Chapter TEN
TEAGUE SETTLED ON THE SMALL couch in Polly’s living room and ran his hand over the new shirt he’d purchased for the engagement party at Tess’s place. Then he fussed with the collar and second-guessed the color. It was a pale vanilla shade, and with his luck he’d spill something on it right away. He could hear Polly moving around her bedroom and bathroom as she finished getting ready for the event—he’d been early and she’d answered the door in her robe—and he decided it wouldn’t hurt to remind her of her assignment.
“Pol,” he called out, “just elbow me if I’m staring at Tess too long, okay? I’m counting on you to prevent me from making a fool of myself.”
His best-friend-who-was-a-girl’s voice floated through her half-closed bedroom door. “How well do you really know her, Teague?”
“What?”
“Can you tell me her favorite color? Does she like musicals? Where’s the one place she wants to visit before she dies?”
Teague stood, too restless for couch cushions. Ever since that dance, holding Polly in his arms and swaying to the melody of “At Last,” he’d been unaccountably edgy, a foreign state for a man usually calm and relaxed. “Her favorite color? The red of cherry Lifesavers. Of course she likes musicals, everything from old Nelson Eddy and Jeanette McDonald movies to that latest on Broadway. She wants to see India before she takes her last breath.”
A long silence followed. Then Polly said, “Teague, that’s me.”
He wandered to the window and watched the waves rush onto the beach, their ceaseless rhythm unable to soothe his jittery nerves. “Well, I like your answers.”
Another silence. Then Polly stuck her head out the bedroom door. “That makes absolutely no sense.”
He glanced around. Her hair was in a shiny golden fall that brushed her shoulders and trailed toward her terry-wrapped breasts. He jerked his head away, refocusing on the surf. “Why do I get the sense you don’t approve of Tess?”
“Tess herself is not the issue,” Polly said, her voice going fainter as he imagined her returning to the depths of her bedroom, “but I admit I don’t like how you’re hung up on her. She’s married.”
“We can’t help who we care about,” he grumbled.
“To a point, I get that. But I’m not going to let myself get moony over some—I don’t know—Hollywood actor or guy I just happened to glimpse in the produce section—”
“What Hollywood actor?” he demanded. “What guy in the produce section? Have you been trolling for men at the grocery store without telling me?”
A frustrated sound came from her direction. “I’m not trolling anywhere. The point is, I don’t let myself fall for someone I don’t have a chance of knowing or seeing again. Someone I don’t have a chance of building a real relationship with. If I did, or you did, you’d just be wasting your time, or...”
Turning his back on the window, he crossed his arms over his chest. “Or...what?”
“Or you’d be doing it out of self-protection. You’d be putting your feelings somewhere, with someone, who was safe. Because deep down you’d know you’re not really risking your heart.”
In Teague’s current mood, the thought was too complicated to unpack. Sighing, he cut to the chase. “You’re saying I’m never going to have her.”
Polly walked into the living room, in some red number with matching red shoes. Her favorite color. “You’re never going to have her.”
He spun back to stare out the window. “Shit.”
“Teague?” Polly asked, her voice softening. “This is not news to you. What’s the actual problem?”
His collar felt as if it were strangling him. He inserted a finger under it, wiggling the cotton fabric to get more room. “This stupid new shirt,” he muttered, though his skin felt too tight, as well. Why’d she have to appear so damn appealing?
“You look very handsome in it,” Polly remarked. “But I don’t think that’s what’s eating you.”
“Tess—”
“It’s not her,” Polly said over him. “Something else is getting to you. Is it work? You don’t ever talk about that.”
“There’s nothing to say.” He’d taught himself long ago to separate his job from his civilian life...and from his civilian friends. The pictures that sometimes stayed in his head didn’t need to be passed on to anyone. His father, another firefighter, had told him that from the very first.
Teague heard his best-friend-who-was-a-girl come up behind him. He could smell her, something like roses. Possibly addictive. Incredibly bothersome. From the corner of his eye, he could just make out her golden hair and her sweetheart’s profile. Her lips were as red as her dress, and he quickly looked away from them, refocusing his gaze on the surf. Stealing glances of Polly’s mouth wasn’t easing his weird, twitching nerves any.
Then she touched his bare forearm. The contact zapped him, an electrical shock that sent him jolting away from her.
He stared down at his skin, checking for a burn. Smoke.
“Teague,” she said. “What is wrong?”
His answer was automatic, even as he continued to inspect his unmarred, but still smarting flesh. “Tess—”
“You don’t even know her!” Polly exclaimed. She flapped her arms, clearly impatient. “My God, you don’t even know me, and I’ve been one of your best buds for nearly five years.”
He stared, sure he’d never seen her temperamental like this. They were both usually easygoing, their moods a laid-back match. “Of course I know you,” he said, keeping his voice calm and reasonable. “You’re an open book to me.”
She rolled her eyes and tapped one foot. The movement drew his gaze to her toes. This time they were painted a swirl of hot pink and passion red—the colors, he thought in an odd turn of fancy, of a French kiss, if such a thing could be described that way.
“There’s so much you’ve never bothered to find out about me,” Polly muttered.
As in what it would be like to thrust his tongue between those perfect lips. Or slide his hand into the bodice of that dress to cradle the warm resiliency of her breast. He cleared his throat, trying to eradicate the errant thoughts, and shoved his hands in his pockets because his goddamn slacks were now starting to tighten. “Cheerleader, track team member, faux secretary of the chess club. Usually the most even-tempered, sunshine-souled person I know.”
“Please don’t use the word perky.”
“Kindergarten teachers have to be perky.”
“That’s what I said,” she muttered, her gaze on the floor. “But I’m more than all those things. Sunshine-souled! Please. I have shadows. Dark places.”
“Yeah,” Teague said, “you’re right. I know, for example, that your dad did a number on you and your mom.”
Her head jerked up. “What?”
“I put the dribs and drabs you trickle out together. You were thirteen when your parents divorced, the only sibling left at home. Your mom hung on, but not so well. You tried to perky your way through it.”
Polly was staring at him, her eyes as blue and wide as the perfect, cloudless sky on this August afternoon. “I never told you that.”
“You didn’t have to. I’ve met your mother, remember? Nice lady, but it’s clear she leans on you. You do her taxes, Pol. You helped her figure out that snafu with her medical bills.”
“I’m good at math.”
“You’re damn great at giving the impression you’re good at everything. Maybe that’s why you don’t have a guy—it’s intimidating to some of them.”
“I have guys.”
“We’ve already decided the kindergarten set doesn’t count.” He tilted his head. “Do you ever see your dad?”
“He’s not interested in knowing me, either,” she muttered.
Teague frowned, reaching her in two strides. He put a finger under her chin and forced her gaze to his. Those blue, blue eyes. “What did you say?”
“He cut me out of his life. My brothers...they were finished with college, living on their own. He spent time with them. Does now, too. But I was the one at home, witnessing Mom’s pain, and when I happened to mention that...” She drew a finger across her throat. “I think being around me made him feel guilty.”
“Oh, Pol...” He stroked his thumb along her soft cheek, aching for her. And then, as his gaze fixed on her half-parted, rosy-colored mouth...aching for her. Her perfume tempted him, tantalized, like a come-hither finger. A new tension took over his muscles, hardening him everywhere as he found himself bending toward her lips.
“Polly,” he whispered, his voice rough. The moment stretched, endlessly long.
She stayed silent, but he heard the catch of her breath, saw the rise of female flesh press against the dress that he now noticed wrapped her cleavage and appeared to fasten with a single button under her left breast. Heat prickled along the nape of his neck and down his back and he felt Polly quiver beneath his hand.
Her trembling reasserted his common sense. This was Pol, his best pal! Stepping back, he glanced at the watch strapped to his wrist. “Hey, we better get going or else we’ll be late. I wouldn’t want to disappoint Tess—”
“Disappoint Tess?”
Uh-oh. The eyes of his best-friend-who-was-a-girl were sparking blue fire. He’d never considered Polly high-strung, but he just might have to revise his opinion. “Um...”
“Disappoint Tess?” she repeated.
“Well...who else?” he asked.
Her mouth pinched together into a little mulish shape that he probably shouldn’t point out looked just like a heart, because of the red lipstick. “Who else?” She whirled away from him, whirled back. “You are...are... Words can’t even describe.”
“Well, while you’re coming up with some other manner of communication, can we get a move on?” He didn’t think it was prudent to be here, alone with Polly, when her temper was high and his nerves and libido were acting up. He was a heartbeat away from saying something stupid like “You’re beautiful when you’re furious.”
She was his buddy, not beautiful.
He was glad he stopped himself from saying that, too, because she was staring at him as if she was trying to remember where she’d left her favorite butcher knife.
His feet shifted on the floor, his instincts going on highest alert. “Look, Pol—”
“No, you look,” she said, and then her fingers reached for the little button beneath the bodice of her dress.
He took another hasty step back, but it was too late. Between one breath and another, she’d unfastened the thing, and sure enough, there was nothing else to keep the cherry-red fabric wrapped around her body. She shimmied her shoulders and the fabric dropped, pooling at her feet in a circle. It looked like the petals of a flower, a hibiscus maybe, with Polly’s mostly nude body rising from the center.
Polly’s mostly nude body.
Oh, God. There it was, her small, strong body covered with nothing but those strappy sandals and a pair of flesh-toned lace panties. Her chest moved up and down, drawing his gaze to her small, palm-sized breasts, the pale pink nipples tight. His belly tightened. His cock went hard.
And it hit him then, that he’d had fantasies of this, of her, in the deepest darkest hours of the night. Fantasies that he’d done his best to forget if they flickered across his consciousness during daylight.
In shock, he took another step back. And then another, and another and another until his shoulder blades slammed against the front door. Mind reeling, he stood paralyzed, still struck dumb. Then he tried for coherence. “Polly...” He made a vague gesture. “This...”
You...you’ve staggered me, he thought, his mouth too dry to push out the words. And I don’t really understand what’s happened.
“Just go,” she said, spinning on her heel. “Just go away.”
And he did it, he obeyed her, rushing off without even taking the opportunity to gawk at her fine ass. Because he was convinced he’d make less of a fool of himself at Tess’s party than he’d managed to do in Polly’s bungalow.
* * *
WALKING UP THE FRONT path to his sister’s elegant Spanish-style house in the upper-middle-class suburb of Cheviot Hills, Gage found himself wishing desperately that Skye had agreed to come with him. He’d texted her and asked—since yesterday, they were back in contact, if only via phone so far—but she’d been obliged to meet a repairman at one of the cottages and would arrive later.
Feet planted on the front porch, he hesitated. Stalling, he knew, because once inside he’d be stuck. Damn it, why hadn’t he waited for Skye? Then he would have had a buffer between himself and what he’d face inside. Like that visit he’d made to the mall, he knew the party would deliver another jolt of culture shock. There’d be a shitload of people he’d be expected to small talk with, and he had a bad feeling that celebration or no, his twin was going to corner him. Maybe he shouldn’t have ignored Griff’s calls, but in the days and nights during which he’d holed up at No. 9, waiting for Skye to get over her unnecessary awkwardness and return to him, Gage had found himself unable to sleep. It wasn’t due to that little lap dance he and his pen pal had enjoyed—he was a guy and not so hung up on perfectly natural bodily responses and perfectly pretty partial nudity. It was some residual aftereffects of his near disaster overseas that were to blame.
His brother would have known something was up if he’d heard Gage’s exhausted voice. He still might, even though after the yeah-we’re-good-again text exchange with his pen pal, Gage had managed twelve hours of shut-eye. With all the lights on, of course.
An unfamiliar couple came up behind him, and he was forced through the door, drifting in their wake. A household helper—hired for the occasion, Gage assumed—had let them in, so he was able to keep to the periphery of the party, unnoticed. Most of the action appeared to be poolside, and he stood in the shadows of the spacious backyard observing the other guests. Men and women were dressed in summer SoCal casual—that ran the gamut from crinkly cotton worn with shandals—rope-soled, awning-striped canvas footwear—to silk sundresses studded with sequins and glittery beads. A dozen kids were playing in the pool, the smallest at the shallows of the beach entry, while others scooted around the large Baja shelf like stingrays. Above the chatter of the partygoers, he heard “Marco!” and the expected response, “Polo!”
The pool game took him straight back to his own childhood. He’d lived in a place just like this—a family neighborhood that revolved around kids and comfort. It had chafed at him, growing up. It wasn’t that he hadn’t appreciated his family and the privilege of his comfortable upbringing; it was just that it had felt so between-the-lines to him, and he’d never been good at coloring that way.
His gaze caught on a figure stationed by the children playing in the water. It was his sister’s husband, David Quincy. Deadly Dull David. Gage had called him that from the very beginning, and the memory made him feel like a louse. David was an accountant, the head numbers guy for a big talent agency. Sure, he was the type to dot all i’s and leave no t’s uncrossed, but he’d also made his wife happy for fourteen years, and seeing him smile at his youngest son, Russ, sent a second pang of guilt through Gage. Where the hell had he gotten off criticizing the other man? There was a good, thriving family here.
In a good, thriving place. After what he’d seen over the past decade, he wasn’t going to bitch about first-world luxury. Maybe it took third-world experience for him to see it with fresh eyes. All he knew was that the atmosphere didn’t hem in his spirit as it had done before.
Probably because once you experienced a real cage, you recognized the difference.
“There you are!”
Gage stiffened at the sound of his brother’s voice, already on guard. Then, reminding himself of the reason for the occasion, he turned toward him, hand outstretched. “Hey. Congratulations again. Great day for a party.”
His twin’s grasp was strong, his gaze sharp. “Thought maybe we’d have to send out a posse to round you up.”
“I’m not late.”
“Of course you aren’t,” Jane said, coming up to the men and kissing Gage’s cheek.
He took her hand, admiring her crisp, lemon-colored sundress and ribbon-laced shoes. “Every time I look at you, I have this pressing urge to put you away somewhere safe, like a pretty, perfect toy. You know, Griff is going to smudge your dress with his grubby fingers or rip a seam by playing too rough.”
Jane laughed, and flashed a look at her groom-to-be. “I sure hope so.”
His brother sent her a private smile that caused Gage to avert his eyes. Yeesh, he thought, feeling scorched by the heat they were giving off. Maybe Griff was right and there was something special about committed sex.
“Can you two excuse me?” Jane said. “I see someone waving at me.”
As she walked away, Griffin followed her with avid eyes. Gage whistled, noting his brother’s hyperalert gaze. “You don’t have to go guard dog, bro. Not a cloud in the sky, so a lightning strike is out. Runaway buses tend to avoid backyard garden parties.”
“I’m not taking any chances,” he murmured, still looking after her. “I almost lost her once.”
Skye popped into Gage’s mind. “I was...touched. Threatened sexually. I was sure I would be raped.” He pulled out his phone, filled with a sudden desperate need to know she was okay. His thumbs flew. Where r u?
“I wonder if I almost lost you, too,” Griffin continued.
“Huh?” Gage responded, distracted by the concern he felt for Skye. He stared at the small screen of his phone, willing it to light up with her answer.
“Did I almost lose you?”
“They let me go,” he murmured, this time texting, WHERE R U???
“Sweet Jesus.” Griffin breathed it out like a curse. “I knew it. What happened? Who had you?” he asked.
At the same time that Skye texted, Look up.
Gage did, and his breath caught in his chest, a sharp, painful ache.
She stood on the other side of the pool. Twenty or so people surrounded her, but their colors ran together, their figures fading like a watercolor picture left out in the rain. Only Skye and he existed in this new world. Dressed in shades of deep seawater, she seemed to be wading through it, green swirling about her torso, fish swimming past her thighs.
Griffin was saying something, making demands maybe, but Gage felt himself taken out on a tide, drawn toward the dark-haired beauty who called to him like a siren. He hadn’t seen her since that day in his office, and though he knew she’d felt embarrassed, he’d thought himself relatively unmarked by the experience.
But...but something was different between them now.
Was it because she looked different? Her glossy hair was loose, waving around her shoulders. Her eyes, surrounded by a wealth of luxuriant lashes, held all the mysteries of the sea, and he needed to get close enough to demand she speak them from the rosy softness of her tender mouth.
It was like walking through a dream, the air soft, sounds muted, his limbs heavy. When he reached her, he kept his arms stiffly at his sides, his fingers curled into fists. If he touched her, she might disappear, like some mythical being you were only allowed to glimpse at the equinox or during an eclipse or when the capricious gods decided to wreak havoc upon your human heart.
A little smile played at the corners of her bewitching lips. “Well?”
He shook his head, trying to shake off the twined feelings of dread and delight that were wrapping his body like seafarer’s rope. Mutineers had been punished like that, thick dock line cinched around them from shoulders to ankles before they were cast into the ocean.
Gage felt as if he were going under.
His gaze ran across the fine-pored perfection of her bare throat and shoulders, the length of her slender arms, the sweet hint of knees and then her naked calves and ankles. She held herself still under his regard, and he could tell the effort cost her something.
He didn’t feel bad about that, not for an instant, because he suspected he was going to be paying for this moment for the rest of his life.
“I’m—I’m wearing a dress,” she finally said.
“You’re wearing a dress,” he answered in solemn agreement.
She tilted her head. “Perfume even.”
A note of it tickled his nose, her fresh scent paired with a darker note of something that smelled female and seductive and worked its way down his spine and around to his cock like a slender, knowing hand. He sucked in a harsh breath, feeling as if the balance of power between him and his vulnerable pen pal had inexorably shifted.
Self-consciousness clouded her eyes. “You don’t like it?”
A wry smile tugged at his lips. He probably didn’t—but not only because of how hermit Skye’s new, shiny shell affected him. Other men would take a second look at her now—not to mention a third, a fourth—and the idea of that didn’t sit well. Something primal inside him wanted her to be his and his alone.
He ruthlessly squashed the thought.
“Gage?”
But he couldn’t quash the impulse to express how beautiful she was, not when he could practically see the rising tide of doubt inside her. Reaching out, he ran a fingertip over one delicate shoulder strap. “You look incredible. So incredible I lost my voice for a minute or two.”
The rigid set of her shoulders relaxed and a second smile flickered over her mouth. “That’s what a woman hopes to hear.”
“But you made the changes for yourself, right?” he asked, gazing into her deep ocean-colored eyes. As much as he appreciated the transformation, whether wearing camouflage or sexy clothes Skye would always be a standout in his mind. “It’s your own approval that matters first and last, sweetheart.”
She studied his face as she seemed to consider the comment, then she nodded. “I did do it for myself.” Her palm touched his arm, sliding down until her hand curled around his. “But you’ll stick close?”
Of course he should have refused—there was potential danger in this new need he felt around her—but he was beyond refusing her anything. As her fingers tangled with his, it was like more sailor’s work, a tether securing them together. He’d always been intrigued by the names of nautical knots: Bowline on a Bight, Icicle Hitch, Rat-Tail Stopper. If there was a name for the tie now binding him to Skye, though, he figured it could only be Big Trouble.
As the afternoon wore on, however, he decided he’d worried for nothing. They wandered about the party together and he found himself actually enjoying it. Between them, they knew most of the people there. He introduced her to some of the Lowell cousins. After that, she tugged him toward a couple standing by the dessert table and introduced them as Layla Parker and Vance Smith, July’s occupants of Beach House No. 9. Vance had been a combat medic in the platoon Griffin had been embedded with in Afghanistan, and had been wounded trying to save the life of Layla’s father, his commanding officer.
The officer’s dying request had brought the pair together and now they were, well, together. Layla, it turned out, had baked the very excellent champagne cupcakes that Gage enjoyed while they talked. She also flashed a brand-new engagement ring and chattered to Skye about wedding plans and a new house in avocado country near Vance’s family’s ranch with such enthusiasm that Gage had to grin at her groom-to-be.
“Lucky you,” he told the other man. “Sounds like she really wants to be your wife.”
Vance ran an affectionate hand over his fiancée’s hair. “It took some persuading—and maybe more than a little Beach House No. 9 magic—but I’m damn glad to say I believe you’re right.”
Gage was saved from responding to the magic comment when a voice across the pool hailed the other couple. He and Skye moved on, deciding to seek out his nephews. His niece, Rebecca, had apparently left childhood for adolescence like a small-town girl heading for the big city—on speedy transport and with little luggage—but Duncan and Oliver were the same scamps he remembered from his last visit. Little Russ had been a bump in his mother’s belly when Gage had last encountered him, but he was a small, sturdy person now. Looking content and sleepy, he sat in Skye’s lap, his chubby cheek pressed to her chest, his baby hair against the bare skin of her throat.
Gage pitched a Wiffle Ball to the bigger boys, calling out encouragement as they drove for the fences with a plastic bat. His sister, Tess, even smiled at him as she came to collect her kids to make sure they ate some dinner. She’d been mad ever since he’d returned stateside, upset about those weeks he’d been incommunicado, but now it appeared she’d let bygones be bygones.
Except her smile died as she brushed past him, Russ in her arms. “I’ll kill you if you hurt her,” she said between her teeth.
“What? Who?” When of course it was obvious.
Her eyes narrowed, darting from Skye to him.
Instead of playing dumb this time, he held up his hands in surrender. “I have the very best intentions,” he said. Meaning it.
They were friends, intimates you could even say, but they’d taken the physical relationship as deep as it would ever go. He’d reminded her of sexual pleasure, shown her she could reach it again, and that’s where it ended. As much as he was drawn to her, there wasn’t going to be any more flesh-to-flesh contact. There didn’t need to be.
That didn’t mean he was going to push her away. She was still an effective shield between himself and his nosy brother. Griffin kept sending him looks whenever they encountered each other, looks that Gage pretended not to notice as he asked Skye a question or fetched her another drink.
At one point they were standing with the engaged couple, Jane chatting with Skye, and under the cover of the female conversation Griffin spoke to him in low tones. “You’re going to explain yourself,” he said. “Before you leave tonight.”
“Sorry, not on my own timetable,” he said, wearing his most innocent expression. “Told the lady of the cove I’d get her back when she asked. She came with Rex and he left early.”
Not long afterward, he caught the lady in question stifling a yawn. Since it was well past dark and he was unwilling to push his luck—he didn’t put it past Griffin to lock him in a room with the intention of eliciting a confession—Gage suggested they make their goodbyes and head back to the beach.
That went off without much of a hitch beyond the gleam in Griffin’s gaze that promised Gage couldn’t get away forever without a confrontation. Well, they’d see about that. Certainly there wasn’t going to be any soul-baring this night. As he hustled Skye from the house, he spied Teague sitting by himself in a corner, staring off into space.
“What’s wrong with him?” he said, nudging her with an elbow.
She glanced in the direction he indicated. “Oh,” she said, sighing. “He has this thing for your sister.”
Poor dude. Tess was wholly committed to David and the kids. Yet... “She’s right there,” Gage pointed out, “and he seems to be oblivious. I’d say something—someone—else is on his mind.”
Skye climbed into the passenger side of his car, and he shut the door behind her. When he settled into the driver’s side, she looked up from her phone. “I can tell you he was supposed to come with Polly but she refused at the last minute. She texted that it’s a long story.”
“Ah.” He didn’t press any more. Let everyone keep their secrets, including him.
The ride back to Crescent Cove was quiet but companionable. Gage relaxed, thinking he’d made it around or over the obstacles he’d dreaded earlier in the day. The party hadn’t been so bad; he’d mostly avoided his prying twin, and even the alarming sense of change he’d felt upon seeing Skye had subsided.
Everything was contained and under control.
Without thinking, he drove to No. 9 and parked in the driveway. “Damn,” he said, realizing his error and reaching for the ignition again. “I need to get you back to your place.”
“Let’s just sit here for a minute.” She put her hand on his knee.
As heat from her touch rocketed toward his crotch, alarm returned with a vengeance. Shit. He wrapped his hands around the steering wheel and gritted his back teeth.
“Gage...” Her voice trailed off, then she cleared her throat as if hesitant about what to say next.
He glanced at her, then hastily looked away. At Tess and David’s, the other partygoers and his family had distracted him after the initial wallop of glimpsing her in that dress, but now her changed appearance struck him again. Oxygen caught in his chest as the image of her skin, glowing like a pearl, was burned into his brain.
So much of her was...bare. Though of course he knew the cut of the garment she wore was actually quite modest. It was all a matter of degree...or maybe it was just Skye. The bravery that it took for her to shed her concealing layers was sexy in itself.
She cleared her throat again, drawing his glance a second time. Now he couldn’t look away. He’d been doing a damn good job of shrugging off that afternoon in his office—ignoring the memory of the satiny weight of her breasts in his hands, the thrust of her nipples against his tongue, the curve of her bottom against his hot palm—but in this moment it all came back in surround sound and Technicolor. She’d climaxed in sweet tremors against his cock, detonating his own release. The only thing he’d regretted about the interlude was that she’d moved away from him so fast. He would have cherished the chance to hold her sated self against his body.
He’d die for another go at it, he admitted to himself, and knew that lust was setting fire to those promises he’d made to Tess and to himself. So what? said the devil on his shoulder. You’ve already proven getting physical with her won’t ruin the relationship. Shifting in his seat, he faced her more fully.
She was an effing beauty. Or she wasn’t. Christ, he didn’t know what an objective person’s viewpoint would be on the subject. There was no way he’d ever be impartial when it came to the lady of the cove. He only knew that she was gorgeous to him, within and without, every side of her: the courageous spirit, the wounded soul, the friend who’d been his lamp in the dark night of his life, the lover he wanted to satisfy again...and again and again.
Perhaps his sudden spiking lust was a tangible thing, because she made a little sound and drew her hand from his knee.
He wanted it back, caution be damned. He wanted her to touch him everywhere.
So he initiated the contact. Moving as slow as if penetrating water, he brought his palm to her face. He cupped her cheek, then drew his fingertips down the side of her throat and across her collarbone.
Her breath hitched. “Gage?” she whispered. “What are you doing?”
“I’m finding you irresistible,” he confessed, and nudged a shoulder strap off the slope of bone. It fell like the stem of a wilted flower against her upper arm. He did the same on the opposite side. “I need to look at you again, Skye. Will you let me?”
Instead of answering, she went wide-eyed and very still. Taking that as a yes, he inserted his forefinger at the center of her straight-cut bodice. Anticipation curled in his belly and his skin tightened against his bones as he tugged on the fabric, slowly working it below her breasts.
With a charged sort of bemusement, she stared down at his hand as if his touch enthralled her. She still wasn’t moving; there was just the finest trembling beneath her skin. Clearly she wasn’t immune to him, either, and in fact he thought she might be entering the same dreamlike state that he’d suffered from earlier that day.
He’d say he took cold-blooded advantage of it, but his blood was running hot, boiling even, burning through his veins and making his pulse jump.
“Skye,” he whispered, his tone reverent, as his gentle tugs and pulls resulted in her breasts popping free. It seemed they both held their breath then while they watched her nipples tighten on their own to stiff points.
“I...” She swallowed, as if needing to lubricate her dry throat. “Funny how short a time it takes to get accustomed to exposing more skin.”
It sounded like a little joke, but her expression was flat-out serious. He brushed the back of his knuckles against the jutting tips of her breasts. Her breath hitched as he took one between his fingers with a tender pinch. “It’s because you trust me,” he said.
“I do.” She seemed to be marshaling some thought, even as she stared, fascinated, at the hand that toyed with her breast. “But...but you can trust me, too.”
“Mmm.” He leaned forward to press his mouth to her temple. Affection and sexual ache had never been a twosome in his mind, but when it came to Skye, he felt both in equal measure.
“Wait,” she said, sounding almost fretful as he dropped kisses across her forehead. “You’re making me forget. I had something I wanted to talk to you about. Ask you.”
He hardened his touch on her nipple and she gasped. “Ask away,” he murmured against her ear, then traced the curve of the rim with his tongue.
“Something...” Her word ended on a groan as he bit her lobe.
“Something?” he prompted, smiling against her cheek. God, how he loved her involuntary, shivery reaction to him. Her whole body responded to his touch. He could feel the goose bumps rising, the heat infusing her skin.
Her head turned, her mouth seeking his.
He withheld the kiss, drawing back, teasing out the desire. “You wanted to ask?”
Her hands clutched his biceps. She was clearly dazed. “What?”
“Your question, baby.” He was hard and throbbing everywhere, but how sweet it was to have the power to subvert her thought processes. “What do you want to know?”
She blinked a couple of times, her gaze going from bleary to semiclear. “I...I want to know what happened to you,” she said, her voice low and still husky with desire. “Because something did. Something bad happened right before you came back.”
Gage froze. Shit. He wasn’t yet home free. Another person was after his secrets tonight. “No, Skye...”
Her mouth went mulish and she brushed his hand away to right her bodice, yanking it upward. The interior of the car seemed to cool by several degrees. “Trust goes in both directions,” she said, sounding more determined by the second. “You know you can tell me.”
But telling would do no one any favors, not that he would admit to even that. So it came down to redirecting her focus, right here, right now. Perhaps if she hadn’t started pressing for answers, he would have marshaled some second thoughts about pursuing more intimacy. Perhaps he would have settled for appeasing the devil on his shoulder with a mere few kisses before letting her go. But now there was only one guaranteed diversion.
To begin, he leaned close again and kissed her.
The Love Shack
Christie Ridgway's books
- Blood Brothers
- Face the Fire
- Holding the Dream
- The Hollow
- The way Home
- A Father's Name
- All the Right Moves
- After the Fall
- And Then She Fell
- A Mother's Homecoming
- All They Need
- Behind the Courtesan
- Breathe for Me
- Breaking the Rules
- Bluffing the Devil
- Chasing the Sunset
- Feel the Heat (Hot In the Kitchen)
- For the Girls' Sake
- Guarding the Princess
- Happy Mother's Day!
- Meant-To-Be Mother
- In the Market for Love
- In the Rancher's Arms
- Leather and Lace
- Northern Rebel Daring in the Dark
- Seduced The Unexpected Virgin
- Southern Beauty
- St Matthew's Passion
- Straddling the Line
- Taming the Lone Wolff
- Taming the Tycoon
- Tempting the Best Man
- Tempting the Bride
- The American Bride
- The Argentine's Price
- The Art of Control
- The Baby Jackpot
- The Banshee's Desire
- The Banshee's Revenge
- The Beautiful Widow
- The Best Man to Trust
- The Betrayal
- The Call of Bravery
- The Chain of Lies
- The Chocolate Kiss
- The Cost of Her Innocence
- The Demon's Song
- The Devil and the Deep
- The Do Over
- The Dragon and the Pearl
- The Duke and His Duchess
- The Elsingham Portrait
- The Englishman
- The Escort
- The Gunfighter and the Heiress
- The Guy Next Door
- The Heart of Lies
- The Heart's Companion
- The Holiday Home
- The Irish Upstart
- The Ivy House
- The Job Offer
- The Knight of Her Dreams
- The Lone Rancher
- The Marquess Who Loved Me
- The Marriage Betrayal
- The Marshal's Hostage
- The Masked Heart
- The Merciless Travis Wilde
- The Millionaire Cowboy's Secret
- The Perfect Bride
- The Pirate's Lady
- The Problem with Seduction
- The Promise of Change
- The Promise of Paradise
- The Rancher and the Event Planner
- The Realest Ever
- The Reluctant Wag
- The Return of the Sheikh
- The Right Bride
- The Sinful Art of Revenge
- The Sometime Bride
- The Soul Collector
- The Summer Place
- The Texan's Contract Marriage
- The Virtuous Ward
- The Wolf Prince
- The Wolfs Maine
- The Wolf's Surrender
- Under the Open Sky
- Unlock the Truth
- Until There Was You
- Worth the Wait
- The Lost Tycoon
- The Raider_A Highland Guard Novel
- The Wife, the Maid, and the Mistress
- The Witch is Back
- When the Duke Was Wicked
- India Black and the Gentleman Thief
- The Devil Made Me Do It