Bert gasped into his mouth. Her tongue pushed in more deeply. He pulled at it and clenched her buttocks. She was motionless against him, but inside she clutched and squeezed him and seemed to be sucking him up. He fought to control himself.
She started to whimper. And then she shuddered against him and Rick gave up trying to hold back. He quaked, his penis far up into the center of her, suddenly jerking and pulsing, pumping out his semen, throbbing hard until he was drained.
When it was done, they stayed together, panting for air. Bert rested her chin on his shoulder. Her hair tickled his cheek. Her hands lay on his back, almost heavy, as if she were too spent to lift them. Spent or not, she kept certain muscles contracted to hold him inside her. He caressed her buttocks.
Later, she placed her open hands on the sides of his face and looked him in the eyes. “Could we stay like this forever?” she whispered.
“Maybe.”
“Might be hard on the knees.”
“What knees?”
She laughed, her nipples moving against his chest. Then she kissed him lightly on the mouth. Her vagina tightened, giving him a friendly farewell squeeze that brought a fresh stir of arousal so that he was growing hard again as she slid off him.
Bert duck-walked backward and sat on the sleeping bag. Her knees were red. She brushed them off. The grit left her skin pitted. Rick stood up. One of his knees popped when he straightened it. He bent over and rubbed them.
“We’ve got matching knees,” Bert said.
“Should’ve used the sleeping bag. That’s what it’s here for.”
“Any port in a storm,” Bert said.
Rick limped and sat down beside her. He put an arm around her back.
“When are we going to take that dip?” she asked.
“I think I’d rather rest for a while before I brave the freezing waters.”
“Then rest,” she said. She turned him and guided him. He lay down on the sleeping bag, head on Bert’s lap. Her legs were stretched out. She was leaning back, braced up on her arms. She smiled down at him. “Close your eyes.”
“Are you kidding?” He turned his head and kissed the hot skin below her navel.
Bert stroked his hair.
His gaze roamed up the sleek bare slope of her body, studying her flat belly and the curves of her ribs, lingering on the smooth undersides of her breasts, on the twin rumpled disks of darker skin with jutting posts of flesh in the center of each. He looked up the valley between her breasts, at the hollow of her throat, at the soft sweep of her collar bones, her shoulders, her slender neck. Her face. She was smiling down at him.
“This may be as good as it gets,” he said.
“Oh, I don’t know. As good as it gets was maybe ten minutes ago.”
“Think so?” Rick asked.
She shook her head. “Not really. It’s all part of the same thing, isn’t it.”
His heart suddenly quickened. “I love you, Bert.”
Her smile died. “I love you, too,” she whispered.
She pressed her lips together. Her eyes shimmered ...
“FOULNESS! STENCH!”
Bert gasped and flinched rigid at the sudden shouts. Rick lurched up. Prancing on a rock slab beside the stream no more than twenty feet above them was Angus, waving a large wooden club overhead.
“FILTH OF SATAN!”
Bert twisted away from the stranger. She flung an arm across her breasts, glanced up at Rick with shocked eyes, and looked back over her shoulder at the wild man.
“Angus...”
Rick sprang to his feet, his heart slamming. He had an urge to laugh—or scream, he didn’t know which. His old buddy, the King of the Wild Frontier. Savior of souls. Christ. What a time to show up. The bastard. That coyote’s head, with its mouth hanging open and those teeth an’ all—no wonder he’d given Bert such a fright.
Rick didn’t believe this was happening to them.
This is mad!
Angus hopped up and down like a crazy thing, shaking his stick, the coyote head bouncing but not falling off.
“MAGGOTS! GET THEE GONE!”
“Get out of here, you damn lunatic!” Rick yelled.
“ANGUS MOUNTAIN KING! GET! NAKED INTERLOPERS! VERMIN! TURDS!”
Angus ducked and skipped aside as a rock shot by, barely missing his head.
Rick looked at Bert. She was on her knees, reaching for another rock. She grabbed one and reared up.
“WHORE!”
“Crazy old fart!” she shouted, and hurled the rock at him. It struck his bare knee, just below the hem of his animal-skin robe.
He scurried backward.
Rick crouched. He picked up some of the chips of rock and joined Bert in throwing them at Angus.
The old man retreated up the slope, shaking his stick and shouting over his shoulder, “SICKNESS! DEFILERS! PUKE AND PISS!”
A rock thrown by Bert skimmed the top of his head. His coyote hat flew off. Suddenly, he looked a sorrowful sight; his straggly gray beard shook and trembled as he mumbled more profanities. He dropped to his hands and knees, grabbed the hat by its snout, scurried up and ran. Soon, he disappeared among the trees near a bend in the stream.
Rick and Bert faced each other. Her face was ashen, her eyes wide. “That, I presume, was Angus the Mountain King. You never did get around to telling me the whole story last night ...”
“Yeah, sorry. I should have prepared you for that. I told you, he’s a maniac, a freak. But, on the whole, probably harmless. Probably gets off on watching folks doin’ what comes naturally...”
Bert was not convinced. She was still pale and Rick could see she was shaking.
“Let’s get out of here.” She hurried into her shirt. She tried to fasten the buttons while Rick put on his shorts. Her hands trembled too much so she gave up.
They rushed down to the clearing. In minutes, they were dressed and packed.
On the shoreline trail, they hiked fast and looked back often. They reached yesterday’s campsite. The girls had already packed up and gone.
Bert stopped by the dead remains of the fire. She was breathing hard. Her shirt was still open. She lifted its front, baring her midriff, and knotted the ends together,. “Should we head for the car?”
“If you want to.”
“Don’t you?”
“It was awfully nice before the Wild Man of the Mountains dropped by.”
“What is he? What really makes him tick? He’s out of it, sure. And gets his kicks spying on other people. Yuck. What a sicko.”
“He’s a hermit, I guess. Mad as a hatter.”
“Don’t mention hats. My God.” She took a deep breath and shook her head.
“I suppose he was probably harmless.”
“A High Sierra shopping cart man,” Bert muttered.
“I wonder if he would’ve bothered us again.”
“What, you want to go back and find out?”
“I hate to leave that place.”
Bert looked into his eyes. “It wasn’t the place, it was us.”
“That’s true. But the place was special, too.”
“He ruined it.”
“Maybe we can find somewhere else.”
Bert raised her eyebrows. “Does that mean you don’t want to leave?”
“I guess that’s what it means. We ought to be able to find another nice, private place.”
“That one didn’t turn out to be so private.”
“It was for a while.”
“What have we got here, a convert?”
“Apparently. Why don’t we take the trail you picked out yesterday?”
“The one the girls are taking?”
“We’ll walk slowly.”
“They can’t be very far ahead of us,” Bert said. “We weren’t gone all that long.”
“If we run into them, we do. But we won’t stay with them. I want to find a place where we can be alone.”