Part 19 (1/2)
”No, no one will hurt it.” With a sigh, Bev slipped an arm around Emma's
shoulders and looked out toward the hedgerow. This time Emma didn't
inch away, but sat still, fascinated, one hand over Bev's stomach.
”I'm a little afraid of being a mum, Emma. Maybe you can let me
practice on you.”
After a deep breath, Bev stood up, bringing Emma with her. ”We're going
to start right now. Let's go up and put on your pretty pink dress.
We're going out to tea.” The h.e.l.l with reporters, the h.e.l.l with starers
and gawkers. ”We're going to make ourselves into the two prettiest
ladies in London and have our tea at the Ritz.”
FoR EMMA iT was the beginning of her first relations.h.i.+p with another
female that wasn't based on fear or intimidation. Over the following
days, they shopped at Harrods, walked in Green Park, and lunched at the
Savoy. Bev ignored the photographers who snapped them. When she
discovered Emma's love of beautiful materials and bright colors, she
indulged them shamelessly. Within two weeks, the little girl who had
come to her with only the s.h.i.+rt on her back had a closet bulging with
clothes.
But at night the loneliness crept back, when each lay in bed pining for
the same man.
Emma's longings were more direct. She wanted Brian to come back because
he made her feel good. Love wasn't something she'd learned to define or
agonize over.
But Bev agonized. She worried that he would grow tired of her, that he
would find someone more in step with the world he lived in. She missed
the good, strong s.e.x they shared. It was so easy to believe he would