On Dublin Street 04 Fall From India Place

I bit my lip and spread my legs.

 

A predatory look flashed in Marco’s eyes as he sat back down on the blanket in front of the fire to press the washcloth between my legs. “You keep that up and you won’t be able to walk out of here tomorrow.”

 

“I’m not doing anything,” I whispered, smiling innocently at him.

 

He shook his head, his eyes never leaving mine. “You are so dangerous.”

 

“Me?” I grinned mischievously as I pushed myself up and slid toward him, lifting my right leg over his knees so I could wrap both legs around his waist. He immediately put his arms around me and hauled me up so I was crushed against him. “I’ve never been dangerous in my life.”

 

“You’re dangerous to me.”

 

I pressed closer, my hands coasting down his muscled back. “I like being dangerous to you.”

 

His answer was to kiss me thoroughly and then bury his head in the crook of my neck, hugging me tight, almost like he needed me to ease something in him.

 

My chest tightened with emotion as I sensed that Marco was feeling overwhelmed somehow. To soothe him I stroked his back, relaxed in his hold.

 

But then I brushed my fingers across the scar on the lower left-hand side of his back and without even meaning to I tensed.

 

Marco felt it and pulled away to look me in the eye.

 

I wanted to ask him, but I didn’t want to ruin the moment between us.

 

He moved as if to disentangle me and I automatically tightened my grip on him with all four limbs. “Don’t.”

 

“Hannah, I don —”

 

“Was it him? Your grandfather?” I asked softly, feeling the burn of anger in my belly as I did anytime I felt the scar under my hands or saw it.

 

Marco sighed heavily. Thankfully, he didn’t pull away again. Instead he gave my waist an affectionate squeeze. “Babe, it’s in the past.”

 

“I want to know what he did to you.”

 

“Why? It’s done.”

 

“Because…” I shrugged helplessly. “I want to make it better somehow.”

 

His face softened. “You already do. You always have. I’m sitting here with you naked and you’ve got your gorgeous body wrapped around me. Nothing better than that. And nothing can make that turn to shit.”

 

“So if nothing can make it turn to shit, tell me. Now is the best time to tell me,” I said to encourage him.

 

He sighed. “Fine. I was eleven. I broke curfew. Nonno had slapped me around a bit before and a couple times he’d whacked me with his belt, but he’d never given me a thrashing. Until I broke curfew – and I didn’t just break curfew, I talked back to him. So he made me take off my shirt, shoved me face-first onto the kitchen table, and took his belt to me. He messed up – let his anger get the better of him – and the belt unfolded and cut a gash open on my back. Nonna went nuts at him. He never hit me again after that.” He shook his head, seeming to pull himself out of the memories as his gaze connected with mine. “They didn’t take me to hospital because of the questions that would be asked, so Nonna did her best to clean it up, but it wasn’t stitched up right, so it left a scar.”

 

I pushed into him, closer, as close as I could get, my lips brushing his. “I hate him,” I whispered hoarsely, feeling the burn of tears in my eyes. “I hate him so much.”

 

“Ssh, baby.” He kissed me lightly, rubbing his hands up and down my spine. “Don’t. I’ve let it all go.”

 

I nodded, but the tears escaped anyway, and I wrapped my arms around him, burying my face against his neck.

 

“It was all worth it to get this at the end of it,” he murmured.

 

I was overwhelmed by my need to make everything better for him – wishing I’d been there back then, to take his pain away. From here on out, I wanted to make it so he never felt that way again, so that he always felt loved.

 

Yes, loved.

 

Because I did, I realized.

 

I’d fallen deeply in love again with Marco D’Alessandro.

 

After a day of fooling around in the cottage, followed by a brisk walk down by the loch, we ended up having dinner at a nice restaurant in the local village before returning to the cottage. As we settled in for the evening, the only sound to be heard for miles was the crackling of the fire in the grate. Despite our romantic surroundings I’d been a little on edge, waiting for Marco to finally bring up what it was he wanted to discuss with me.

 

At last, as I lay against his side on the sofa, my legs tangled in his, I prompted, “You wanted to talk?”

 

Marco was silent for a moment as he drew circles on my bare shoulder with the tip of his finger. “Liv said something,” he replied, his voice low and amused in the quiet room. “It was that Sunday we had lunch at your mom’s. She said that you once planned an ambush with her. She took you to D’Alessandro’s so you could corner me and get me to talk to you because I’d been ignoring you. Is that true?”

 

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