The Roughest Draft(76)



“Good note,” I reply with faux-fancy respectfulness, imitating the tone everyone would use in creative writing courses. “Just sexy. I’ll workshop it in.”

“Yeah.” Kat nods. “Workshop it in, Van Huysen.”

We’ve separated for this repartee, her fingers still interwoven with one of my hands while my other holds the inside of her thigh. Her eyes smolder into mine.

I feel the moment when we realize we really, really want to return to kissing. We rush forward with new fevered intensity, everything sweeter for the pause. She reclines flat on the comforter, her hair splaying out while I shower her with kisses, over her collarbone, her stomach, the upper hem of her underwear.

I feel dizzy. Dizzy from the impossibility of the dream I’ve walked into, from how this passion is past every romantic scene we’ve written together. This is what’s left out of the idiom. Sometimes life is stranger than fiction, but sometimes it’s incomparable in other ways. Sometimes it’s a heaven that the false fire of imagination could never capture.

The strip of smooth skin between Katrina’s hip bones and the tops of her legs isn’t just real. It’s the sexiest thing I’ve ever felt, forcing me to run my hands over it once, twice, up her thighs, before hooking my thumb in her underwear to drag them off. She responds, exhaling unconsciously, tipping her head up.

Then she’s pushing herself back toward the pillows, hurriedly. I remember the conversation we had four years ago, writing Only Once, on precisely this subject. The first time . . . she’d said. After all the waiting, I wouldn’t want to wait longer.

I move fast, shucking off my shorts and underwear, practically vaulting to position myself over her. “Um—” she interjects quickly.

“I know. No metaphors,” I exhale.

“No.” She puts one hand on my upper chest. I look up. I feel like she holds my entire world in the dark pools of her gorgeous eyes. “Do you have a condom?”

I digest the question, worried for a moment—I do not want to put this on pause, although for her I obviously would. “Yeah,” I say, remembering.

Katrina nods. Her expression doesn’t change. “Get it,” she instructs me. Part of me notes how perfectly Kat the request is. It’s like her writing. Direct, efficient. I love her for it.

I’m suddenly enormously grateful for this thought. I love her for it.

I love her.

“Hold on,” I say. I scrounge in my shorts for my wallet, unfolding the scuffed leather to pull out the single wrapped condom inside. Flush with relief, I return to her, half kneeling on the bed while I open the wrapper. I’m surprised when she reaches forward.

“I want to,” she says. She grasps the latex in her fingers.

Wordlessly, I nod. She does.

I reach one hand to gently sweep her hair from her cheek. The other runs the length of her—the mesmerizing reality of her, from the slope of her breast to the stretch of her exposed side to the curves farther down. I feel charged, unsteady. I’m not in control, and every single second my eyes wander over the soft subtleties of her naked body, I’m pushed further past myself. Her hand lingers on me, and then she reclines once more while I position myself over her.

She looks up, her lips parted softly, her eyes saying now.

Now.

I’ve never felt so much of her, felt so close to her. Everywhere we meet, my skin is feverish. She enfolds me, leaning into this moment, joining us.

I feel like my very soul is on fire.


? FOUR YEARS EARLIER ?

I hear Katrina’s door open and close. Everything in me coils, winding up for whatever will happen next. In every second, my hopes leap from impossible highs to crashing lows. Every creak of the house or whisper of the wind feels somehow significant, either warning or promise. I wish I knew which.

I wait for her to slide something under my door. Or to knock. Or to say my name. Whatever form my fate will be delivered in. In the near silence, my room feels like a prison, my fears and desires fighting to escape the four walls. With every passing second in which nothing comes, it gets harder. Finally, when four minutes have gone by, I stand up. I wonder if she’s left the house. Feeling restless, like I have to know, I walk to my door.

When I reach the stairs, I smell it.

The earthy warmth of kindling, the faint whisper of smoke. The smell of fire.

When I hear something crack—the sound splitting the quiet of the house—I hit the stairs, my feet thundering down the steps. I recognize the light vermillion glow dancing garishly on the wall.

I feel like I’m watching myself, like I’ve flipped forward in the pages of my own life. I’ve read this part. I know what happens next. I’ve spoiled the ending.

Katrina is kneeling in front of the fireplace, her hands empty, her eyes fixed on the golden parchment curling and catching flame in front of her. The heat consumes what I’ve written, welcoming it into the fire. She faces me, her expression empty. I meet her stare, and an entire conversation is spoken in utter silence. She doesn’t want me. She hated what I wrote to her, enough to destroy the words instead of just disregarding them.

No, that’s not right.

I feel a separate fire catch in me. Because I understand what’s truly happening here. If Katrina felt nothing for me, she would just say so. We would want to have conversations, figure out how to navigate our writing career going forward. She might even want to be friends. There’s only one reason to burn what I’ve written. She’s betraying herself. To destroy what I wrote could only mean she doesn’t want to face what it makes her feel. Because she does feel something. But she would rather hide, would rather pretend the words we’ve exchanged this summer were only a game.

Emily Wibberley & Au's Books