Destined to Play

Destined to Play by Indigo Bloome Page B

Book: Destined to Play by Indigo Bloome Read Free Book Online
Authors: Indigo Bloome
Tags: Fiction, General, Romance, Contemporary
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sounds like a teenage kid who is driving his own car for the first time.
    ‘But I can’t see!’ I scream as he squeezes a helmet over my head and ensures my glasses are correctly positioned.
    ‘You don’t need to see, I do,’ he shouts back at me over the noise.
    The engine growls to life underneath me. He laces my fingers together around his waist.
    ‘You just need to hold on!’
    ‘Do you have a licence to ride this thing?’ I yell in his direction.
    ‘You don’t need to shout. I can hear you now you have your helmet on.’ I hear his voice penetrating the inside of my helmet, straight into my ear. He ignores my question. Uh oh , I realise I have just asked another, and hope he hasn’t noticed.
    ‘Hold on, sweetheart, and try to calm your breathing just a little.’ He could obviously hear my anxiety through the helmet’s microphone.
    ‘Easier said than done!’ As the beast lurches forward, I’m almost left behind. I have no option but to hold on to him as tightly as possible as we swerve around a sharp corner. The wild ride of this weekend is clearly still in full octane swing.
    We stop and start quite a bit for a while and it takes my balance a while to adjust to the unanticipated manoeuvres. Jeremy isn’t talking so I presume he is concentrating on city traffic, which is at least a little comforting. Now that I am on a motorbike, I don’t feel quite so conspicuous in my outfit. And at least I’m not wearing a blindfold. We pick up speed and the ride eventually becomes smooth, making it considerably more comfortable than the jerkiness of before, where I was continually bracing myself for the next move.
    ‘Are you alright back there?’
    As I feel Jeremy readjust his position on the seat, I realise I am squeezing him so tight, he must be having difficulty breathing.
    ‘AB?’
    My grip is so strong; I’m not game to loosen it in case I fall off. My legs anchor me to the bike while my arms brace his waist. My upper body is slamming against his back so there is not a millimetre of space between us. Just as I tell myself to loosen my grip and tell Jeremy I’m fine, the bike swerves to the right and back to the left rapidly. Great, now he is overtaking someone.
    ‘Alexa, can you hear me?’ His voice pounds into my helmet again.
    ‘Yes, yes, I can. I’m okay. Just concentrating on, well, on holding on, really.’ I stammer out the words as we gather more speed. ‘Staying alive’ would have been more appropriate, I muse.
    ‘Are you scared?’ His questions continue to filter through to my headspace.
    ‘What do you think? I never knew you could ride.’
    ‘I’ve been riding for years. It’s great to be finally taking you out for a spin.’
    ‘Well, I’d rather be experiencing the ride with vision.’ I can’t help but point this out.
    ‘Please be careful, Jeremy. I really need to come out of this alive. I’m in your hands.’
    ‘Indeed you are, Alexa. Finally you are beginning to understand. Settle back and relax into the ride; we are on the open road now.’
    ‘And I don’t suppose you will enlighten me as to which open road that might be?’
    ‘You know that would spoil the fun.’
    At that, he goes full throttle and lets ‘her’ embrace the road at high speed, which does take my breath away.
    Who would have thought I’d be riding on a boisterous beast such as this, in pitch black conditions? Not me in a million years. Once I let myself relax a little, not too much though, I have to admit it is a great feeling. Thankfully Jeremy’s position in front ensures my insulation from the harshness of the wind, which allows me to appreciate the exhilaration and openness of the bike. Imagine if the kids could see me now! They wouldn’t recognise me. Jordan would hardly believe it, but would think I was the coolest mum ever. He’d want to take a photo to prove it to his friends and teacher in Show and Tell, although he’d be more impressed if I was riding on my own. Elizabeth would probably

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