Cold Kiss

Free Cold Kiss by Amy Garvey Page B

Book: Cold Kiss by Amy Garvey Read Free Book Online
Authors: Amy Garvey
Tags: english eBooks
to.”
    I tell him stories for a while, lying on the mattress with him, his head cradled on my chest. I’ve pulled up the blankets, but it doesn’t matter. The chill is on him, in him, and he’s pressed up against me. My teeth are chattering, but if he notices, he doesn’t say anything.
    He loves this, but I have to be careful. I try to talk only about us, times when we were alone together, because I don’t want to remind him of Ryan or Becker, or his parents and his brother and sister. I can’t answer the questions he asks about them, not honestly anyway.
    He never used to ask. At first, all he wanted was me, as if he’d woken up in some dream where the two of us were all there was, all he needed. Even the loft didn’t confuse him much, as long as I was there.
    But the longer he’s alone, the more the dream fades.
    “Remember the first time we went into the city?”
    He nods, calmer now, and his hand rests easy on my hip. We’ve been at this for an hour, and I dread the thought of my alarm in the morning.
    “God, it was so cold that day, even for February,” I whisper, and shiver a little. It doesn’t feel much warmer right now.
    I describe it all for him, letting my eyes drift shut as I lay my head back and remember it. Bundled together into the seat, sharing earbuds and a coffee while the train rattled along the tracks. Changing at Newark and running down the long ramp to the PATH, which took us into the Village. We’d stopped every two blocks for coffee, it seemed—it was a blue-cold day, the wind biting into our cheeks, and we didn’t have anything specific to do anyway. We were simply roaming, playing, and it became a game to spot another coffee shop first and race toward it on the crowded streets.
    “My favorite was that one on MacDougal,” I say with a smile. “The one with the tin ceiling and all those old pictures of people in furs and weird hats. That place had the best croissants.”
    He makes a vague humming noise, in agreement, I think, and I know he won’t fall asleep, but he’s as relaxed as he ever gets now.
    “And then we went to Bleecker Bob’s and that comic-book store, remember? Oh, and the thrift store where you bought me that necklace, the one with the owl in front of the moon.”
    “I remember the moon.” He sounds faraway, preoccupied, and his body is tense again, solid marble.
    “Yeah, the owl is sitting on a branch with the full moon behind it,” I tell him, and scritch idly through the hair at his nape. “It’s pretty. I’ll wear it tomorrow.”
    “I remember the moon,” he says again, and sits up. The blankets rustle in his wake, and I shiver. “And the candles. There were candles.”
    My stomach turns over in a dizzying swoop. Candles? There are no candles on that necklace, but there were candles and a full moon the night I cast the spell.
    I grab his arm, trying to pull him back to me. The silver light through the window is murky, but his eyes are gleaming.
    Polished stones, I think, remembering my dream, and pull harder.
    “Remember where we went after that?” I ask him. I’m trying not to panic—he’s immovable, completely still, watching me, and I feel small, weak.
    Breakable.
    Danny never had much of a temper, but this isn’t really Danny in too many ways to count. I know that my Danny would never have hurt me, would have stepped in front of a bus before hitting me, but this Danny? I’m suddenly not sure. As cold as he is, I can feel the heat of fury in his stare.
    “Remember?” I say again, and my voice is really shaking now, giving the word at least four extra syllables. Panic is fluttering like a trapped bird in my chest, and the air snaps with electricity. “We found that great diner on Broadway and you ordered the cheeseburger that was as big as your head.”
    I don’t even know what I’m saying anymore, but I let the words keep coming, the cherry cheesecake we shared, the long, windy walk back to the PATH station, the woman with the blind

Similar Books

Take Courage

Phyllis Bentley

Licensed to Kill

Robert Young Pelton

Finding Focus

Jiffy Kate

Hell-Bent

Benjamin Lorr

The Factory

Brian Freemantle

A Mother's Love

Ruth Wind