Read Starting From Scratch Online
Authors: Georgia Beers
Tags: #Fiction, #Lesbian, #Romance, #Erotica
pressed together, each of us raggedly trying to catch our
breath.
“My God,” I managed.
“I’ll say.”
“My God,” I said again and she chuckled. I could feel
her playing with the ends of my hair, tickling the side of
my neck, and goose bumps of pleasure broke out across my
skin. She rubbed her thumb across my bottom lip and it
took every ounce of strength I had left in my body to keep
from sucking it into my mouth. I was certain that, if she
pushed just a little, I would willingly and joyously have sex
with her right there in the parking lot on the hood of my
own car, and that knowledge both excited and mortified
me. Cliché as it was, I’d never felt such sexual compatibility
with somebody, ever. Elena and I were going to be a
bonfire in bed. I knew it beyond a shadow of a doubt.
Which was exactly why we needed to slow things
down. I was afraid such heat would incinerate us both.
My throat suddenly dry, I swallowed hard and tried to
find my voice. And some logic when I spoke.
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“Early game,” I croaked, the reminder the best I could
come up with.
“Right.” She nodded, which took her forehead from
mine. Who knew a forehead could suddenly feel cold and
neglected?
“Will you be there?”
Her grimace was full of disappointment, which made
me feel the tiniest bit better. “I’ve got to work.”
“Crap.”
at made her grin, her teeth gleaming whitely in the
artificial light. “If I try, I might be able to catch the end.”
“Try hard,” I ordered.
“Yes, ma’am.”
I don’t know exactly why her answer turned me on so,
but when she said it, I felt a rush of heat between my legs.
I had no idea I was such a hussy. “And if you can’t make
it…” I trailed off, trying to think of something witty to say,
but her hips were still tight against mine and I was having
trouble formulating coherent thoughts.
“Don’t worry. I know where you live.”
Before I could process anything more, she kissed me
again, quickly, then backed away. I’m pretty sure I pouted
at the loss of her.
I waved feebly as she backed her car out and pulled
away, and I brought my fingers to my lips as her taillights
faded into the darkness of the night.
“My God,” I whispered into the air.
It was another five minutes before I could feel my legs
again and was brave enough to step away from my car
without worrying I’d collapse into a boneless heap on the
asphalt.
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CHAPTER SIXTEEN
I saw them arrive with Max, but I would have known
immediately who they were, even if they’d come without
him.
Elena didn’t look much like her father at all. He was a
big bulldozer of a man with broad shoulders and very little
left of what might have once been sandy blond hair. I
could see flashes of her in his smile, though, and her eyes
were the same rich brown as his. Her mother, however, was
a different story. I could almost hear Grandma’s voice in
my head, “She looks like she fell off her mother’s face.”
Elena was a carbon copy of the woman, who was strikingly
beautiful even in what must have been her late sixties. e
shape of her face, the way her eyes were set at a slight tilt,
her tall, lean frame; it was all Elena. I felt like I was getting
a quick flash of the future any time I looked in her
direction. Elena, thirty years from now.
ey paid infinitely more attention to Max’s playing
than Cindy ever had in all the times I’d seen her there.
ey smiled and cheered and every time Max looked in
their direction, Mrs. Walker gave a sweet wave of
encouragement. Mr. Walker shot his grandson a thumbs-
up more than once.
I tried not to stare into the bleachers at them, but it
was hard. Maddie had things under control as far as the
Georgia Beers
team went and I was trying to make myself as unobtrusive
as possible, only helping when she asked me specifically,
not wanting to step on her toes. I coached third base and
then first as the game went on, pleased to see that most of
our kids finally understood in which direction to run after
they hit the ball. Each time Max was up, he glanced into
the modest crowd and my eyes would follow his, my
stomach flip-flopping at the jolt of familiarity when his
grandmother smiled at him.
Max made contact with the ball every time he was at
bat, which I didn’t think was a coincidence.
“See my nana and papa up there?” he asked me
brightly as he stopped on first base during the last inning.
“ey’re watching me play.”
He was so adorable as he stated the obvious to me, I
wanted to hug him tightly. I settled for ruffling his hair
before I stepped back for the next batter and ordered Max
to pay attention. When I glanced over at the Walkers, my
heart did a weird little skip as I noticed Elena scootching
in to settle between her parents. She caught me looking
and gave me a little wave, and I couldn’t keep the stupid
grin off my face as my cheeks warmed.
Across the field at third base, Maddie arched a brow at
me, her expression very clearly telling me she had
witnessed that little exchange and was expecting details.
I tried to put my focus back on the game, but my
mind drifted a bit. I’ve always loved the smell of freshly cut
grass and I inhaled, taking the scent deeply into my lungs.
It was the epitome of summer to me; it’s what my
childhood outdoors smelled like. Inside it was chocolate
chip cookies; outside it was freshly cut grass. I was
reminded of how strong the sense of smell is to me as I
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stood there and watched the end of the game, reveling in
the fragrance of the air, knowing I only had a few short
months to enjoy it before the autumn chased it away with
the completely different, but no less wonderful, scent of
crushed leaves.
e game ended, but I was still caught up in the
pleasantly comfortable feelings that had distracted me.
Feelings of home, of summer, of knowing the gorgeous
woman in the bleachers had been kissing me last night.
Gabriel came up to me as the teams were cleaning up their
gear.
“Hey, Coach King, what was the score?” he asked,
sweat glistening across his forehead.
I checked my clipboard. “Seven to five. Us.”
“Hey, you guys! We won,” he touted as he ran back to
his teammates and slapped high fives with the few who
were actually listening.
I felt Maddie’s scolding look before I actually saw it.
“We don’t keep score, remember?” she said, shaking a
finger at me.
“Oh, we do, too,” I argued back. “We just don’t talk
about it.”
“I’m surprised you even know what the score was.”
I looked at her, puzzled, and waited for her to
elaborate, which she did.
“Who’s the hottie in the bleachers?”
“What hottie?” I knew in a nanosecond she wasn’t
buying my feigned innocence, but she snorted, just to make
it ultra clear.
“e one you couldn’t keep your eyes off of. e one
with the cute little wave.”
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“She’s…” I wanted to say “nobody,” but I couldn’t do
it, mostly because it was so far from the truth. “She’s Max’s
mom.”
Maddie squinted towards the bleachers where Elena
and her parents were gathering their things. “Wait. I
thought that other one was his mom. e one who looked
at you like you were a piece of meat and she was a starving
wolf.”
“Right. She is. is is Max’s
other
mom.” I watched in
excited anticipation as Elena held a finger up to her
parents and gave them the universal sign for, “I’ll be right
back,” then headed in our direction.
Maddie gaped at me. “Max has two moms? How did I
not know this?”
My smartass answer was stalled in my throat as Elena
reached us.
“Hi,” she said to me.
“Hey, you,” I replied, trying to keep my eyes from
roaming over her body. She wore dark dress slacks and a
cream silk shirt with short sleeves, obviously having come
right from work. A wink of a lacey camisole teased me
from the V at her neckline and I seriously entertained the
thought of throwing her to the grass and unbuttoning her
blouse with my teeth.
“My dad says it was a good game,” she commented,
interrupting my filthy thoughts. ank God.
“It was. Max played great,” I said. Maddie cleared her
throat in a not-so-discreet fashion. “Oh. is is Maddie.
Maddie, this is Max’s mother, Elena Walker.”
“Oh,
Coach
Maddie. Max has talked about you. It’s
very nice to meet you,” Elena said as they shook hands.
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“Same here. Your son has quite a lot of potential. Is he
enjoying the game?”
“He loves it,” Elena said, her smile growing as it
always did when she spoke of her son. “He’s having a great
time. Tee-ball is all he talks about.”
“Well, if he keeps it up, I think he’ll make a terrific
ball player as he grows.”
Trying to busy my hands so I didn’t look like an idiot,
I smiled politely as they talked about baseball and how
they each had brothers who played in college. When the
conversation stalled, as it almost always does with new
acquaintances, Elena said her goodbyes, thanking Maddie,
then turning to me.
“I’ll catch up with you later?” It was a question, not a
statement, and I realized she wasn’t sure where the
boundaries lay for me there on the field.
“Definitely,” I said, putting as much conviction into
the one word as I could.
“‘I’ll catch up with you later?’” Maddie asked as soon
as Elena was out of earshot. “What the hell does that
mean?”
Hesitation borne from fear of loss swamped me then
and I stumbled over an explanation. If I spoke it aloud,
would I jinx any chance I had of creating something good
with Elena? Was she too good to be true? I was being
ridiculous and I knew it.
We’ve only had one date, for Christ’s
sake,
I told myself.
“It means…that she lives in my development.” I hoped
to leave it at that. No such luck; Maddie could read me like
a book.
“Okay. And?”
“And…we met for drinks last night.”
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Maddie blinked at me, torn, I was sure, between
excited happiness for me and annoyed hurt that I hadn’t
told her ahead of time. I could almost see her calm herself
down, force herself to speak calmly and not bite my head
off.
“And…did you have a good time?”
e smile wouldn’t stay tucked away. It blossomed on
my face, making me feel a little silly. “Yeah. We had a
fantastic time.”
“You sleep with her?”
“What? No!” My indignation was real, though I knew
the question was to be expected.
“Oh, like you’ve never gone to bed with somebody on
the first date.”
I pursed my lips, unable to think of a comeback.
“Well, I didn’t with Elena.”
“Yet,” she supplied.
“Yet,” I agreed with a wink.
“She’s gorgeous.”
I nodded as both of us watched her walk toward the
parking lot with her parents and Max in tow. After several
seconds, Maddie spoke again.
“Did you want to say something about the beauty of
that ass, or should I?”
1
Saturday mornings had become a little rough on me.
Spending all that time with a dozen over-excited kids,
keeping track of the game, answering parents’ questions,
and trying to stay professional and organized was energy-
sucking. Add to that my chat with Elena, my attempts to
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dodge Maddie’s questions, and the anticipation of maybe
seeing Elena again that night, and my brain was totally
fried.
I read an article once on introverts and it gave me
certain facts that I already knew, but had never seen
written as public, scientific knowledge. It said that
extroverts
gain
energy from being around a lot of people,
that they need it. It also said that introverts have energy
drained
from them being around a lot of people and that
afterwards, they need to be alone to recharge. I never really
understood my need to be away from others, my intense
enjoyment of being alone with a good book or a DVD or
on a long walk until I read that article. I felt vindicated,
strange as it may sound.
I had a friend in college who was the poster child of
gregariousness. She was the life of every party, charming,
people loved her and wanted to be around her because she
was a hoot. She stated to me one day that she was going to
make it the mission of her junior year to “pull Avery out of
her shell.” I suppose I should have been flattered by the
attention, but instead it pissed me off. It never once