“Why don’t we
all close our eyes and get started,” Emmy said. Her hands were sweating. The
back of her neck was sweating. She blew out a long breath and focused on the
back wall of the studio. “Breathe in, hold one second, and breathe out. Again,
breathe in...”
She had no idea how she got through the hour.
She wished Blake had chosen an Advanced Class, just so she could put him
through pigeon pose and a headstand or two. But apparently the basics of Sun
Salutation were torture enough. He grunted trying to keep up. Once he stumbled
and nearly took out the little girl in front of him. A sheen of sweat appeared
on his brow, and in the middle of tree pose, as he was wobbling and reaching for
the wall to keep from falling, Emmy could swear he cursed under his breath. She
bit the inside of her cheek to keep from laughing. He narrowed his gaze at her.
She narrowed hers right back.
Finally the class drew to its ritualistic end.
“All right, lie back, extend your arms and legs fully, and let go. Relax your
breath. This is Savasana pose,
also known as corpse pose, the way we end every yoga class. It is a chance for
you to let go of all your efforts and let the effects of your practice sink
in.” And a chance for Emmy to gain her composure, because as much as she’d
gotten a kick out of watching Blake struggle, she’d also felt a slip of desire
more than once.
Those palms, spread wide on the mat, that had
once wrapped around her waist.
Those legs, strong calves and thighs, that used
to flex while sprinting down the college football field.
That square jaw, the dark hair, the quiet
sounds of sleep she used to love to wake up next to.
Stop
remembering all that.
Sure. She could stop breathing too, while she
was at it.
Emmy summoned them to a seat at the
end and chanted the final meditation. As they rolled up their mats and
replaced their shoes, she turned on the lights and slipped a waiver onto a
clipboard for Blake. Really, she didn’t want his paperwork. She didn’t even
want his money. It wasn’t like fifteen dollars was going to make or break her
at this point. If he had five thousand dollars he wanted to put out for the
class, that would be another story, but he’d made it pretty clear the other day
that he was interested in buying the whole building out from under her. For way
below its market value, probably.
“Goodbye, thank you, see you soon!” she called
as the women walked out. She hoped one of them would stay, even if they made
comments about Blake being her boyfriend, but they didn’t. It was as if Bev’s
Boutique was having a fire sale they all had to get to. In less than five
minutes, she and Blake were alone.
“Well, that was interesting.” He rubbed his
shoulder. “That was a beginners’ class?”
“It was.”
“Some of those women are in pretty good shape.”
“They are.” Maybe if she spoke in single
syllables and short sentences, he’d get the hint and leave. “Here you go.” She
handed him the clipboard.
“Emmy.”
“Please don’t call me that.”
He swallowed back whatever comment he’d been
about to make and glanced at the clipboard instead. He filled in the lines with
a few scribbles, pulled out his wallet, and handed over a ten and a five.
“Thank you.”
“Can we talk?”
“About what? Did you have questions about the class
or any of the poses?”
He gave her a look, that look, the one he used to level on her back in school when
she was being deliberately unreasonable and they both knew it. “Actually, yeah.
That dog one? Where we were supposed to be upside down? I don’t think I was
doing it right.”
“Downward Dog?” One corner of her mouth
tugged. Don’t laugh at him. Don’t
even smile at him. But she couldn’t help it. “You weren’t.”
“I knew it.” He looked at his mat, still lying
on the floor. “Can you help me?”
“Blake.”
“I’m serious. My doctor keeps telling me I need
to relax. If I can learn yoga, maybe she’ll be happy. My father had already had
his first heart attack at my age.”
“Fine. Come over here.” She unrolled her own mat
and laid it a few inches from his. “Now watch.” She balanced herself on her
hands and feet, straightening her legs and stretching deeply into the pose. She
loved Downward Dog. It made her feel grounded and secure, even when nothing
else in her life did. “See how my back and my arms are straight? And my head is
down?”
He ran one hand along her spine. “Yes.”
She dropped to her knees. “Hey.”
“Sorry. I couldn’t help it.”
She looked up at him, and there was another
look she knew, a look she’d seen a thousand times before. Want. Love. Or something like it.
“Don’t look at me like that.”
“Like what?”
“Like you’re about to kiss me.”
An
eternal moment hung between them, and then Blake leaned over and did just that.
4 comments:
Allie Boniface writes the best book series. I love 'Pine Point' and 'Hometown Heroes'.
Both books sound very good
Hi Audrey!! Thank you so much for your awesome words of kindness!
Sounds like a perfect snuggle up with a cuppa tea story.
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