THE MAZE by Catherine Counlter

Savich pulled her against him, lightly pressing her face against his shoulder. “I know what you mean. It’s infuriating. Everything that comes out of your mother’s mouth makes Alice’s Wonderland look like MIT. How long has she been like this, Sherlock?”

“As long as I can remember. She’s more so now, I think. But I don’t see her all that often anymore.”

“Do you think she could be doing some of this to gain your father’s attention?”

“Oh yes. But how much of it is real and how much is her own playacting? I don’t know.”

“I don’t either.”

“And my father?”

“I don’t know,” he said slowly, leaned down and kissed her left ear. “I just don’t know. He’s slippery, hard for me to read. But you know, Sherlock, it’s tough not to like him.”

“I like him too, most of the time,” Lacey said and looked up at his mouth. “Do you really want to marry me now that you’ve seen my mother and father?”

“Unfair. But you haven’t met my family yet. Now there’s a scary bunch. Actually, they’re going to be so grateful that you’re taking me on that they’ll probably try really hard not to be weird around you, at least until after we’re married.

Then, no guarantees. Oh yes, Sherlock, we’re all alone here in the corridor. I think now’s the time. Will you marry me?”

“Yes, I will.”

He kissed her. It was sweet and warm and he tried very hard not to overwhelm her with his need, which was growing by leaps and bounds. But then she pushed him against the wall, pressing herself up tight against him. “You feel delicious,” she said into his mouth, her breath warm and dark from the espresso. “You taste even better. Dillon, are you sure you want to marry me? We haven’t known each other all that long. We’ve been stressed-out since we met, nothing’s been normal or natural.”

“Sure it has. I kicked your butt in Hogan’s Alley and at the gym. What’s more natural than that? I’ve cooked my pasta for you, I’ve fed you pizza at Dizzy Dan’s. You’ve slept in my house. I think we’ve got great experience going into this. Besides, the sex isn’t bad either, except it’s been so long that I’m having a tough time remembering all the details, any of the details, actually.”

She kissed his chin, his jaw, lightly bit his earlobe. “I don’t understand how you’ve managed to stay footloose for five whole years.”

“I run fast and I don’t chase too well. Actually, I guess I was waiting for you. Nobody else, just you. I’m more surprised that no one snapped you up.”

“I was just so locked in the past, locked into only one path, all of it focused on Belinda. What will we do?”

He said as he slowly traced the buttons of her blouse, “I have this inescapable feeling that everything revolves around Belinda, not Marlin, not Douglas, not anybody else, just Belinda. I don’t think anyone ever really knew who she was. I’d like to see pictures of her around the time she was killed. Do you have any albums?”

“Yes. I hope Mother didn’t throw them away. Would you like to see them now?”

“Nope. We’re still on East Coast time, so it feels like three hours later than it is. I want to get some sleep. Actually I want to sleep with you, but that wouldn’t be right, not in your parents’ house. Besides, your mother is so worried that we’re shacking up, she just might go on patrol tonight to make certain we’re separated.”

She laughed. “Mother is a hoot, isn’t she? You never know what will come out of her mouth. But it seems she’s gone even more around the bend just lately. Lots of it might be an act, who knows? She’s not going to change. But it still scares me because some of what she says just might be true. Did my father really try to kill her? Run her down in his BMW?”

“God knows, I don’t. If he did do it on purpose, at least he knows she’s told us about it. Your father isn’t stupid. If he did do it deliberately, it won’t happen again.”

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