Excerpt for The Sixteen Year Itch by Melissa Blue, available in its entirety at Smashwords

THE 16 YEAR ITCH

COPYRIGHT© 2008 by Melissa Blue


Morgan Stevens took in the pink and red heartshaped

balloons, the rows of endless chocolate in

heart-shaped boxes, the heart-shaped greeting cards,

and her stomach clenched. “You know, I really hate this

holiday. It’s not even a week from now and everything

is…ugh.”

Alan, her best friend, laughed. “Only because no one

has ever asked you to be their Valentine,” he shrugged.

“Could make anyone grumpy.”

Morgan took in the atmosphere again. She’d missed the

naked babies armed with heart-shaped arrows. Oh, and

the array of pink stuffed animals. It was like Pepto-

Bismol on crack. “No, I don’t think so.”

She followed him to the card aisle. His long, easy

strides ate up the floor. She tried not to watch the

view from behind. “Why did I get dragged into this

again?”

“Because you love me.” The comment stopped her cold,

until he continued. “And because you know what card my

mother will like.”

The fear seizing Morgan’s heart loosened. She knew he

only saw her in a platonic fashion--knowing someone

since the age of five could do that. But there had been

moments when things between them shifted like a crackle

in the air, moments when if she had leaned forward,

just a little, the platonic part of their relationship

would no longer exist. Morgan never leaned forward and

those moments past as if she imagined it.

There had been one of those moments just that morning

when he reached behind her for a coffee mug, he had

paused. Her breasts had been pressed against his muscled

chest. Her heart had thudded seeing, feeling their

mouths touching like she fantasized on too many nights

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to count. He had smiled down at her like a brother

would.

Another opportunity lost.

She pulled herself together. Nothing could come out of

her crush-that-should-have-died-years-ago. They were

friends. They’d always been and always will be friends.

Instead of years of hot, sweaty, monkey sex with Alan,

Morgan had consigned herself to be the one to tell him

to put his teeth in.

“What’s wrong?” Alan asked softly.

“The capitalist way of saying I love you with an oversized

balloon that says, ‘I love you, beary much’ is

getting to me. I think I’m developing an eye twitch.”

She pointed to her face. “I’m sure of it. Tell me, is

it twitching?”

He reached out and cradled the side of her face with

his wide palm. The corner of his mouth twitched up making

the dimple in his left cheek peek out. Then there

was that zing again. And no, she wasn’t imagining it

this time. The same nameless emotion that had been

driving her berserk since puberty flashed in his hazel

eyes.

He caressed her eyebrow with his thumb. Under the florescent

light his caramel toned skin appeared flush.

This was it; he was finally going to kiss her. Yes,

yes, yes! His smiled spread, the damn brotherly smile,

and the moment went poof.

“Your eyes are fine.”

He turned back to the cards, and her heart, like it always

did after one of those zing moments, broke a little.

She had to stop doing this to herself. Who was she

kidding? This was maddening. Holding her breath for one

of those moments to stretch and become more was pointless.

They would never become more. Maybe, if she really wanted to delude herself she could add up those moments

and hold them close to her. It still wouldn’t be

enough.

Morgan crossed her arms to stave off the cold creeping

on her. “I think your Mom would like the one on the

left. 12 o’clock.”

His hand went straight to it. “Not too cheesy?”

A laugh finally broke through the melancholy. “Everything

in this aisle is too cheesy.” Including me.

Alan tried not to glance at Morgan, but keeping his

eyes on the road was becoming troublesome. The leather

upholstery squeaked when he shifted again to curb the

urge, because he knew without looking at her something

was off. If he only had one guess, Alan would pick the

moment in Lucky’s Superstore. God, he shouldn’t have

touched her. When would he learn touching her only made

it worse?

He had come close, twice, in one day to kissing her.

Alan needed to be rid of Morgan or he’d do something

dumb and ruin a friendship. She was smart, witty, and

incredibly sensual. Over the years they’d argued, made

up with a joke or smile, but most people couldn’t go

from lovers to friends again. That and many other reasons

is what stopped him every time.

Just see what happens, his mother’s voice lodge in his

head. More often those words pushed him closer to forgetting

his reasons for keeping things on a platonic

level.

The silence on the other side of the car continued.

Alan gave up and glanced at her--big mistake, because

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his eyes strayed to her lips, plump and kissable. Lips

that had comforted, chastised, and encouraged him when

he needed it.

Damn, damn, damn. He was in deep this time. He had to

get her out of the car, now, because he was sure, he

was going to do something dumb. He slowed to park in

her driveway. He kept the car running. “I guess I’ll

see you later.”

She made a noncommittal noise and opened the door. The

leather seat seemed to hug her wide hips as she slide

down from the SUV. Finally it let her go and she turned

those deep chocolate brown eyes on him. Something was

definitely off.

“I think we need some time from each other.”

Those had been the last words he’d expected her to say,

so it took him a moment to get his brain around them.

His hands gripped the steering wheel. He saw what she

was going to do in her eyes. He’d known her too long to

assume what had happened in Lucky’s didn’t already

change things between them.

Even knowing the answer, Alan still said, “Can I ask

why?”

“I just need some time. Away from you. We’re 28. We’re

unattached. Most men I date don’t understand our relationship.”

She scoffed. “Hell most of them offer a three-way

thinking we’ve already been there and done that.”

She shook head as if to say that’s not my point. “The

comment you said back at the store got me thinking.

I’ve never had a Valentine. Not that I really wanted

one, but still…” She stopped not meeting his eyes.

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And this is why men shouldn’t talk, Alan conceded, at

least why he shouldn’t talk. But this could be a good

thing for them. He never really looked at any other

woman as a possible girlfriend, much less as a wife.

When he did he compared them to Morgan. None of them

ever passed muster when he did.

Maybe it was time to let their friendship die. They

could stay in touch by phone. He went back to those

chocolate irises. His stomach clenched harder. He

wouldn’t be able to admire how the soft features belied

the sarcastic temperament underneath. He wouldn’t be

able to drown in her eyes secretly and not wanting an

anchor. She sunk her teeth in her bottom lip, her nervous

tell, and the thought hit him—I’ve lost her already.

It was for the best.

Okay, think brotherly. He started to smile. Morgan made

a disgruntled noise and slammed the car door. He banged

his head on the headrest then reached for the door handle.

He couldn’t bring himself to open it.

Ages ago he should have made the first move. It’s not

like there weren’t moments where he could have taken

the opportunity. His mind went back to the first and

only time they kissed back in the 8th grade.

I’m going to be dead before a boy kisses me, Morgan had

said. They’d been sitting on the bleachers, she’d been

doing math homework, and he was waiting to copy the answers.

He leaned forward and gave her a closed mouth

kiss. Her eyes had widened, but then surprised turned

to pleasure.

They’d never talked about it. Now that Alan thought

about it he’d made a joke and they moved on like they

always did.

But there were other times: summers spent half naked

and swimming in Dead Man’s Lake, dancing together at

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prom, drunken college nights. A few million opportunities,

all wasted because he’d been too chicken shit.

No, too scared that any relationship they’d have just

might crash and burn then he’d never be able to see her

again. Their lives we so intertwined. Alan tried to

think of a time when Morgan wasn’t there.

He couldn’t.

Alan loosened his grip on the door handle, stared at

her house for a few more moments, then left. No, he was

definitely a chicken shit.

Morgan stared down the phone then said, “I swore on a

stack of Holy Bibles I wasn’t going to call.”

She didn’t turn to her mother’s sigh. “Dear, either you

call him or stop calling me.”

Morgan turned, not surprised at her mother’s reply.

“What kind of mother are you? You are supposed to be my

moral support. You are supposed to be the one who says,

‘it’s alright, let me kiss your hurt.’ Not, ‘don’t call

me.’ Ugh.”

“I would be if you hadn’t called me for seven days

straight, asking me if you did the right thing. Every

day I’ve come over here to watch you mope around the

house for hours. In between the moping I’ve watched you

break your neck every time the phone rings. So, that

circles me back to call him.” She lifted the Chardonnay

bottle. The five carat diamond wedding ring shone in

the false light. “Looks like you need a refill, Honey.”

No wonder she was so screwed up. Not that having June

Cleaver as a mom seemed like a better choice out of the

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two extremes, but she wanted…Morgan wasn’t sure what

she wanted. On a whim she’d spoken words she wished to

take back. She thought her life would be simpler without

pining over Alan. Apparently life completely without

him didn’t lessen the pining.

She wanted him here, any where near here, just to be

there with her. Apparently, he still wasn’t out of her

system. Realizing how pathetic she looked, Morgan

marched away from the phone and took the glass her

mother offered.

“ If I call, he wins.” And my heart will keep breaking

every time he doesn’t touch me.

Stacey rolled her eyes. “And what if he doesn’t call?

Weren’t you the one to tell him you needed time away? I

mean really, dear, sometimes I don’t know how you became

so contrary.”

“I have a mother that says contrary and celebrates

every holiday on a calendar year.” Morgan rubbed the

condensation from the glass. The liquid beaded on her

fingertip. “But I think my contrariness has screwed

things up.”

“What’s to come is inevitable. Think about it, dear,

for 16 years you guys have ignored this elephant in the

room. Also, in 16 years this is the first time you guys

haven’t talked.”

Her mother took a sip from her glass. “There is going

to be an implosion. I just hope I’m not in the way when

it happens.”

Morgan glanced down into her drink. “No, I’ve definitely

screwed this up.”

Before she could take a sip from her glass the phone

rang. She skidded across the floor and answered it

half-way through the first ring. “Hello?”

THE 16 YEAR ITCH Page 9

She didn’t hear the reply over the ringing of the doorbell.

Still couldn’t pin point the voice when her mother

yelled “I’ll get it” And the swigging door slammed

shut behind Stacey.

“I’m sorry can you repeat that.” She said.

An automated voice said, “If you don’t have renter’s

insurance here’s your opportunity to--.”

Morgan slammed the phone down. The swinging door

creaked open behind her. “It wasn’t--.”

Alan wasn’t calling her, because he was standing in her

kitchen. Wrinkles clung to the bottom of the denims he

wore. His collared shirt was half tucked into his

pants. She backed up into the counter, not sure if it

was his appearance or that he was standing in her

kitchen.

“Stacey said she had to go and something about an implosion.

She said you’d know what it meant.”

There was an implosion alright. Was it wrong that she

wanted to run to him and just wrap her arms around his

steady frame? Maybe, but seven long days had changed

her outlook a little. It was time to stop lying to herself.

She loved Alan, and she’d been in love with him

for 16 years. She told her rational brain to shut up

and moved toward him.

“I’m sorry. I—it’s been hard.”

Morgan stopped at his words. “What do you mean?”

He stuffed his hands in his pockets. “I thought I would

go out on dates. When that didn’t work, I grabbed the

nearest sibling and went on a drinking binge.”

“You drank? Hard liquor?” Morgan narrowed her eyes.

He grimaced. “Sure as hell wasn’t a fuzzy navel.”

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She took in a deep breath and let it out slowly. “Why?”

Morgan asked, though she already knew the answer.

“Because I was trying to live my life without you in

it.” He moved toward her. “It’s damn hard.” He took

another step until he stood in front of her. “Frankly,

I don’t want to.”

Damn the consequences. Morgan moved forward until they

were chest to chest. “Kiss me.”

Those wide palms she’d fantasized about cradled her

head. The heat spread from her temples down, down

farther, until she moaned against his mouth. The kiss

was everything she dreamt it would be, but it didn’t

scratch the itch.

“I love you.” He murmured.

Oh, that was close, but not quite there. “Beary much?”

He pulled back and his dimple deepened as he chuckled.

“Forever.”

That hit the spot. “I love you, too.” She paused, her

hand on his zipper. “But first I’ve got an itch only

you can scratch.”

The End



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