“You want to eat broccoli?” He sounds skeptical. Should I be offended?
No, Ian. I don’t want to eat broccoli. I’m not even hungry, to be honest. But I have committed to this. I am a person who is capable of having dinner with another human. And I will prove it to you. “I could make a sandwich, then. There’s lunch meat over there.”
“I think those are tortilla wraps.”
“No, they’re— Shit. You’re right.”
I sigh, slam the door shut, and turn around. Ian does not take a step back. I have to lean against the fridge to be able to look up at him. “How do you feel about Froot Loops?”
“The cereal?”
“Yeah. Breakfast for dinner. If I still have milk. Let me check—”
He does not. Let me check, that is. Instead he envelops my face with his hands and leans over to me.
Our first kiss, five years ago, was all me. Me reaching out. Me initiating. Me guiding him. This one, though... Ian sets everything. The rhythm, the tempo, the way his tongue licks into my mouth—everything. It lasts for a minute, then two, then an uncountable length of time that blurs into a mess of liquid heat and trembling hands and soft, filthy noises. My arms loop around his neck. One of his legs slides between mine. I realize that this is going to end exactly like our afternoon at JPL. Both of us completely out of control, and...
“Stop,” I say, barely breathing.
He pulls back. “Stop?” He’s not breathing at all.
“Dinner first.”
He exhales. “Really? Now you want dinner?”
“I promised.”
“Did you?”
“Yes. I’m trying to—to show you that—”
“Hannah.” His forehead touches mine. He laughs against my mouth. “Dinner is... it’s symbolic. A metaphor. If you tell me that you’re willing to see where things go, I believe you, and we can—”
“No,” I say stubbornly. The urge to touch him is nearly painful. I can’t remember the last time I was this turned on. “We’re having our symbolic dinner. I’m going to show you that—what are you doing?”
He is, I believe, turning around to pluck two grapes from the same cluster I half ate this morning. He presses one against my lips till I bite into it, pops the other in his mouth. We both chew for a while, eyes locked. Though he finishes before I do, starts kissing me again, and—a mess.
We’re a mess.
“Done eating your dinner?” he asks against my lips. I nod. “You still hungry?” I shake my head and he picks me up and carries me to the—
“Wrong door!” I say when he tries to enter the bathroom, then the closet where I keep the vacuum cleaner I never use and the one pair of spare sheets I own, and by the time we’re on my bed we’re both laughing. Our teeth clack together when we try and fail to keep kissing as we undress each other, and I don’t think that anything has ever been like this before, intimate and sweet and so much fun at the same time.
“Just—let me—” I finish taking off his shirt and stare at his torso, mesmerized. It’s pale and broad, full of freckles and large muscles. I want to bite him and lick all over. “You’re so...”
He has undone my cast. He sets it aside, next to the pajama bottoms that I threw on the floor this morning, then helps me wiggle out of my jeans. “Red? And spotty?”
I laugh a little harder. “Yup.”
“That’s what I—”
I press him down till he’s lying on the bed. Then I straddle him and peel off my top, ignoring the slight sting in my ankle. This should be familiar ground to me: bodies against bodies, flesh against flesh. Just seeing what feels good and then doing more of it. It should be familiar, but I’m not sure it is. Being here with Ian is more like hearing a song I’ve listened to millions of times, this time with a new arrangement.
“God, you look so— What works best for you?” he asks between breaths. “For your ankle?”
“Don’t worry, it doesn’t really hu—” I stop myself as something occurs to me. “You’re right. I am injured.”
His eyes widen. “We don’t have to—”