“You spoiled me for all other women, Katie.”
She shoves my shoulder and my hand falls from her belly. I want to put it back. “Wait,” I protest, “I was enjoying that.” She turns away from me. “Bring your uterus back. I want to touch it again.”
The front door opens and Gabby walks in. “Mom?” she says warily.
Katie looks up at her and arches her brow.
“Did he just talk about touching your uterus?” she asks her mother.
“Better my uterus than my vagina,” Katie sings out.
“Or your boobs,” Gabby adds, and then she shrugs. She jerks her thumb toward the porch. “Mr. Jacobson wants a deck of cards. He says he’s going to teach me to play blackjack.”
Katie crosses to the TV cabinet and opens it up. All the cabins are equipped with games and cards. She takes out a pack of cards and tosses it to Gabby. “Don’t bet with real money,” she says.
“Pop cheats,” I add.
Gabby clucks her tongue and acts like she’s shooting me with a pistol. “I got this under control,” she says, and she goes back outside.
“Her dad taught her to play blackjack when she was seven,” Katie says. “She’ll beat the pants off your old man.”
I grin. “Good. He deserves it.” I scratch my head. “So, about me touching your uterus again…” I hold my hand out in question. She takes it, lifts her shirt, and lays my hand upon her skin.
We suddenly go from curious and playful to warm and uncomfortable. “Um, this wasn’t what I meant.”
“Hey, Jake?”
“Yeah?” I feel that tiny little flutter under my hand again and a grin tugs at the corners of my lips.
“That day when you fell in the lake, the first day we ever met…”
“Yeah?” I wait.
“You didn’t pull me in with you.”
“Huh?”
“I jumped.”
7
Katie
I shouldn’t tell him. I know that. I’m playing with fire here, but memories are powerful things.
“You fell in the lake, and you thought you pulled me in, but you didn’t. I jumped in with you because I was afraid you would drown.”
“You’re lying.”
“Am not.”
“Are too.”
“Am not.” I go to the couch and sit down, then pat the space beside me. “You were so cute. And so drunk. You fell right over the side, and I was afraid you wouldn’t come back up, so I jumped in to save you.”
“It was so cold.”
“I know. I thought I would freeze to death.”