I might have been awake an hour, watching Becky sleep. Her body twitched. She mumbled anxiously, while rain and wind rattled the windows. When dawn broke with a clap of thunder, she sat up in alarm - the sheet falling to her waist.
"It's just thunder," I whispered, rubbing her back, feeling her tension subside under my palm.
Resting her head on her knees, she groaned miserably.
"You all right?"
"I was having one of my nightmares."
"Tell me," I said, pulling her down across my lap. "What was it about?"
She sighed, as I massaged her into a tranquil reality.
"Vietnam. My brother... fighting to stay alive." She sighed again, and then added, "But he doesn't."
"It's just a dream."
"Is it? Maybe it's a vision."
"Is it the same every time?"
"No."
"Then it can't be a vision."
"What's the difference? He's dead anyway."
Arguing with her wasn't going to change anything. I slipped out from beneath, straddled her hips, and began to massage her shoulders in earnest. The best way I could think to help her cope was to be a supportive partner.
The violent storm outside shook the old house, while lightening provided flashes of clarity in the shadowed room.
"Mmm, that feels good," she said, laying her cheek on the white sheet and closing her eyes.
Becky remained motionless for so long, I thought she'd fallen asleep. Then, with a husky morning voice, she said, "lower."
My hands had already worked down to her waist. Dutifully, I slid down to her knees and pulled the sheet with me, exposing her bottom. Placing a hand on each cheek, I kneaded the firm hills.
"Mmm, feels very, very good."
"I love B. B. B."
"What?"
"Becky's beautiful butt."
She smiled, eyes closed.
After a gluttonous gluteus grope, I worked down each leg, ending with her fairy feet and twinkle toes. Several times I had to recapture an escaped foot, promising not to tickle it again. It was an accident. Honestly, I didn't mean to make her squeal - at least not the first time.
Gently setting her limp leg down, I said, "I'm going to take a shower. We should go out for breakfast, since I may be cooking all the meals, after the game." Stopping at the door, I asked, "Does this tiny burg even have a diner?"
Her eyes were open, and her focus slowly rose from my groin to my face, making my skin tingle pleasantly. "Annie's diner opens at 5:00. Farmers get up early." She rolled over. "I need a shower, too."
"Far out. I'll do your back and you do mine."
Actually, we washed each other, all over - thoroughly. One of life's great sensual pleasures is a soap-slippery, naked woman.
An hour later, we sat in the booth near the back of Annie's diner. Bad news traveled fast in 'Petticoat Junction'. Just about everyone in the place seemed to know Becky, and told her how sorry they were about her MIA brother. No one asked who I was, but their stares burned into the back of my head. I assumed they thought the worst of our relationship. The fact they were right didn't give me any warm-fuzzies.
There should be a law against farmers wearing their shit-kickers into eating establishments. The diner smelled like a cow barn. My appetite practically disappeared. Coffee, bacon, eggs, and toast were all I could manage. Grabbing a newspaper off the counter, eager to catch up on world events, I read the headline and turned the paper around so Becky could see the bold print.
Vietnam Moratorium Day, Thousands Rally Against the War.
"We missed a good protest, yesterday."
She took the paper from me, "Maybe the government will begin to listen to the people."
"Miracles happen" ...not.
After reading the article, Becky stared out the window, deep in thought. "Maybe I should've stayed in school. At least there I could protest - do something positive with my time. When are you going back?"
I didn't dare tell her Rodger was shipping all my stuff to her house. Whatever she decided to do, I'd deal with it. "Why? Are you trying to get rid of me?"
She didn't answer, just turned her gaze out the window. The rain had stopped and sunshine streaked through breaks in the clouds. A tractor rumbled down Main Street, driven by a man whose face was made of crumpled leather.
"How old do you think that guy is - 25, 30?"
Becky laughed softly. "That's Mr. Harper. He so old, he remembers when the glaciers melted."
"I bet he has a saber-tooth tiger head over his mantle."
"No, there's a wooly mammoth head over the fireplace. The tiger head is over the straw mattress in his bedroom."
"When were you in his bedroom?"
"Never. His 10th wife told me it frightened her on their wedding night."
"You're funny," I said, taking her hand across the table.
She grinned crookedly, and answered, "You bring out the best in me... and the worst."
After clearing my throat and swallowing hard, I said, "Then I'm both glad and sorry."