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Welcome to Rosie Hopkins' Sweet Shop of Dreams

Page 94

   


Yet it was not at all repellent. It was cleanly healed; simply a mark on the man, nothing more, nothing less. If she was to love this man, she would love all of him, and that was that.
Slowly, she lowered her head and, gently but firmly, kissed the very top of the scar, halfway up the warm inside of his thigh; once, twice.
For a moment, there was silence. Then, above her, she heard a very low groan, and then a long exhalation. She kissed the scar once more, then rose up. Stephen’s eyes were closed now, his expression completely unreadable.
Rosie felt her heart pound, felt the adrenalin course through her body; her tongue, inexplicably, was suddenly too large for her mouth. Was he trying to think of a polite way to tell her to get the hell out? Had she mistaken genuine pique for angry passion? Had she just made a terrible, terrible error? She blinked rapidly as she tried to read his expression – but ran out of time.
Stephen’s eyes snapped open, and before she could respond, he grabbed her upper arms with his strong hands and pulled her towards him, kissing her fiercely and fearlessly. The clumsiness of their position – he already had his trousers halfway down – meant Rosie threw caution to the wind, lifted up the silken layers of her skirt and clambered on to the chair, both of them still kissing passionately. Instantly, as she wrapped her legs tightly around his waist, she could feel that her instincts had been the correct ones.
‘Christ,’ said Stephen, exhaling into her hair. ‘Christ. It’s been … it’s been so long.’
‘Well, it is now,’ said Rosie, trying to lighten the mood. ‘Sssh. Ssh.’
Stephen held her face between his hands and gazed fiercely into her eyes. ‘And so hard,’ he said finally, a spark of mischief flickering across his face. They stared at each other for a second longer, then suddenly he was unzipping her bodice, with the fumbling excitement of a man coming back to life; and she was pulling up his white shirt, desperate to put her hands and mouth on the flat stomach and muscled chest she’d been dreaming of.
Neither wanted to mention whether he would be capable of moving them both to the bed; Rosie didn’t want to move too much, in case it caused him pain; so instead they stayed exactly where they were, grinding close together; pressed tightly into the high-backed chair, the dim light in the kitchen, the snow falling silently on the remote house, the fire blazing, then eventually dying, as the heat from two bodies rose and fell and rose again. The motion was made more delicious by its necessary slowness; it went on so intensely and so long that finally Stephen could stand it no longer and, all thoughts of pain forgotten, he pulled down hard on her shoulders, pressing her tightly into him until she felt they were one person; until he bellowed, loudly and suddenly, and, almost without warning, her back arched and she lost herself in him. When she came to herself, she found to her astonishment that she was crying.
Chapter Twenty-one
Sour cherries are an awkward taste. One would want to keep an eye on the child with a fondness for these sweets. Harsh and chemical, they spill their secrets gradually.
Later, Rosie could never remember how long they had stayed, afterwards, her curled up, both of them staring into the fire.
‘I thought you thought I was a prick,’ whispered Stephen into her hair.
‘To be fair,’ said Rosie, ‘that was only after you’d been a complete prick.’
‘Oh yes,’ said Stephen. ‘Did you think I was a total whinger?’
‘Noooo,’ lied Rosie. She looked up into his face. ‘You are the first total whinger I have ever fancied, you know.’
‘Uhm, good.’
Rosie squirmed and wondered where her knickers were.
‘I have to ask though,’ she said. ‘That night in the pub.’
‘Where you were completely trollied.’
‘For the first time in about sixty-five years!’ said Rosie. ‘I’m a very cheap date. Don’t say it.’
Instead, Stephen gave her a kiss, which started getting a little out of control, until he winced. ‘Maybe we could … move?’
‘Yes,’ said Rosie. ‘But first … why did you tell that lanky blonde girl I was your nurse?’
Stephen bit his lip. ‘Honestly?’
Rosie nodded. ‘Yes! You made me feel like some awful below-stairs … Well, I don’t know.’
‘Because I didn’t know where I stood with you,’ said Stephen. ‘Well, I did. You were always giving me grief for this and that and telling me off for things.’
‘Oh,’ said Rosie, stung. ‘I was trying to help.’
Stephen stared deep into her eyes.
‘You think you weren’t helping?’
‘No.’
‘But I thought … I thought I was just a kind of project for you. Professional boundaries and all that.’
‘Is that why you never phoned me or asked me out for a coffee or anything?’ said Rosie, still slightly disgruntled.
‘Can’t we just say I’m out of practice?’
‘Oh, I don’t know,’ said Rosie, still pink. ‘What about all those people who are suddenly hanging around all the time?’
‘Well, word went round that I was back … The jag grapevine moves pretty fast,’
‘Where were they before?’
Stephen looked uncomfortable. ‘This is a lot of questions. I thought we were going to bed.’
Rosie tried to bite down her concern. It wasn’t attractive, she reminded herself, to show off her insecurities. She looked at his gorgeous, stern head and lean, pale physique and decided to count her blessings instead.
‘Let’s,’ she said, and stood up, feeling confident in the gentle light coming from the fire, her hair tumbling down her back.
Stephen smiled. ‘Cor,’ he said. ‘You are lush.’
It was such an unlikely thing to hear him say that Rosie burst out laughing. Stephen laughed too, and pushed himself up and out of his chair.
‘I think I can still outrun you,’ said Rosie.
‘Not for long,’ said Stephen with a wolfish look on his face, lurching for her. She screamed – and then screamed again as suddenly she was blinded by enormous beams of light shooting straight through the kitchen window. At first she was completely frozen, unable to tell what was happening. Then she realised that, of course, it was another car coming back. She could hear voices and barks of laughter in the air and understood, to her utter horror, that it was all of Stephen’s friends, arriving home from the ball.