“Mmm,” Ann replied luxuriously, stirring and stretching.
“Do you want to take a shower or something? I’m sure Amy wouldn’t mind.”
“Shower?”
“Aren’t you bleeding?”
“Just a little.” Ann sat up and looked around the room. Everything seemed different but she know that it was she herself who had changed.
“Are you feeling okay?” Heath asked anxiously.
“Stop fussing, Heath. I’m all right,” Ann said, smiling as she got up and looked around on the carpeted floor for her clothes. She handed Heath his crumpled jeans and then slipped quickly into her own shorts and T-shirt.
Silence reigned as they dressed.
“Annie, are you sorry?” Heath finally said desperately, afraid that she regretted what they had done.
She turned and embraced him, kissing his bare shoulder.
“Not for a second,” she replied. “I’m just thinking about what we’ll do tomorrow. And the day after that.”
“I’ve been thinking, too,” Heath said quietly, holding her. “I wasn’t going to tell you this just yet but I didn’t realize things would go this far so fast.”
Ann drew back to look at him curiously. “What are you talking about?”
“Come here and sit down,” Heath said, leading her by the hand back to the sofa they had shared.
Ann sat next to him and waited attentively.
He took a deep breath. “I have a cousin in Georgia who manages a marina there. I’ve been in touch with him and he says he can give me a job.”
All the color drained from Ann’s face. “You’re moving to Georgia?” she whispered, horrified.
“I’ll move if you’ll come with me,” he replied quietly.
Ann sat perfectly still for a stunned moment, then flung her arms around his neck. “Yes, yes, yes!” she yelled, going weak with relief and joy.
“I’ve already checked, and seventeen is old enough to get married there. We’ll get a place and I’ll work full-time. I know it won’t be much at first but we’ll be together. That’s what’s important, right?”
Ann was crying silently, unable to talk, but she nodded vigorously, clutching him.
“The only thing I’d feel bad about is you leaving school....” he said in a worried tone.
“I can take the high school equivalency exam, that’s not a problem. I’m sure I could pass it right now,” Ann replied, recovering her voice and wiping her eyes with the hem of her T-shirt. “And I can get a job, too, waitressing or something. We’ll be just fine, Heath. I know we will.”
“Then why are you crying?”
“I’m so happy.” She sniffed loudly.
“Look, Princess, I think you should take some time to consider this idea. If you come with me you’d be giving up a lot—your home and security, your whole past life—to go off with a guy with an uncertain future.”
She put her hand over his mouth. “My decision is made. Just name the time and the place.”
He searched her face and saw that she was serious. He nodded, exhaling forcefully. “Okay. I’ll need a couple of days to work out the details. Once we get to Georgia, we can stay with my cousin until we find an apartment. It will probably be crowded at first—he has a couple of kids, but he said that there’s a spare bedroom fixed up in the basement.”
“Oh, Heath, I don’t care, I don’t care,” Ann said, kissing him wildly. “I’ve been going crazy, wondering how we would work this out, wondering how I would ever be able to see you, and here’s our solution!” She laughed delightedly.
“I have enough money saved for bus fare for both of us, and if I sell my bike I’ll have more...”
“Don’t sell your bike!” Ann said, aware of how much he loved it. “Can’t we ride it there?”
“It won’t exactly be the most comfortable trip,” Heath said dryly.
“That’s all right.”
“You can only bring one duffel bag to put on the back of the bite,” he said warningly.
“That’s fine. Anything you say.”
“I can let you know through Amy when and where to meet me,” he said, his arms tightening around her.
“Good.”
“We’ll do it,” he said, his tone confident.
“We will,” she echoed, her lips curving unconsciously into a smile again.
All her problems were solved.
* * * *
Three days later Ann was packing her single bag by the glow of a flashlight when her bedroom door opened and her father snapped on the overhead light.
Her throat closed at the sight of him.
“What do you think you’re doing?” Henry Talbot said to his daughter.
Ann decided to confront him. He would have to know sooner or later, it might as well be now.
“Packing,” she said calmly.
“To go where?”
“To Georgia with Heath. I’m of age to get married there and he has a job at his cousin’s marina. I suppose you know something about this or you would be asleep, not standing here in the middle of the night demanding an explanation.”
“Luisa overheard one of your phone conversations with Amy, and she alerted me.”
“Is she on your spy payroll now, too?”
“She’s very fond of you, Ann, and doesn’t want to see you get into trouble. She did the right thing.”
“I’m not getting into trouble, I’m getting married.”
“No, you’re not.”
“Yes, I am. Seventeen is old enough to get a license in Georgia. You can’t stop me.”
“I certainly can. Seventeen is still minority in Florida, and I believe your paramour is of majority age. That means any intercourse between the two of you constitutes statutory rape. If he takes you across state lines, as you say he plans to, he is also in violation of the Mann Act. If you leave this house tonight to meet him, I will have him arrested within an hour.”
Ann felt her flesh go cold at his dispassionate tone. She had heard it before in reference to his business dealings, and she knew he meant every word.
“You can’t prove anything,” she finally answered, keeping her voice steady, trying not to show how frightened she was. “I’ll never give evidence against Heath.”
“If necessary, I will bring in a doctor to confirm that what I suspect is true,” her father said flatly. “But I doubt that you will let things go that far. If you care about this boy at all, you won’t want to see him in jail. And I assure you that if you pursue this foolishness, that is exactly where he will land. The usual sentence for statutory rape is several years, I understand.”
Ann sat heavily on the edge of her bed, her packing forgotten. “What do you want?” she said dully.
“I have already arranged for you to stay with Mildred Plunkett. You remember my friend in Massachusetts. I called her earlier this evening. I want you to leave for New England in the morning—I’ll take you to the airport myself. I will arrange a transfer to the Hampton School for Girls in Longmeadow for the September term. You will leave without ever seeing this boy again, and you will not communicate with him in the future. Please remember that I can raise the rape charge at any point. Don’t consider contravening me, or Heath Bodine will pay dearly for your defiance.”
Ann stared past him hopelessly, feeling all her plans and hopes shattering like delicate crystal, the shards collecting at her feet. She pictured Heath waiting for her at the appointed spot, waiting for hours in vain, finally realizing that she wasn’t coming, thinking that she had abandoned him. It was too awful; she couldn’t let it happen. But then she pictured him in handcuffs, languishing in jail, later on trial for a serious crime. That was worse.
There was no way out but to obey.
She looked at her father as a sentenced convict might look at his executioner.
“I’ll do whatever you say,” she said.
* * * *
Ann came home from school at Christmas break to find that Heath was gone. She heard from the Jensens that he had joined the navy. He had left them no forwarding address.
Ann had never known the name of Heath’s cousin in Georgia. Heath’s father would not talk to her. Henry Talbot discussed everything but his daughter’s slight lapse in romantic judgment. Margaret Talbot looked on with worried eyes and said very little. Luisa pretended that she knew nothing about the whole episode.