. “Come here.”
I do.
I sit right next to him, thigh touching thigh, and I want to look at his face.
I do look. For fifty minutes, I’m allowed to look. I’m not sure what else I’m allowed to do, but looking is okay.
His face is beautiful. The Christmas lights cast a glow over his skin, blue across his cheekbone, red behind his ear. His eyes, slightly narrowed, seem to glow. The word I think of is avid. Like whatever I’m about to do, he’s going to observe it, lean into it, take it and run with it.
I like being the thing he’s avid for, because that same feeling is inside my skin. The strain of not touching him, a low hum that’s always there, always something I’m pushing down, ignoring.
Only now I don’t have to.
As soon as I think it, my fingertips drift up to touch his neck. I turn my hand over and feel the rasp of his stubble against the backs of my fingers, the bumpy texture that smooths out lower down, until I find a spot where his skin is like hot satin.
“Can I do this?”
What I’m really asking is, How greedy can I be? How much will you give me?
He smiles, a little huff of breath that isn’t a laugh or a judgment, just a pleased noise. “Yeah.”
He draws a line across my chest, above the swell of my breasts. “Above here.”
I inhale and feel the line rise. The wake of his touch.
He strokes down my arm to my wrist. “And here.” He rubs his thumb over my wristbone.
“There?”
“That’s where I’ll touch you.”
“That’s it?”
He looks hard and long at my body. Every part of me that was sleeping comes awake and puts out its arms and says, Come in, come in, come in.
He taps my knee. “From here down.”
I hide my eyes against his shoulder, wanting to grumble. He’s going to skip all the best parts. “Is there a weird, kinky reason for this that I’m not understanding?”
He puts his hand in my hair and lifts my face so I have to look at him. “It’s just … what I want.”
His eyes are cautious, saying this. As if telling me what he wants is the scariest thing he’s done since he opened the door. It makes me certain that he hasn’t always been able to draw lines, hasn’t always set the terms.
It makes me wonder who he’s been with before, and how.
“Do you want me to do the same thing?” I drag my finger across his chest. “Above here.” Down his arm to his wrist, catching on his bracelet. “All along here.” A lingering tap north of his knee. “From here down?”
“You could.” His thigh shifts under my fingers, which have given up tapping in favor of fanning out over the muscle they’ve found. I want to stroke upward, filling the full width of my palm with soft denim and firm warmth until I reach the crease of his hip and have to decide where to go. Map him with my hands. “Or you could just go with the flow and trust me.”
I try to think of something smart to say, or something funny. But those words—trust me—crumple up my confidence and toss it away.
I think, all in a rush, of the reasons I can’t trust. Bad breath and body smells, stuck zippers, biting. The words on the birth-control chart that hangs on the inside door of the bathroom stalls that I’ve meant to look up but never gotten around to. Frottage. Rimming. I don’t know what they mean. I don’t know how many girls West has had sex with, and it seems vitally necessary that I find out so I can compare myself to them unfavorably.
There are condoms in my desk drawer, but they could be the wrong size.
Trust me, he says, and I can’t shut off my brain. Last time we kissed, I was stoned, so it was different. This time I have no defense, no way to hide from how close his eyes are, how much he sees.
It was like this with Nate. Over time I got better about it, but mental flailing was pretty much my constant make-out companion until I figured out that it worked better if I had a few drinks first. Then I tried to plan as many of our sexual encounters as possible for parties.
I’m not sure I’ve ever been kissed at ten in the morning, in the daylight.
I don’t trust it. I don’t trust myself.
“We should have some music,” I blurt.
West sighs.
Then he shoves me.
I’m on my back with West above me, those eyes like smoke, that smart-ass mouth so sure of itself. “Trust me,” he says again, and kisses me.
Then it’s okay.
Way better than okay.
Kissing West is nothing like kissing Nate. His mouth is warm and sure of itself, and it says, Shut up, Caro. Close your eyes. Stop thinking.
Feel.
I do. I can’t not. With West’s mouth on mine, feeling is the only thing I’m capable of.
We kiss. Time passes, and we kiss.
I wish I had words, if only so I could press them into memory. This hot, wet slide of tongue against tongue, soft lips and angled mouths, fitting and refitting. This beautiful pulse, this damp haze, this foggy, hot, yearning ache.
There are more ways to kiss than anyone ever told me, and I want them all.