“But you’re still dodging my question.”
“How about this. When you give me what I want, I’ll give you what you want.”
I sighed and crossed my arms. “And what exactly do you want?”
“I want to see the look on your face as you slowly slide down my hard cock.”
I sighed and shook my head, completely annoyed. “I am not sleeping with you just to get one stupid answer out of you.”
“Your loss. I think you’d be getting the better deal.”
“I doubt it. Apparently you came all the way here just to try to get in my pants again.”
He laughed, grinning. “Okay, you got me there. That pussy is definitely worth coming across the country for.”
I wanted to say something cutting, but he suddenly sat straight up. He was looking out the window with this strange look on his face, half intense and half angry.
“What?” I asked him.
“We need to go,” he said, without looking away from the window.
“Excuse me? We haven’t talked about anything.”
He looked back at me. “I promise we’ll talk more, but you have to trust me right now.”
I stared back at his piercing eyes and felt something shift inside me. He wasn’t joking around anymore, and that cocky grin was gone, replaced with this intense stare and strange stillness, like he was completely in control.
“Okay,” I said, and I didn’t know why.
He stood. “Come on. Follow me. Stay close.”
I stood up and he headed toward the front door. I followed him and we moved outside.
“My car,” I said as we began to walk away from the building.
“Leave it,” he said. “I’ll get it later.”
I frowned but listened. We moved toward the back of the café and then down through the alley. He cut right at the end and we moved down a residential street. He kept looking around, his eyes sweeping the place.
“What’s going on?” I asked him.
“Just keep up.”
He cut down between two houses and I followed. We moved down their lawns and came out on another street on the other side. He turned left, heading away from my house, walking, but at a fast clip. I had to walk fast to keep up.
“I’m from Indiana too,” he said suddenly as we turned onto another street.
“Really?” I asked.
“Sure. Small town, just like this one. I’m a Hoosier, born and bred.”
“What is a Hoosier anyway?”
“Nobody knows.” He turned down another street. I felt like I was going to get out of breath soon, but he seemed like this was nothing.
“Did you go to school around here?”
“High school,” he said. “I went to the Naval Academy for some college but dropped out to enlist in my second year.”
“Really? Why?”
“School wasn’t for me,” he said. “I was more interested in the action. I had top marks in school too, but I just couldn’t stand all that sitting around shit.”
“That’s amazing,” I said. “You don’t meet a lot of people who really go for what they want.”
“That’s the kind of man I am.” We made another strange turn, heading away from my house again and down an alleyway. When we got to the end, he turned right, and I realized that with each new turn, we were getting closer and closer to my house, even though we were taking the strangest route possible.
“I grew up with my mom mostly,” he said. “My dad left us when I was just a baby.”
“What happened to her?”
“Cancer,” he said. “Died when I was fifteen. I lived with my aunt until I left for the Academy.”
“I’m sorry,” I said.
“So I understand what you’re going through to some extent. I respect single mothers.”
I nodded but had no clue why he was suddenly telling me all of this. Not that I minded; actually, it made me like him much, much more knowing that we had similar backgrounds. But I didn’t get why he was just talking, on and on.
And then it hit me as we made another weird turn. He was trying to keep me calm by talking to me. What we were doing was bizarre, totally strange, and he was basically a complete stranger to me. I was following him along and he could be taking me anywhere.
My heart started hammering in my chest when I realized that. He was keeping me calm and could be leading me anywhere.
I stopped walking.
He turned back to me. “What are you doing?”
“I don’t know you,” I said. “Where are you taking me?”
“Back to your house.” He walked closer to me. “We have to move, Tara. We can’t stand here.”
“What’s going on?”