I picked Kasey up a little after five on Sunday afternoon.
She came bounding down the stairs in a skirt similar to the one she'd worn the day before and a spaghetti strap top; from the movement of her breasts beneath the shirt, it was clear she wasn't wearing a bra.
It was our third time to be together and the trend was she showed a little more skin each time. For a moment, I lamented the fact that it was almost October and would be cooling off soon.
Thirty minutes later, we were sitting on a bench by the river with fresh made deli sandwiches and a pile of thick cut boardwalk style fries.
We watched a collection of ducks as they wandered in and out of the water. The sandwiches were on thick bread, and we began pitching chunks of it to the ducks.
After we finished eating, Kasey leaned against me, resting her head on my shoulder. I put an arm around her and we talked through the concept she was mulling over for her English research paper.
A little while later, Kasey sighed.
"What's wrong?" I asked.
"I just remembered I've got two chapters I have to read for this quiz we've got a tomorrow."
"Ahhh. You have to love Monday morning quizzes. Let's go ahead and take you back to the dorm so you can study."
I stood up, taking Kasey by the hand and helping her up.
"I'm sorry," she said, holding onto my hand as we walked back to my car.
"Don't be," I said. "School is important."
"It's not the only thing that's important."
She leaned against the car, blocking me from opening the door and grabbing my other hand.
"What are you thinking about?"
"Why are you so quick to take me back to school and get rid of me?"
"Get rid of you? No, Kasey, that's not it at all."
"Then, I don't understand. What is it?"
I sighed. And I caught myself. I'd almost called her sweetheart.
"Kasey..." I took a deep breath. "You worked really hard to get here, and right now, school has to be your number one priority. Job, second priority, because it helps you pay your expenses. I, or any young man that catches your eye should be a distant third. And any guy worth your time will understand all of that."
She looked as though she were about to object.
"I'm not going anywhere," I said. "But right now, you're going back to the dorm so you can study."
Kasey still didn't budge, so I resorted to trickery and deception.
I leaned in and kissed her. Her hands immediately fell away from mine and I grabbed her about the waist, hugging her and then moving her to the side. I broke our kiss long enough to unlock the door and open it.
"You're mean," she said. She didn't mean it, though. She was trying hard not to smile.
"No. Not mean, I'm just doing this because..."
I stopped short.
"Because you love me?"
Slippery slope. I had one foot on it and the other foot on a sheet of greased glass.
"I care, Kasey. You're really important to me."
Her shoulders sagged and a glimmer of hope that had resided in her eye burned out almost instantly. It was like I'd popped a balloon with a pin.
"Do you like me?"
I grabbed her hand and stopped her.
"Do I like you?"
She looked up at me, bit her lip and nodded.
"Of course I do." I looked into soft blue eyes; down to her tempting, luscious lips; down to out joined hands; back to her eyes.
"Kasey, yesterday... the day before, you..." I sighed, shaking my head. "If I didn't like you, I would never have taken you to dinner last night, much less anything else. And if I didn't like you, I would never have offered to take you to dinner tonight."
"Then why..."
I laid a finger across her lips.
"And if I didn't like you, I wouldn't care if I ever saw you again."
The sparkle came back to her eyes.
"But, you are..." Pick your words carefully, I told myself. Very carefully. "You're beautiful, sweet... you're very smart, too, obviously. You wouldn't be doing as well with school as you are if you weren't. There is nowhere I'd rather be now than with you. And I'd really like to do this again."
A smile. "You would?"
I nodded. "In fact, I'd like to eat dinner with you every Sunday night. Assuming, of course, that some lucky guy doesn't capture your eye."
Kasey shook her head. "That... that won't happen. I don't want to go out with anyone else."
Her eyes danced as she peered at me. Something different in her expression.
"So... you just want to eat dinner with me... once a week? That's it?" Disbelief? Disappointment?
"No, sweetheart, that's not what I mean. I..."
"What did you just call me?" Kasey's eyes were wide. Her mouth was open; agape, even, a smile trying to overtake her expression.
"What? Uh..."
"You called me 'sweetheart.'"
A silent moment of shock passed between us. The smile captured her face, and she weaved her fingers in with mine.
"I don't think you meant to, but you said it."
"Kasey, I..."
It was her turn to stop me with fingers laid across my lips.
"Please don't say you're sorry. I don't want you to be sorry you said it."
Her fingers moved from my lips to the side of my face and she leaned up to kiss me, her lips soft against mine. The kiss lingered as we breathed against one another; nothing overt, just a kiss, contact, affection.
"I'm not sorry you said it. I want to hear it again. And you can call me anything else you want. Because even if you don't want to say you love me, I know you do. I can tell. But just so you know, I do love you."
Kasey pulled her hand free from mine and hugged me. I wrapped my arms around her and as I held her, I got the distinct impression that I was in the arms of a young woman who would not soon let me go. I was in deep. Probably too deep.
I kissed the top of her head and brushed my fingers through her hair. I don't know why I didn't want to say it, but I did love her. Maybe not as I one day would, maybe not as I should. But I did love her.
Kasey pushed back and looked up at me.
"I need to go study for my quiz."
"Yeah, you do."
Kasey slid into the car without making a sound.
By the time we were out of the parking lot, Kasey was either holding my hand or touching my arm. I'd forgotten how all consuming young love can be, and I'd just learned an important lesson; it wasn't reserved for the young. I was developing a true and honest affection for her, even after resigning myself to the inevitable fact that she merely bore a strong, strong resemblance to what my daughter probably did look like, and I admitted to myself that I really regretted having to take her back so she could study.
We pulled up out in front of the dorm a few minutes later. Our fingers tightened their hold on each other as we fought against the sudden inevitability of her banishment to the textbook.
"So, will you know tomorrow what your grade is on the quiz?"
Kasey shrugged. "We might. It might be Wednesday before we know."
"Call and tell me how you did?"
She nodded. She leaned over and kissed me on the cheek.
"Thanks for dinner. I want to do that again. I liked feeding the ducks."
"Plan on it."
I kissed Kasey quickly on the lips, and she smiled as she got out.
I drove off as she climbed the stairs.
I almost felt like the white knight riding off; the glare from the sunset was that bright in my eyes on the way home.
Three hours later, I was in bed, reading and on the verge of being asleep when my cell phone buzzed.
A text message at... not quite eleven o'clock.
From Kasey.
:-*
That was it, and I had not the first clue what it meant. I sent a text back. One character.