Read Starting From Scratch Online
Authors: Georgia Beers
Tags: #Fiction, #Lesbian, #Romance, #Erotica
“Yes…” she said, her voice barely above a whisper.
“Oh…Avery…”
“at’s it. Come on. Let it go. I’ve got you…”
Her teeth clacked together audibly and her entire
body seemed to tighten. e orgasm tore a groan from her
throat as I pulled her down on top of me and slid my
fingers inside her, gasping with joy at the feel of her
muscles convulsing around me. She buried her head in the
crook of my neck.
“God, I love you,” she ground out as the last
contraction hit and left her as wrung out as a wet towel.
It didn’t surprise me; I’m not sure why. I think I’d felt
it coming. I know I was feeling the same way. So I replied
simply, “I love you, too, baby,” and pressed a kiss to her
temple. Straightforward. Effortless. Uncomplicated. I have
no idea how, but there it was.
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We straightened our legs out at the same time,
dropping them flatly to the mattress like weights, and we
chuckled as we lay in a panting heap for several long
moments.
Elena pushed herself up on an elbow so she could look
me in the eyes. Despite the darkness of the room, I could
see the strength of the gaze.
“I do love you,” she said quietly.
“I know.” I kissed the tip of her nose. “And I do love
you, too.”
“Do we need to talk about…you know…exclusivity?”
I cocked my head a bit. “What do you mean? Like me
not seeing anybody else and you not seeing anybody else?”
“Exactly. I know it’s kind of fast, but…” Her eyes
darted away as her voice trailed off and it occurred to me
that she was embarrassed.
“Are you just an old-fashioned girl, Elena?” I teased
gently, giving her a little squeeze.
When her eyes came back to mine, there was an
intensity to her gaze. “I don’t want you to be with anybody
else.” She wet her lips and dropped her voice to just above
a whisper when she continued. “I don’t want anybody else
touching you like this.”
If I could have melted into a puddle, I would have,
absolutely. And the slightly possessive quality of her voice
sent a pang straight down between my legs where it rested.
And throbbed.
Bringing my hand to her face, I informed her, “I don’t
want anybody else touching me like this either.” And then
I pulled her in for a mind-blowing kiss to seal our pledge
and start things heating up all over again.
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It was close to three o’clock in the morning by the
time we lay in each other’s arms, lightly dozing and as
spent and breathless as marathon runners. But my mind
wouldn’t settle, for some reason. Maybe I was afraid if we
actually went to sleep, I’d wake up to find it had all been a
dream, that Elena was still and forever out of my reach,
that I’d been standing in the lobby of the bank, fantasizing
all this time.
“So, what have you told Max about us?” I asked her.
Yep, the wee hours of the morning, after endless, limb-
melting sex, and I wanted to chat.
I felt Elena chuckle against my shoulder. “Where on
earth did that come from?”
I shrugged. “Just wondering.”
“Well, I explained to him that Cece and I are not
going to be together again, which I think is hard for him
because I get the impression Cindy lets him believe it’s a
possibility.”
“But it’s not, right?” I tried hard not to sound like a
child, but I didn’t succeed.
Elena pressed her lips to my neck. “No,” she
whispered. “It’s not.”
“Okay.”
“en I told him that Mommy doesn’t want to be
alone forever, that she does want to share her life with
somebody. I told him that ‘dating’ meant I was looking for
that person. And that I’ve been dating the same woman for
a little while now and I wanted to know what he thought
of her.”
I swallowed, suddenly nervous over the outcome, as if
the conversation with Max hadn’t taken place yet and there
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was a chance he’d put the kibosh on me. “Did you tell him
it was me?”
“Yup.”
“What did he say?”
“Cool.”
I waited for her to elaborate. Nothing. “at’s it?
Cool?”
“at’s it. And ‘cool’ is a pretty positive response
coming from him.”
It was true. I’d heard him say it more than once, so I
should have been relieved. But I’d never been in the
position of having somebody
other
than the woman I’m
dating have a say in our relationship. It was kind of weird. I
let it sink in and I nodded as it did. “Okay. Good. at’s
good.”
“It
is
good.”
“It must be hard for you.”
“What do you mean?”
“I mean, just about everything you do, you have to
take Max into consideration. It must be hard.”
“It’s just part of being a parent.” I felt her shrug.
“Still. It must be tough.” I absorbed that for a few
seconds before all kinds of questions began to zip through
my head, like a fleet of biplanes pulling giant signs behind
them. I turned my head to look at Elena’s face. “What’s the
hardest part about being a mom?”
Her brow furrowed. “Hmm. I’d say it’s probably the
constant negotiation on rules because they change as your
child grows, so there’s this ebb and flow based on Max’s
abilities at any given time. ings as simple as bedtime or
how much TV he gets to watch.”
I nodded. Made sense.
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She jerked. “Oh, wait. I know.” Her gentle laughter
shook the bed. “You have to be the grown-up. You know
what I mean? Your kid can push your buttons like nobody’s
business and sometimes he gets you. He gets you bad. And
you’re tired and you’ve had a crappy day and he’s just
pushing, pushing, pushing. It’s easy to let him pull you into
some kind of argument where you’re
both
acting like kids,
sniping back and forth and making zero progress. But you
have to take a step back and be the adult, even if you piss
him off. Or worse, break his little heart. Sometimes that
really sucks, but you have to do it.”
“For his own good.”
“Exactly.”
“God, how many times did we hear that when we
were growing up?” I smiled as Grandma’s voice filtered
through my brain, telling eight-year-old, very upset little
me that whatever she’d decided it was for my own good.
“You know what’s the absolute scariest thing in the
world about parenting?”
“Tell me.”
“e first time you hear your own mother’s voice
coming out of your mouth.”
I laughed. “Do you remember it?”
“Like it happened this morning. Max was two and he
wanted a cookie and he’d had, like, a dozen or something
ridiculous, and I told him no more. And he kept asking
why, but none of my explanations were good enough for
him. So the next time he asked why, I snapped and told
him, ‘Because I said so, that’s why!’ Oh, my God, Avery, I
was horrified. I clamped both hands over my mouth and
just stood there.
Horrified!
”
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I squeezed her tightly, grinning. “Ah, the old ‘because I
said so.’ A classic, truly. My grandmother said it all the
time.”
“It
is
the quintessential Mom Answer.”
“Without a doubt.”
We chuckled a little more and eventually quieted,
snuggling closer, our limbs entwined. I fell into a sated,
restful sleep during which I dreamed of baby bottles, soft
yellow chicks, and plastic tee-ball bats.
Weird.
230
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
Grandma was, of course, charming on Sunday
afternoon. I smothered a smile as I chewed a bite of her
melt-in-your-mouth pot roast. My grandmother was
always pleasant and polite, but she had an ‘extra charm’
button reserved exclusively for incredibly good-looking
men, Mr. Davidson, and apparently, Elena.
“is is delicious, Mrs. King,” Elena said sincerely.
Speaking of charming. If Elena didn’t meet with
Grandma’s approval, there was no hope for me.
“You’re very kind, Elena. ank you.” Grandma
speared a chunk of potato with her fork. “Now, your son—
Max is it? How old is he?”
I was pretty sure I’d already given her this tidbit of
information, but I appreciated her making conversation
with Elena.
“He just turned six two months ago.”
“And will you have more children?”
I’ve been chewing and swallowing my food for the
better part of three decades, but that didn’t prevent me
from snorting pot roast up my nose as I choked on a
mouthful. I was sure I saw a trace of amusement in the way
the corners of Elena’s mouth turned up ever-so-slightly,
but she thankfully didn’t look my way as she answered.
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“Well, it will depend on a lot of different factors, but
yes. I think I’d like to have another child.”
“You would?” I asked before I could stop myself.
She nodded and smiled, then forked a baby carrot into
her mouth.
“Good to know,” I said, more to myself than either of
the other two.
“Avery doesn’t think she’s good with children, but I
keep trying to tell her she’s wrong.”
“
Grandma.
” I covered my eyes with one hand.
Elena’s shock of a laugh cut through the air as
Grandma replied, “I’m just telling her the way it is, that’s
all.” Her smirk told me she knew exactly what she was
doing.
“Your grandmother’s right, Avery,” Elena told me.
“You’re very good with kids. at tee-ball team loves you.
Max thinks you’re the coolest thing since video games.”
“Well,” I said, playing with my meat. “I
am
pretty cool.
at part’s true.”
She pushed at me playfully and we got off the subject
of kids for a while. ank God because I just wasn’t ready
to get into a deep discussion about it, but I didn’t want
Elena to know that. I managed to shift the topic to Mr.
Davidson. en we talked about the financial industry,
television, and cleaning products for the kitchen. In that
order.
All in all, the visit was a huge success and I could tell
by Grandma’s enormous smile and the way she hugged
Elena and told her to be sure and come back soon, that
she’d been won over.
I smiled all the way home.
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I dropped Elena off at her own house so she’d be there
when her parents dropped Max off. She didn’t want to
leave me, but thought she’d better spend some mommy
time with Max. I felt the same way; I didn’t want to be
away from her, but I knew I’d neglected Steve all weekend
and he could probably use some mommy time as well. We
kissed goodbye in my car, barely able to pry ourselves away
from one another before clothing was in danger of being
removed. Elena breathlessly pushed herself out the door of
my car and I nearly ended up with my face on the
passenger seat as I tried to stay with her. She gave me one
last peck on the lips.
“I’ll call you later,” she said as she backed away.
“’Kay.”
I watched her go inside, then blew out a huge breath,
my cheeks puffing with the effort. I was exhausted, my
thighs ached, and my nipples were sore.
Life was good.
Later that night, Steve and I lay in pooped-out piles
in the living room after a long romp through the park. We
were watching TV, Steve stretched out on the couch next
to me and actually allowing me to cuddle with him, when
Maddie called.
“Are you in love?” she asked in response to my hello.
“What?”
“I’ve been calling you all weekend, at all hours, and
you didn’t answer.” I vaguely recalled a distant memory of
the phone ringing a couple times and then realized I hadn’t
checked my voicemail.
“Oops. Sorry about that.”
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“e only time you don’t answer
at all
is when you’re
having sex. And you only have sex when you’re in love.
So…are you in love?”
“Yes.” ere was no point in arguing with her; she
knew me too well, and if I tried to lie, she’d only annoy me
until she pried the truth from me. Besides, she was right
on all counts. And it felt good to say it. Silence filled my
ears. “Hello?” I said, wondering if we’d been disconnected.
“I’m still here. I just didn’t expect you to admit it.”
en she laughed.
“I know from experience that hiding things from you
is futile.”
“Damn right. So…details?” Her hesitation was very
slight, but I understood it. After all, she was my best friend
and I’d barely told her a thing about Elena, so I wouldn’t
have been surprised if Maddie was angry. But she didn’t
seem to be and she listened to me blather on and on about
Elena, how wonderful she was, how great I thought we
were going to be together, and how incredible the sex was.
It didn’t take long at all for her to loosen up, let her