Ice bucket in his hands, he started back toward the room.
And glanced to his left at the bank of elevators.
The doors of the nearest elevator stood wide open.
He saw no one.
He stepped toward the elevator.
Empty.
Why did it even stop here? he wondered.
Step right in, he thought. And leave. And never come back.
He smiled wistfully.
But where would I go? he wondered. I’ve
As if losing patience with Owen, the elevator shut its doors and descended without him.
Chapter Twenty-Three
HEAT
The job required two hands, so Owen set the ice bucket on the floor in front of his feet. Then he pulled his wallet out of his left rear pocket. He fingered open its bill compartment and plucked out the plastic key card. After glancing at the diagram near the door handle, he turned the card around and ran it through the lock slot. A tiny green light came on. He quickly pushed down on the handle lever and shoved the door open.
Holding it open with a knee, he put away his card and wallet, then crouched and picked up the ice bucket. He shouldered the door wide and entered the room.
“I’m back,” he announced.
Monica didn’t answer.
The bathroom door was shut. From the other side came the muffled hiss of spraying water.
“Great,” Owen muttered.
I can’t have half a minute off my feet without being sent for ice, and the moment I’m gone she heads for the shower. Very nice.
He carried the ice bucket over to the dresser and set it down. Then he sat on the end of the bed and pulled off his shoes.
And sighed.
It felt
He was tempted to massage his feet. That’d
Or longer.
The longer the better, he thought.
Feet dangling off the end of the bed, Owen eased down onto the mattress. The instant his head and back met the bed, his aches and soreness started to melt and flow away. He filled his lungs and sighed.
Don’t get too comfortable, he warned himself. Still have to get up when Monica comes out.
Have a cream soda with her.
Change for bed, wash, brush my teeth...
He fell asleep, but not for long.
The clink of an ice clump dropping into a glass woke him up.
He raised his head off the mattress, then propped himself up on his elbows.
Monica, standing at the dresser, had her back to him as she popped open a can of cream soda. Her hair was wrapped in a tower of pink towel. She wore the black nightgown that she’d bought especially for this trip, that she’d modelled for him last night.
It left most of her back bare. It draped her buttocks and surrounded her legs like a veil of smoke. She wore nothing underneath it.
Owen felt a squirm in his pants.
As cream soda gurgled into Monica’s glass, he pushed himself up to his elbows.
“How was the shower?” he asked.
She swiveled toward him, smiling and giving him a side view of her right breast. Though covered by the nightie, it appeared to be cloaked in nothing but a shadow. “It was grand,” she said. “I feel
“I don’t think I can stand up.”
She eyed his groin. “
He blushed, then sat up so his bulge wouldn’t show.
Smiling, Monica turned away long enough to set her can on the dresser. Glass in hand, she faced Owen. After a glance at his lap, she met his eyes. She raised her eyebrows high. Then she turned her face aside, raised her glass and tilted back her head. As she swallowed cream soda, she shifted her stance, thrusting her hips to the left and standing mostly on her left leg.
Posing.
Keeping her eyes away from Owen.
Keeping her arms out of the way so they wouldn’t obstruct his view.
From where Owen sat near the edge of the mattress, she was almost close enough to touch. Her breasts swelled out at him, looking as if they might burst through the frail material holding them in.
The gown drifted in front of her groin, caressed her thighs, concealed nothing.
As Owen gazed at her, she glided her right foot forward and sideways. Then she lifted her right knee. Bare toes pressing against the carpet, she swayed her leg lazily from side to side. The motion drew Owen’s eyes to where she obviously wanted them.
“What’re you looking at, Owie?” she asked, her voice a teasy sing-song.
Blushing again, he quickly raised his eyes. “Nothing,” he said.
“Nothing, huh?” Monica lowered her glass. It was empty now except for some small clumps of ice. Reaching behind her, she set it next to the soda can. Then she eased backward against the edge of the dresser. She sat on it, put her arms down straight by her sides to hold on, and stretched out her legs. Then she smiled languidly at Owen.
“I bet I know what
“What?”
“Nothing,” she said. She spread her knees, opening herself wide to his view, then swung them back together.
Owen smiled. “What’s going on?” he asked.
“Nothing.” She opened and shut her legs again. “What makes you think something’s going own?”
“I don’t know.” He shrugged. “You don’t usually ... act this way.”
“Don’t I?” Instead of spreading her legs, she swiveled her shoulders. Her breasts, confined only by her flimsy nightgown, lurched heavily from side to side.
“What’re you doing?” Owen asked.
“Nothing,” she said.
Her shoulders stopped, but her breasts didn’t. The rough lurching came to an end, but they continued to