Broken in Soft Places

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by Fiona Zedde




  Synopsis

  Some mornings, Sara Chambers wakes in bed next to her girlfriend and her girlfriend’s lover wondering how she ended up there. Beautiful, successful, and a force to be reckoned with at her Atlanta law firm, Sara is still powerless in her attraction to the rebellious and reckless, Rille Thompson.

  As college girlfriends, Sara and Rille’s relationship had been incendiary, burning away Sara’s innocence and self-respect even as it widened her world beyond her wildest imagination. Now, almost twenty years later, Rille still pushes Sara beyond her limits, bringing a third lover into their bed and domestic lives when their monogamy gets stale. The hold Rille has over Sara—and their new lover—becomes as powerful as it is dangerous. Can Sara pull herself free in time, or will her life turn to cinders in the wake of Rille’s powerful flame?

  Broken In Soft Places

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  eBooks from Bold Strokes Books, Inc.

  eBooks are not transferable. They cannot be sold, shared or given away as it is an infringement on the copyright of this work.

  Please respect the rights of the author and do not file share.

  Broken In Soft Places

  © 2013 By Fiona Zedde. All Rights Reserved.

  ISBN 13: 978-1-60282-915-2

  This Electronic Book is published by

  Bold Strokes Books, Inc.

  P.O. Box 249

  Valley Falls, New York 12185

  First Edition: May 2013

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  This book, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced in any form without permission.

  Credits

  Editor: Cindy Cresap

  Production Design: Susan Ramundo

  Cover Design By Sheri ([email protected])

  Dedication

  To Angela.

  For believing, encouraging, and always reading.

  What We Are

  Stephen/Atlanta

  Stephen watched Rille walk past him in her rock star underpants, shirtless, and whistling an Otis Redding song. Her breasts bounced gently as she rocked out to “Dock of the Bay,” swaying like a belly dancer in front of the bathroom mirror. He lay back in rumpled sheets, enjoying the rare pleasure of having her to himself. Their lover, Sara, had abandoned them, gone back to the office because she forgot something and had an important case on Monday she needed that particular something for. On a Saturday, for heaven’s sake.

  Rille came out of the bathroom with a wet towel held between her two fingers like it was contaminated. “Whose?”

  Stephen knew she found it on the floor, miles away from the laundry hamper. Right where he left it after his shower earlier that morning. With what he hoped was a penitent air, he claimed it and she chucked it at him, sending the damp towel whooshing into his bare chest before going back in to tweeze her eyebrows. She left the bathroom door open.

  From the bed, Stephen watched her. Barely paying attention to his book, a history of the bicycle in America. He watched her. The way her breasts sloped in that universally beautiful way, the lean lines that led to the soft swell of her belly and those ridiculous panties. They were shiny and pink with sequined stars and a guitar stenciled on the ass. The words “rock star” flashed across the pubis. Not the expected attire of a tenured physics professor at Emory. Her students would be shocked to see her now.

  In the bathroom, she finished tweezing and began to shave her armpits. After being with these women for almost three years, Stephen thought he’d get used to rituals like these, but they were still endlessly fascinating to him. Sara had had all her body hair lasered off. And her already perfect eyebrows arched over perfect eyes that matched her perfectly lean brown body and the dreadlocks she wore in a thick black fall down her back.

  “Stephen, let’s go out for dinner tonight.”

  Rille emerged, still shirtless, from the bathroom and gave him a soft, lingering look. She walked past the windows with curtains that had been pulled aside to let in the sound and sight of rain tapping, a curious visitor, against the glass. Like Rille, the day was beautiful. She climbed into the bed with him, pulled his book away and crawled into his lap.

  “Kiss me.”

  Rille’s beauty was the most awful kind, Stephen thought. The awareness of it grew on you, sneaking into your consciousness with each passing day until, years down the road her loveliness hits you like a whip every time you see her. But by then she has lost interest in you and it’s time to move on. By second semester, all her students were in love with her, mesmerized by the tangle of brown and blond flyaway curls and the changeable eyes that crackled with energy as she walked back and forth in front of the classroom with fractals and chaos theory on her lips.

  He touched her the way he knew she liked to be touched, gently, with the roughness growing by turns until he twisted her nipples hard, dug his fingers into her skin, and she hissed, dragging his shorts off, rolling on a condom, and mounting him with quick ferocity. A brief moment of fear, of the rubber breaking, of Rille forgetting herself somehow, snared Stephen’s attention from their lust. But her heat engulfed him, like always, scorching away the habitual terror. She was tight and wet, a snug satin glove. Her panties still clung to her hips, just shoved to the side for convenience.

  Stephen lay back and let her set the pace. She rode him with skinned teeth, breasts bouncing, eyes fierce. Sweat flushed to the surface of his skin, her skin, and electricity lanced between them, shooting up from his hips into her hips. The whip of orgasm began to uncoil in his cock.

  “I see that you’re enjoying your weekend off.”

  He turned at the sound of Sara’s voice, still grasping Rille’s hips. She slowed her pace, but did not stop. A grunt rose in Stephen’s throat as the orgasm retreated.

  “You could be too,” Rille offered in her sex-roughened voice.

  “True.”

  He and Rille watched as Sara, damp from the rain, dropped her briefcase on the table by the bedroom door and slowly stripped off her slacks and blouse. The shock of her beauty tugged at Stephen’s hips and Rille laughed. She knew that her woman was beyond compare. Sara looked at them, her eyes flickering from where Rille and he were joined, then to Rille’s sex-flushed face. She hefted her clothes in one hand as if to toss them, but only walked past the bed to the bathroom where she hung the slacks and blouse over the shower rod to dry.

  “No, continue without me,” she said to their unasked question, her voice muffled by the cavernous bathroom. “I have to work…”

  But she left the bedroom door open on her way to the adjacent office. Sara would hear them and later, Stephen knew, after she was sure that his fingerprints had faded from Rille’s skin, she would come back. Then she’d finally let herself enjoy Rille without distractions, without his presence.

  Rille grabbed his face, pressing her palms tight against his cheeks. “Me. Now.”

  She rode him hard, but the rhythm was somehow off. Her body closed tight around him, a hot, bucking weight, but her mind was somewhere else. Stephen could feel it. With Sara perhaps, settling beside her into that gigantic leather chair in front of the desk, wishing that she could be there in body to reassure Sara that nothing was wrong in their complicated relationship. The arrangement that was Rille’s idea and that they agreed to because they both wanted her so much.

  After, with the sweat still drying on Stephen’s skin, Rille left the bed to find Sara. In the office, he heard the rising softness of Sara’s voice, a cool blade of reason to the honeyed nonsense leaving Rille’s mouth.


  “But, baby, I wanted to feel you, too.”

  Rille closed the door behind her before he could hear anymore. Outside, the rain beat against the roof as if trying to get in. Its drowsy cadence, along with the gray light spilling past the windows, pressed at his eyelids. Stephen turned in the sheets, already half asleep, and pulled his pillow closer.

  The First Day of…

  Sara/1994

  This place was nothing like high school. The people were different. They had sex, they drank, some, Sara heard, even had HIV. She walked around in a daze, soaking it all in, looking, she knew, as naïve as she felt with her big eyes and exclamations of “really?” or “no way.” Her roommate, Raven, sat with her in the cafeteria, elbow pressed to Sara’s at the long table in the high ceilinged room ripe with the smell of D-grade meatloaf, watery mashed potatoes, and the strangely colored peach cobbler.

  Most of the older students walked in then out of the cafeteria, carrying away plastic wrapped sandwiches and small containers of juice, while the newest ones sat captive to their meal plans and limited social opportunities, staring down at the brown and white mess on the chipped canvas of their dinner plates. To Sara’s inexperienced eyes, the older students all looked so sophisticated. Never mind that most wore ragged jeans, oversized flannel shirts with their hair long and stringy to their waists or blooming around their heads in intimidating Afros. And that was just the boys. The girls, or women, held Sara in thrall. She couldn’t quite look at them; they all seemed too bright, too beautiful, too confident. There was one girl she did look at, though. Raven said that the girl’s name was Merille Thompson. She was a fourth year physics major with glass green eyes glowing against her cocoa bean skin and a head full of dark blond curls.

  Now, when Merille caught her staring, Sara quickly looked away but not before she saw the smile and quick wink. She blushed, glad that the girl wouldn’t see the color through her teak skin, and looked down at her dinner tray. Beyond the glass doors of the cafeteria, the sun slowly sank behind the trees. From the corner of her eye, Sara could see how the falling sun haloed Merille, making her appear ethereal and unattainable.

  “Stop being so obvious,” Raven said, looking down at her own tray. Today, her chemically straightened hair was braided back over her scalp like tiny fields of grain. Small wooden beads clacked quietly at the end of each braid just above her shoulders.

  She was straight, but fancied herself able to give advice because of the nearly six-month gap in their ages. And the fact that she had a boyfriend in Tampa only fifty miles away who made her the happiest first year Sara had ever seen.

  “Shut up,” Sara said, a helpless whine in her voice. “I’m not being obvious.”

  “Then why did she just wink at you?”

  “She just had something in her eye.”

  Raven snorted then choked on the toxic meatloaf. A piece of it flew out of her nose and bounced off the tray. With a faint coating of slime on it, the meat actually looked more appetizing than the original version on her plate. Sara said as much and they both looked at the piece of meat.

  “Gross.”

  They looked at each other and laughed. They already loved their new school, but not because of the food.

  “We’ll have more interesting things to eat at the party this weekend.”

  Sara looked up at the low, resonant words and almost died. Merille stood quietly next to their table, her long brown hand extended. A piece of paper, bright pink with black ink scrawled across it, dangled from her hand announcing a party later that week. When Sara didn’t lift her hand to take the flyer, Merille slid it on the table next to her tray. Sara blinked when the clear gaze caught hers. There was destruction in those eyes, she thought stupidly. And a chance to be reborn.

  “Hi, I’m Rille,” she said. “Both of you are invited to come.”

  Her voice was a husky rasp. Somehow, Sara hadn’t thought anything else could possibly make the girl more appealing. Obviously, she was wrong. Sara swallowed.

  “Thank you,” she mumbled.

  Rille smiled. “You’re welcome. I hope to see you there.”

  “Are you going?” Raven asked after Rille went back to her table of friends and out of earshot.

  Sara swallowed again, still staring at the paper.

  “Of course you’re going.” Raven rolled her eyes, acknowledging she’d just asked the most ridiculous question on earth. “Be careful.”

  The party was in three days in a part of the campus where Sara hadn’t been, Third Court, ruling place of third and fourth years and a few giddy second years. Would she be the only first year at this party? Sara didn’t know what she wanted to do first—hyperventilate at her ridiculous luck, or back out, not bothering to show up at that party with Rille and her friends. She wasn’t quite sure if she was ready to play with the big girls.

  “I don’t think there’s anything to be careful of,” she said, trying to convince herself.

  Already she’d heard the fantastical rumors about all sorts of things that the upper class people indulged in on the campus. Vreeland College was what many called a “hippie school,” a place of free love, drug experimentation, and a reckless disregard for consequences. Sara, fresh from her parents’ house and a high school she gleefully abandoned with her virginity intact, wasn’t sure if she was ready for any of this freedom. She folded up the neon invitation and dropped it in her pocket.

  *

  The days between the issued invitation and the party crawled slowly past. Sara sat in her philosophy class—the first one she’d ever taken in her life—and thought about the abstraction of Rille, the certainty of her presence at that party on Friday night, and the shiver down her spine at the thought of what would happen there.

  All five windows of the room were open to let in the fresh burn of the early morning Florida sunshine. Light reflected off the bald head of Professor DJ Holloran as he perched on the desk in front of the room, looking more like a TV version of an Irish thug than a philosopher.

  “If you can’t think logically, this isn’t the class for you.” His mouth twisted into a charming smile that invited the class to share some conspiracy. “I see nineteen people in here. No offense taken if some of you walk out of here right now. I don’t mind you wasting my time today. It’s the first week of classes, but don’t come here next week if you don’t want to be challenged.” He waited to see if anyone would leave. When the entire class seemed bent on staying put, he hopped off the desk and went to the chalkboard. “Great, now let’s take a look at our reading list.”

  Sara studied the syllabus and the list of unfamiliar names—Voltaire, Kant, De Beauvoir, Fanon—and wondered dimly how they would prepare her for the world here at Vreeland College, for the world beyond its terracotta walls, or even for Rille. But maybe she was asking too much of one class.

  *

  “So what are you going to wear?”

  Despite her boyfriend’s eagerness to see her, Raven stayed in school past her last class on Thursday morning to prep Sara for her first college party.

  “I don’t know,” Sara said. “Jeans. Nothing serious.”

  “What do you mean? You need to wear something fun and sexy so she can’t miss you.”

  “I thought you wanted her to miss me, pass me altogether in favor of other young virgins to debauch?”

  “Don’t be a smartass.” Raven propped an elbow on her duffle bag—already packed for her weekly booty call to Tampa—and looked Sara over carefully. “You should wear something pretty. Maybe some velvet?”

  “What?”

  In the end, Sara took Raven’s advice and wore red velvet, a quintessential party dress, spaghetti straps, with a bodice fitted over her breasts and belly then flared out in an A-line to make the most of her thick hips and thighs. She arranged her straight permed hair into a French twist, fastening it with red beaded crystal clips and slipped on black high-heeled pumps she’d had for years but never had an occasion to wear.

  Her feet felt strange
in the shoes, squeezed tight but sexy in a way she’d never known before.

  “You look hot. Very fresh meat.” Raven’s smile slowly faded until she watched Sara with grave eyes. Finally, she turned away and grabbed her bag. “My work here is done. See you Monday. And take care of yourself.”

  “That’s it?” Sara turned to her, hyper conscious of the way the stilettos elongated her legs under the silk-lined velvet while propping her bottom up and out.

  “Sure. What else do you want me to say?”

  The truth was that Sara wanted company at the party. Raven was the only person she knew on the Vreeland campus, and she often felt out of place among these people who were largely the opposite of chic, but still possessed their own sophisticated mystique.

  “Nothing,” Sara finally said with the tiniest pout. “Tell Kevin I said hello.”

  Even though she had never met Raven’s boyfriend, they had often ended up talking to each other on the phone while Raven dashed out of the shower or ran up the stairs to their dorm room from a late class.

  “Definitely.” Raven quickly hugged her and breezed out of their shared room.

  It was after ten, too late for anything good to be on TV, but far too early to go to a party that started at nine. Or at least that’s what Raven said. Sara waited until eleven o’clock on the dot to leave her room and walk to the other set of dorms across the courtyard. A cool Florida breeze off the nearby ocean brushed against her cheeks and stirred tendrils of her hair.

  Was she really going to do this?

  Sara slowed her footsteps, but she didn’t stop.

  Her parents wouldn’t approve. Definitely not her homophobic friends from high school whom she’d abandoned after making the decision to go to Vreeland. Yes, the school was a place to indulge in all the excesses she’d heard about but felt too afraid to try—mushrooms, weed, alcohol, sex, skinny-dipping in the ocean under indifferent stars. But the campus also had one of the largest percentages of gay students of all the schools she’d been interested in. When Vreeland had said yes to her application, Sara dismissed all the other universities and their acceptance letters, even Columbia, where her father had hoped she would enroll.

 

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