Authors: Joey W. Hill
that caught under her
heels and flapped over her wrists,
she was some fragile,
beautiful heroine with flowing hair
and silky lingerie. A
heroine who could trust him to carry
her to safety. She could
curl her arms around his shoulders,
which seemed broad
enough, his lean frame
notwithstanding, and bury her face
into his shoulder, reassured by his
male scent. And not just
any male. A male who would protect
a woman, who would
care for her, no matter what. Who
didn’t question or resent
that but considered it a duty, a
privilege and, beyond that, a
deep, abiding desire.
She was embarrassed that he was
seeing her smal
apartment like this. She usual y kept
it clean and cleansed,
a tranquil space for reading,
meditation, regrouping. But
the clothes she’d worn to the club
were stil crumpled
beside the coffee table, her purse left
there. In the kitchen,
dishes piled in the sink and dirty
countertops showed the
remains of the lackluster meals she’d
made. Though he
seemed to take al that in with a quick
glance, his steps
didn’t falter as he headed for her
bedroom, fol owing the
easy-to-discern path to it.
She’d never had a man carry her.
Didn’t even remember
her deceased father doing that,
because the last time it had
happened she’d likely been too young
to remember it.
She’d scoffed at the way they did it
in the movies, so
smooth and easy, even if the woman
wasn’t expecting it or
resisted, which would, in reality,
result in an awkward flurry
of limbs, a hitch in his movements to
handle her weight.
With her yoga muscles, heavy breasts
and curvy hips, she
was a solid one-thirty, but he’d
plucked her off her feet as if
she weighed much less. But of
course, this was a man who
could easily hold his own weight on
his arms.
She’d started shaking again and she
didn’t want to fal to
pieces. But it was as if her body and
mind had been
waiting specifical y for this. While
she was apprehensive,
she couldn’t deny pretty much every
part of her was glad to
have him here. And that was bad.
Laying her down in the rumpled nest
of covers, he
planted his very fine backside on the
edge of her bed,
keeping her hemmed in. He glanced
at the side table.
“Aspirin and compresses?”
She shrugged. “It’s the best thing for
helping it do what it
needs to do. What are you doing
here? And how did you…”
“I came to check on you. Leland and I
know one another.
He noticed my card in your purse and
assumed something
about you that I was more than
pleased to have him
assume. That you’re one of mine.”
Digesting the mortifying shock of him
knowing Leland
Kel er took a moment. Then she
blinked. “Excuse me?”
He put a hand on her face, the
uninjured side. “Rachel,
why did you do this?”
When he was little, her son had taken
martial arts
training. For some reason, at Jon’s
direct look, the firmness
in the hand on her cheek, she
remembered one of Kyle’s
instructors. He’d been gentle, careful,
intel igent. Yet when
he helped the boys spar, there was a
concentration in his
gaze that suggested it was best not to
underestimate the
power of a gentle, focused man.
She closed her eyes. “Jon, we can’t
have this
conversation. I can’t have this
conversation. It was stupid
and pointless. That part of my life
was over a long time ago.
I’d accepted it. It was just…”
“I started something I didn’t finish,
and left you nowhere
else to go.”
“No.” She opened her eyes
immediately. “This was my
stupid decision, Jon. You weren’t
responsible. I appreciate
you coming by to check on me,
but…”
It was as if he were weighing the
significance of every
word that came from her mouth,
noting every minute
change in her expression, the
uncomfortable shift of her
body. Since he was sitting on her
bed, his hip brushing her
thigh, he now slid his hand from her
cheek to her shoulder,
his thumb resting on her col arbone. It
effectively stopped
her babbling. She couldn’t seem to
continue, to tel him she
was fine, that he needed to leave.
“Breathe,” he said. “Like when you
start your class. Three
count. And keep your eyes on mine.”
His thumb shifted so it was on the
pulse in her throat,
making short strokes there as she
drew in a breath. She felt
foolish, but she took that deep breath,
drew it in for a count
of three, even as she remained
conscious of those two
points of contact, his hand on her
throat, his hip against her
leg. When she let it out, emotion wel
ed up in her chest,
making it tighter. She got the second
breath out, and it got
worse, such that more tears spil ed
forth.
“I don’t want you to see this.” Her
voice broke. “I can’t—”
“One more,” he said, not unkindly,
though his hold on her
throat increased, underscoring the
relentless command.
It was a shudder of sobs, more than
an indrawn breath,
and as it crested, they broke. She’d
cried a lot over the
past day and a half, but this was
different. This was the way
a person cried when someone was
there to hear, to help.
Pul ing her into his arms, he turned
them so they were
stretched out on the bed together, one
of her arms wrapped
around his back and the other around
his neck, her face
buried into his chest. He stroked her,
crooned to her as she
shook and cried, until she’d cried out
the fear and shame,
and was left limp with exhaustion.
If she was going to experience soul-
deep weariness, she
couldn’t have asked for better
immediate surroundings. He
smel ed like sage and sandalwood
aftershave, and
beneath that, more faintly, something
that was like motor oil
and burning wood. His hair was
under her fingertips, silk
she was able to stroke in nervous
movements, trying to
regain her composure. Since he was
wearing slacks and
dress shirt, his tie loosened, she
realized he’d come from
work. Because she’d had her cheek
pressed to the tie, it
was now water spotted. Drawing
back enough to see it,
she saw it had a subdued silhouette
pattern of dark blue
dolphins against a deep ocean blue,
like seeing the
magical creatures leaping through the
waves at night.
“I like your tie,” she rasped. She
smoothed her hand over
it, the man beneath. “What you said,
‘one of mine’. I don’t
understand. I can’t—”
His hand closed over hers, held it stil
. “I want to know
more about you before we start
talking about me,” he said.
That velvet voice became irresistible
when it dropped to a
rumble, like now. “What did you
mean when you said this
part of your life was over a long time
ago? Have you served
a Master before?”
He made it sound so normal. Of
course, it was part of his
life, like yoga class or going to work.
It made her want to cry
again, but she had no tears left.
“No. My husband…he and I divorced
some time ago, and
he wasn’t into that. I’ve never been
able… I’m not real y,
either. I got confused. Chalk it up to
midlife crisis.” Her
other hand pleated and worried at the
tie under his grasp.
Her fingers were cold compared to
his.
“Hmm. So if it’s never been a part of
your life at al , why
did you say this hasn’t been part of
your life in a long time?”
Catching both her hands now, he
brought them into a
prayer
mudra
and folded his over
them, giving her warmth
but also bringing her gaze up that
pointed direction of their
fingertips, to his penetrating gaze.
“Jon.” Why was she saying things she
couldn’t possibly
explain, to him or anyone? “It was a
mistake. Can we
please leave it there?”
“The only mistake you’re making
right now is not trusting
me.”
“I’m not going to tel a man young
enough to be my son
that sex hasn’t been part of my life
for nearly six years.”
Longer, if she counted when she’d
stopped being able to
enjoy it.
Then she realized what she’d said,
and panic clutched
her stomach. If he asked her about
Kyle…
“Al right,” he said gravely. “You
don’t have to tel me that.
But maybe you could tel me why.
And I’m only old enough
to be your son if you had me when
you were barely a
teenager.”
The relief that he hadn’t taken it as a
direct reference to
her being a mother was quickly
replaced by another sick
feeling. He was going to make her
say it. Despite the blow
to her already nonexistent pride,
maybe it would push him
the necessary step back from her. It
stil shamed her to
speak the words.
“I can’t do it. I don’t get…excited.
Not the right way. And
the things I want…” She sat up, pul
ing away, and huddled
on the edge of the bed. She felt so
worthless, used up. A
whole cauldron of emotions she
couldn’t handle was
bubbling up. Why the hel was she
saying these things?
Because she’d dreamed of having
someone understand.
No, she’d wanted someone she
loved
to understand. But
no one loved her. And she was
having to explain it to this
handsome, charismatic man, a Master
who could have
anyone. Multiple anyones, such that a
cop had thought she
was “one of his”.
The bed shifted as he rol ed off the
other side and came
around the end of the mattress. Any
other time, she would
have watched him, because she loved
to watch him move.
But today, seeing such a thing could
lacerate her heart
even more deeply. She wondered if a
cardiac surgeon had
ever been asked to do a heart
transplant merely because
the heart had been slashed to ribbons
from too many
serrated emotions.
When he stood in front of her, she
kept staring at the
floor, her bare feet beneath the floppy
cuffs of the pajamas
braced on the bed railing. “Jon, I
know this sounds so
ungrateful, but can you please go?
Just leave?”
“Do you want me to leave?”
“Yes.” She forced it past the hard
lump in her throat.
No,
no, no.
Reaching out, he stroked his hand
through her limp,
unwashed hair. She closed her eyes,
not wanting to revel in
the male strength in that touch, but
unable to keep herself
from turning her head into the stroke,
pressing hard into the
heel of his palm, holding there while
his fingers made short
caresses of the area around that
pressure point. It was a
long moment before he spoke.
“For a year, you’ve kept me at arm’s
length with that
wedding ring, making me believe
something that’s untrue. I
should have fol owed my intuition
sooner, because I knew it
didn’t fit. I don’t pursue married
women, and yet I kept
coming back to your studio, unable to
stop seeing you. I
asked you a question just now, and
you lied to me as wel .
Rachel, look at me.”
His fingers dropped to her chin.
When she couldn’t
manage the motion herself, thinking
of how swol en and
blotched her face must look, no
makeup, he forced her face
up to meet his intent gaze.
“You won’t lie to me again. Do you
understand?”
With that trace of steel in his voice,
her reality shifted.
She was standing in an open
doorway, and he was
ordering her across the threshold.
Her trembling soul
recognized it, even as the rest of her
wasn’t yet brave
enough to wrap her mind around it.
“Do you understand how to answer
me, Rachel?”
She swal owed. She couldn’t. He
didn’t know how often
she’d stood here. Her dangerous