Read The Culmination Online

Authors: Lauren Rowe

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Erotica, #Romantic, #Contemporary, #fifty shades of grey, #series, #Romance, #trilogy, #erotic

The Culmination (48 page)

BOOK: The Culmination
8.86Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“Buster!” Rosario yells when a scrap of food lands on the kitchen floor, and our goofy dog rushes from Luna’s side to scarf it up.

Jeremiah bats me in the face with his little hand and I shift him in my arms.

Josh and Kat are sitting with Henn and Hannah at the dining room table, engrossed in animated conversation. Kat’s got her hand on Hannah’s baby bump, and she’s giggling like crazy at something Hannah’s saying. Henn’s gesticulating wildly as he tells Josh some story, and Josh is giving Henn his patented laughing-with-his-eyes look. Huh. I’ve never seen that look from Josh trained on anyone but me—it’s nice to see it directed at someone else for a change.

And in the midst of it all, there’s my Sarah—
My Magnificent Sarah
—bringing sippy cups to the toddlers and darting back into the kitchen to peek over Gloria’s shoulder at the food.

The Lifehouse song finishes and a new, instantly recognizable song from Sarah’s playlist begins. I chuckle.
My baby’s playing our song.
At the first notes of the song, Sarah wheels around, looking for me, I presume, and when her eyes find mine across the room, a wide grin unfurls across her face.

She giggles.

The song blaring over our sound system is 2Real’s latest smash hit from his second album, “OAP” (the clean radio edit, in consideration of all the kids in the room).

“OAP” samples liberally from the ‘90s rap hit, “OPP” by Naughty by Nature, and even I have to admit it’s catchy as hell. The rapid-fire lyrics are about 2Real coveting another man’s woman —a woman with “big brown eyes who doesn’t take any shit” and who, much to 2Real’s chagrin, is hopelessly devoted to some “asshole” with “rich boy pockets” and “nothing but muscles on his docket” whose only redeeming quality, it seems, is the guy’s wizard-like ability to “make a girl come undone with one zap of his stun gun.”

I fucking love this song.

It’s true I once declared I’d never fuck Sarah to hip-hop, and I was so sure of myself when I said it, but that’s life for you—a man should never say never. Because, fuck yeah, I’ve fucked my beautiful wife to this song, many, many,
many
times, giving her (and myself) some pretty epic orgasms as it’s blared in our ears. And every time I fuck my precious baby to this song and make her scream my name, the thing that gets me off even more than whatever I’m physically doing to her is the commentary running through my head while I do it:
That’s right, motherfucker.
I’m an “asshole”—a cocky-bastard-asshole-motherfucker, to be exact. And this woman is all mine

propiedad de Jonas Faraday. So fuck you.

Sarah flashes me her most alluring dirty-girl smile, shakes her ass to the beat of the song for a brief moment, and then dances into the kitchen to assist Rosario and her mother with the food. I watch her for a long beat as she moves, unable to wipe the smile from my face.

“Jonas.”

I turn toward the source of the voice. It’s Uncle William, holding two snifters of Scotch.

“You got a minute to catch up?”

“Absolutely.”

I follow my uncle into the living room and we make ourselves comfortable on the couch. For fifteen minutes, with Jeremiah nestled in my arms, Uncle William and I chat about all the Faraday kids, Uncle William’s latest fly-fishing trip to Montana, the current state of the stock market, and the performance of some of my uncle’s most recent investments.

“A couple years ago I invested in a yoga-apparel brand, and it’s already clearing a gross profit margin eight points above industry average,” he says.

“Wow. That’s huge.”

Jeremiah sticks his fist in my mouth and I shift him in my arms.

Uncle William sips his Scotch. “I’ve been watching you and your brother build Climb and Conquer, son. Impressive.”

“Thank you.”

“It’s one thing to expand a business you’ve been handed through birthright, but it’s an entirely different thing to start a new company from scratch—and to make it so successful so quickly. I’m proud of you.”

“Thank you,” I say again, feeling color rising in my cheeks.

“Do you have plans to expand the brand? I think outdoor apparel would be a natural fit.”

“Actually, a whole line of Climb and Conquer fitness and outdoor apparel has always been part of my vision. But I’ve got too much on my plate to take it on right now. Plus, I’ve come to realize my personal passion lies in the gyms themselves and the confidence we instill in our clients.”

Uncle William takes a calm, slow sip of his drink—but I’ve watched him in far too many high-stakes negotiations to be fooled by this maneuver. He’s clearly got something big on his mind. He clears his throat. “I think it’d be pretty easy for Climb and Conquer to develop a line of apparel and get an on-line store up and running—and if that works out, maybe do brick and mortar stores in major cities, at least in the Pacific Northwest to start.”

I’m blown away. “I’ve got that exact strategy written into our five-year business plan, actually. I just haven’t been able to find the time to focus on that aspect of the business yet.”

Uncle William’s eyes sparkle. “I’d love to head that up for you, Jonas.” He looks down at his drink. “I’ve really missed working with you boys.”

My heart leaps out of my chest. “That sounds really promising,” I say, trying to keep my voice calm and collected. “But you know part of our business model is philanthropy. It’s not just a gimmick with us. We have all sorts of programs and causes we support, every single day. It’s a firm commitment.”

Uncle William smiles. “I know, son.” He touches Jeremiah’s foot. “I’m on board with that.”

My heart feels like it’s going to burst out of my chest. “Well, awesome, then,” I say. “Let’s talk to Josh about the idea and set up a meeting to flesh things out further. I’m sure he’ll be just as interested as I am about the idea.” He looks exactly the way I feel right now: elated. “Honestly, Uncle William, working with you again would be a dream come true.”

The birthday party’s over. Everyone’s gone. Rosario’s in the kitchen, scooping the leftovers into Tupperware and putting away the last of the dishes. I’ve just finished bathing Jeremiah and putting him down for the night in his crib. I’m not sure where Sarah and the girls are, but I’m guessing Sarah’s bathing the twins in their bathroom.

I walk down the hall and peek into the twins’ bathroom, eager to see what silliness my three girls are up to, but they’re not there. The bathtub’s empty and the rubber duckies and monkeys and frogs are neatly propped on the ledge. I pop my head into the girls’ shared room, but they’re not there, either. The room is still and quiet.

I walk down the long hallway toward the master bedroom, and as I approach, I hear Sarah’s soft voice, speaking in a lilting Spanish. A gentleness in the tone of Sarah’s voice makes me slow my pace and creep stealthily to the doorframe.

I covertly peek inside the room.

There they are. Three out of the four great loves of my life.

The sight of them literally takes my breath away.

Sarah is snuggled up in our bed with our two little girls—our dark-haired beauties with their mother’s olive skin and sparkling eyes—one on each side of her—and she’s reading
The Hungry Caterpillar
to them, translating into Spanish as she goes. The girls are looking up at their mother with rapt attention, reveling in her every word like she’s casting a magic spell on them, and Sarah keeps gazing from the book to their little faces with the purest look of love I’ve ever seen. When Sarah gets to the part about the caterpillar turning into a butterfly—“
una
mariposa”
she says—her eyes drift up from the girls and discover me leaning against the doorjamb, spying on her.

She beams at me—my beautiful iron butterfly—and I smile broadly back at her. My wife. My life. My everything.

She’s my limitless ocean.

My Mount Everest.

My peak.

She’s the sun, the moon, and the stars.

My reason to breathe.

When she smiles at me, redemption is mine.

She’s my religion.

My church.

My sacred valentine.

Oh, my little Mount Everest.

My reason to breathe.

The goddess, the muse.

Sarah
Effing
Cruz.

I touch the tattoo on the top of my right forearm and breathe deeply, an overwhelming serenity filling every nook and cranny of my body and soul.

I’ve reached the peak.

The divine original form of me.

A lightness of being I didn’t even know was possible.

Pure ecstasy.

Our love is the joy of the good, the wonder of the wise, the amazement of the gods. The
envy
of the gods. The greatest love story ever told.

The culmination of human possibility.

Bonus Scene: Peru

Jonas

Josh and I high-five and hug each other exuberantly, and then we hug and high-five Jorge (our guide), Scott (the reporter who’s been chronicling our Peruvian climb for
Climbing Magazine
), plus two members of Jorge’s crew—and then all of us stand together, awe-struck, quietly taking in the incredible views from our perch atop the summit of
Huascarán,
the highest peak in Peru.

“Let’s take a selfie,” Josh says, pulling out his Go-Pro.

“The first time in the history of my life I’m not gonna make fun of you for saying that.”

We snap about a hundred photos of ourselves with the group and then take a hundred more shots of just the two of us.

“Pretty fucking awesome, huh?” Josh says. He pulls out a flask and takes a sip. “There’s no greater feeling in the world than this.” He hands me the flask.

“Well, I can think of
one
greater feeling in the world.” I take a sip and gaze at the views all around me.

“Oh, Jesus, no. Don’t talk about her again,” Josh says, grabbing the flask from me roughly. “This summit is a Sarah-free zone, man. Let’s just be
men
right now. Not husbands. Just
men.
Beasts. Climbing beasts.
Please
.”

“All I said was I can think of one greater feeling in the world. That’s all I said.”

“I know what you said. And I know exactly what you were thinking and where that statement naturally leads. I’ve been with you nonstop for the past two weeks, bro, and we’ve still gotta descend this fucking mountain for another week. So don’t do it. I know you love her. I know she’s ‘amazing.’ I love her, too, okay? But just shut the fuck up about her already. Jesus Fucking Christ.”

We’re quiet for several minutes. Josh is right—I was about to say something about Sarah. And now I don’t know what to say.

“Everest takes two months, you know,” I finally mumble.

“Yeah, I know.”

“I don’t think I could be away from Sarah for two months.”

“You just talked about Sarah.”

“No, I was talking about Everest. Two months is a long time to be away.”


From Sarah
,” Josh says, putting words into my mouth.

I shrug. Clearly, that’s what I’m saying. Everything I say and do always leads back to Sarah somehow. So sue me.

Josh exhales and takes a sip from his flask. “Bro, I don’t think I could be around
you
being away from Sarah for two solid months. I’d hurl myself off the fucking mountain.”

I laugh.

Josh shakes his head. “I have zero desire to be away from Kat and Gracie that long, either, bro.”

He hands me the flask.

“If you think about it, climbing Everest is a pretty batshit crazy thing to do,” I say. I take a sip from the flask. “A group of, like, fifteen people died on Everest the week before we came here.”

“I know. I read about that.”

“One climber dies for every ten that makes it to the top. Did you know that statistic?” I ask.

“Yeah.”

“When I was younger, I didn’t think about shit like that,” I say. “I didn’t care.”

“Yeah, neither did I.”

There’s a long beat.

“So, no Everest, then?” I say.

Josh shrugs. “Meh. It doesn’t make sense anymore. I’ve been feeling that way for a while now about Everest—ever since Gracie was born.”

I exhale. “Okay. Cool.”

Josh nods his agreement. “Cool.”

“Coolio Iglesias,” I mumble.

“Dude, no. You’re even talking like her now?
No.

“Sorry. That was pretty bad. I deserve to get punched for that.”

“Yeah, you do,” he agrees. “But I’m feeling so good up here on top of Peru, I’ll refrain from inflicting bodily harm on you.”

“Thanks.”

There’s a long beat as we both continue taking in the incredible views all around us.

“I thought you’d be gung-ho, no matter what,” Josh says.

“You mean about Everest?” I ask.

He nods.

I shrug. “Life doesn’t stand still.” I take another sip from the flask. “Certain things you never cared about before can become all-important—other things that once seemed critical suddenly don’t seem to matter at all.”

“Well said.”

I clap my hands together. “So, if we’re not gonna do Everest any time soon, there’s something I gotta do while I’m up here.”

“What?”

“I’m gonna go over there by myself for a minute.”

“Seriously?”

“Yeah.”

“Well, gimme my flask, then. If you’re gonna do something stupid and fall off the edge of the mountain, I don’t want you taking my whiskey with you.”

“I’m not gonna fall off the edge of the mountain.”

“You gonna take a piss in the snow? Leave your mark?”

“No. I’m not ten years old. Just gimme a minute.”

“I’m intrigued.”

“I’ll be right back.” I hand Josh the flask and signal to Jorge that I’m gonna walk a short distance to the left around a large crag.

When I’ve made my way around the bend to a private patch of real estate, I look around, feeling like I’m totally alone on top of the world. True, I’m only on top of Peru, but that feels close enough. The first thing I do is unzip my pants and take a piss, marking a big “J” in the white snow. Of course. But that’s not why I sought out a little solitude for a moment.

BOOK: The Culmination
8.86Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

One Dead Cookie by Virginia Lowell
Bound by Donna Jo Napoli
Tarnished Steel by Carmen Faye
A Bad Day for Scandal by Sophie Littlefield
4 Blood Pact by Tanya Huff
Dichos de Luder by Julio Ramón Ribeyro
Orhan's Inheritance by Aline Ohanesian
For Valour by Douglas Reeman
Night Veil by Galenorn, Yasmine
Teacher's Pet by Laurie Halse Anderson