The Millionaire's Secret Wish (5 page)

Read The Millionaire's Secret Wish Online

Authors: Leanne Banks

Tags: #Romance: Modern, #Contemporary, #General, #Romance, #Romance - Contemporary, #Fiction, #Fiction - Romance, #Non-Classifiable, #Romance - General

BOOK: The Millionaire's Secret Wish
2.46Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Robbie, a thin, young-looking ten-year-old, walked into the office with an expectant expression on his face. As soon as he saw Alisa, he smiled, revealing a missing tooth.

“Robbie!” she said, rushing toward him and embracing him. “One of your teeth is gone.”

“It finally fell out,” he said. “Two years later than everyone else. How is your head? They told me you hurt it very bad.”

Alisa nodded. “I did, but I’m much better now. How much reading have you been doing?”

Robbie stuffed his hands in his pockets and shifted from foot to foot. “I read a whole chapter, but it was hard.”

Alisa smiled. “Would you like to start reading together again?”

His face lit up. “Oh, yeah. It’s a lot more fun with you.”

“Next week. Wednesday at three o’clock,” she said, remembering their standing appointment.

He gave a thumbs-up and nodded. “I’m glad you’re okay.”

“Me, too,” she said, and felt somewhat lighter. The world suddenly made a little more sense to her.

 

Dylan counted to ten, then twenty, then one hundred when he couldn’t find Alisa at her apartment at their agreed-upon meeting time. There was no reason to call the police, he told himself even as he felt a trickle of perspiration stream down his back.

He doubted he would ever get that call from the hospital out of his head. They hadn’t been sure she would make it and even though Alisa couldn’t stand him, he didn’t want to imagine a world without her. He’d never been much for praying, but he’d spent the next several days in long conversation with the Almighty.

He checked his watch again and racked his brain for where she might have gone. He spied a taxi round the corner and pull into the parking lot and exhaled in relief as Alisa exited the cab and looked for him. He tightened his hands around the steering wheel several times to relieve his tension, then got out of the car.

“There you are,” she called, and walked toward him. Her face was shining with such joy that he
couldn’t call her attention to the time. “I remember,” she said, and hugged him.

Confused, Dylan felt a mixture of happiness and foreboding. He automatically closed his arms around her. She couldn’t possibly remember everything, could she?

“I remember Mrs. Henderson at Granger’s and I remember Robbie is a little boy I’ve been helping with reading. And I remember the total layout of the Granger campus.” She looked up at him, her eyes filled with tears. “I remembered Mrs. Henderson’s name before she told me, and I even remembered the name of the book Robbie and I were reading together.”

Her joy was contagious. He’d watched her struggle from the very beginning. “What do you want to do now?”

“I want to make chocolate chip cookies,” she said with a knowing glance. “My mother’s recipe,” she added with determination. “And I want to see if I can do it from memory.”

His heart contracted. “What do you remember about your mother’s cookies?”

“I used to snitch a few and give them to some of the guys.”

“You were the cookie girl, and everyone always wanted your cookies.”

She paused for a moment, then looked up at him from the veil of her eyelashes. “Did you always want my cookies?”

Five

“T
hey’re still missing something,” Alisa said with a frown after the third batch.

“Taste great to me,” he said, having eaten entirely too many cookies. “At this rate we won’t have any room for the barbecue at Michael’s house tonight.”

She glanced at him and winced. “I forgot. Since Michael and Justin were Granger boys, too, maybe they can tell me what’s wrong with them.”

“Nothing is wrong with these cookies,” Dylan said emphatically.

“I still think there’s something missing.” She glanced at the clock. “What time do we need to leave?”

“Fifteen minutes,” he said, not all that eager to go
to the barbecue tonight. Who knew what she would remember next? “We don’t have to go if you’re too tired or too full,” he casually offered.

She shook her head. “Oh, no. I want to see what else I remember. This could be fun.”

Yes, he thought. Or not.

Thirty minutes later he drew near the turnoff for Michael’s home. Alisa glanced at him. “My cookies didn’t make you sick, did they? You’ve been very quiet.”

“No. I’ve just got a few things on my mind.”

He seemed so distant, Alisa thought, and wished things were different. She wished a lot of things that made her heart hurt. She had the strongest yearning to be the one he felt he could turn to, but she knew she wasn’t. The knowledge hurt a tender spot deep inside her.

He pulled to a stop, and she covered his hand with hers. “I hope all those things work out,” she said, reaching out to him the best way she knew.

He met her gaze and in his eyes she saw a kaleidoscope of emotions. The one that affected her most profoundly was regret. “Some will,” he said, “and some won’t.”

Alisa’s heart twisted. She sensed that he was certain something important to him would not work out.

He glanced up. “Here they come. Do you want me to give you names or—”

“No! Let me guess. I’m getting more and more of my memory back. Let me see what I remember.” She
got out of the car and was immediately greeted by twin boys, pre-school age, and a girl, slightly older, followed by two couples. Her memory creaked like a rusty wheel. “I did some baby-sitting for you,” she said.

The twins gave big nods. “And you let us eat cookies,” one of them said.

“For dinner,” the other one added.

The little girl covered her mouth and made a shushing sound. “You weren’t supposed to tell!”

“Starts with a
J,
” Alisa murmured.

“Jeremy,” one of the twins said proudly. “I’m Jeremy and I start with a
J.
Aunt Amy told me.”

Alisa laughed and tried to concentrate. “Emily.”

Emily’s eyes lit up and she nodded with a huge smile. She mouthed the letter
N.

The cue did the trick. “Nick,” she said, delighted with herself.

He nodded and stepped closer to her. He pointed his finger at her head. “You bonked your head. Are you all better?”

“Mostly better.”

“Can you still bake cookies?”

She heard Dylan’s muffled chuckle and smiled. “I brought some cookies with me and I need someone to tell me if I baked them correctly.”

The twins jumped up and down. “Me! Me! Me!”

“After dinner,” a red-haired woman said, then turned to Alisa. “No more guessing games. Save your
brain strain for something more important. I’m Amy, Justin’s wife.”

Alisa immediately liked the woman all over again. “Thanks,” she said and glanced at Justin. “How’s the market?”

He blinked in surprise. “Hey I saw you in the hospital and you didn’t remember squat. You’re remembering everything.”

“Breakthrough day,” she said, riding the wave. She looked at her hosts. “Michael and Kate, it’s nice of you to invite me.”

Both Michael and Kate embraced her. “We’re so glad you’re okay,” Kate said sincerely.

Overwhelmed with emotion at finding another part of herself that had been lost, Alisa struggled with tears. Floundering, she instinctively looked for Dylan.

Correctly reading her face, he put his arm at her back. “I need some help with these cookies,” he said, taking the pressure off Alisa. “How soon can we have those burgers?”

The kids clamored for the cookies, and the group scattered.

“Thanks,” she whispered.

“No problem. Remember, you’re recovering.”

“Nice way of saying I’m difficult?” she asked wryly.

“I did not use the ‘D’ word,” he said firmly.

“You know everything that has happened to me since the accident has been a roller-coaster ride. I don’t understand why you’ve stuck with it.”

His gaze held hers. “I have my reasons.”

She would love to know what those reasons were, but she wouldn’t be finding out tonight, she realized as they neared a long picnic table. Alisa enjoyed a lighthearted hour with the adults and children. Kate and Amy made her feel at ease and brought her up to speed on recent events in their families.

“The adoption has been official for several weeks now,” Amy said. “Justin has been great for all of us.”

“Who would have known,” Kate said, “that our allergic-to-marriage-tightwad-millionaire could be such a great instant dad?”

“He was a good guy when he was a kid,” Alisa said.

Amy raised her eyebrows and exchanged a glance with Kate. “You remember back that far?”

“I remember some,” Alisa said. “I remember my childhood, but it gets sketchy during my teen years. Very recent memories are starting to come back. I wish I remembered more about Dylan. He’s done so much for me since the accident, but I can hardly recall anything about him after I was about twelve years old. I just have all these feelings I can’t explain.”

Turning silent, Kate and Amy looked at her with concern. Kate sat down beside Alisa and gave her a quick squeeze. “You’ve been through a lot. Give yourself time. No matter what you remember or don’t remember, there are people who care for you deeply,
and we’re all relieved that you’re getting better. And if you need anything at all, you are to call me.”

“Or me,” Amy said.

Alisa sighed, taking comfort in Kate’s words and the support both women offered her. At the same time, however, she knew she wouldn’t rest until her memory filled in some very important gaps.

Nick and Jeremy raced to stand in front of her. Cookie crumbs dotted their chins. “So far, we think the cookies are good,” Nick said.

“But we need to eat some more to make sure,” Jeremy said with a craftiness beyond his four years.

Amy intervened. “How many cookies have you eaten?”

“Not many,” Jeremy said.

Emily walked up behind them. “Four cookies each,” she said.

The boys glared at her.

“You’ve had enough. I don’t want you getting sick in Justin’s car again.” She winced in Alisa’s direction. “The joys of fatherhood.”

Alisa glanced at Justin. Her attention naturally shifted to the man beside him—Dylan. She wondered what his children would look like. She wondered what kind of father he might be. She wondered what kind of wife he might choose, and immediately felt a twist of something very close to envy. Uncomfortable with the direction of her thoughts, she turned her attention to Amy and her children. “Feel free to take some cookies home.”

Dylan strolled to her side and whispered in her ear, “See, I told you all the boys want your cookies.”

His playful, seductive tone heated her blood. “You never answered me. Does that include you?”

Dylan paused. “Sometimes we want what we can’t have.”

She felt a dart of impatience. “Why does this sound like forbidden cookies?”

 

Later that night Alisa dreamed of Dylan again. He kissed her lips and touched her body. His arousal made her burn. She wanted more, so much more. She wanted him closer than close. He touched her intimately and just as she drew close to ecstasy, his image faded.

“No! Don’t go!” she yelled, waking herself. She sat up breathing heavily, her breasts heavy with arousal, her skin warm, and between her legs she was swollen with need.

Frustrated beyond belief, she tossed off her covers and could not withhold a shriek. She would have preferred to scream at the top of her lungs, but she didn’t want to wake Dylan.

Forgoing the lamp on her bedside table for cool air, she padded across the floor to the balcony and threw open the French doors.

A second passed before Dylan burst into her room. “What’s wrong? Another bad dream?”

She glared at the cause of her restless nights. His bare chest gleamed in the moonlight, his black slacks
had been hastily drawn on. They were unbuttoned. She suspected he was naked beneath them. “In a manner of speaking,” she said.

He stepped closer and touched her face. “Your skin is warm. Are you sick?”

“Probably,” Alisa said with irony and tilted her head away from him. “I’m fine,” she said, crossing her arms over her chest and looking away from him. “You can go back to bed.”

“What’s going on?”

She was unbearably frustrated. What did she have to lose by telling the truth? “I’ve been having bad dreams about you,” she said.

“Bad? How?”

She paused a second, then shrugged. “Erotic dreams.”

A long, thick silence followed. “Oh.”

“I keep dreaming you’re kissing me and making love to me, and we get closer and closer. Just when I want you most, you fade away.” She took a breath and closed her eyes, willing her heart rate to slow. “Why do I keep dreaming about you? Why are you so important? What were we before my accident?” she asked, opening her eyes and turning to face him.

“Our relationship was complicated.”

“How?” she asked, drowning in his dark eyes. “Tell me,” she whispered, moving so close to him she could feel the heat of his body. “Show me.”

His eyes narrowed, then it was as if something inside ripped. He slid his hand through her hair and
drew her mouth to his. He devoured her as if he’d wanted her for a very long time, as if she were a need long denied. She felt plundered and seduced, immediately, fully aroused.

“You make it difficult for me to do the right thing,” he muttered against her mouth.

“I’m not sure we agree on what the right thing is,” she said, and pulled his mouth to hers again. She tasted his dark, masculine flavor and was filled with the familiar desire for more.

He pulled back slightly and rubbed his hands over her shoulders, pushing one of the straps of her chemise down over her shoulder. “I saw you when you were naked on the balcony. I didn’t sleep the rest of the night.”

“That’s fair,” she said breathlessly, holding his gaze. “You’ve been keeping me awake.”

A flame lit in his eyes and with one finger, he dragged the other strap of her chemise down. She held her breath as he slid his index finger down over her chest to the swell of her breast, then deliberately lower over her nipple. The silky chemise fell to her waist, baring her breasts to his gaze.

She felt him drink in the sight of her as he slid his finger around her nipple in a circular motion. Alisa inhaled a shaky breath that drew his attention to her face. He backed her against the wall and meshed his chest with her breasts. Alisa sighed at the exquisite sensation.

French kissing her, he slid his hands down to her
hips and guided her against his hardness. He stepped between her thighs and rocked intimately against the cradle of her femininity.

He made a low moan of pleasure that vibrated throughout her and dipped his head to taste the hardened tips of her breasts. Leaning her head helplessly back against the wall, Alisa felt the roar of arousal in her blood and let it take her higher and higher.

She felt the cool night air on her bare legs, then his thighs intertwined with hers. His touch felt new and somehow not new. It was as if he knew her body. How? she wondered.

His fingers slid beneath her panties, and she gasped in surprise.

“You feel so good,” he told her, finding her sensitive pleasure point. “Like velvet.”

Alisa wanted more. She wanted to feel him inside her. She wanted him as out of control as she felt. She opened her mouth, but his stroking fingers stole her words. Plunging a finger inside her, he rubbed her bead of sensitivity with his thumb. With each stroke, the coil inside her tightened. Heat suffused her, and a spasm of pleasure ripped through her.

She shuddered against him as the aftershocks of his touch shook her. Inhaling deeply, she clung to him, overwhelmingly aware of his unspent passion. His arousal was more than a body part; it was so powerful it permeated the air she breathed. “I didn’t want it to be that way,” she told him in a low voice. “I wanted you—”

“—you’re not ready,” he said flatly. “You’re still recovering.”

On the heels of their intimacy, his tone jarred her. “I think I’m the better judge of that.”

Silence followed, and his disagreement hung between them. It hardly seemed possible, but Alisa felt shut out and rejected, and it hurt. “Why did you kiss me and touch me?”

“You needed the release,” he said in a low voice. “I could give you that.”

“So it was like a favor?” she asked, feeling her heart contract painfully. Humiliation trickled in like acid. She stepped back and pulled her gown up to cover herself.

He reached for her, but she stepped back. “It wasn’t a favor. You could feel my response.”

She shook her head in confusion. “I don’t understand this.”

“I told you you’re not ready.”

“I don’t buy that,” she said. “I wanted you and you held back. Did I hurt you and I don’t remember it? Did I betray you in some way?”

He stiffened as if she’d struck him. “No, but I know you wouldn’t forgive me for taking advantage of you.”

“You wouldn’t have been taking advantage of me. I made it perfectly clear that I wanted you.” She shook her head again. “The only thing you’ve done is totally confuse me. I didn’t want a favor. I have all these feelings for you and I don’t know where they
come from. They’re so strong I don’t know what to do with them. I wanted to make love to you. I wanted to be your lover and for you to be mine. This was about more than release. Don’t do me any more favors. I can turn on the cold water in the shower just as easily as the next person,” she said, and left him on the balcony.

Other books

The Alienist by Caleb Carr
El último Catón by Matilde Asensi
The Midnight Guardian by Sarah Jane Stratford
Songs of Blue and Gold by Deborah Lawrenson
Duchess by Ellen Miles
Iced to Death by Peg Cochran