Neither of us meant it to happen the way it did, it was just one of those things, and it came about so slowly, so naturally, we were in way too deep before we knew it. In too deep to stop. Not that either of us wanted to by then.
I hadn't seen my sister Steph in almost five years, not since the day I'd watched her walk down the aisle with a no-good bum who broke her heart less than three years later. I walked beside her that day because there was no-one else. Pop had died two years before in a car wreck, though it was booze that killed himโhe'd been so wasted that everyone was surprised he could even find his car, let alone drive it into an underpass. Mom was gone a year later. Broken heart, though the doctors called it cancer of the pancreas.
I'd flown back for the wedding, flown out the following day and not stepped on American soil since. The dirt on my boots was African. Before that I'd served three years in Afghanistan, invalided out when a IED went off under my left boot. I'd been lucky two ways. Whoever had created the device had been bad at their job, and the medic who attended me was good at hers. I walked with nothing more than a limp these days.
After I was invalided out โ Uncle Sam wants only one hundred percent functioning grunts โ I'd gotten used to hot climates and spent a couple months bumming around Thailand, Australia, ended up in Kenya and fell in love with the place. I met a guy who asked if I wanted to help him run safari trips for rich Americans and Europeans and I said yes. I fell in love with the work too, the country, the animals and the people. But on my last Skype call with Steph she sounded real low, so I asked for a month off and boarded the next flight to San Diego. When I knocked on her door and she answered I thought she was going to pass out.
"Surprise!" I said, a grin plastered across my face.
Steph shook her head and hugged me, then hugged me even harder as I lifted her off her feet and swung her around.
"Matt!" She squealed and I swung her harder. It felt good. Damn, she felt good and a little guilt sparked inside me. Not enough to make me stop, but enough to slow me down a bit.
"What if I'd been away?" Steph said later, after her feet were on the floor again and she'd made coffee for us both. We sat at her kitchen table in the small apartment she called home. There was a great view through the tall windows which stood open, letting in a baking heat I found comfortable, and offering a great view of the bay.
"But you weren't," I said. "Besides, where would you go?"
"I do have a social life," she said, but there was a brittleness to her voice, the same brittleness that had brought me across half the world. Physically Steph looked great, better than I'd ever seen her. She was two years my junior, which made her twenty-seven, and four inches shorter, which made her five-eight. She'd inherited Mom's auburn hair shot through with streaks of red and gold, but had acquired her figure somewhere else. A gift from the gods, most like, because she was stunning. She tried to hide the swell of her breast and the curve of her hips under sloppy clothes but I was an expert at judging women. Except it felt strange to be judging Steph that way and after a while I made myself stop.
I'd dropped my small weekend bag near the door and as Steph poured more coffee she glanced at it.
"I've got a room booked at the Holiday Inn," I said.
Steph shook her head. "No you don't, Matt. You're staying here."
I looked around the apartment I'd never seen before. It was compact, and that was being kind.
"You got another bedroom hidden away somewhere?" I said. "In a closet maybe?"
Another shake of the head. "But I got a fold down couch and no fuckin' way are you going to hunker down anywhere but with me."
I smiled. I'd forgotten how much she liked to cuss.
"They allow cancellations before six," I said, glancing at the wall clock. I might make it if I called right that instant. I pulled out my cellphone and Steph laughed.
"What the holy fuck is that?"
I turned it over in my hand. "I live in Kenya," I said. "Out there this is the latest thing, let me tell you."
"Call 'em, then," she said. She got up and padded across the room and found her own phone, the latest model from Apple. She spoke into it, her voice soft, then lifted it to her ear. I thumbed the hotel number into my phone and waited while it rang, watching the second hand tick across the face of the kitchen clock.
"Holiday Inn, how can I help you?" A nice voice, sexy. I guess it was one of the recruitment factors.
I cancelled the room and the sexy voice had no problem with that at all. Probably freed it up for some late business exec they could charge a higher rate for. I glanced at the couch. It looked wide and soft and welcoming.
Steph finished up her own call and put the phone down without even checking Facebook or Twitter or anything. Damn, she was hard-hearted.
"I booked us dinner for tonight," she said. She cocked her head to one side, hair tumbling over her shoulder. "Is that all right, or are you jet-lagged to fuck?"
I wondered how she managed that mouth at work.
"Not too bad. It was a long flight so I got some sleep."
"How long?" She stepped close and slipped her arm through mine, leaned her head against my shoulder. Steph had always been tactile. Before it had never bothered me. Now, just me and her in the tiny apartment it felt a little awkward, but that was likely just me so I let her lean and hold on. I had come to offer comfort, after all.
"A whole day," I said. "Stop-over in London."
"Fu-uck," she said, her voice soft, drawing the word out.
I disentangled myself and walked to the sliding doors. The apartment might be small but the view was stupendous, out over the bay. A narrow balcony lay beyond the door and I slid it aside and stepped out. The afternoon heat enclosed me and I welcomed it as a familiar friend.
Steph came to join me. Again with the arm and the head against my shoulder. She smelled good, felt even better, and after a moment I lifted my arm and put it around her and she leaned harder, her own arms circling my waist.
She sighed, long and hard, a lot of meaning in that one sound.
"That tough?" I asked.
"Fuck, yeah," she said. "And some."
A tremor started up against me and it took me a second to recognise it. Steph was crying, trying not to make a sound. I turned her to face me and she sniffed and wiped an angry hand across her face.
"I wasn't going to fucking cry, Matt, and then you went and fucking hugged me. Shit!"
"Hey, it's OK." I squeezed her shoulders. "What's this all about? If it's some guy he's toast."
Steph tried a small laugh but it didn't work right. "There is no guy. This is all about me. Maybe if there was a guy I wouldn't feel the way I do, but then it's guys who make me feel this way." She sniffed again, wiped her nose with the back of her hand, real lady-like. "Ah, fuck, Matt, why can't men be more like you?" She put her arms around my waist and leaned against me. Breasts pressed to my chest, making me uncomfortable. I hesitated then put my arms around her too because it looked like she needed it.
"I'm no catch," I said, pulling her tighter against me despite the guilt. "I've broken a few hearts, too."
Steph sniffed against my shirt. Nice. "Not mine though."
I smiled and kissed the top of her head. "No, never yours, but I guess there's time for that too. You want to talk about it, babe?"
She shook her head against my chest, smearing whatever she'd deposited there just for luck. I had two more clean shirts.
"What's the point? Men are all dicks โ present company excepted, of course."
"Naturally. You ever tried women? I hear it's all the rage these days, and they do claim to possess the emotional skills we men lack."
"Ha." It was all she said, and I got curious wondering if she had indeed tried women, but I was too chicken to press it. Maybe later.
It felt good holding Steph. There had been women in Africa, but those relationshipsโno, too definite a word for what they'd beenโwere shallow and based on nothing more than a mutual need to get laid fast. Steph was different. Softer. Sweeter.
She sniffed a final time and looked up at me. "Can I say something to you, Matt?"
Her face was a mess, but a beautiful mess. "Sure."
"You stink. You're gonna need a long shower before we go anywhere." She continued to stare, her face all creased and serious, and I wiped snot from her nose with my thumb like Mom used to do to us when we were kids.
"Point me," I said.