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Dawn Patrol - Don Winslow [68]

By Root 817 0
big waves are coming to her. Almost literally to her back door, and all she has to do is walk outside, paddle out, and catch one of the big mackers. The beaches and bluffs will be lined with photographers and video guys, and all she needs is one ride, one monster ride, with her tawny hair waving like her personal flag against the black wave, and she knows that her picture will be on the front cover of the mags.

And the sponsorship will follow.

So lift, she tells herself. Push past the pain; it’s only pain. Every fiberripping lift will help you stay up in that wave. This is what you’ve been training for for months, for years, all your life. So do one more, one more, one more.…

The lifting done, she goes back on the mat and stretches some more, then lies back, breathes, and imagines herself riding the big wave.

It’s not mere fantasizing; she carefully breaks it down, moment by moment, from the paddle in to the drop to the heavy right break, into the tube, then out again with the blast of spray. She imagines it again and again, each time in more detail, and in each repetition she does it stronger and better. She never imagines missing the wave, or wiping out, or getting sucked over the falls.

Sunny keeps it rigorously positive.

The sound of her moment coming to her.

She gets up, wipes herself down with a towel, and sits and listens to the ocean.

53

Petra watches Boone sleep.

It’s a somewhat edifying experience, in that she’s never actually watched a man sleep before.

Not that there haven’t been men in her bed, but she has typically fallen asleep before they have, or, preferably, they have gotten up and left after the sexual act and a decent period of “cuddling,” although, truth be told, she could do without the latter. It seems to be expected, however, even though she suspects that the man could dispense with it as well.

If she’s in the man’s bed, she gets up and leaves after the polite interval, because she prefers to sleep alone, and, especially, wake up alone. She’s hardly decent—physically, emotionally, or psychologically—until she’s had that first cup of Lapsang souchong, and besides, the last thing she wants to be doing in the morning is looking after a man’s needs, feigning cheerfulness as she makes him coffee, eggs, sausages, and the like.

That’s what restaurants are for.

Now she watches Boone Daniels sleep and she’s fascinated.

One moment the man was totally, utterly awake and one second later he was just as totally, utterly asleep, as if he didn’t have the proverbial care in the world. As if he weren’t financially bereft, as if he didn’t have a crucial witness to locate, as if an apparently violent gangster wasn’t out to harm him, as if …

I weren’t even here, she admits to herself.

Is that what’s bothering you? she asks herself. That this man can simply ignore you to the extent of actual unconsciousness?

Ridiculous, she tells herself. Why would you care if this … primitive doesn’t find you as fascinating as, let’s face it, most men do? It’s not as if you have any interest in him, not as if you’ve made the slightest effort to attract him.

Of course, you never make the slightest effort, she thinks. Be truthful, woman, you’re very lazy when it comes to that. Lazy because you can be, because a frank assessment in the mirror tells you so, and because men tell you so.

They act like idiots and they’re ridiculously easy to bring into your bed, if that’s what you want.

Not that there have been that many.

A few well-selected, well-heeled, polite, appropriate sexual partners, one or two of whom she had considered as potential husbands and who, she supposes, have evaluated her as a potential wife.

But they are all much too career-oriented and, face it, selfish for marriage. At least at this point in her life, in any case. Perhaps after she makes partner, she might seek out a more serious relationship, perhaps find a man who might be a suitable husband. In the meantime, she’s content to find the occasional young lawyer or banker who’s appropriate to take to company dinners and, even more occasionally,

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