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Authors: Lori Foster,Kayla Perrin,Janelle Denison

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BOOK: Perfect for the Beach
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She shook her head, still watching him with absorbed attention.

“Pity.” He stood, unbuckled his belt, drew down his zipper—and dropped his pants. There wasn’t a damn thing he could do about his boner, barely constrained by the snug, black cotton boxers.

Nora stared, drew a broken breath, and licked her lips. Did she know what that small lick did to him?

She turned and swam to the other side of the pool, keeping her back to him.

Cary dove in. The initial force of his entry carried him across the pool so that he surfaced right behind her. She gripped the side of the pool, her toes balanced on a ledge.

Cary mimicked her stance, putting his hands alongside hers, his feet bracketing hers on the ledge. His cock pressed into her firm bottom. If they were naked, he could enter her this way, leaving his hands free to play with her breasts while he thrust deep and slow … He turned his face into her neck. “Nora.”

As if she’d had the same imagery, she moaned.

Opening his mouth, Cary took a slow love bite of the muscle running from her neck to her shoulder. “I want you.” He felt her shiver. “More than you can even begin to guess.”

“You … you don’t want to get married,” she whispered.

She was so damn sure of that. And if he told her now, at this particular moment, with an erection prodding her backside, that he wanted marriage and forever after and those kids she’d mentioned earlier, she’d think he was just on the make. She’d think he was making promises just to get laid.

He drew back a little, giving them both some breathing room. But not much, because he couldn’t bear the distance between them. “We haven’t even been on a real date yet, so how do you know what I want? With you, everything is different.”

“You’re so determined. But … why me?”

He shook his head. “Hell, Nora, that’s like asking why I like chocolate ice cream better than vanilla, or why I prefer boxers to briefs, or why I bought an SUV instead of a flashy car.”

She turned in his arms. Her glasses were now wet with droplets of water, but her eyes were direct. “And?”

“And what?”

“Why did you make those choices?”

They were both mostly naked. For all intents and purposes, they were alone. It wasn’t easy for him to concentrate. “Maybe we should move to your patio for this discussion?”

She nodded—then waited. When Cary just stood there, breathing in the scent of her warmed skin, her wet hair, and the light fragrance that was all woman and hers alone, she cleared her throat. “You need to … move, so I can get out.”

“Oh. Yeah.” He stepped to the side of her, hoisted himself out, then reached in for her. Catching her wrists, he pulled her up and against him. She fit him perfectly, her head at just the right height for his shoulder.

As naturally as if they’d been a couple forever, he put his arm around her waist and walked her around the pool to her towel. She didn’t dry off with it. Instead, she wrapped it around herself, hiding her body from him.

Okay, he could deal with that. For right now. He gathered up his clothes and shoes, then reached out a hand, and after a long moment of hesitation, she took it.

Cary led her to the middle of her covered patio. Wet and shaded, he felt cooler on the outside, but no less hot on the inside. He set his clothes and shoes down. They stared at each other. With one finger, he touched her mouth. “Chocolate tastes better to me—just as you taste better.”

Her lashes lowered and new color stained her cheeks.

He coasted that same finger down her shoulder to the swell of her breasts, visible above the tightly wrapped towel. “Boxers,” he murmured while tugging the towel free of its knot, “are more comfortable.” He dropped the towel on the concrete patio. Everything about her, from her hesitation to her sweet little body, turned him on.

“You’re saying I’m comfortable?”

“Yeah. Being with you feels right.”

She wet her lips.

After a leisurely, heated review of her body, Cary met her gaze, his expression as intent as he could make it so that she’d understand. “Flashy cars don’t appeal to me anymore.” He caught her waist and drew her close again. “They’re just for fun, but these days I’m more interested in the long haul.”

Her lips parted, but just before Cary could kiss her, she drew back. Frustration rose up—at himself for rushing her again. Damn it, around her it seemed that his dick wanted to call all the shots, never mind what his brain had to say about it. “I’m sorry.”

Shaking her head, Nora said, “I have to explain.”

“All right.”

She kept her gaze on his chest while visibly working up her nerve. In a voice so small, Cary could barely hear her, she confessed, “I was a virgin when I married.”

Her husband must have had one hell of a wedding night. Bending his knees, Cary tried to see her face, but she only tucked her chin in a little more.

“My husband was a virgin, too. What we knew, we learned together.”

Cary released her, turned his back on her, and took three deep breaths, then a forth and a fifth. Jealousy raged inside him, though he doubted that was her intent. “I can’t miraculously become a virgin, Nora.”

Her startled, nervous laugh had him turning back around again with bemused curiosity at her reaction. One hand covered her mouth, but her eyes were still smiling. Cary smiled, too. “Want me to pretend to be?”

Another laugh bubbled out. “No.” She swatted at him playfully. “Don’t be ridiculous.”

“Good.” The sound of her laughter filled him up when he hadn’t really known he was empty. “I doubt I could have pulled it off anyway.”

She swallowed, cleared her throat, and tried to be serious again. Rushing to get it all out, she blurted, “I haven’t been with anyone in two years.”

“I know.” His cock throbbed in renewed interest. Two long years. Damn. Talking about it only made it more real. “I heard you tell Liza that,” he reminded her.

“Not even a kiss.”

His brain went blank.
Not even …

“Not even … holding hands.”

“Jesus, Nora, why?” Cary could hardly credit such a thing. “You’re beautiful and sexy. I know damn good and well guys have been asking. Hell,
I’ve
been asking.” If she told him she was still in love with her husband, after all this time, he’d howl.

She half turned away from him, giving him her profile. “At first, I didn’t want anyone else because I missed my husband too much.”

There it was, the one thing he couldn’t fight—a dead man. “I can understand that, but it’s been
two years.”

She rubbed her forehead, readjusted her glasses. “I was always really shy with men.”

The small voice was back, proving to Cary that this was a difficult topic for her. He moved closer, giving her silent support.

“Dating didn’t come easy to me.” She flashed him a quick look to see if he understood. “We dated for eighteen months before we married.”

Eighteen months of celibate dating? Wow.

“Even after we married, I felt awkward sleeping with my husband.” She bit her lip and squeezed her eyes shut. “I don’t …” She gestured toward him with a hand. “Anything I know about sex I learned with my husband.”

Cary was starting to understand. Two virgins fumbling in the dark added up to a lack of confidence in the sack. “And it wasn’t all that much that you learned?”

“Exactly.” Eyes still closed, she said, “But it wasn’t his fault. He loved me and we were both innocent, but I just—”

He stepped behind her, put her hands on her waist. “Did you ever have an orgasm?”

She trembled.

“Nora?”

In a barely there whisper, she said, “No.” Then in a rush, “But I loved him, Cary. A lot.”

“Shhh. It’s all right. I understand.” He understood that her husband had been cheated out of a lot of pleasure by dying too young. And Nora had been cheated, too. In a big way.

So what the hell should he do now?

She was a nurse for an OB-GYN. She dealt with pregnant ladies—the result of sex, no two ways about that—every damn day. His brain churned, trying to muddle out the situation. “Do you believe that I care about you, Nora?”

“I don’t know.”

Well, there was honesty for you. “I do. I wouldn’t lie to you.” He was caressing her waist without realizing it. Her skin was so silky soft he couldn’t wait to feel all of it against him while they made love. “How did your husband die?”

“Massive heart attack. I … I woke up one morning and he was … he was gone. I didn’t hear anything, didn’t know he’d had a problem in the night.”

Woke up? “He was beside you? In bed?”

She nodded.

Damn. No wonder she hadn’t wanted to rush into any other man’s bed. Cary turned her, hauled her into his arms, and kissed her. Not a gentle kiss this time, but one of hunger and need and possession. He hurt for her and wished for some way to erase those memories from her mind, even while he sought a way to claim her.

She wasn’t really kissing him back, but her hands clutched his shoulders and he could feel her fast breaths. “Give me your tongue.”

She parted her lips, shyly did as he ordered—and Cary was lost. He drew her soft pink tongue into his mouth, sucked gently, teased with his own and followed her tongue back into her mouth, licking, tasting. Hot. Damn, she was hot.

The kiss went on and on, sharing, taking, giving. It required all his concentration to keep his hands on her waist and not lift them to her breasts, or drop them to her bottom. It was enough that he could feel her skin, wet from her swim, warm from the summer day.

Slowly, before he pushed too far too fast, he pulled back. She struggled to get her heavy eyelids lifted, then her gaze locked with his and her tongue flicked out, tasting her lips. “I liked that.”

She wasn’t helping his self-control, saying things like that. He cupped her face. “You’ll like everything I do to you, I swear. We’ll be incredible together, Nora.”

Her mouth twitched into a small, nervous smile. “Great sex, that’s what you’re offering?”

“No.”

She looked confused. “No?”

Cary groaned. What the hell was he saying? “I mean, yeah, but more than that, okay?”

He wanted her to ask him how much more, but she didn’t. With her thoughts clear on her expressive face, she considered everything he said, touched one hot little palm to his chest, and whispered, “Okay.”

Such a rush of triumph, expectation, and tenderness rolled through him, it was almost like coming, almost as sweet. But not quite. “Now?”
Please let her mean now.

Her big brown eyes looked up at him from behind her glasses. She gave a tiny nod, smiled tremulously, and said, “Okay.” And then to confirm it, “Now.”

Chapter Three

Cary wasn’t a gallant man or a guy prone to melodrama. Never in his life had he carried a woman to bed. Hell, he was more likely to race her there, laughing with every step. But now, with Nora, he felt like a cross between Tarzan and a groom on his wedding day. He felt like the Initiator of Virgins and it was such a turn-on, he could barely draw breath.

He lifted her up high against his chest, caught her small sound of exclamation, and kissed her. He could kiss her forever, every day, every hour even. “You won’t be sorry, I swear. I’ll make this so good for you.”

“I know.”

When he reached the French doors, she pulled them open and Cary swept inside, a romantic figure to the core. “Which way?”

Appearing a tad overwhelmed, Nora said, “Um, down the hall, last door on the right.”

It wasn’t easy, but he accomplished a sedate walk rather than a run. He even kissed her twice again without getting carried away. He didn’t stop and take her against the wall, or on the floor, as was his basic inclination, given the level of his need.

Her bedroom door stood open, her bed unmade and rumpled. “Wet suits,” Cary told her, forcing himself to logic. This was almost like her first time, close enough that he wanted it to be special, so close he was the one trembling like a virgin—with anticipation. Sopping sheets would add nothing to the ambiance for either of them. He stood her on her feet to strip her.

BOOK: Perfect for the Beach
4.78Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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