She slammed the door, locked it, and gunned the engine. A shower of stones flew behind her as she peeled out of the yard.
Pat ran to his car and took off after her. He had to talk to her. Make her listen to reason. What was reason? That he was an immature jerk and was afraid to sign on the dotted line?
“Okay,” he said, “so I’ll sign. I’ll sign!” He beeped his horn and waved at her. “Pull over!” he shouted.
Megan gripped the wheel and stepped on the accelerator. The car backfired and the valves clattered in protest, but the machine surged forward.
Pat pressed his own accelerator, but nothing happened. He was maxed out at thirty – five miles per hour.
“Piece of junk,” he muttered, fuming. “Ugly, stupid excuse for a car.”
He was relieved to see Megan stopping for traffic ahead. Once she got onto the highway he’d never catch her, but while she was going through the commercial district he had a chance. He stepped on the brake and felt it go clear to the floorboard. He didn’t have any brakes!
He blew the horn, pulled on the emergency brake, and swerved to the right at the last instant, but he still slammed into Megan’s right rear quarter panel. There was the sound of tearing metal and crunching glass. Pat felt himself thrown forward against his seat belt, then everything was quiet, except for the soothing hiss of steam escaping from his cracked radiator.
He unstrapped himself and ran to Megan. Her car reminded him of a giant maroon accordion. He’d pushed her into a garbage truck, which appeared completely unscathed, but the snout of Megan’s car was telescoped into itself. “Megan!”
She looked at him glassy – eyed and blinked slowly. “I said no more kisses.”
“Are you okay?” He wrenched the door open and looked for blood, felt for broken bones. “Megan, speak to me!”
She eased out of the crumpled car and stood on wobbly legs. A crowd had gathered around them. A siren wailed in the distance. “What happened?” she asked.
He put a supporting arm around her. “My brakes broke. I couldn’t stop.”
“Oh, good,” she said. “I thought you were mad at me.”
An hour later they’d signed all the police reports and grimly watched the cars being towed away. “Don’t worry,” Pat said. “I have insurance. It’ll pay for your car.”
Megan sighed. “How are we going to get home?”
“The police officer said he’d give us a ride.”
“This has been some day.”
Pat nodded. “I’m probably being repaid for sending Dave home on a rubber doughnut. I don’t suppose you’d want to come to my house for turkey leftovers.”
She shook her head. “I want to go home. I’m going to take an aspirin and soak in a hot tub, then contemplate my future.”
“I’d like to talk to you about your future.”
“I don’t think I’m ready to talk about it. I feel a little… dazed.”
When the squad car stopped at Megan’s door, Pat got out, too, following his instincts as a doctor more than as a lover. Megan really did seem dazed, and he didn’t want to leave her alone. They stood on the porch for a moment, watching the police drive away.
It was mid – afternoon, and the sun was casting long shadows across the yard. A dog yapped in the distance. The tenant horse lounged against the split – rail fence in the far corner of the pasture.
“You’re right,” Pat said. “That horse is fat.”
“I feel like getting fat,” Megan said. “I feel like eating fifty pounds of chocolates.”
He opened the front door for her. “I’d go get you fifty pounds of chocolates, but I haven’t got a car.”
Megan felt tears burning behind her eyes. It had all been too much. “I think I need a hug,” she whispered.
He tenderly gathered her to him, stroking her hair, pressing a kiss against her temple. “Why is life so complicated?”
She didn’t know. She only knew that she loved him and needed him to hold her. She didn’t want to think about tomorrow or next week or next year. She didn’t want to think about marriage or babies or bashed – in cars. She wanted to be comforted. She moved closer, fitting herself to him, needing to absorb his warmth, his strength, his affection for her.
“Do you suppose for just one night we can pretend life isn’t complicated at all?”
When he answered his eyes were bright, his voice husky. “We can pretend for as long as you like.”
This was his fault, he thought. He’d brought this pain to them. He didn’t want to lose her, but he couldn’t promise to keep her.
He saw a tear catch on her curly red lashes, and kissed it away. Then he lowered his mouth to hers, finding it incredibly soft and warm.
The kiss was deep and intense with the unspoken love that throbbed between them, and Megan gave herself up to it. She could feel her body awakening, anticipating the pleasure, the mindless obsession to please and be pleased.
Pat sensed the difference in her attitude. She no longer needed comforting. She was indulging herself, reveling in the power of her own sensuality, inviting him to join with her. He answered the invitation with a kiss that was hard and urgent.
“So lovely,” he whispered. “I’ll never tire of you… the silky feel of your hair, the taste of your skin, the way you arch your back when my mouth is on you.” He was glad he’d smashed her car. What would he do if she left? He couldn’t imagine ever desiring another woman. Only Megan.
“Maybe we should go upstairs,” he said, taking her hand and starting up the stairs. “What do you think about a long, hot shower?”
She laughed. “I think it sounds lovely, but I’m not sure I have the patience…”
His smile became mysterious as he led her into the bathroom and turned on the water.
“Testing your patience will be a highlight of the evening,” he whispered.
She demurely stepped out of her clothes and into the hot shower. With a crook of a finger, she beckoned him to her. “Perhaps we should make this a contest… of patience.”
They clung to each other, then, as if their physical joining could solve all other problems. They spent the night together, sated and exhausted, under the thick plaid quilt on Megan’s bed.
Monday morning Pat kissed Megan awake. “Meg, I have to go to the hospital.”
She ran a hand through her long tangle of hair and sat up, tucking the quilt firmly around her bare breasts. She felt better. Depressed but stronger.
“Thank you. It was a very beautiful night.”
Pat could only nod. Megan was in control now, he realized. The pretending was over, forever, and he had to leave. “I’ll work it out, Meg.”
She looked at him coolly. “Me too.”
Megan was packing some of her books in a cardboard box when the insurance adjuster arrived with a check for the damages to her car. She looked at the check and blinked. “This check is for one hundred and fifty dollars. The garage said it would cost over a thousand to fix my car.”
“Sorry,” the adjuster said. “The car’s replacement value is only a hundred and fifty dollars.”
He left, and she sat on the bottom step, staring at her suitcase, newly packed and ready to go, waiting in the foyer. It was going to have a long wait, she thought. She wasn’t going anywhere without a car, and she certainly couldn’t buy one with a hundred and fifty dollars.
She continued to sit on the step for a long time, trying to come to terms with her problems, but they skittered through her head like clouds on a windy night. The problems and their solutions were wandering aimlessly in a place where murky emotions reigned.
Finally, her stomach growled, reminding her it was dinner time. She looked in her freezer. Empty. She looked in her refrigerator. Empty. Dave had eaten everything. She couldn’t go food shopping, because she didn’t have a car. She was going to starve to death. Good. She felt like starving to death. It was pathetic. She found a box of stale crackers and decided to eat them at the kitchen table with a glass of water, because that was even more pathetic than starving to death. She was trying to swallow her third cracker when Pat arrived.