Authors: Joey W. Hill
every part of her felt she was doing
the wrong thing. But
when she couldn’t trust herself, that
was the whole point,
right?
So though it was exponential y more
difficult, she looked
straight at him and spoke. As she did,
her fingers closed
into tight, cold bal s and her voice
shook. “I came to thank
you for last night,” she said. “And t-
to bring you the name of
another yoga instructor. You’re…at a
more advanced level
than I offer…can offer.”
She sounded harsh and abrasive,
even to herself, but his
expression didn’t change. She had to
imagine her practical
heels embedded into the floor to keep
herself stil .
Jon glanced to his left. “Lucas, can
we continue this later
this afternoon?”
Her stomach gave a precipitous
lurch. Now she thought
about jumping out of her shoes and
running. She hadn’t
even noticed the other man. Thank
God she hadn’t said
anything less circumspect. But then
she latched onto the
name.
Lucas.
He’s spent a great deal of
time studying the way
to pleasure a woman with his mouth.
He’d thrust his
tongue deep into your pussy, do
things that would make
you mindless…
“Sure.” The masculine voice was as
confident and
commanding as Jon’s, though not as
velvet-toned. It stil
was capable of running a shiver up
her spine. Now that
she’d been proven right at least three
times, she couldn’t
deny her ability to detect a Master
from a straightforward
alpha male. She could modify The
Weather Girls’ one-hit
wonder.
It’s raining Doms…
She
was a safari tourist, come
to glimpse a lion, and had instead
walked into a ful ,
ravenous pride of them.
The anxious humor didn’t help her as
much as she’d
hoped. Having seen the photos, she
nevertheless wasn’t
surprised they didn’t minimize his
impact on her senses.
Lucas Adler moved with the grace
and control ed power of
an athlete, and the sculpted lines of
his handsome face
could have graced an Egyptian prince
in a previous life.
Though she tried not to look, she
couldn’t help focusing
on his mouth. She’d worn a trim
bolero jacket over her
blouse, and she was glad for it. His
direct, steady glance,
combined with the memory of Jon’s
words, the idea that he
might let Lucas put his clever mouth
on her, had her nipples
drawing tight. She shifted her
attention back to Jon before
she made a fool of herself by
lowering her eyes in
automatic deference before both of
them. The speculative
look, the hint of a feral, humorless
smile on Jon’s sensual
lips, told her he knew exactly where
her thoughts had gone.
Lucas was headed toward the door,
where she was
standing. She should step out of the
way, but she couldn’t
move. Literal y couldn’t, because
panic had frozen her in
place. A brush of Lucas’ jacket was
fol owed by the touch of
his strong hand on her lower back,
gently but firmly moving
her farther into the office so that he
could not only get past
her but close the door after him.
She was alone with Jon, and an acre
of glass windows
overlooking the river.
He was stil looking at her, but
instead of meeting his
gaze again, she moved to those
windows. Ten feet of
carpet and weighted silence lay
between them, but in
reality, there was so much more than
that. Just like that, al
the false constructs she’d used to get
herself here, the
anger and rationalizations, al the
games she played with
herself, were beyond her grasp.
There was only the sad
truth. Too much truth to give to him.
“You shouldn’t have done that this
morning,” she said. “It
means nothing. Can mean nothing.”
He didn’t say anything. No
interruption, no argument. She
didn’t know if that made her feel
desolate beyond measure
or apprehensive. She didn’t want to
feel anything. She
should turn around and leave. She’d
delivered her
message. But of course she kept
talking.
“When my husband left me, he said,
‘The way to your
heart is through your…cunt.’” She
swal owed, hating how
ugly that word sounded now. It had
been much different
when Jon said it last night. “And he
said he couldn’t read
the road signs anymore.”
Jon shifted. His proximity was a heat
against her back,
like the sun coming in on her front,
but she crossed her
arms over herself. A reflex, a sign
she didn’t want to be
touched, even though he hadn’t
moved toward her, hadn’t
closed that distance. She kept her
back straight, chin up,
eyes on the moving water, the
skyline. “I was so hurt and
angry, I lashed out, something I rarely
did in our marriage. I
told him he couldn’t read them
because he wasn’t brave
enough. He said no. It was because
he wasn’t interested.
Not anymore.”
She drew a shaky breath,
remembering the lancing pain
of that final strike. “People are cruel
when they’re hurting,
and somewhere inside him was the
man I married, who
didn’t real y mean those words. But it
doesn’t mean it
wasn’t true. It wasn’t in his nature. I
could have lived with
that, even been happy, if we were
friends, or he loved me
for whoever I was, even though he
couldn’t understand it.
When true love exists in a
relationship, it can overcome
pretty much anything. Isn’t that what
we tel ourselves? It’s
what we have to believe to stay
sane.”
She gave a faint smile, though it hurt
her face. “But
whether it was girlish fantasy or not,
the reality was that I
mistook selfish, lazy and overbearing
for protective and
alpha. And what I was looking for…I
couldn’t even define it
in the first years of my married life.
As the world became so
sophisticated, I understood it more,
but it was already too
late, even then. I just didn’t know it.”
She shook her head,
looked down at her hands.
“Nowadays women are strong,
outspoken. They bristle with outrage
at the idea of a man
looking at them as a possession.
Those kind of women
would consider me a freak…weak,
stupid. Maybe mental y
unbalanced.”
The chuckle she attempted now came
out sounding like
a strangled sob. “They’d cal me a
coward too, but it wasn’t
fear that kept me from leaving him,
tel ing him off. Al I
wanted was to take care of him, and
be loved for it. Even if I
couldn’t have anything more, I could
have accepted that.
The submission is…it’s far more than
sex. I know you know
that. I see it in your eyes.”
Her voice quavered again, and she
had to pause,
compose herself. She was a mature,
single woman. She
would get through this. But the truth
was it destroyed her,
knowing she’d final y found someone
in the world who
understood, and not just intel ectual
y. His Dominance was
as innate to his blood as her
submission was to hers.
Though it was too late for anything
else, there had to be
comfort in that validation, right?
“Sometimes I tried to
pretend he was the man I needed him
to be. I had this
picture of him in my head, and
everything he did, I
interpreted it as something else. If I
tried harder, if I just
loved him enough, it would be
okay… The worse he treated
me, the harder I tried. Until even he
was so disgusted with
me, he left.” She pressed her lips
together. “They say life is
a journey, and you should savor
every moment. I was
always a submissive, initial y with
no words to describe it,
or a husband who could understand
it. The frustration and
confusion of it nearly drove me mad.
There was a time…I
didn’t want…I couldn’t see any
reason to go on.”
She couldn’t stop at that marker,
because if she did, she
would truly fal to pieces. She put her
mental weight against
that door, before she could hear the
report of the gun, see
the flash of fire, feel the wet blood on
her neck… Or think
about the most important reason for
it, the straw that had
brought her to that terrible moment.
She didn’t want to
share that now, not here. Couldn’t do
it.
“That was when I started taking
yoga.” Sensing somehow
that he’d shifted closer to her, she
blurted it out, pressing
her palms against the glass to steady
herself. “Something
about it…it told me I could find
peace there. I immersed
myself in it, became an instructor. It
helped me find the
balance I needed.”
She turned then, faced him, and it
was so hard, for so
many reasons, to meet that steady
gaze. “I can’t have what
you’re offering, Jon. You’re too
young, too late and I’m too
fragile. It took me too long to pul
myself back off the cliff
edge and…” Her voice trembled
once more. Closing her
eyes, she steadied herself, spoke the
desolate truth to that
black space. “I won’t survive going
there again.”
“I’m not offering anything.”
He moved then, closing the space
between them. She
wanted to shrink back against the
glass, but managed to
keep herself stil . He had such a
smooth way of moving,
gathering an energy around him that
would always turn a
woman’s head. Her gaze latched onto
the tie. His tie tack
was a Japanese
kanji
symbol, one
she recognized,
because it was on a tapestry in her
yoga studio.
Perseverance.
Her palms tingled, wanting to reach
out, touch it, flatten
against his chest, feel his heat and
heartbeat. When he laid
his hands on her tense shoulders, she
had another brief
spurt of panic, but before she could
wrench away, he’d
pushed her against that panel of glass.
It had absorbed a
considerable amount of the sun’s
heat, such that it burned
through the fabric of her bolero and
the thin blouse beneath.
“Let me go,” she whispered.
“No.” The resolve beneath the
deceptive mildness was
terrifying to her. Gentle, thoughtful
Jon, so interested in the
philosophy and spirituality behind
yoga, yet he also
understood the strength of it as wel .
A mountain could be
placid, but it didn’t make it less
immovable, less capable of
demonstrations of utter power.
However, while he could
easily overcome her physical y, he
didn’t need that. His
voice and manner alone arrested her.
“What I left you this morning wasn’t
an offer, a suggestion
or a proposal, Rachel. It was a
command. I’m not going to
give you a choice. Not right now.
Because you’ve been
given far too many. That isn’t what
you need, is it?”
The ache low in her bel y was
becoming that spinning
wheel she knew too wel , a wheel
with blades that were
going to cut her insides to pieces.
“Please…don’t.”
“Keep your eyes down, Rachel.
You’l meet my gaze
when I give you permission. You
understand?” The
implacable tone shut that wheel
down, made her knees
weak. He leaned in, until his lips
were at her temple, trailing
down her skin in a highly distracting
way until he reached
her ear. “Tel me you understand.”
Squeezing her eyes shut, she realized
she’d latched onto
his shirt at the waist, digging her
fingers into the cloth as an
anchor. A hard shudder ran through
her body.
“Ssshh, girl. At the end of the third
class I took with you,
you told me you saw an old soul in
my eyes. We talked
about how we both believe in
reincarnation, the idea that
the physical body isn’t the sum total
of a human being. You
remember?”
She nodded. He tightened his grip.
“Wel , when I look in