CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER TWO
She met with Ramirez three hours later, just after his shift had ended. He’d answered her call eagerly enough but had sounded tired. That’s why they had elected to meet alongside the Charles River, on one of the many benches that overlooked it from the walking paths around the eastern lip of the river.
As she strolled up to the bench they had agreed upon, she saw that he had just gotten there. He was sitting down, looking out across the river. The tiredness in his voice showed on his face. He looked peaceful, though. She’d noticed this about him on numerous occasions, how he would get silent and introspective whenever presented with a scenic view of the city.
She approached him and he turned to her when he heard her footfalls. He flashed his winning smile and just like that, he no longer looked tired. One of the many things Avery liked about Ramirez was the way he made her feel whenever he looked at her. It was clear that there was more than simple attraction there; he looked at her with appreciation and respect. That, plus the fact that he told her that she was beautiful on a routine basis, made her feel safer and more desired than she could ever remember feeling.
“Long day?” Avery asked him as she joined him on the bench.
“Not really,” Ramirez said. “It was filled with busy work. Noise complaints. A fight at a bar that got a little bloody. And I shit you not, I even got a call about a dog that had chased a kid up a tree.”
“A kid?”
“A kid,” Ramirez said. “The glamorous life of a detective when the city is quiet and boring.”
They both looked out over the river in a silence that, over the last few weeks, had started to grow comfortable. While they were not technically an item, they had come to appreciate the time together that wasn’t filled with talk just for the sake of talk. Slowly and deliberately, Avery reached over and took his hand.
“Walk with me, would you?”
“Sure,” he said, giving her hand a squeeze.
Even hand holding was something monumental to Avery. She and Ramirez held hands frequently and had kissed briefly on a few occasions—but intentionally holding his hand was out of her comfort zone.
But it’s getting comfortable,
she thought as they started walking.
Hell, it’s
been
comfortable for some time now.
“Are you okay?” Ramirez asked.
“I am,” she said. “I had a really good day with Rose.”
“Things finally starting to feel normal there?” he asked.
“Far from normal,” Avery said. “But it’s getting there. And speaking of getting there…”
She paused, confused why it was so hard for her to say what she wanted to say. Due to her past, she knew she was emotionally strong…so why was it so hard to actually express herself when it was important?
“This is going to sound cheesy,” Avery said. “So please bear with me and keep my extreme vulnerability in mind.”
“Okay…” Ramirez said, clearly confused.
“I’ve known for quite some time that I need to make some changes. A big part of that came in trying to fix things with Rose. But there are other things, too. Things I’ve been almost frightened to admit to myself.”
“Like what?” Ramirez said.
She could tell that he was getting a little uncomfortable. They’d been transparent with one another before, but never quite to this extent. This was much harder than she had expected.
“Look…I know I’ve basically ruined things between us,” Avery said. “You showed extreme patience and understanding as I worked through my crap. And I know I kept luring you in a little at a time only to push you away.”
“That would be accurate, yes,” Ramirez said with a bit of humor.
“I can’t apologize enough for that,” Avery said. “And if you could find it in your heart to look past my hesitancy and my fears…I’d really like to have another chance.”
“A chance for what?” Ramirez said.
He’s going to make me come out and say it,
she said.
And I kind of deserve this treatment.
The evening was unraveling into dusk and there were only a scant few people out along the sidewalks and trails that wound around the river. It was a picturesque scene, like something out of one of those movies she usually hated to watch.
“A chance for
us,
” Avery said.
Ramirez stopped walking but kept her hand in his. He looked to her with his dark brown eyes and held her gaze. “It can’t be a chance,” he said. “It has to be a real thing. A surefire thing. I can’t keep having you push and push, always keeping me guessing.”
“I know.”
“So if you can let me know what you mean by
us
, then I’ll consider it.”
She couldn’t tell if he was being serious or just trying to give her a hard time. She broke their eye contact and gave his hands a squeeze.
“Damn,” she said. “You’re going to make this hard on me, aren’t you?”
“Well, I think I—”
She interrupted him by pulling him to her and kissing him. In the past, their kisses had been brief, awkward, and filled with her usual hesitancy. But now she lost herself to it. She drew him as close as their bodies would allow and kissed him with the most passion she’d put into any sort of physical contact since the last happy year of marriage with Jack.
Ramirez didn’t bother trying to fight it. She knew he had been wanting this for a while now and she could feel the eagerness running through him.
They kissed like love-struck teenagers by the side of the Charles River. It was a soft yet heated kiss that thrummed with the sexual frustration that had been blooming between them for several months.
When their tongues met, Avery felt a surge of energy pass through her—energy that she knew she wanted to use up in a very certain way.
She broke the kiss and leaned her forehead into his. They looked to one another for several seconds in that posture, enjoying the silence and the weight of what they had just done. A line had been crossed. And in the tense silence, they both sensed that there were still many more to cross.
“You’re sure about this?” Ramirez asked.
“I am. And I’m sorry it took me so long to realize it.”
He drew her close and hugged her. She felt something like relief in his body, like a huge weight had been lifted from him.
“I’d like to give it a try,” Ramirez said.
He broke the hug and kissed her again, softly, on the side of the mouth.
“I think we need to celebrate the occasion. You want to get dinner?”
She sighed and gave a shaky smile. She had already broken through an emotional barrier by confessing her feelings to him. What harm could it do to continue being blatantly honest with him now?
“I do think we need to celebrate,” she said. “But right now, at this very moment, I’m not too interested in dinner.”
“So what do you want to do?” he asked.
His obliviousness was beyond charming. She leaned in and whispered into his ear, enjoying the feel of him against her and the smell of his skin.
“Let’s go to your place.”
He pulled away and looked at her with the same seriousness as before, but now there was something else there, too. It was something she had seen in his eyes from time to time—something that looked very much like excitement and was born out of a physical need.
“Yeah?” he said uncertainly.
“Yeah,” she said.
As they hurried across the grass, toward the parking lot where they had both parked their cars, they were giggling like children. It was fitting, as Avery could not recall the last time she had felt so liberated, excited, and free.
The passion they had experienced while along the river was still there as Ramirez unlocked his apartment door. There was a part of Avery that wanted to jump him right there and then, before he even had time to shut the door behind him. They’d lightly pawed at one another the whole ride to his place and now that they were there, Avery felt like they were on the precipice of something monumental.
When Ramirez closed the door and locked it, Avery was surprised when he didn’t come to her right away. Instead, he walked through the living room and into his modest kitchen, where he poured himself a glass of water.
“Water?” he asked.
“No thanks,” she said.
He drank from his glass and looked out the kitchen window. Night had fallen and the city lights sparkled through the glass.
Avery joined him in the kitchen and playfully took the glass of water from him. “What’s the matter?” she asked.
“I don’t want to say,” he said.
“Do you…well, have you changed your mind about me?” she asked. “Did all the waiting make you stop wanting me?”
“God no,” he said. He put his arms around her waist and she could see him trying to form the right words.
“We can wait,” she said, hoping he wouldn’t take her up on it.
“No,” he said, a little urgently. “It’s just….shit, I don’t know.”
This was a surprise to Avery. With all of his masterful flirtation and seductive talk over the last few months, she was sure he would have been a little aggressive when and if the time ever came. But right now, he seemed unsure of himself—almost nervous.
She leaned in and kissed the corner of his jaw. He sighed and leaned in against her.
“What is it?” she asked, her lips brushing his skin as she spoke.
“It’s just that this is real now, you know? This isn’t just some one-night stand. This is for real. I care about you a lot, Avery. I really do. And I don’t want to rush things.”
“We’ve been dancing around this for the last four months,” she said. “I don’t think that’s rushing.”
“Good point,” he said. He kissed her on the cheek, then on the little bit of shoulder her T-shirt was showing. His lips then found her neck and when he kissed her there, she thought she might collapse to the floor right on the spot, pulling him down with her.
“Ramirez?” she said, still playfully refusing to use his first name.
“Yeah?” he asked, his face still brushing against her neck and applying kisses.
“Take me to the bedroom.”
He pulled her close, hoisted her up, and allowed her to wrap her legs around his waist. They started kissing then and he obeyed her. He slowly carried her to the bedroom and by the time he shut the bedroom door, Avery was so lost in the moment that she never even heard it close.
All she was aware of was his hands, his mouth, his well-toned body pressing against hers as he laid her down on the bed.
He broke their kiss long enough to ask: “Are you sure about this?”
And if she needed one more reason to want him, that was it. He genuinely cared about her and did not want to ruin what they had.
She nodded and pulled him down onto her.
And then for a while, she was not a frustrated Homicide detective or a struggling mother, or a daughter who had watched her mother die at her father’s hands. She was just Avery Black then…a woman like any other woman, enjoying the pleasures life had to offer.
She’d almost forgotten what that was like.
And once she started to get acquainted with them, she vowed to herself that she would never allow herself to forget them again.