The Lady's Second-Chance Suitor by Scott, Regina (best 7 inch ereader txt) ๐
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Read book online ยซThe Lady's Second-Chance Suitor by Scott, Regina (best 7 inch ereader txt) ๐ยป. Author - Scott, Regina
He lifted his feet alternately, reclaiming them from the darkness.
He twisted his neck, but the distant mountains could no longer be
seen. The wind was cold on his cheek. Fingers flexed, he touched
contact pads on the chair arm, blinked as he was inserted into an
elsewhere where the light was bright. His ears popped.
Before him, Clouis stood for a megachronon like a statue, mouth
open, one hip dropped, knee bent, one arm half raised. Then he
came to life and said, โHi, Bern-EE, hi hi!โ
โHello.โ Bernheddin looked down as he thrust himself from the
chair to stand erect on the metal disc where it now rested.
โBernie, I was so anxious about you.โ
Looked up. โI wish you wouldnโt always wait here for me.โ
Through a round white arch a dazzling white terrace was visible,
a corner of balustrade, the spikes of an agave, and sunlight entered.
โBut Bernie, I was lonely.โ From a suggestion of pout he
chameleoned a smile, and, posing: โDo you like this gorgeous garment? I found it.โ
It draped from his small shoulders in ivory folds, leaving bare his
arms and his legs from above the knees. There was a thin em broidered border. With this Clouis wore sandals; he had touched his eyelids with lilac.
Bernheddin ran thumb and curled forefinger along Clouisโs
sharp jawbone. โItโs very nice. You know, I do believe youโre growing a beard.โ
โBer-NEE! T hatโs a revolting joke. And youโve said it before.โ
He wished to avoid any quarrel, but whatever he might have said
was too slow in coming.
โAnyway, my new garment isnโt just very nice, itโs lovely.โ
โItโs a chiton.โ
โW hat?โ
โYour new garment โ itโs a chiton.โ
Clouis put an arm round him playfully. โYou know everything.โ
His own arm seemed wooden. โThey were wearing them when I
was young, I had one.โ
Tim e andflowers
31
โYou talk as if you were old, Bernie. Youโre not old. Do you love
me?โ
โO f course I love you.โ He kissed him dutifully. The boyโs soft lips
and the scent of his face stirred him. Lust was an undeniable force;
it had driven evolution through the megayears. Kissed him again,
longer.
Clouis broke away, โWould you like some tea?โ
They sat on the terrace in the brilliant light. As well as agaves
there were small palms, hibiscus with sensual pink flowers, and
bougainvillea climbing the white walls, breaking on the tiled roof
in a spray of lilac. The rim of the thousand-foot cliff on which they
perched was covered with white terraces and houses, all empty save
for themselves, all clean. Below, the sea was a brilliant crystalline
blue, and there were islands.
Clouisโs sunglasses matched the bougainvillea flowers. A single
shield deeply notched over the nose, glinting and opaqueing as he
turned, it gave him an incongruously aggressive look. Perhaps it
was the glasses hindering the meeting of eyes, but the conciliatory
mood was lost. Clouis was saying, โWhy do you have to ride that
thing?โ
Bernheddin sipped from the amber glass. โItโs perfectly safe.โ
โItโs not safe. You said โ it can come back without you.โ
โOnly if the line of the journey intersects a chronal distortion.
And then it will only return empty if the rider leaves the chair.โ
โW hat would happen then?โ
โI never leave the chair.โ
โBut what do you do? Youโre riding it all the time. Itโs as if you
canโt stand me anymore โ you always want to be away.โ
โNo, Clouis. You know thatโs not true. I am rarely gone more
than an hour or two. You should take a ride yourself, sec what itโs
like.โ
Clouis shook his shoulders in a theatrical shiver. โUff! You wonโt
catch me in that decadent thing.โ He stood, poured Bernheddin
more tea from the glass jug in which floated ice and slices of lemon.
Like Ganymede, thought Bernheddin, with his tight golden
curls. He found it within himself to grin, for he felt not at all like
Zeus.
โBut Bernie, what would happen if it came back without you?โ
โSweetheart, it wonโt.โ
โBut if it did?โ
โWell, nothing would happen, I guess.โ
32
Anthony Peacey
โYou couldnโt get back without it, could you?โ
โIt would be a little difficult.โ
โCould I find you?โ
โWell, no . . .โ
โI know. I read in that decadent book.โ
The Charting and Navigation of Chronal Dichotomies. The wave with
which Clouis dismissed this text conjured for Bernheddin the thin
foreclaw of Tyrannosaurus rex, a wonder of the vast past he had so far
neglected to seek out.
Clouis went on, โWell, where do you go all the time?
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