Cactus Heart (David Mapstone Mystery 5) - Page 62

“Definitely the whole package,” I said. I crossed the room and kissed her passionately, toasted her, and then felt the gin on my lips, cold and warm at the same time. She smelled vaguely of old rose petals and clean bedsheets.

She had a body made for the look: long and leggy. Right down to the expensive black pumps. I’d never seen her in a short skirt before, and as much as I appreciated the rough-gentle denim she wore like a uniform, this was something else again. Gretchen!

“Are you close to solving your case, deputy?” she asked, sipping her drink, animating those lips and dimples.

“I think so,” I said.

“I’m very proud of you,” she said. “I’m very honored to know you.”

“I couldn’t have done anything without the help of the city archaeologist’s office. Specifically, one archaeologist…”

She started unbuttoning my shirt with one hand. She was good with one hand: long, elegant fingers dominating the buttons of a man’s shirt. She should have played the piano. Instead, she dug up the remains of ancient civilizations.

“I don’t want to know more,” she said. “I won’t put you on the spot. I can read about it in the newspaper, and then I can smile to myself and say, ‘I know that man.’”

She slipped her hand in my shirt and caressed my chest, teased my nipples.

“I have more plans for you,” she said, taking another ounce of gin.

I set my glass down and took hers, too. “Maybe I have plans for you,” I said.

I lightly kissed her lips. Her tongue came out to meet me, but my mouth moved on to her high, aristocratic cheekbones, to her long, warm neck, to the loamy-smelling province where her neck met her shoulders. She pressed herself against me and gasped. I could feel her nipples harden like pebbles under the dress.

Men underestimate the sensual power of kissing. For a long time, I just kissed her—long and deep, short and teasing and anticipatory. Using the tongue, a circle and a thrust. The subtle turns and tenses of the lips. Gentle bites on her lower lip. Nothing much else. Not much caressing or hugging, yet. The room felt ten degrees hotter. Then she let me push her to the sofa, and slowly ease her down. She smiled a far-away smile. Her pupils were black and wide. I knelt down and used my tongue.

“Oh, my,” she gasped.

This was my show. Starting at the ankles—the exquisite planes and facets of the ankles of a woman gifted with athleticism and good DNA. Moving up to the smooth, taut surfaces of the calves. Behind the knees…The intimate, dangerous, tender skin of the inner thighs. Then starting all over again on the other leg, slowly moving up.…

***

She came awake with a start. We were on the rug in front of the fire. It had cooked to embers, like a little burned village. I pulled her back down to me, smoothed her mussed hair, and pulled the comforter back up.

“That wasn’t like me…” she whispered.

“You were wonderful.”

“I have a hard time giving up control.”

“You sounded like you had fun.”

“I’m very loud,” she said. “My previous boyfriend didn’t like that.”

“I love it,” I said, wondering about this previous boyfriend. So much I didn’t know about Gretchen Goodheart.

“I had a dream about you,” she said. “About you and those two little boys trapped in the wall.” She shivered against me.

“What was it about?”

“It’s bad luck to tell a bad dream. You’ll make it come true.”

She stood and put on a Lucinda Williams CD, the volume low. The fireplace snapped and sizzled. Then she came back and nuzzled against me. I held her tight. The old building creaked. A train whistle sailed through the window.

“Why did they put that woman in prison and keep her there her whole life?”

“I don’t know,” I said quietly.

“The Yarnells had all the power. Frances had no power at all.”

Tags: Jon Talton David Mapstone Mystery Mystery
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