Finding Eden - novelonlinefull.com
You’re read light novel Finding Eden Part 10 online at NovelOnlineFull.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit NovelOnlineFull.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
His eyes opened, but they were hooded. He was awake, but not yet fully conscious of his surroundings.
"Tex, stay with me!" I ordered. "I'm going to give you some water. You have to swallow it, okay?" I said, staring into his eyes. I wasn't sure if he knew what was going on; he grunted, so I took that as a yes. I pressed my thumb against his bottom lip. It was chapped and wind-burned, but soft. "Open," I commanded. He did and I tilted his head back, dribbling a few droplets onto his tongue. "Drink." I let a few more drop into his mouth. He swallowed it. I put a little more in this time and I he finally got the hang of it; he became greedy.
We were satiated, but still unbearably tired. I felt drunk and fuzzy, but I was able to pull out the blanket and lay it down. I dragged Tex onto it; he helped very little, but I couldn't blame him. He had carried me. I dropped down next to him, wanting to feel safe. He made me feel safe. He saved me. We kept saving each other and it was crazy to think about it. We had barely known each other a week and we had rescued each other more than any two people would probably do in a lifetime. I curled up beside him, no longer caring about how it looked.
He was my comfort.
[ Tex ]
I woke up, but barely. Blondie was lying beside me; her arm was linked with mine. Her head rested above my shoulder. Her hair smelled like dirt-the scent of shampoo long gone. I was still so d.a.m.ned fatigued and every bone in my body throbbed like I had run a marathon. In a way, I had. I didn't want to wake up yet and I didn't care whether it was night or day.
I brushed her cheek with my thumb. It was dusty. I rested my forehead against hers, taking in the sweet smell of her skin, and drifted back to sleep.
[ Elle ]
I was groggy, thirsty, and hungry. That was the first thing I noticed. The second was Tex's hand resting gently on the side of my neck; his lips mere inches from mine. His steady breaths fell across my face. He wasn't awake, but his thumb absently ran along my jaw line. I loved this. I didn't want it to end.
I was afraid it would end though. We would soon have to have the talk-the talk that involved my father and the heinous act he had committed. I was so scared that he'd close up and the little moments like this would disappear-he would be back sleeping on the edge of the blanket and never tell me his real, honest name.
I looked at his lips, though chapped and burned, they looked inviting. I remembered them on my forehead. I didn't know what I was doing, but I inched my face forward so that his breath was. .h.i.tting my mouth. I didn't want to admit to myself that I felt something more than friendship towards him. It was a stupid feeling and I wished it would die. I tried to tell myself that I only felt it because he was the first man I had come upon since the end of the world happened, but that would be a lie; I loved his laugh and his witty quips. I loved his toothy grin and his imperfections. I loved his stories. I loved his h.e.l.l bent att.i.tude towards everything. I loved that his height dwarfed me.
I loved the fact that he still ached for his wife and daughter, that he had loved them so much. I loved that he didn't see me as my father's daughter, but as Blondie.
I loved that we had the ability to save each other in more ways than one.
Though I wanted to kiss him, I didn't. Instead, I leaned my forehead against his; it felt right for some reason. I wasn't sure how long we had been sleeping for, but I didn't care. I liked where we were at that moment. I didn't want to have to deal with reality, so I closed my eyes and fell back to sleep. And as I drifted off, I smiled.
[ Tex ]
There was no way to tell if we had slept one day or five. Since Leonard and his gang of goons hadn't arrived, I expected two at the most, if they had been able to copy the map in time. My fingers were crossed that they hadn't, but with my rotten luck, I wouldn't be surprised if they had. It made me wonder if Blondie's dad was still alive or if Leonard had did him in for helping us escape. We'd have to keep a constant state of alertness and I wasn't looking forward to that; I was still beyond exhausted. But then again, there was an itch that I hadn't been able to scratch lately: my double-sided axe. I didn't condone killing, but I wouldn't mind watching a few heads roll if need be. I wondered what a shrink would think about me. Those b.a.s.t.a.r.ds deserved what they had coming if they ever found us again. My fingers curled, remembering the weight of the axe in my hands.
Blondie stretched out beside me, her limbs delicately cracking, if that was even possible. Her hair was mussed and she was in desperate need of another shampoo. Her skin was pale against her bright green eyes. I didn't believe it was possible, but sleep must have enlarged her eyes; they were huge on her face and she reminded me of a porcelain doll my mom had given to Danielle on her fourth birthday. She smacked her lips together and grimaced.
"Water." Her voice was rough. I handed her a water bottle I had refilled while she had been sleeping. She downed it before giving it back to me. "More." I laughed and refilled it for her. She polished that one off in seconds.
"You're going to have to p.i.s.s like a race horse in an hour," I said, refilling the rest of the bottles and tucking them into our packs.
"Charming," she muttered. Blondie stood up, undid her braid, and brushed her fingers through her hair while shaking her head. Dirt fell from her scalp as dust floated around her like a fog. She re-braided her hair.
"Charming," I repeated.
I pulled out a bag of what was left of our beef jerky. I took out the largest piece and tore a bit off between my teeth. I watched Blondie because there was nothing else to do. She looked down the front of her shirt and then her shorts. The scene unfolding before me was hilarious and it reminded me of something I might have watched on a sitcom way back when.
She sighed dramatically and said, "Oh, this is so gross. I need to change. It looks like dirt and grime are just falling from my pores." She threw a meaningful glance in my direction and gestured her index finger in a circular motion. "Turn around. Don't peak."
I rolled my eyes and spun around on the rock I was sitting on. "I wouldn't dream of it."
I heard her bag unzip and something was pulled from it-her clean clothes. Just by the subtle noises everything made, I knew what she was doing. I heard her shorts unzip then drop to her ankles. Something thinner and more delicate fell next. I heard the brush of fabric against her skin as she pulled her top over her head and let that drop to the ground next. Then something snapped-her bra.
So there was a naked woman standing behind me. Well, this was new. It had been almost five years since I'd been around one and that had been my wife. My lips pressed in a thin, straight line and I let out a breath through my nose.
I heard Blondie brush at her skin. I ran my hands over my head. I picked at the beef jerky. I picked up a pebble and examined it: smooth and gray with white specks. I noticed all the nooks, all the crannies imprinted in the cave wall before me. I connected them together like constellations in the midnight sky.
Something else brushed against her skin. I finished off the jerky, chewing on it until it was just mush in my mouth. I took a swig of water, wishing it was rum or whiskey. I could really use a drink right now, I thought dryly.
I couldn't deny that she was, well, hot. I guess I was still young enough to use that word. I also couldn't deny that it had been almost five years since I had slept with someone-my wife. And having a twenty-three year old undress behind me wasn't fair in the slightest. She was old enough to know exactly what she was doing to me. Sarah had done the same exact thing on numerous occasions, teasing me, taunting me while I was in a position that I wasn't able to reciprocate. I hadn't given her any pleasure from it and I wouldn't give any to Blondie either. I licked my bottom lip, let out a dramatic sigh, and rolled my shoulders.
"Done yet, Kid?"
"Patience is a virtue, Old Man."
My laugh was mirthless.
"Okay, I'm done," she said.
I turned around and she looked exactly the same while stuffing something pink and lacy into her backpack. I guess she had just changed whatever she wore underneath. I didn't want to think about it.
Blondie handed me the map.
"How much farther?" She asked, peering over my shoulder. Her breath hit my cheek. I didn't know why I was so aware of every little thing she did now. It was getting on my nerves or maybe it was just making me nervous. I had to figure out the difference.
With my fingertip, I quickly pointed to where we were at that moment, and then traced it along the black line until it hit Eden. "s.h.i.t," I muttered under my breath. After everything that had gone down over the last few days, I hadn't realized we were almost there.
"Is it our next stop?" Blondie squeaked. When did her excited squeaks become cute?
"It looks that way," I said.
"At-freaking-last." She pushed off of me and grabbed her stuff. "Oh, Tex, I wonder what will be there. I bet there'll be food and clothing and soap and shampoo and tweezers-oh, G.o.d, do I need tweezers-and razors that aren't dull like mine and nail clippers and a comb and-"
"Geez, Kid. Don't get your hopes up." She was acting like a little kid on the day before Christmas. I loved the moments when she was stuck between a woman and a child. It was like the best of both worlds and it endeared me to her. She had become good at that lately.
"You're right," she pouted, sticking out her lower lip. I looked away.
I had come to terms with my family's death. I missed my wife, but it would be a lie to say that the details of her face weren't beginning to fade from my memory. Without a portrait to remind me, it would be hopeless. Time healed, but not always in the ways you wanted. I was afraid that I was beginning to forget the sound of her voice, the way her laugh would always brighten up my mood. It was as if she was a photograph with a delayed exposure. The important parts were still there, but the in-betweens were blurred, smudged. I could remember the smell of her favorite perfume and her homemade spaghetti sauce, but not the curve where her neck met her shoulder or the slope of her lower back.
I felt guilty letting these memories disappear, but if I was being honest with myself, and I was, I wanted them to go away. I was tired of hurting, sick of feeling guilty; it was draining me in every way possible. Being alive was a constant reminder of her death and if I was to move on and live, I had to forget. I wouldn't forget the day we met, the day I proposed, or any of the days I spent with Danielle.
And I could already feel it happening. It was probably wrong of me to find joy in this, but I did, and I basked in it.
I recognized the sweet scent that invaded me. Blondie suddenly stood beside me with a knowing smile on her lips. She always seemed to know when I needed a moment to myself. She looked up at me with her bright, emerald eyes, handed me my pack, and took my wrist in her hand.
"Let's go, Tex. I'm way too excited to stand around for even another minute."
"Gabriel."
"What?" She asked with a tilt to her head. I loved that.
"My name is Gabriel," I said as I took my first step as a free man.
Chapter 17.
[ Elle ]
The weather seemed normal or as normal as it could be. It was still, dry, and possessed no electric charge. The star lit sky blanketed the expansive desert. I had harbored such hatred for the mundane continuity of it all, but after the electrical sand storm, it seemed possible to take some sort of enjoyment from its normalcy now.
"Gabriel." I tested his name on my tongue. He had finally told me and I didn't know how to react to it. I realized it would probably be difficult for me to change from Tex to Gabriel, even though I loved his birth name a million times more. "Gabriel," I tried it again.
"How many times are you going to say my name?" He said as he flicked my ear.
"I approve," I said and swatted his hand away.
"I'm so glad you approve of my name, Blondie." He added dryly.
"Why did you decide to give it to me?" I turned towards him and walked backwards so I could see his face.
Gabriel shrugged and scratched the back of his neck.
"You're hiding..." I bit down on my bottom lip, grabbed his face in my hands, and pulled him down to me. He was at my eye level for once and I made my gaze so intense that he couldn't look away even if he wanted. "Stop. Hiding."
Gabriel pulled my hands from his face and lifted his own to the sky, signaling his defeat. "Jesus, I don't know, Blondie. I just felt like I could."
I grinned. "See, now that wasn't so difficult, was it?" I laced my fingers together behind my back and we continued on our way.
I was in one of my playful moods. It was foreign to me; I hadn't felt like that in a long, long time. Maybe I was just giddy with excitement over our destination, the fact that we'd be there in just a few hours. Or maybe it was because I could finally call this man Gabriel and not Texaco.
"Gabriel," I said again, but it wasn't to call for his attention. I just wanted to taste it on my tongue once more. I heard him sigh, overly exasperated by me. I just laughed.
I turned and started walking backwards again, but this time right in front of him. I flattened my hand against his chest and he looked at me questioningly-one eyebrow rose.
"Try mine now." I sucked on my bottom lip, eager to hear it.
He grunted and looked past me.
"Elle." I said. "Here, look at me and see how I p.r.o.nounce it." His gaze fell to my mouth. I parted my lips and flicked my tongue against the roof while saying my name. "See, it's not too difficult."
Gabriel narrowed his eyes and his face hardened. He grabbed my chin so that I had to stand on my tip toes. For a millisecond, I thought he was going to kiss me. His face was so close to mine; our breaths combined into one. My eyelids fluttered and my heart kicked into gear. I was afraid he could hear it.
"You better watch it, Kid." He said as he let me go and pushed by me.
I frowned. "Sorry, Old Man." I handed him a piece of gum and painted a mile-wide grin on my face.
"h.e.l.l no!" He yelled.
I made a knowing smile and laughed, so he laughed too. And everything was forgiven, even though I wasn't sure why he got irritated in the first place. I should have been the one irritated-teasing me with such close proximity like that. I grumbled and stuffed the gum in my mouth.
"Tell me something," I said.
"Something?" He said after finishing off a water bottle and opening a package of stale chocolate chip cookies.
"Anything. What kind of student were you?" I stole a cookie from him.
"Straight A's and Salutatorian."
I gasped and almost dropped my cookie. "No way!"
"Why is that so hard to believe?" He scowled at me.
"I always imagined you as the cla.s.s clown." I shrugged and then frowned. "Or at least a stern-looking loner. You could pa.s.s for both."
"You've imagined me in a cla.s.sroom environment?" He raised both of his brows and looked down at me.
"It's not like you've given me much to go on." I yanked the entire package of cookies from him.
He inhaled deeply. "My name is Gabriel Reed. My birthday is November fifth. I tend to like the color green more than others. My mother was Louisa and my birth father died when I was only an infant; I grew up calling my step-father Daddy. He was a good man, a Navy veteran, which was why I wanted to join. I had a German shepherd named Shep growing up and he died of old age. I loved watching my mother cook, so now I'm not too bad in the kitchen. I was never a big movie-goer or video game player. I'd rather play sports than watch them. I hate bugs. I've read over a five-hundred books in my lifetime, not including school a.s.signments. I'm an adrenaline junkie. I'm attracted to the female s.e.x." He ticked off a finger after every statement. "I like the pink jellybeans. I used to enjoy the desert and often went camping. I miss sleeping in a bed." He took one more deep breath. "And I miss my daughter."
I blinked.
"Is that good enough?" He crossed his arms, looking a little too happy with himself.
I pressed my fingertip to my lips. "Why pink jellybeans?" I asked with a tone of innocence.
He threw his hands into the air and disappeared into the night, so I ran after him.
[ Gabriel ]
"So, we have to go over this next mountain, and there should be some sort of entrance on the other side?" Blondie asked as she balanced on top of a meteorite.
I couldn't help but smile, watching her this way. Her arms were stretched out wide, eyes closed, and head back. She looked carefree. I was happier lately, but I still didn't think I could ever feel the emotion she was experiencing at that moment.
The moon was low in the sky and behind her. She was outlined in a white glow like some sort of moon G.o.ddess. Her pale skin brilliantly reflected the moonlight. Blondie was short, making her look like a child, but when you really looked at her, you could see she was no kid. She had cheekbones that were placed high on her face. Her hips sloped into the curve of her a.s.s-and she had a great a.s.s. If it was up to me, she'd wear those tiny shorts every day. Her legs were covered by boots that reached just below her knees, leaving just enough bare skin for my viewing pleasure.
I laughed at myself. "Yeah. Get down already; we're almost there."
She paused for a second before jumping down. "This thing is worth quite a bit of money. Well, it used to be." She gestured toward the meteorite.
"Yeah-used to be. It's stupid to think about now." I walked in the direction of the mountain, beckoning her to follow me.
"Humor me, Mr. Reed." She looped her arm around mine. "What would you do with the money?"
"It's irrelevant, Blondie. In order for me to get any money out of it, the end of the world couldn't have occurred, which means the meteor wouldn't have fallen from the sky, which means it doesn't exist, which means I wouldn't be able to receive any money to buy anything."