The word flagged him. “And you said that there really is a devil.”
“Um-hmm.”
“So if there
“People sell their souls to the devil every day, for a whole lot less.”
Collier found that if he ate the food without looking at it, it was much less radical. When Dominique excused herself for the restroom, his gaze covered the back of her body as effectively as a paint roller. He ordered another beer from the waitress and had her take the other bottle after draining it, then drank the new bottle down to the first bottle’s level.
When he saw Dominique coming back, he dug his fingernails hard into his leg.
“What were we talking about?” she asked. “Oh, yeah. Deals with the devil.”
But the idea seemed to taint the power of the legend. Could it really be that bland? “Satanism, then. The Gast myth is just a painted-up version of that?”
“Probably. Inventing stories is part of our nature, I guess—as the highest animal. Detractors of religion say the same thing about Christianity. It’s just a caveman legend: the savior comes and plucks the good people out of their hellhole existence and takes them to paradise.”
“A fair point, for people who consider religion objectively.”
“Of course it is. But seeing is believing. Those detractors never get a chance to really
“Money and fashion is the new god?”
“The new golden calf,” she said. When she crossed her ankles under the table, her toes brushed his leg. “Sorry. Wasn’t trying to kick you.”
“Not just intrigued. We need them,” she said. A squid tentacle slipped between her lips into her mouth. “Cavemen
Collier’s brow furrowed.
“Not only are ghosts proof of an afterlife, but they’re also proof of a netherworld—or hell. If the caveman really believes there are ghosts haunting the woods, what else can they be but unsaved spirits? And if there are
Collier tried to make more observations without being the devil’s advocate. “So…
“I don’t worry about it because I see the reality of God every day.”
“What does that look like, exactly?”
“You have to ask God to
“No, no, I wasn’t asking you to do that,” Collier hastened. “I understand that it
She just looked at him and nodded. “Humans aren’t strong—not since Eve bit the apple. That’s why God gives us an out. We either find it or we don’t.”
He tried to assimilate. “Then what did Harwood Gast find? You say that you know there’s a God because you’ve seen evidence of him in your life—”
“Sure. A bunch of times.”
“So if you know there’s a God, then you know there’s a heaven, and if you know there’s a heaven, then you know there’s a hell?”
She laughed. “Yeah.”
“So then maybe all those cotton fields
She shrugged. “I agree with the possibility.”
“So what about you? I believe you when you say you’ve seen evidence of God in your life. Have you ever seen any evidence of anything else?”
Her gorgeous eyes narrowed. “As in what?”
“At lunch, didn’t you imply that you
“Bullshit? Well, in all honesty I can say…maybe. But I won’t say what it was.”
Collier sighed.
Now she was grinning. “I know. I hate it when people do that, too. But I don’t want to say anything ’cos then you really will think I’m a crackpot.”
“I swear I won’t,” he about pleaded. Collier was getting the same jive from everyone around here. “There’s no way I’ll think you’re a crackpot.”
“Well…” Her gaze darted up to the waitress. “Oh, here’s the check. This is Dutch treat—”
“I’m not Dutch.” Collier gave the waitress cash, with a big tip. Then he leaned into the table. “Tell me.”
Her reluctance was genuine. “All right, but not here. You paid for dinner, so I’ll get dessert…”
Dominique dug into the sundae as if ravenous. As each spoonful was savored, Collier saw the wet shine of her lips and tongue-tip in a Daliesque clarity; nightfall hovered around the radiant face and the gem-shine of her eyes. “I’m such a pig, but this is so good,” she reveled. “You sure you don’t want some?”
“No, thanks, I’m stuffed.” When he imagined his stomach’s reaction to ice cream mixing with Korean spices and squid, beef, and half-cooked egg—plus all the beer he’d had today—he shivered. In all, he had to force himself to eat the cookie.
Then he imagined something else: when she raised the next spoonful to her parted lips, she froze. Suddenly she was topless and sitting spread-legged on the bench, the quirky Christian reverting to her college-tramp roots…
Her mouth sucked the ice cream off the spoon, where it sat on her tongue till it melted, and then her lips expelled it. The slew of white cream marbled with hot fudge began to run a slow line down her chin, over the hollow of her throat, and between her breasts. It stopped to pool in her belly button, and that’s when the fantasy put Collier on his knees licking it out. His hands molded her hips and slid up her ribs as his tongue followed the track in reverse. He evacuated the adorable navel, then sucked upward over a quivering stomach. His mouth could feel excited blood beating in vessels beneath succulent, perfect flesh. No thoughts formed in his own mind, just the