Authors: Georgia Beers
Tags: #Fiction, #Action & Adventure, #Romance, #Contemporary
same as skinny, and her wife often shocked onlookers with her strength and vigor. It was a
good trait to have up her sleeve working in the male-dominated field of contracting and
construction. Jo always pulled more than her weight, much more, and Amy admired her like
no other. She had fallen head over heels in love with Jo fifteen years ago and that hadn't
changed, not even a little.
When the flames were steady and a pleasant crackling emanated from the fire, Jo set the
black screen in place and stood, brushing her hands along her jean-clad thighs. She
surveyed her handiwork for several minutes before giving one quick nod of satisfaction.
She stepped back and sat next to Amy, automatically lifting an arm so Amy could tuck
herself against the body she knew and loved so well.
"How's that for a fire?"
"It's perfect, as usual." They sat quietly, mesmerized by the hypnotic blue and orange of the flames licking sensuously along the wood. "I feel like we've been running nonstop for days."
Jo smiled against Amy's hair. "That's because we have." From two days before Christmas until the previous night when they'd arrived at the cabin, their schedule had been jam-packed. "You want me to call everybody and tell them not to come? That we're too old for this shit and the week in the woods has been cancel ed?"
She felt more than heard Amy chuckle. "After all my work today? Have you lost your mind?
What good is my spotlessly clean house if nobody sees it but you?"
"That's what I thought you'd say."
"It'll be fun. I'm looking forward to having an uninterrupted week with our friends."
Jo nodded. "Me, too."
After a few beats of silence, Amy said, "I hope they like each other."
"It's not like they've never met."
"I know, but a fleeting introduction at a couple of parties isn't quite the same as spending a week holed up with one another."
Sensing her wife careening down a new path of worry, Jo headed her off at the pass. "It'll be fine, baby. Don't worry. Our friends are all good people. Good people like one another.
It'll be fine. Okay?"
Amy inhaled deeply and let her breath out a little at a time until she felt relaxed. She
burrowed farther into Jo's embrace. "Okay, boss."
MOLLY
T
he day was gorgeous and went a long way toward helping Molly DiPrima take a deep breath
and relax as she drove along the country roads that would lead her to Amy and Jo's cabin
in the woods. The sky was so blue it almost seemed artificial, and she'd been pleasantly
surprised to have to don her sunglasses as she settled into the driver's seat. Gray was the
common color for this time of year in upstate New York, and an appearance by the sun did
much to lighten moods. The farther away from the city she got, the more relaxed she felt.
Actually, the farther away from her life she got, the more relaxed she felt, and that made
her sad.
Christmas had been chaotic. She'd been ecstatic to be done with work. She loved her job,
but the closer the holiday got, the more out of control her kindergarten students became.
Sending the last one home on the twenty-third had wrung a relieved breath from her lungs
so large, it had collapsed her into her chair where she simply sat and stared off into space
for the better part of a half hour.
Spending the night before Christmas Eve in the mall had been a treat, she thought
sarcastically. She rolled her eyes as she recalled that most stressful of trips. She'd fallen behind on her shopping and Kristin had been no help, saying she had a proposal for one of
the firm's biggest clients due by the end of the day on Friday—The day before Christmas
Eve? Seriously?—and wouldn't be able to get to the store. She handed a short list to Molly
on her way out the door Friday morning and asked if she'd mind grabbing gifts for these
few people, not really waiting for an answer. Molly hated shopping. Despised it, especially in a crowd of
people, and Kristin knew it. She was amazed she got in and out of the mall without actually
beating somebody to death with her bare hands.
Then, of course, there was Christmas with the family: always fun, but at the same time,
always loud. Being Italian definitely had its disadvantages. Molly loved her clan, but when
her mother and her mother's brothers and sisters all got talking at the same time, the
volume increasing exponentially, none of them listening to anybody but themselves, it was
all she could do to keep from screaming at the top of her lungs, "Shut up!" More often than not, she left her mother's house with a headache and the burning need for several hours
of silence as a remedy.
Easing to a halt at a stop sign, she noted with amusement that there wasn't another car in
sight. She stared past the empty seat on the passenger side, then immediately berated
herself for inviting her mind to slide toward the topic she wanted to ignore. You made a
pact, Mol, she told herself. No wallowing. You 're here to relax, be with your friends, and
have fun. The fact that she was alone in the car was a glaring issue, one she'd been trying
to avoid, and it wasn't like Amy and Jo wouldn't notice. But so be it. Kristin had other
priorities and there was absolutely nothing Molly could do to change that reality.
"I just need to get this contract ironed out, baby," Kristin had told her that morning. "I promise I'll do it as quickly as possible."
Molly was packing for both of them, and Kristin's sudden change in plans had taken her
completely off guard. She held a T-shirt in mid-fold. "What?"
Kristin had smiled that smile, the skin around her crystal blue eyes crinkling. "I promise.
Trust me." When she grinned like that, there was alrnost nothing Molly wouldn't give her, despite how angry, hurt, or disappointed she was. This time, though, Kristin was pushing it.
"But we planned this months ago," Molly said, nearly wincing at the whining tone of her own voice. "You requested this vacation time in September."
Kristin rested her hands on Molly's shoulders. She was taller and stronger and her hands
felt large, holding Molly in place as if she were a doll. Molly resisted the urge to shrug
them off, her irritation beginning to build.
"I know. But Reeves is counting on me to be his right hand here. This could mean big things for the firm, and you know how close he
is to retiring. If I can show him I can handle whatever he throws at me..." Kristin let the sentence dangle in the air, knowing Molly was well aware of what remained unsaid.
Kristin was in line to take over. It wasn't the largest advertising firm in the city, but it was sizable, growing by leaps and bounds, and had a sterling reputation. Once Jack Reeves
retired, the title of president would most likely fall to Kristin. She was constantly
reminding Molly what that would mean for them financially.
Molly had sighed, knowing she wasn't going to win this one, as usual. There was no way to
change Kristin's mind, and she was suddenly just too exhausted to fight about it. "When
will you be able to make it?" she asked, feeling small and defeated and knowing she sounded that way, too.
"I'll be there by Tuesday night, okay? You'll only have to be there for one night without me. One night. I promise."
"We're going to have two cars there now." Grasping at straws.
Kristin shrugged. "That's all right. It won't kill us. No big deal." They stood in silence.
"Okay?" Kristin prodded. Molly's reluctant nod earned her a bear hug from her wife of seven years. When Kristin set her down, she took Molly's face in her hands and kissed her
forehead. "You're the best, Mol."
Surprised by the nearly overwhelming urge to cry that suddenly seeped in on her like warm
water, Molly went back to her packing and barely registered Kristin's departing ritual—the
briefcase, the quick kiss dropped on her mouth,
"I'll see you tomorrow, sweetheart. Be careful driving." Kristin tapped the Blackberry in its holder clipped to her waist. It was her lifeline—a cell phone, mini computer, and PDA all in
one—and Molly hated it. "Call me if you need me." As she left the room, she tossed over her shoulder, "I love you."
"Love you, too," Molly muttered.
Standing alone in their bedroom, she felt like a child who'd been left behind. She glanced
at the bed and tried to remember the last time they'd made love. It had been months, she
was sure—she couldn't recall the last time Kristin had even looked at her with any inkling
of sexual interest. The tears came then and she'd been powerless to stop them. She sat
down on the bed, dropped her face into her hands, and wept openly, letting all the pain and
frustration overcome her.
Now, an hour away from her home and partner, she sat in her Honda Accord and felt
annoyed that she hadn 't put up a fight. She was beginning to feel as if Kristin's order of
priorities went something like this: Reeves & Associates, their personal finances, and then Molly. She was sure if she added it all up, she actually got much less of Kristin's time than any of her clients or coworkers. And when had Kristin become so focused on money? Had
she been like that seven years ago when they'd first begun dating?
Molly pressed a hand to her forehead, trying to stave off the gnawing beginnings of a
headache. It was a pain that had recently become familiar and didn't seem like it was
leaving any time soon. Gritting her teeth, she punched the power button on the CD player
and let Gretchen Wilson sing to her about being a redneck. Tears pooled in her eyes but
she refused to let them spill, angry with herself for allowing her brain to take her down
this well-known, over-traveled path yet again. She was sick of crying all the time. She was
going to have fun this week, damn it. She was going to have fun if it killed her.
Forcing herself to concentrate on the beauty of nature that surrounded her, Molly was
able to calm down ever so slightly. Upstate New York had everything, she reflected as she
drove; it was one of the amazing benefits of this part of the United States. You could live
and work in the heart of the city, as she and Kristin did, but within an hour of driving, you could find yourself in the middle of the countryside. Cow-filled pastures, sprawling farms,
even vineyards were scattered across the northern parts of the state, easily accessible to
anybody willing to sit in the car for a bit.
Civilization was beginning to spread out, away from downtown, even beyond the suburbs, as
people realized they could live in the "country" and still commute to the city each day. Yes, it was a longer drive each morning and night, but for some, the ability to leave work, drive
home, and sit in the open back yard listening to crickets and watching fireflies was much
more appealing than the sounds of traffic or the wailing of the occasional police siren. And
there were people like Amy and Jo, who loved both lifestyles and were hard-pressed to
choose between them so they didn't choose at all. They kept a place in the city, worked
during the week, and spent weekends and vacations far away from the hustle and bustle of
downtown. Amy often said their cabin in
the woods felt a million miles away from her everyday life. If you could afford it, it was
the best of both worlds.
The rolling hills on either side of Molly's car were gorgeous no matter what time of year.
Right now, they were covered with snow, the trees bare, branches poking upward like dark,
bony fingers in sharp contrast to the color of the sky. White to brown to brilliant blue, the distinction was clear cut and precise, as if the landscape had been cut with scissors out of
construction paper and pasted together, a project created by one of Molly's young
students to be hung on the refrigerator at home.
In the summer, the difference was less defined, the white of the snow replaced by dozens
of varying shades of green with sporadic splashes of color...grass, leaves, wildflowers, apple trees. It constantly amazed her how the different seasons could bring about such
completely opposite color schemes. Molly said often that she really wanted to retire to
someplace warmer, someplace with no winter at all, but she knew deep down that in the
very soul of her being, she'd miss the change of seasons. They were in her blood. They
were a part of her childhood and a part of her now and she wasn't entirely sure she could
survive being stuck in an eternal summer, no matter how much she despised being cold.
She slowed the car slightly, going from memory now, even though it had been a long while
since she'd visited Amy's cabin, and she'd ridden with Amy, so hadn't really paid much
attention to the directions. Recognizing the split-wood fence marking the property, she
made a right and turned into the impeccably clear driveway, smiling at the fact that Jo had
been hard at work that morning to clear the snow for her friends.
Molly could already taste the cleanliness of the country air that had worked its way
through the car vents during the ride. As she turned off the ignition and got out of the
car, she inhaled gradually and let the breath out bit by bit, trying hard to erase the worry
and stress from her mind. She knew instinctively that a warm fire and a glass of wine were
waiting for her inside. A smile touched her lips as the front door of the cabin flew open
and Amy appeared in all her red-haired glory, arms outstretched, shouting her pet name
for Molly as if it had been years rather than a month since they'd seen each other last.