“How cool what is?” Dar asked.

Kerry turned her head and regarded the ceiling for a few moments. “First time I ever really got drunk was when I moved here,” she said. “I think I went nuts for a while.”

Dar wriggled a little closer and curled her arm around Kerry’s.

“After leaving home? Lots of people do that.”

“S’true,” Kerry agreed. “Nobody telling me what to do, who to talk to, where to go. Felt great.” She looked at Dar’s hand, resting casually on her shoulder. “Like I was an animal, out of my cage.”

Dar chuckled softly. “I’m sure you weren’t that bad.”

Kerry met her eyes. “Yeah, I was,” she admitted. “Then…one night...I still don’t remember it a whole lot, but I woke up in my car—half on the beach near a tree—and didn’t know how’n the hell I got there.”

Dar’s brow contracted.

“Couldn’t remember a thing,” Kerry murmured. “Scared the shit out of me.”

“I bet.” Dar moved closer.

“I remember sitting there, kinda wondering what the whole damn point was?” Kerry shook her head a little. “I felt so empty.”

She turned and looked at Dar. “I felt like...if I’d kept driving, right into the water, no one would have given a crap.”

Dar merely gazed at her compassionately.

“Just another sordid back-page story: senator’s kid, drunk off 140 Melissa Good her ass, drowns.”

“Ker.”

“S’true, and you know it.” Kerry smiled sadly. “I had no clue what it felt like to really matter to somebody.” She interlaced her fingers with Dar’s. “Didn’t know what it would be like to be a part of someone’s life.”

“Well,” Dar studied her face, “you do now.”

Kerry grinned easily. “Yeeeahh, I sure do.” She rolled onto her side unsteadily and pulled Dar’s hand close to her. “That’s what’s so cool,” she said. “I got you.”

“You got me,” Dar agreed, carefully gathering Kerry up into her arms and hugging her. There was no resistance in her lover’s body; Kerry meshed her limbs into Dar’s embrace with total abandon, humming softly in delight as Dar rocked them gently on the bed. “You got me, Ker, I got you, and that’s how that is.”

“Uumrrrmm. I love you so much,” Kerry warbled, her breath warm against Dar’s neck. “You make my life rock.”

Dar was surprised to feel tears welling up in her eyes. She blinked, and they spilled out over her cheeks, disappearing into Kerry’s pale hair as she swallowed the lump in her throat. She stroked Kerry’s head and kissed her, knowing a moment of pure joy so intense there were no words for it. True happiness was, she’d discovered somewhere in the last year, in making someone else happy. A damn simple concept, really, that somehow escaped all the laboriously written motivational manuals. All that crap about inner balance. Millions of dollars made on a bunch of bs when a single line on a cocktail napkin would do it. It’s love, stupid. Dar sniffled.

Kerry squirmed around to look up at her. “Hey, BooBoo...” She reached up and gently wiped Dar’s eyelids. “What’samatter?”

“Nothing.” Dar’s lips quirked. “Booboo? You been watching too many cartoons again, Kerrison?”

Kerry poked out her lower lip and grinned sheepishly. She hid her face in Dar’s shoulder as a giggle escaped. “I am so tanked,” she muttered, “I’m channeling an animated bear.”

Dar chuckled. “Tell you what, Yogi, let’s get your clothes off and get you into bed.”

“Is that a plan or an invitation?” Kerry giggled again, but she eased back and rolled over, covering her eyes with her arm. “Too bright in here.”

Dar started with her sneakers, untying them and tugging them off, then working Kerry’s interestingly striped socks off her feet.

“Ooo.” Kerry wiggled her toes. “Can I get drunk more often? I like being undressed.”

“You do, huh?” Dar slid back up her lover’s body and unfastened the button on her shorts, moving the zipper down.


Terrors of the High Seas 141

“Well, just so happens I enjoy undressing you, so that works out great.” She eased the shorts down, aided by a helpful wiggle of Kerry’s hips, then pulled them off and tossed them over onto the chair. “Half down, half to go.”

Kerry put her hands behind her head. “Do your worst,” she grinned.

Dar slipped her hands under Kerry’s T-shirt and slid them up, pulling the fabric with. She leaned over and gently kissed Kerry on the lips, before she bunched up the shirt and eased it over her head, returning for another kiss as she finished.

“Mmm.” Kerry had her eyes closed. “I definitely like being undressed.”

Dar tossed the shirt towards the chair. “I’ll have to remember that.” She slid her hands behind Kerry’s shoulders and rolled her over onto her side so she could undo the catches on her bra. She felt a tug at her waist, and then heard the soft sound as Kerry unbuttoned one of her overall buttons. “Hang on a minute here.”

“Hang on?” Kerry tangled her fingers in the straps and pulled.

“Okay.”

Dar chuckled as she eased her partner’s grip. “Let me get you some water.”

“Water?” Kerry folded her hands on her now bare stomach, watching amiably as Dar moved her half-clad body towards the credenza. “We never needed no water before.”

“To drink.” Dar poured from the bottle on the dresser into a glass, then returned to the bed.

“Is it warm water?”

“No. It’s cold water.”

“I’m cold. Don’t want no cold water.”

Dar set the glass down, then pulled down the covers on the bed and knelt, sliding her arms under Kerry’s knees and shoulders and shifting her over. She pulled up the covers then handed her the glass. “Sweetheart, you gotta trust me on this one. Drink.”

Kerry clasped the glass, studying it seriously. She peered at Dar over the rim, her blonde hair partially in her eyes. “Okay,” she finally said. “If you tell me how come you were crying before.”

Dar blinked, not expecting the question. “Oh.” She cleared her throat a little. “It was just...um...you said something that really touched me, I guess.”

“I did?”

Dar nodded. “Yeah.”

“In a good way, right?”

“Right.”

Kerry stuck her nose in the glass and drank its contents, lifting it up and letting the last drop drip into her mouth before she handed it back to Dar. “Now what?” she inquired. “Do I turn into a pumpkin?”


142 Melissa Good

“You turn into a beautiful sleeping princess.” Dar quickly stripped out of her own clothing and joined Kerry under the covers.

Kerry giggled. “Does that make you the frog?”

“C’mere.” Dar gathered Kerry into her arms again, and turned the light out. It was quiet for a moment.

“Hey, Dar?”

“Mm?”

“I’m gonna really regret this in the morning, ain’t I?”

“Eeerrrrmm, probably.”

“You are too, huh?”

“Eh.” Dar rubbed Kerry’s neck. “We’ll survive.”

“Dar?”

“Hm?”

“I love you.”

Dar smiled into the darkness. “I love you too, Ker.” She let her eyes close, hoping she could remember her father’s old hangover remedy by the next morning. Though, she wasn’t sure whether Kerry would consider it better or worse than what it was supposed to cure. Or if they had Bosco syrup on St. Johns.

DAR PROWLED THROUGH the aisles of the small grocery, one of the few customers so early in the morning. She had a small basket hanging off her arm that already had a quart of milk in it, along with a box of Oreo cookies. She spied a bottle of chocolate syrup and snagged it, studying the label. Ah well, it will have to do.

She made her way to the soda aisle and selected two bottles, then analyzed the contents of her basket and retraced her steps to the refrigerated case, swapping her quart of milk for a half gallon.

Satisfied, she walked up to the single register and set down her selections.

The cashier picked up each item and punched its price into the old-fashioned cash register. “Got you some kids, huh?” She smiled at Dar.

Dar peered at her over the top of her sunglasses. “No.” She handed the woman a twenty dollar bill and accepted her change.

“It’s my breakfast.”

The woman looked at the bag, then at Dar.

Dar pushed her sunglasses back up and took her bags, heading for the door as a young couple entered, stopping short when they recognized her and reacted.

“Hi,” Todd said. “Sorry about last night.”

In an instant, every ear in the place seemed to turn their way.

Dar suppressed a wry grin. “Don’t worry about it.”

Rachel put a hand on Todd’s arm. “We’ve heard a lot about you.”


Terrors of the High Seas 143

Erf. “I can imagine,” Dar replied. “Take it with a grain of salt.”

“Well, we just came in to get some breakfast.” Todd glanced around. “Maybe if you’re not busy later, we can sit down and talk?”

“Sure.” Dar eased around them and slipped out the door.

Rachel gazed after her. “She’s weird, Todd.”

Todd steered her towards the grocery aisles. “No, she’s not.

You’re just freaked out because she’s gay.”

“I am not,” Rachel protested, noticing the looks they were getting from the cashier. “Don’t make like I’m some white-bread JAP.”

“Oreos on the left there.” The cashier pointed helpfully. “Got lots of ’em.”

Todd and Rachel exchanged puzzled glances, then shrugged.

DAR WRAPPED THE handles of the plastic bags around her hands and started on her trek back to the room. She’d left Kerry asleep, though they’d both stirred before dawn and she’d heard the pathetic moan as Kerry regretted opening her eyes.

It was clouding over, Dar noticed, and far off she could hear a faint rumble of thunder. That was good, because a stormy morning gave her a chance to pamper her ailing sweetie and not have Kerry feel too awful about missing out on any fun.

Dar glanced up as a faint, first spattering of rain hit her shoulders. She gauged the distance back to their section of the resort, and broke into a jog. She took a tighter hold on the bags to keep them from swinging, and crossed the expansive grounds at a very fair clip. She hurdled a hedge, taking it in stride, and then turned toward the building. Halfway there, seeing someone coming in the opposite direction, she moved to one side of the path. The tall man, however, saw her shift and moved directly into her way, holding up a hand.

Dar contemplated simply running him down. He was tall, but relatively thin, and she calculated she probably outweighed him.

She studied his face as she approached, seeing a chiseled, hawk-like visage, clean-shaven, with a cap of graying dark hair. The suit he was wearing was silk, and his attitude projected the fact that he expected her to do whatever it was he wanted.

Dar grinned recklessly and didn’t slow down. She focused her gaze on the man and kept up her pace, her hands slowly curling into fists without conscious direction. She got closer, but his expression didn’t change and he didn’t so much as flinch, so Dar steeled herself for the impact, ready to twist her body to the right and lower her shoulder. Her dad had taught her to play chicken right around the time she’d gotten her first bicycle. The roadblock waited until she knew he could feel the vibration of her footsteps, 144 Melissa Good and then just as it almost became too late, he jumped aside.

Hah, Dar snorted silently, brushing past him without a word.

She almost missed seeing the quick lunge as he reached for her, but he’d misjudged his grab, and her speed, and she was already past him by the time he made the attempt. She waited until she was certain he knew he’d screwed up, and then she slowed and stopped, turning to regard him icily.

He seemed surprised. “You don’t take direction well, do you, Ms. Roberts?”

Dar just laughed. “Not in this lifetime,” she replied. “You want something, or do you just grab women for fun?”

He collected himself and put his hands behind his back. “My name is John DeSalliers,” he announced. “And I believe we need to talk.”

Dar peered at him and then glanced up. Rain spattered her sunglasses. “Maybe, but not now.” She turned. “I’ve got important stuff to do.”

“Ms. Roberts.”

Dar looked over her shoulder. “If you want to deal with me, you do it on my terms,” she told him flatly. “Have a great day.”

With that, she started off toward the building again, picking up speed as the rain started to come down harder. As she reached the door, the skies opened, and she ducked inside just in time. Turning, she looked back and saw a satisfying vision of DeSalliers bolting through the rain, running awkwardly in his silk trousers. “Jackass.”