Part 2 (2/2)

Hemma's sharp, low cry made her look again. Hemma wrapped her legs around Amy's hips, rising to meet her. Her face swam into Marian's feverish view. Beautiful with abandon, Hemma bit her lower lip, then her mouth curved with pleasure. Amy kissed her and they thrust together, inching their way across the bed. Amy was whispering in Hemma's ear and Hemma's moans sharpened to short cries of climax.

Marian gripped the sill, dizzied. She hated this feeling, and loved it. She told herself she wouldn't watch ever again but always did.

Hemma's head hung off the bed, showing the elegant line of her throat, her lush b.r.e.a.s.t.s, her spread legs where Amy knelt. Bending over her, Amy said something low and urgent, then Hemma's rising wail flowed across the night, wrapping itself into the private places of Marian's heart.

14.

Loving HER. Wanting HER. Days, weeks, years of wis.h.i.+ng for something she would never have. Before Robyn, during Robyn, after Robyn, the ache never eased. Robyn had left two years ago after destroying everything that had mattered-except for Marian's heart.

Hemma had always been and would always be the one who possessed it, whether she knew it or not.

She closed her eyes and pictured the perfect beach, the perfect sunset, the perfect woman by her side. One who could hold her, one who liked to be held. One who told her what was good about her more often than what was bad. She hungered for the velvet fullness of Hemma's lips against her skin.

Hemma's cries faded under Amy's deeper groans. Amy wouldn't stop until Hemma was taken care of. Wonderful Amy, tall, slender, intellectual, witty, all things that Marian envied. Amy gave Hemma everything she needed. Amy was a good lover, a good friend, and Hemma looked at Amy with stars in her eyes that never wavered.

Amy cried out as Hemma's nails raked over her back, then they were rolling over and Hemma, her face glowing with desire, pressed her hand between Amy's legs and watched her lover's every nuance of expression. She said something fiercely and Amy's loud, fervent, ”Yes, baby, yes,” was what Marian longed to say.

You're such a loser, she told herself. Go get laid, have a fling. She should make up a T-s.h.i.+rt for the I-CARE breakfast that screamed, ”Forget the U-Haul, Just f.u.c.k Me!”

She wiped away a tear. She'd feel better in a couple of days. She always felt better. She didn't have needs. She'd have dinner on Thursday and bask in Hemma's affection and Amy's friends.h.i.+p. It would be okay. Her hands swept over her b.r.e.a.s.t.s again, imagining the Hemma of her fantasies teasing her for hours. It was Hemma's hands that opened her thighs and touched her. She could hear Hemma's knowing laugh at what she found, and the low promise that all that heat, all that wet, would not go to waste.

Hemma's laughter drew her attention to the window again. Light but sultry, it accompanied the act of tossing a towel on the floor.

15.

Spreading another on the bed, she pressed Amy down, straddling Amy's hips. She flowed up and down Amy's body, so sensual, so s.e.xual, so captivating.

Marian could not stop watching and imagining, even knowing that it would never be her with Hemma. She should join Ellie in her d.y.k.e hunts. Practice whatever voodoo it was that got nearly every woman in town onto that couch of Carrie's. Move away, start a new life, move on.

Right. That would fix everything, she thought bitterly. She'd only let Robyn into her life and her bed as a cure for Hemma, and look where that had gotten her. Her unwilling gaze turned from the window to the box in the corner where the Robyn Ruins were sealed.

Someday she would look inside again and maybe then her desire to commit murder would finally wane.

Tomorrow, she thought. I'll think about all of that tomorrow when I can't hear HER in my head. When I can't hear Robyn either.

She knew that tomorrow night she'd look in on Hemma's life again. The pain of not having Hemma's body was one she'd learned to bear. She could live without s.e.x, yes, she could. It was harder to see them watch television with teacups on their stomachs, or argue fiercely about something in the newspaper, or read aloud to each other from books. s.e.x was easy. Robyn proved that. Intimacy, real intimacy, was something Marian had never known.

She wanted to make cornbread on cold nights and dash through the house naked for ice cream and spoons after s.e.x. To lounge outside on a summer evening with only crickets for entertainment. To share the last piece of pie by pa.s.sing the tin and a fork back and forth.

Amy was rolling Hemma across the bed. Hemma shrieked as they slipped off the edge where Marian could no longer see them. Their voices rose together in harmonic laughter.

16.

2.

”That's her.”

Liddy Peel ignored the audible comment and pointed look directed at her. This town was too small, too humid, too hot, too provincial, and she hadn't even been here a week. Eight more weeks of this baking h.e.l.l to go.

She was so f.u.c.king tired of being the fresh meat at the coffeehouse market. She'd even heard that description of her whispered from one woman to another. Obviously, none of these cow town lightweights had seen the inside of a women's studies cla.s.s. Not that her own foray into women's studies had turned out so well, but that was beside the f.u.c.king point. They were worse than men, she told herself, swear to freakin' G.o.d.

”Mocha, definitely with caffeine, on ice. With cream.” The barely legal kid behind the counter mumbled an answer. So far they'd gotten it right, and the coffee was admittedly good.

17.

At home she'd turn around now, check out who was in the place, on the off chance she would know someone. Not that it would have been likely, even in the student union. But she didn't know anybody here. She didn't want to know anybody here. The last thing she wanted was to make eye contact with one of the boa constrictors.

She couldn't go back to Cal, either. She was a graduate, finally.

This job had come along at exactly the right moment in her life and she was lucky to have it.

She waited with her back to the rest of the long, narrow shop and the cl.u.s.ters of tables and groupings of sofas and easy chairs. To be fair, the Java House was as comfortable and collegiate as similar establishments in Berkeley. All it lacked was a plastic drum band outside. The radio was even tuned to the university station. Just like at home, she tried and failed to focus on what must be a vitally serious topic to engender such pa.s.sion from the panelists. It sounded worth-while, burning oat hulls instead of coal, but it just wasn't something she could get all worked up about.

Liddy edged sideways to make room for a shorter woman now ordering, who also wanted an iced mocha. They probably went through ice by the ton in the summer.

”Did you find what you needed about writing to the Queen of England?”

The oddity of the question made Liddy glance at the woman next to her, who was actually managing to hold a conversation with the taciturn boy. He was even smiling. Who knew?

Liddy took her mocha from him and added fake sugar and chocolate sprinkles. Her drink well-doctored she took a breath and turned to face the room. It was only about twenty feet to the door, but the most direct route took her past the boa constrictors. With relief, she detoured instead to the stack of Daily Iowan newspapers. Maybe somebody at the university was doing something remotely interesting this weekend.

She flipped it open to scan the headlines. Trailer-park residents were suing Coralville. All she knew about Coralville was that the city logo on the water tower was blue. A U of Iowa student was the first Iowan to reach the summit of Mt. Everest. The university was also 18 proudly the home of a one-of-a-kind model lake, useful for numerous experiments.

<script>