“’Cause that’s so sexy and all.”
“You don’t think so?” I kiss the spot below her navel. I don’t have time to warm her up.
Randy knocks on the door. “Butterson, we gotta go unless you wanna be there all day.”
“Two minutes!” I shout back.
Then I put my mouth on her and erase the sad look from her face, replacing it with another orgasm.***The fundraiser is about half an hour away. We don’t take the rental, which would be lame. Instead we borrow one of Waters’ cars. He has two in the garage. One’s a truck with sweet rims. The other is an old-school Iroc Z with an eagle painted on the hood.
“Waters is a weirdo, isn’t he?” Randy eyes our ride.
“He’s marrying my sister, so yup.”
“Not that I’m complaining.” He slides into the red-leather interior. The whole thing has been redesigned so the inside looks like a racecar.
I don’t expect we’ll be gone too long. All we need to do is write a check, get the car washed, schmooze with the host, and I can get back to Sunny. We’ve only got another night or two before Randy goes back to Chicago. I don’t have to get back right away, but Sunny has work, and that means going back to Guelph. I’ll bite the bullet and stay a couple extra days there, even if it means awkward dad conversations and sleeping in the spare room.
As soon as we pull out of the driveway, I start with the questions. “So? What’s the deal?”
“Huh?” Randy’s on his phone, texting. He pauses and sniffs. He lifts the bottom of his shirt to his nose and follows with his fingers. “What’s that smell?”
“Bunny repellent.”
“Say what now?” He arches a brow.
I repeat myself, but don’t elaborate.
“It smells a lot like pussy.” He cracks a window and goes back to texting.
“Speaking of, what happened with Lily?”
She came through the kitchen to get coffee while I was cutting peaches for Sunny and me. She was wearing Randy’s T-shirt. She was also friendly. It was very un-Lily.
“We had fun. Several times.” He doesn’t pause his texting. “I’m hoping to have even more fun tonight.”
“Oh, yeah?” I try to see what’s on his screen, but it’s impossible to read and drive at the same time. “Who’re you texting?”
“No one.”
“Please tell me you don’t have plans to meet up with a bunny this afternoon?” I don’t need more drama. I’ve already had enough over the past week.
“No, man. I’m not a total asshole.” He sends one more message and pockets his phone. About two miles down the road from Waters’ cottage, I spot a camping trailer parked halfway in the bushes. I slow down.
“Is that Bushman and Benji?”
Randy frowns as we pass. “Maybe? It’s hard to tell.”
There’s a car behind us, so I speed up again. “If it’s still there on the way back, I’m definitely stopping. Those guys are as persistent as the stalker bunnies.”
“No kidding. That dickhead kept texting Lily all night. Eventually I made her shut off her phone, otherwise I would’ve thrown it out the damn window. Or gone to find the fucker and broken all his cocksucking fingers.”
He flips through radio stations and taps his fingers on his knee.
“So?”
He stops fidgeting to look at me. “So what?”
“That’s all I’m gonna get? You had fun.”
“Don’t forget the several times part.”
“I’m guessing I was wrong about the vagina teeth if you managed to get in there more than once.”
“Vagina teeth?”
“Yeah. I figured she’s kinda snarly, so maybe her vagina is, too.”
Randy shakes his head. “Butterson, sometimes your brain is a fucked up place to be.”
He flips down the visor and checks his reflection in the mirror, smoothing out the short ponytail he’s sporting. He’s joined the man-bun fad. I think he looks like a douche, but the ladies seem to like it.
“She wasn’t snarly with me at all.”
“That’s because you were boning her.”
“Lily’s actually a lotta fun.” His mouth quirks up in a private grin. He flips the visor back up. “She has a cousin who was at Camp Beaver Woods this past week.”
“With us?”
“Yup.”
“No shit.”
“She said he’s been playing hockey since he could hold a stick, but her aunt and uncle have, like, six kids, and they can’t afford all the lessons, or whatever. Don’t tell her I told you, though. I think he might’ve been one of the kids you helped subsidize.”
“Huh.”
“I don’t think she hates you as much as you think.” His phone buzzes in his pocket, and he checks the message, ending the conversation.
I try to decide if Lily has been different with me since we arrived yesterday, but I’m not sure. It’s hard to tell with all the Benji BS and Sunny’s poison ivy.
The fundraiser takes place at a cottage on top of a hill. The driveway curves around a rocky bend, making the actual structure impossible to see. Cars snake upward in a slow line—luxury rides interspersed with moderately expensive vehicles. Based on the sheer number of cars, we’ll be sitting here for a while. It’s like a small version of a car show. The rental would’ve sucked compared to Waters’ car.