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Definitely, Maybe in Love(15)

By:Ophelia London


As far as I knew, Julia hadn't had sex yet, being a little more  old-fashioned than your average twenty-one-year-old. There was only one  other virgin in the room that I knew of.

I guess I was just … I never had time for such entanglements. My  philandering youth was spent trying to get into Stanford, and then  trying to stay in Stanford.

Well, that's what I told myself. If I was being brutally honest, the  thought of even the tiniest chance of having to stop my life to have a  baby scared every ounce of all-the-way libido out of me. My mother had  me at seventeen, and never let me forgot how she sacrificed everything  to keep me. She struggled, my whole family struggled. I was not going to  spend the rest of my life like that.

Catching a glimpse of Julia and Dart in an intimate moment surprised me.  The beginning of their relationship was all-consuming. Which wasn't odd  for Julia-she never let the physical get very far. She was always more  emotionally invested. That was probably where Anabel's gift of black  lace came in.

Dart's hand slid to her side, curling low around her hip. Huh. Maybe  they had already slept together. Julia and I were close, so I was a  little surprised she hadn't told me. I couldn't help sneaking more tiny  glances their way as they huddled over the sink. Her fingers were out of  his jeans, but the way they were standing next to each other, her hair  up in a pony tail, his hand on the back of her bare neck. Innocent,  yet … not.

I swallowed and looked away. Having that kind of comfortable, complete  intimacy was not in the cards for me, not with my parents' disaster of a  marriage as my prime example. For as long as I could remember, I wanted  no part of that. But suddenly, watching Julia in her bare feet lift up  to her tiptoes to kiss Dart on the cheek, I wondered if I might be  missing out on something.





Chapter 11

Julia and Dart awoke at the crack of dawn to put the turkey in the oven.  After that, they headed out for a drive up the coast, leaving the other  remaining, and still sleeping, members of the household to tackle the  rest of the Thanksgiving dinner preparations.

One by one, each of us staggered into the kitchen. Lilah baked two pies  the night before and was now attempting "homemade" cranberry sauce (out  of a jar). I volunteered for rolls, vegetables and other non-meat menu  items. Knightly sat in a kitchen chair eating a bowl of cereal. He  didn't look up once, focused on his iPad.

"Will you taste my filling?" Lilah asked him. Her mildly disguised  double entendre was not lost on me. Clueless to the lewd request,  Knightly gestured with his spoon that his mouth was full.

I smiled down at the bread dough I was kneading.

Undaunted, Lilah continued variations upon her request until she was  summoned to her phone, leaving the kitchen. She hadn't said one word to  me.

With empty cereal bowl in hand, Knightly stood up from the table and  walked to the sink. He rinsed his bowl and put it in the dishwasher. He  wore long black shorts and a green T-shirt with some faded and  unintelligible navy blue wording across the front. Italian, probably. I  think he was about to go for a run.                       
       
           



       

"Well," he said, wiping his hands on a bar towel, "it looks like you've  got everything under control here. So"-he backed up toward the  door-"I'll let you-"

"Um, nooo." I lifted my hands to show that I was up to my elbows in  flour. "You're not planning on leaving everything to the womenfolk, are  you?"

He tossed his iPad on a chair by the door then came to my side. "What is that?"

"Bread dough. There's nothing to it."

"Do you want … help?"

"Are your hands clean?"

He looked down at his hands and nodded.

With one finger, I scooted the dough in front of him. "Show me your skills."

His gaze held on me, assessing my challenge. After a moment, he took the  dough and sat down, while I walked to the sink to scrub my hands. He  was elbow-deep by the time I returned.

"You don't bake, do you?" I guessed.

"Not unless I have to. This is a workout. Could you grab me something from the fridge?"

"A little early for a beer, don't you think?" I said as I pulled the  refrigerator open, about to reach behind the half-empty takeout cartons  from last night, expecting to find rows and rows of dark bottles. I was  surprised to find absolutely no alcoholic beverages whatsoever. How very  un-collegiate.

"No beer," Henry said. "My paternal grandfather died of cirrhosis of the  liver when he was forty-five." His chin was tucked, kneading away.  "I've never had a drink in my life."

I stared at him for a moment. What a thing to admit. And he seemed  almost proud of it. Well, not that being a teetotaler was something  shameful. In fact, I couldn't help wishing my own father had followed  that particular practice when he was in his twenties, instead of boozing  it up and leaving my mother home with three kids. Five years sober or  no five years sober, I still hadn't forgiven him for choosing alcohol  over his family all those years ago.

"You weren't drinking at the party?" I asked, remembering perfectly that he'd been holding a red Solo cup.

"No," he said. "I knew I had to keep my wits about me that night. I heard there were snakes."

I snorted under my breath. "You're killing me."

"I'll take a water, though," he said, "if you can manage."

"I can manage." I slid a bottle from the door shelf.

"Yeah, thanks," he said, preoccupied, as I set it in front of him. With  no luck, he was trying to scratch his cheek with his shoulder. I was  familiar with Murphy's Law in the kitchen: the moment your hands are  incapacitated, every inch of your face-and other various body  parts-inevitability begins to itch.

"Could I get a little help here?" he requested, his voice pinched.

I sat down across the table from him and rocked my chair back on two legs.

He let loose a rough exhale of frustration then rubbed his cheek with the back of his hand, leaving behind a flour smudge.

"Sweetie, you got a little something"-I pointed at my own cheek-"right there."

Henry stopped kneading to return my smile, only his was much more  menacing than mine. I examined my nails. A moment later, something small  and sticky hit my face.

I blinked, glanced up and dabbed at my cheek. "Et tu, Brute?"

His sinister smile grew as he flicked his fingers like a whip toward me,  sending more chunks of dough in my direction. Most of them landed  short.

"Aww, you missed," I said as my chair legs dropped down on all fours. I  leaned forward, elbows bracing my weight. Henry followed suit, his  floury palms flat on the table, angling toward me. His gaze flicked to  something to the side of him then back at me. His smile widened.

That's when I noticed the open bag of flour on the table, closer to him  than to me. Without needing to turn around, I knew that behind me on the  counter sat sugar, salt, pepper, oatmeal, baking soda, bread crumbs,  and other substances of the grating, powdery, confectionary persuasion.

Two seconds later, our respective chairs flew out from behind us. Five  seconds later, like an explosion of snowy dynamite, flour was  everywhere.

He stepped right, I stepped left. And so we danced …

After a particularly dastardly pitch of cornstarch on my part, Henry  blinked and coughed, shaking his head, white dust falling from his dark  hair, catching in the curls.

He went on the offense.

I staggered back, temporarily blinded, clutching the edge of the counter  so my feet wouldn't slide out from under me. It was hard to breathe  with cocoa powder up my nose, and I sputtered a laugh, making myself  choke. When I regained focus, Henry was at the sink, filling a tall  glass under the faucet.                       
       
           



       

"Whah-ha-ha-ha," he taunted over his shoulder.

"Dry ingredients only. Dry."

"I don't remember hearing rules." He shut off the tap when the water reached the top rim.

I backed away, hanging onto the counter. Henry was blocking the only  suitable exit out to the backyard. I was trapped. The hair on my arms  stood on end when he took a single step forward, full glass in hand,  aimed right at me.

"You wouldn't dare!" I rasped, slipping and sliding in retreat.

He dipped his fingers in the glass and flicked. Large drops of water soaked into the front of my T-shirt.

I was desperate for a weapon, any weapon. That's when I spied Lilah's  bowl of bright red cranberry sauce sitting on the corner of the table,  just begging to be tagged into the ring. Henry's eyes went wide as I  slid it off the smooth surface and into the palm of my hand, my arm  cocked like a baseball pitcher.