“Too bad.” I move closer.
“Do you want me to serenade you?” Another step and he’s right in front of me.
“No.”
He slides his fingers into my hair and pulls me closer. “Do you want me to kiss you?”
“Yes,” I say—or I try to. His mouth captures mine before I finish the word, and I fall into the kiss, into his touch. Into the passion that we have always shared and that has always saved me. And that even now, when we are both damaged and raw, can keep me steady.
I’m breathing hard when we reluctantly separate, and I press my cheek to his chest as he strokes my hair with one hand, his other arm holding me close against him.
“I didn’t know she was here,” he says. “I’m sorry.”
I tilt my head up. “You didn’t?”
“I told her she could work the camp—part of the twelve-step thing I told you about. But once everything happened . . . well, I didn’t realize that she’d actually made the arrangements. I wouldn’t have—anyway, I’m sorry if you were caught off-guard.”
“So you didn’t come here looking for her?” It’s not until I’ve actually voiced the words that I realize that was my assumption. After all, I hadn’t left a note telling him where I was going, and he hadn’t texted asking where I was. So presumably he’d come here for some other reason. Probably to tell her that he’d finally told me about how she wanted to apologize to me face-to-face, but that with the miscarriage, now probably wasn’t a good time.
But Damien’s shaking his head, dispelling my assumptions. “I came for you. You know I’ll always come for you.”
“But how—” I cut the question off. Of course he knew where I was. Somehow, he always knows.
He pulls his phone out and shows me the screen with his primary contact list. He taps an icon next to my name and a map pops up. And right there, on the grid-style map, is a tiny picture of me in the middle of what is the Stark Children’s Foundation.
“Clever,” I say. My phone does the same, of course. I just never think to use it.
“And my apology still holds,” he continues. “I’m sorry if Sofia blind-sided you.”
“No. No, it’s okay. She . . .” I trail off, searching for the words. “She seems better. And she seems sincere.”
I watch his face and see a flicker of hope. It’s been hard for him, I know. He loves her—not like he loves me, but she’s important to him the way Jamie and Ollie are to me. And I’d love them both even if they went off the rails.
“She won’t ever be my best friend,” I tell Damien, because I’m pretty damn certain about that. “But I think we can move on from here.”
I watch as relief flares in his eyes, then sigh as he pulls me close for a long, deep kiss. I melt against him, and when I feel his erection press against my belly, every cell within me fires. I want him—we’ve held each other tenderly every night since the miscarriage, but it’s been far too long since we’ve made love.
Now, I crave him, and a wild desperation washes over me, setting my senses on fire and making me wish that we were someplace other than the reception area of a children’s foundation.
We’re both breathing hard when we break the kiss, and our eyes lock on each other’s for what feels like an eternity. My heart thuds in my chest, and I can feel the blood pounding through my body.
I want to get out of here.
I want to drop naked onto the floor and not care who sees.
“With me,” Damien says brusquely, tugging me with him as he hurries past the desk and into the foundation’s main hall. We reach the end of the corridor, then enter his private office. It’s rarely occupied—he tends to work from here only when he’s holding a foundation-related meeting or courting donations—but it has a desk and a couch.
Best of all, the door locks.
He closes it, then flips the latch, then presses me against the wall, his hand cupping the back of my neck. “Nikki,” he murmurs, before his mouth closes hard over mine.
His other hand slides down my body, cupping my breast, tracing my waist. His fingers move as he hitches up my skirt, then slides his hand up my thigh as I gasp against his mouth, then cry out when he cups my sex.
I whimper, craving a more intimate touch, and he doesn’t disappoint. His fingers slide under my soaked panties, and he thrusts them inside me, then finger fucks me in time with his tongue teasing my mouth.
My fingers dig into his shoulders as I moan with need. I want more—so much more. Wilder, more intense. And when he picks me up and carries me to the couch, I anticipate a savage build, a violent claiming.
I know how much the drama with Sofia has weighed on him. Then there’s the miscarriage, the arrest, my mother—with all of that, he must be about to burst. But instead of coming to me, he’s been boxing in the gym, pounding out his frustrations.
I know that he’s been trying to let me heal. But physically, I’m fine now, and I need that intensity. That desperate, primal wildness that has always been our strength.
I need it, and because I know he does, too, I expect him to take me brutally. To use me as an antidote against all his fears and frustration.
And yet he doesn’t.
Instead he pulls my panties off and settles me on the couch. He kisses me, strokes me, teases. Every touch is a treasure. Every stroke ignites my senses, making me crazy with need. And with every touch, I expect him to ratchet it higher.
I’m so damn wet, my thighs slick with need. And when I spread my legs, he thrusts inside me, kissing me as he makes love to me, fingering me to take me closer to the edge, pushing me higher and higher until an unexpected orgasm rocks through me, and I shatter into a million pieces, then sigh beneath him, warm and sated, as he murmurs that he loves me.
He’s made love to me beautifully, with a gentle sweetness that fills me with a tender love and a glowing happiness—and a hint of dissatisfaction.
I curl against him, frustrated with myself, because I know that I should feel nothing but joy that we are healing. But I can’t quite get there. Because underneath the happiness, I can’t deny the tiny niggle of fear that he’s ignoring what he needs because he sees me as something fragile and breakable.
Most of all, I can’t escape the fear that we’ll never truly get past this tragedy if we can’t take from each other exactly what we need.
23
I spend the next three days using the third-floor kitchen as an office. The table is my desk, and while my laptop is the centerpiece, all of my documentation for the Greystone-Branch project is spread over the polished wood.
I sit for so long, my ass goes numb, and I drink what must be several times my weight in coffee. I sleep only when I have to, and my food is all delivery.