Bay of Sighs
Page 21
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She found such a pretty suit with red flowers, and another in bright, bright green, and what Sasha called a wrap almost as thin as air, and shoes with pretty seashells that left most of the foot bare. With Sasha’s help, she bought them all, and another wrap with blue waves over white for Sasha.
“For you.” She offered the little bag. “For helping me.”
“Oh, no, Anni, you don’t have to buy me something for helping you.”
“But it’s for you.” Firmly, Annika pushed the bag into Sasha’s hands. “The blue is like your eyes. It’s a gift for you, and makes me happy to give.”
“Thank you. It’s beautiful. We really have to go now. Remember, we have to carry all of this.”
“Pretty things never weigh too much.”
To Sasha’s mind, a couple of bikinis that barely covered the essentials weighed virtually nothing, but she steered Annika out of the shop.
“There they are.” Wary, Sasha kept a solid grip on Annika’s arm as they walked up to where the rest redistributed bottles into packs.
“You’re exempt,” Riley told Sasha as she hefted her heavier pack. “Fair’s fair.”
“I can carry more.” Annika turned around, offered her pack. “It’s not heavy.”
Doyle zipped a couple bottles of Italian beer inside her pack. “That’ll do it. We’ve got the rest.”
“There’s gelato!” Annika dashed up the steep street as if her new sandals had wings.
She’d struck up an animated conversation with a couple of American tourists by the time the others caught up.
“Jessica likes the chocolate, but Mark likes the pistachio. It’s a nut.”
“Right. How ya doing?” Riley signaled Sawyer to ease Annika away, distracted the couple with small talk until they wandered off.
“They were very nice, but I don’t know whether to listen to Jessica or to Mark. And oh, there are so many pretty colors.”
“Pick two,” Sawyer suggested, and her eyes went wide.
“I can have two?”
“Two scoops in a cone.”
“Two scoops in a cone,” she repeated. “Which do you pick?”
“You pick first. You’re not going to go wrong.”
“I think . . . the pink, and this green? They’ll look nice together. Like a flower.”
“Strawberry and mint. Nice combo. It’s on me,” he told the rest.
When, even after he’d paid, Annika just admired her cone, he demonstrated on his own. “You want to eat it.”
She took one delicate lick, then another. “Oh! It’s like eating joy!”
Weird, Sawyer thought as they hiked with packs, bags, and cones, but she made him feel like a hero for giving her her first taste of eating joy.
Because of it, the hike back went easy.
They scattered on the return, and as Sawyer moved faster, he snagged the shower ahead of Doyle. He washed off the salt, the sea, the sweat, felt fully human again as he drank half his first beer in the shower.
When he got out, he heard laughter from the kitchen. Female laughter. And though it appealed, he thought it wise to take a little time, a little distance from Annika.
His lust quotient there kept rising, no matter how studiously he tried to suppress it.
He took the rest of his beer outside, pulled a lounge chair into a patch of shade, and settled in with his tablet. He needed to email home, update his family. Maybe he’d read a chapter or two of one of the books he’d downloaded.
He dashed off the emails, promised pictures to follow. Told himself he could take an hour off, to read, or doze, or whatever the hell, then he’d do some research.
Riley was the queen there, but he had lines to tug as well.
Then she walked out, the mermaid in one of her floaty, filmy dresses, her hair loose, waving a little from its time in a braid. She carried a tray of flutes filled with frothy peach-colored liquid.
“Riley says it’s Bellini time.” She set the tray on the table, picked up two flutes. “She made them, and we had sips—Sasha and I.” She handed him a flute, sat on the grass with those incredible legs folded. “The gelato was eating joy, and this is drinking it.”
He sampled to please her. “Fancy. Good. Good and fancy.”
“Sasha said a monk found—discovered—champagne, and said it was drinking stars.”
“I’ve heard that.”
“Stars are meant to be for beauty and light, and for all the worlds. Nerezza won’t drink them.”
“Damn right, she won’t.” Sawyer shifted, tapped his glass to hers.
“Damn right.”
Sasha and Bran came out, chose another patch of shade with their drinks, Sasha’s sketch pad. Riley settled in the sun with a Bellini and, like Sawyer, a tablet. Doyle came last, gave the Bellinis a look of suspicion, then shrugged, took one. He, too, chose the sun.
“I like when we’re all together,” Annika murmured. “Even apart, like this a little bit, but together. I’ll miss it, miss everyone, once we return the stars to the Island of Glass.”
“We’ll have a reunion.”
“I don’t know that word.”
“It’s like when people who’ve been together, then go separate ways, come back together again to celebrate. For a night, or a couple of days.”
“A reunion.” She thought it would be a new favorite word. “You’d come?”
“For you.” She offered the little bag. “For helping me.”
“Oh, no, Anni, you don’t have to buy me something for helping you.”
“But it’s for you.” Firmly, Annika pushed the bag into Sasha’s hands. “The blue is like your eyes. It’s a gift for you, and makes me happy to give.”
“Thank you. It’s beautiful. We really have to go now. Remember, we have to carry all of this.”
“Pretty things never weigh too much.”
To Sasha’s mind, a couple of bikinis that barely covered the essentials weighed virtually nothing, but she steered Annika out of the shop.
“There they are.” Wary, Sasha kept a solid grip on Annika’s arm as they walked up to where the rest redistributed bottles into packs.
“You’re exempt,” Riley told Sasha as she hefted her heavier pack. “Fair’s fair.”
“I can carry more.” Annika turned around, offered her pack. “It’s not heavy.”
Doyle zipped a couple bottles of Italian beer inside her pack. “That’ll do it. We’ve got the rest.”
“There’s gelato!” Annika dashed up the steep street as if her new sandals had wings.
She’d struck up an animated conversation with a couple of American tourists by the time the others caught up.
“Jessica likes the chocolate, but Mark likes the pistachio. It’s a nut.”
“Right. How ya doing?” Riley signaled Sawyer to ease Annika away, distracted the couple with small talk until they wandered off.
“They were very nice, but I don’t know whether to listen to Jessica or to Mark. And oh, there are so many pretty colors.”
“Pick two,” Sawyer suggested, and her eyes went wide.
“I can have two?”
“Two scoops in a cone.”
“Two scoops in a cone,” she repeated. “Which do you pick?”
“You pick first. You’re not going to go wrong.”
“I think . . . the pink, and this green? They’ll look nice together. Like a flower.”
“Strawberry and mint. Nice combo. It’s on me,” he told the rest.
When, even after he’d paid, Annika just admired her cone, he demonstrated on his own. “You want to eat it.”
She took one delicate lick, then another. “Oh! It’s like eating joy!”
Weird, Sawyer thought as they hiked with packs, bags, and cones, but she made him feel like a hero for giving her her first taste of eating joy.
Because of it, the hike back went easy.
They scattered on the return, and as Sawyer moved faster, he snagged the shower ahead of Doyle. He washed off the salt, the sea, the sweat, felt fully human again as he drank half his first beer in the shower.
When he got out, he heard laughter from the kitchen. Female laughter. And though it appealed, he thought it wise to take a little time, a little distance from Annika.
His lust quotient there kept rising, no matter how studiously he tried to suppress it.
He took the rest of his beer outside, pulled a lounge chair into a patch of shade, and settled in with his tablet. He needed to email home, update his family. Maybe he’d read a chapter or two of one of the books he’d downloaded.
He dashed off the emails, promised pictures to follow. Told himself he could take an hour off, to read, or doze, or whatever the hell, then he’d do some research.
Riley was the queen there, but he had lines to tug as well.
Then she walked out, the mermaid in one of her floaty, filmy dresses, her hair loose, waving a little from its time in a braid. She carried a tray of flutes filled with frothy peach-colored liquid.
“Riley says it’s Bellini time.” She set the tray on the table, picked up two flutes. “She made them, and we had sips—Sasha and I.” She handed him a flute, sat on the grass with those incredible legs folded. “The gelato was eating joy, and this is drinking it.”
He sampled to please her. “Fancy. Good. Good and fancy.”
“Sasha said a monk found—discovered—champagne, and said it was drinking stars.”
“I’ve heard that.”
“Stars are meant to be for beauty and light, and for all the worlds. Nerezza won’t drink them.”
“Damn right, she won’t.” Sawyer shifted, tapped his glass to hers.
“Damn right.”
Sasha and Bran came out, chose another patch of shade with their drinks, Sasha’s sketch pad. Riley settled in the sun with a Bellini and, like Sawyer, a tablet. Doyle came last, gave the Bellinis a look of suspicion, then shrugged, took one. He, too, chose the sun.
“I like when we’re all together,” Annika murmured. “Even apart, like this a little bit, but together. I’ll miss it, miss everyone, once we return the stars to the Island of Glass.”
“We’ll have a reunion.”
“I don’t know that word.”
“It’s like when people who’ve been together, then go separate ways, come back together again to celebrate. For a night, or a couple of days.”
“A reunion.” She thought it would be a new favorite word. “You’d come?”