"Wait, wait," Marsha said. "I want to hear the part about Phil. I love it when men don’t get their way."

"I must have been insane," Kara said. "They invited me on a cookout, Louise and all," she said.

"Who’s Louise?"

"Grandmother," Kara said. "Anyway, I shouldn’t have gone. I mean, Phil was there, I knew they had probably slept together and I was crazy with jealousy. But I went. Ginny and I took a walk around sunset, to the Big Tree," she said.

"Your painting?"

"Yes. We’re standing there, up against this tree…"

"Making love?"

"Yes. And Phil comes looking for us, but we don’t stop. We couldn’t. That’s when I knew for certain that I loved her."

"Jesus. Did he catch you?"

"No. But when we got back, Louise announced that Phil and Ginny are getting married."

"Kara?"

"I know," she said. "I’m crazy."

"But she sent him away?"

"Yes. And I left."

"Just like that?"

"She said that she loved me," Kara said.

"And you ran for your life?"

Kara shrugged. "She’s not straight, Marsha. She only thought she was."

"Oh, Kara. Do I know you or what?"

"Meaning?"

"You’re just protecting yourself, aren’t you? In case she finds out there are other fish in the sea?"

Kara laughed. "Very good," she said, inhaling deeply on her cigarette.

"Kara, you can be so stubborn sometimes. Don’t you know what a good catch you are?"

Kara laughed again. "You didn’t think so."

"I was selfish. I wanted more of you than you could give me."

"I’m sorry."

Marsha shook her head. "So? When are you going back?"

"I don’t know that I am."

"Why not?"

"She just ended a five-year relationship with a man. A man who thought they were going to get married. And now she’s discovered that…"

"She’s gay?"

"Yes. There was a woman once, before Phil, that she was involved with. Well, not sexually, but they were headed that way and she ran from it. Now that she’s accepted who she is, she’s got her whole life in front of her."

"And you’re scared she won’t choose you?"

"Something like that," Kara murmured.

"So you leave before she has a chance to tell you."

"Something like that," she said again.

"You haven’t told her, have you?"

"What?"

"That you’re in love with her."

Kara shook her head. "No. And I doubt that I will."

Marsha smiled and touched her glass to Kara’s. "Here’s to foolish women in love," she said lightly. "Foolish being the key word, Kara."

CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT

GINNY WALKED INTO the bar, feeling that every eye in the room was on her. More women than she ever thought she’d see were crammed together in the loud and smoky club. She shoved her way to the bar and got a beer, then walked through the crowd, looking at faces, suddenly wondering what she would do if Kara was there. But of course, she wouldn’t be. Ginny didn’t think that bars were Kara’s style.

She had scarcely taken a drink from her beer when a pretty, young women, barely college age, asked her to dance. Ginny stared at her, shocked, then politely declined. For a moment, she had forgotten where she was and why. She was embarrassed and wanted to call the girl back, but she let her go. She wasn’t interested in that woman in the least.

She didn’t decline her next offer, even though the woman was even more masculine that Phil. She was at least closer to Ginny’s age.

"I’m Mandy," the woman said.

Mandy? This was no Mandy! "Ginny. Nice to meet you."

The woman pulled her close and Ginny could smell bourbon on her breath and she turned her face away from her.

"I haven’t seen you around before," Mandy said.

"I’m just visiting," Ginny explained.

"I hope for awhile," Mandy said seductively.

"Leaving in the morning, I’m afraid," Ginny lied. She felt the woman’s large breasts press against her own and she wanted to pull away.

"That’s a shame. But the night’s long," Mandy whispered in her ear.

Not long enough to convince me to stay with you! "I’m actually waiting for someone," Ginny lied again. She prayed that the song would end.

"Well, just my luck," Mandy said but she continued to hold Ginny close.

Ginny suffered through the slow dance, escaping Mandy’s arms as soon as the song ended and moved to the other side of the room, away from Mandy.

She made herself stay until midnight, enduring countless dances with strangers, none of whom stirred even the slightest desire in her. None of them could compare to Kara, not that she thought any of them ever would.

Back at her hotel, she lay on her bed, fully clothed, feeling even more depressed than before. Kara, where are you? I need you.

She closed her eyes and let silent tears fall, feeling her heart breaking all over again. How could she love someone so much, finally, and they just leave her? Leave with a half-assed excuse that it was for her own good? It made no sense.

And it wasn’t fair. She had been looking for so long. Looking for that magic, that burning desire. And she had finally found it with Kara. And now she was gone from her life as quickly as she had come into it.

She awoke during the night and undressed, crawling beneath the covers finally. But she couldn’t sleep any more. She tossed and turned, her thoughts jumbled with memories of Kara. Kara’s lips coming to her; Kara’s hands cupping her breasts. Kara’s mouth settling over her, taking her to heights she had only dreamed of. Kara. Kara’s face. Kara’s eyes. Kara.

She got up. Angry.

"Damn her," she whispered to her empty room. She had to stop. She couldn’t go on like this. It was slowly driving her insane, this desire, this need she had for Kara.

"Well, she doesn’t want you. She doesn’t love you."

Ginny laughed bitterly. And what could she possibly offer Kara anyway? Friendship? Yes, they were friends. But she was sure Kara found her lacking in bed. Ginny didn’t have experience. She didn’t know how to love a woman. Kara had probably been with many women, all of whom were vastly superior to Ginny when it came to making love.

Ginny was jealous again. Jealous of those women who had touched Kara, had made love to her. Was there someone now? Had she called up an old friend? Was there someone staying with her at her cottage?

Ginny slammed her fist on the table, cursing herself for the tears that ran down her cheeks; cursing herself for being weak.

She should just go back, she thought. Go back to Nana and her lonely life. She would forget about Kara. Eventually. Maybe even look back on this with fondness someday. Kara had, after all, shown her that there was a whole new life for her, just waiting to be explored.

But instead of leaving, she took a bus downtown and walked the familiar streets, window-shopping and people watching. She paused at the high-rise where Phil worked. Where she had once worked, too. She should go up. At least say hello. At least so that she could tell Nana she had seen him.

But she didn’t. He would want to talk. It would just start all over again and it was better this way. She didn’t want to see him, anyway. He meant nothing to her anymore. He was just a distant memory of another life.

She walked down to the waterfront and had lunch, taking her seafood platter out to the patio overlooking Puget Sound. She had to fight the gulls for her last shrimp, but it was relaxing to be out here again. The familiar smell, the familiar sounds. She hadn’t realized she had missed Seattle. She had stayed away because of Phil. But Chiwaukum was only a couple of hours through the mountains. She could come back now, if she wanted. She no longer felt the need to avoid Phil. That was over.

She wondered through Pike Place Market, watching as the vendors displayed their goods, shoving through the crowds. Back on the street, she walked again through downtown, pausing to watch the horse-drawn carriages carry tourists along to the waterfront. She walked on, passing shops and people, her mind blank and empty for once.

She passed an art gallery, one that she had walked past a hundred times before and her breath caught in her throat. She reached out to touch the glass, her eyes wide. It couldn’t be. She brought her hand to her chest, trying to chase the pain away. The Big Tree. By Kara Morgan. She looked at the card again, but it was there.

Her eyes blinked quickly, trying to hide the tears that had formed. She stared, dumbfounded. The forest was ablaze in white light, the moon seeming to chase the sun from the sky. Her eyes followed the giant tree into the dark forest, down its rough bark, bark that she could still feel pressing against her skin. The path to the tree seemed to glow and she followed it now, as her feet had followed it all those weeks ago. And there, at its base, stood the shadows of two lovers, beneath the summer moon, heads drawn together, embracing. Hands touching, loving.

She shuddered and her breath left her in a silent gasp. Is that how they had been? Wrapped so closely together that even the barest of light could not penetrate? She watched, and remembered.

"Did you want him the way you wanted me? Did you beg him to put his mouth on you?"

Ginny swallowed hard, her eyes unseeing as she stared at the painting.

"Did he make you feel the way that I did? Were your breasts ready for his touch, like they are mine?"

Ginny shook her head. "Never," she whispered. She closed her eyes and saw them, her hand placing Kara’s between her legs. "Touch me."