Clifford and Claire, Scene 3
Hi, folks! As I
shared a few weeks ago, keeping up this blog and working on the new novel has
put a strain on my already poor time management skills. So, I’ve been cheating by posting some excerpts from
the new novel instead.
It’s working, because I’ve been getting
sooooo much done on Red Wolf Rising that
I’m really excited about. If I can maintain this momentum I might actually meet
my completion deadline later this year.
So, picking up where we left off last time,
here’s how Clifford Crane and Claire Deerfoot first met. Having just found her
naked and starving in the park while he was jogging, and assuming her to be
homeless, Clifford has taken her to IHOP for a meal…
Her name was Claire Deerfoot and she
loved pancakes. She really loved
pancakes. She was now sopping up the syrup on her otherwise empty plate with
the last fork full of her second short stack. Clifford had never seen a woman
of her age and slight stature put it away like she did.
Other than those two things, Clifford
knew little or nothing about the woman sitting across the table from him. She
had been very close-mouthed and vague about who she was and where she came
from. Her facial structure was slightly exotic, possibly Native American, but
he wasn’t good at recognizing that stuff. She appeared to be somewhere in her
late fifties or early sixties, going by the lines of character in her face, but
there was the vibrancy in her movements of someone much younger.
Her hair was beyond gray. It was long
and white as snow. And the straw-like, disheveled quality he thought he’d observed earlier in the
park was gone now. At some point during the meal he had begun to notice how it
glistened as it hung straight and framed her face. It was beautiful, and he’d
been disappointed when she’d complained that it was getting in the way and
pulled it back and banded it into a pony tail.
But the most striking feature about her
was her eyes. They were clear gray, and seemed to hold an ageless intelligence.
And they were familiar, so familiar, but he could not jog his memory into
recognition. He had her pegged as an academic, maybe a forensic anthropologist
fallen from grace because of some bizarre theory she proposed but none of her
fellows supported. Perhaps she had been driven to insanity and dereliction from
the ostracism of her peers, eventually finding herself living in the greenway.
But that was all wild, fantastical
speculation. She had revealed next to nothing about herself. He, on the other
hand, had spilled his guts all over the table. She had managed to draw him out
easily, and he had just about told her his life story in the last twenty
minutes or so. In fact, he realized his own stack of pancakes lay largely
untouched in front of him because he’d been running his mouth so. He now took a
bite. They were stone cold.
She dabbed at her lips with a napkin and
frowned. “Is something wrong?” she asked.
Her question drew his attention back to
her face. Hers was one of the prettiest frowns he’d ever seen. For an older
woman. In fact, he may have over-estimated her age. Some of the wrinkles he’d
thought he’d noticed before now seemed to have disappeared. He shook himself
mentally.
“Oh,” he said, “My food’s cold. I can’t
believe I’ve been talking so much.”
“You have
been going on a bit.” She smiled, which removed yet another decade from her
face.
He could feel himself blush. “Sorry, I…”
“No, no,” she chuckled. “Don’t be. You
merely answered my questions… in great detail.”
His blushed deepened, and her chuckle
expanded into genuine laughter.
“Sorry,” he murmured. “Jeez.” He cut
another fork full from his pancakes, put it in his mouth, and began to chew
silently.
Her laughter subsided. She took a deep
breath and pushed her plate a few inches away. “Whew,” she said. “Thanks for
that.”
Clifford watched her lean back in her
seat and wipe a tear from her cheek, still flushed from laughing. He swallowed
and blurted without thinking, “How old are you?”
She started. “Uh…” The question had
caught her off guard. She thought a moment. Nine
hundred ninety-two? Or, is it ninety-three? Best not to tell him that. “Is
that something a gentleman should ask a lady?”
“No,” he said, “definitely not. I’m
sorry, please. I didn’t mean… It’s just that, I thought you were older back in
the park, and now…” He cut himself off. From the look on her face he was just
making it worse.
She shrugged and sighed. “I am pretty
old,” she said. “And when you found me this morning I was really feeling my
age. But this,” she waved her hand over the remains of her meal, “has done
wonders. I feel young again.”
She had effectively dodged the question.
He decided not to push it. Instead, he took another bite of cold, soggy
pancake, and regarded his plate as he chewed. When he looked up again, her eyes
were on him. Their gazes locked for a moment. He felt as if she could see into
his soul.
She was the first to break eye contact.
Dropping her eyes to the table she said, “Um, while we’re asking personal questions…” She ran a
forefinger through a puddle of syrup on her plate that she’d missed and raised
it to her lips. She looked back up at him to see a smirk on his face. “What?”
He shook his head, smiling. “Nothing.
You were saying?”
She liked his smile. This was the third
or fourth time she’d seen it during the meal, and she was quickly becoming
addicted. “I was saying,” she began,
putting the syrupy digit into her mouth and sucking on it. His smile widened.
Oh,
my god, she
thought, I’m flirting with him. She
blushed and removed the finger from her mouth. Get a grip. It’s not too late… yet. She cleared her throat and
forced a note of seriousness into her tone. “I was wondering, actually, what it
is that makes you so unhappy.”
“Huh?” His expression was startled.
“What makes you think I’m unhappy?”
“I’ve been watching you…” For months. “… during the meal. It shows in your eyes when you talk about some
things. Your life, your family…”
The question flustered him. He set down
his fork and stared in the direction of his plate. “I-I don’t think of myself
as unhappy. I…” He looked up. “Does it really show that much?”
“Your struggle to hide it shows,” she
said, and from his reaction she could tell she’d struck a nerve. Reflexively,
she reached across the table. “Don’t worry. I’m more… sensitive to these things
than most. I doubt much that anyone else can tell.” Her hand settled onto his.
He flinched at her touch, as if he’d
received a shock. She felt it, too, and she gave an involuntary gasp of breath.
His fingers curled reflexively against the table top, forming half a fist
against her palm. The tips of her fingers passed lightly over the hairs on the
back of his wrist.
The touch was electric. Her pulse
quickened instantly. She tried to pull her hand away, but her brain wasn’t
sending the signal to her fingers. He lifted his hand slightly, as if to pull
it from under hers, and the tips of his fingers brushed across her palm.
“Oh,” she murmured. She couldn’t let go,
mesmerized as his fingertips slowly moved across her palm, underneath her
fingers, up to their tips and back down. Her fingers responded of their own
volition, entwining with his and squeezing almost to the point of pain before
releasing and entwining again. Her breathing became shallow and quick.
For a moment their fingers continued a
dance of incredible intimacy. Then, suddenly, he pushed his palm against hers
and withdrew. He took a breath and exhaled with a shudder. Her eyes locked with
his, and she could feel the heat of a deep blush explode under the skin of her
face.
He cleared his throat. “Um, I better go
or I’ll be late for work. Can I, uh, give you a ride… somewhere?”
She took a deep breath and nodded. They
both seemed to recognize the double entendre at the same time. He blushed, and
hers deepened. “To my car, if you don’t mind. I parked in the lot off Sardis
Road.”
“Oh,” he responded. Your car? That was unexpected.
She immediately wished she hadn’t said
it. She’d just blown her cover and now there would be more questions she wasn’t
prepared to answer. “If you’ll excuse me, I need to use the restroom before we
go.” She slid from her chair and walked towards the back of the restaurant.
He watched her go, admiring the graceful
sway of her hips as she walked. “Uh, sure, go ahead,” he murmured. “I’ll get
the check.” Who was this woman? I should
just take her to her car, let it go, and never see her again.
But he wanted to know
more about her. Much more.
Okay, that’s probably a good place to stop.
I’ll have the final portion of the excerpt for you next week. And, by the way,
I love to read your comments, so please don’t hesitate to leave one below. Just
drag the cursor over the word, Comments, click,
and you can probably figure out how to do it.
And, if you haven’t read the first two books,
there are links below to sites where you can purchase them in various formats.
The ebooks are only $2.99! Check ‘em out.
The Draculata Nest -----------------------------------------------------------------------
Click on the link to order:
ebook for Kindleebook for Nook ebook for Kobo in Paperback
in Charlotte Smashwords
ebook for Kindle
The Dragon of Doughton Park ----------------------------------------------------------
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ebook for Kindleebook for Nook ebook for Kobo in Paperback
in Charlotte Smashwords
ebook for Kindle
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