Brenda's Dreams
Chapter Nine
Brenda lunged for the gull, lost her footing and fell headlong
into the stormy sea. Waves slammed into her. She fought to keep
her head above the water. Choking and sputtering, she tried to
scramble to her feet but the water sucked at her legs, drawing
her back under. Desperate, she struggled to the surface and
gasped for air, trying to stand erect.
Numb with cold, she stumbled towards safety, battling the waves.
She thought
she heard a cry and sobbed as she tried and failed to locate the
gull.
A voice shouted Brenda's name and a hand gripped her arm, yanking
her forward. Lightning illuminated Jax's face.
"I can't find Larry," she gasped.
"I have him," Jax shouted over the wind and the thunder.
"Let's go!"
He pulled her along with him until they were free of cold water.
They made their way through the darkness to the light of her
house. By the time he opened the door, Brenda was so tired that
she was barely able to make it inside. She stood shaking while
Jax forced the door closed against the cruel thrust of wind.
Jax pulled a bedraggled Larry from his pocket and, after dumping
some wood from a box near the fireplace, put the gull inside the
box.
Is he okay? Brenda asked through her chattering teeth.
Hes in a lot better shape then you are. Jax
wiped the water from his face and took his wet jacket off. You
better get out of those wet clothes or you will be catching
pneumonia.
Before she could even think about moving, he scooped her up into
his arms and started for the stairs. Except for her father when
she was little no man had ever carried, and she not only felt
protected but thoroughly enjoyed the sensation. Halfway up the
stairs, and fighting the urge to cuddle, a loud crash startled
her into hanging on tighter to Jax. A few seconds later the house
went dark as the electricity went out.
Damn, Jax muttered. He carried her the rest of the
way up the stairs and paused at the top. Do you have a
flashlight somewhere?
She was shivering so hard that her voice shook when she answered
him. Theres a candle in my room. Its the second door
to the right. If you put me down, Ill...
No, your about ready to collapse. He shifted her in
his arms, and she realized he was feeling his way to her room by
running his shoulder along the wall.
When they reached her room, Jax set her down slowly and by
following her directions found the candle. He found some matches
in a drawer and lit the candle. Thank goodness that Grandma
Quartermaine had believed in preparing for emergencies.
Get out of those wet clothes, Jax ordered.
Brenda slid out of her jacket. Despite the chills raking her body,
she was very much aware of him in this, her childhood bedroom.
What did he intend to do? The room and the entire house was cold,
but if the two of them underneath the sheets could warm each
other. She stared at him and wondered if he was thinking the same
thing she was.
Jax took a deep breath and let it out very slowly. Put on
some dry clothes and Ill light us a fire downstairs.
Did his words relive or disappoint her?
He was almost to the door before she remembered that he was as
wet as she was and that he didnt have any dry clothes to
put on.
Jax, there is a cedar chest in the room next door. It has
some blankets and quilts in it. And another candle on the stand
between the windows. Grandma put them in all the rooms.
He nodded and plunged into the darkness of the hall.
Brenda fumbled her sweatshirt and jeans off with shaking fingers
and, too cold to make the trip down the hall to the bathroom for
a towel, used an old terry clothed beach robe from her closet to
dry her hair and skin.
Ill turn the heat when I go downstairs she told herself.
Then she shook her head and groaned. You dummy the electricity is
off and that meant the furnace as well.
In her mind she started to picture a fire. Jaxs fire. The
flames licking at the split oak logs and radiating a wonderful,
blessed heat she couldnt wait to savor. Thrown across her
pillow was the mid-thigh T-shirt she had slept in. Hurrying as
quick as she could she slipped it over her head. Slipped her feet
into her slippers and grabbed an arrow quilt that was resting at
the foot of her bed. She wrapped herself in the quilt and headed
downstairs.
For a while Brenda couldnt concentrate on nothing except
getting warm as, sitting on the raised hearth, she soaked up all
the heat she could. Jax, with a blanket draped over his body
Indian-fashion, walked back and forth carrying wood from the shed
off of the kitchen to the fireplace. Finally, Brenda noticed his
stockpile.
Looks like you have at least a two-day supply there,
she said.
Thats because seasoned wood burns quickly and its
hard to tell how long we will be without power. Jax dusted
his hands together and came over and sat down next to her on the
hearth. Do you feel better now?
She nodded, then remembering the gull, and looked around for the
box. She didnt see it. Wheres Larry?
I covered his box and carried it into the kitchen so that
he would sleep.
He wasnt injured?
Larrys fine. Gulls dont get soaking wet like we
do.
They were all safe...she, Jax, and Larry. Safe and warm. Brenda
hugged herself under her quilt, surprised at how it felt so right
the three of them in Grandma Quartermaines' house. It felt
as though they belong together.
That was ridiculous! She sat up straight, careful not to look
over at Jax, who was sitting to close for comfort.
That was a stupid thing you did, running out into a storm
like that. Didnt it occur to you that I would take care of
Larry?
Brenda stiffened. Why would I think that? I dont even
know you.
You saw how I was feeding him before you started.
You also remember what you told me? You told me Larry could
take care of himself, she accused.
Jax shrugged his shoulders and the blanket, an old cotton one as
faded as the red sweatshirt he had worn on the beach, slid off
his bare shoulders, dropping in folds around him on the bricks of
the raised hearth. His tanned torso gleamed in the firelight,
making it a shimmering gold. Flames flickered in his blue eyes.
An almost tangible aura of virility pulsed from him, flowing
around her, enticing her. She willed herself to look away but
could not.
Everything faded form her mind, except for Jax. Touching her
tongue to her suddenly dry lips, she watched breathlessly as
desire sparked in his eyes and softened his mouth. The memory of
his kiss from the beach flashed into her head. Without thinking
about it, her body leaned towards his.
He blinked, mouth hardening, eyes shifting away from hers. Im
hungry, he said, a slight huskiness in his voice.
For an instant, starved for his touch, she mistook his meaning.
Any food in the house? he went on.
Brenda, feeling as though Jax had actively pushed her away,
tightened the quilt around her and stood up, controlling the urge
to tell him to go home and fix his own meal. The windows rattled
as a gust of wind battered the house; obviously he was going to
have to stay until the storm passed.
She tried of a casual tone. Ill see what I can find.
He stood, folding over his blanket and tucking it around his
waist. She couldnt help but think he wore nothing
underneath. He hands grasped her shoulders, pressing her to sit
back down on the hearth.
Relax, he said. Ill fix us something to
eat.
Why argue? She thought. The fire was warm and she was tired. If
he wanted to wait on her she might as well let him. Since she
couldnt trust her reaction to him, she would welcome the
barrier eating would create for them. Anything to keep him
occupied and apart from her because this situation...the two of
them sheltering together from the storm...was potential dynamite.
She had already discovered her own fuse was much too short.
********************************
I cant risk touching her, Jax told himself as he buttered
bread in the kitchen by
candlelight. She had already been responsible for a major
disturbance in his...well he didnt want to go there. If I
hold her in my arms again...
He held his hands above the bread as he stared off into space,
remembering her softness against him as he had kissed her on the
barrier beach. He felt his body react and muttered a curse. Youd
think hed never had a woman before.
In a sense, he hadnt. Not a woman like Brenda anyway. There
was an elusiveness about her that intrigued him while at the same
time he was aware of what seemed to be an understanding between
them. The rightness of being in this house with her circulated
through him with each beat of his heart. Larry shifted and Jax
glanced towards the bird. Even the gull was somehow involved, he
thought.
He hunched his shoulders against childhood memories of the time
he believed he could look in his mothers head and sense what she
felt, always after she and his father had quarreled. He hated
knowing her pain; he had fought to blunt his sensitivity and had
finally succeeded. Had he really had this ability, or was it all
childish imagination?
Jax shrugged. He certainly had no such ability now, nor did he
wish to. In his profession it would be a disaster just waiting to
happen. He was fantasizing about possessing Brenda, thats
all. Despite how much he wanted her, he knew better than to get
involved with any woman at this point in his life. His mind must
be making up this psychic nonsense to justify his need for her.
Just make the sandwiches and thinking, he chided himself. Eat,
and maybe get some sleep. The storm cant last forever, and
once your out of Brendas house, stay away from her. In two
days youll be gone and in two months you wont even
remember her name.
Jax slapped some peanut butter onto the bread and reached for a
jar of grape jelly. He paused, hand outstretched. Looking at it
another way, why not take advantage of this time with Brenda? Why
not make love with her? He would never see her again. No
complications. He didnt know her last name and she didnt
know his. Neither one of them lived on the Cape. They would never
see one another again.
He sighed and shook his head. Already she was far more than a
casual itch that needed scratching. He couldnt risk the
chance she might become important to him. After the complications
caused by Miranda, he certainly didnt need another woman
messing up his life.
He carried the tray into the living room with two and a half
peanut better and jelly
sandwiches on it, plus two stemmed glasses filled with milk.
Im surprised you found all that. Im just about
out of everything.
I left some dried meat and bread for Larry. Hell
probably be hungry when he wakes up.
Brendas smile lit her whole face and Jax wondered how long
it would be before he
forgot that smile. Deliberately turning away, he searched for a
place to put the tray down. Seeing a small table, he reached for
it with one hand. A piece of driftwood on the tabletop wobbled
precariously, and Brenda jumped up to catch it before it fell on
the floor. Her quilt slipped to the floor.
Her thigh-length stripped shirt clung to her curves so snugly he
was certain she was naked beneath and his breath caught in his
throat. Her face flushed under his gaze but she didnt react.
Clutching the driftwood to her like a talisman, she said, I
made this when I was
thirteen. She sounded as breathless as he felt.
Setting the tray on the table, Jax forced himself to focus on the
wood, not her. At first glance he saw an iron bolt affixed to the
driftwood, with feathers, grasses and bits of colored glass
strewn over and around both the bolt and the wood. After a minute,
he discerned a pattern to the apparently random placement of the
decorations, and he frowned, intent on pinning down the elusive
feeling the pattern evoked inside him.
Suddenly a door opened inside his head, and he tensed as he
sensed an emotion that was not his, an alien picture in his mind.
Summers over, he muttered. To his huge relief the
door closed and once more his mind was his own. He glanced over
at Brenda.
She stared at him in shocked surprise. Had she experienced what
he had?