Read Upon a Mystic Tide Online
Authors: Vicki Hinze
Tags: #Contemporary, #Fiction, #Fantasy, #Romance, #General
Oh, God help her, he tasted good too.
A little groan of submission vibrated in her throat and she glided her hands up his thighs to his narrow waist, then finally circled them around his back. “Damn you, Jonathan.” She tunneled her hands through his thick hair—longer, more luxurious, more tempting—then settled into the kiss.
His fingers danced up the vertebrae of her spine, caressing her skin, taunting, tantalizing, his hold loose and undemanding, enticing; his lips sipping and tasting, inciting but not quenching. She pressed firmly against his scalp, urging him to deepen the kiss. Lost was lost and, in this, she managed grace. She submitted to defeat.
With a totally masculine growl, he bore down on her mouth, a tangle of teeth and lips and tongues, all eager and searching. A shudder rocked through his body, shimmied through her fingertips, and arrowed a shiver of sheer joy to her woman’s heart. He tightened his hold, crushing her to him, her breasts flattening against his hard chest, his arousal pressing firmly against her hip. He wanted her. He still wanted her.
The knowing pulsed through her and, heady at her feminine prowess, at the frantic drummer’s beats of his heart, she swore that if he let her go, she might just float. They were divorcing, but the magic
. . .
the magic was definitely still there.
God help them both.
He left her lips, blazed a trail of hot kisses to her jaw, to the soft underside of her chin, to the shell of her ear. “Bess,” he whispered, raking her lobe with his teeth.
Awash in a sea of remembered sensations, she couldn’t think, just let her head loll back, and let the tide of reawakened passion take her. “Hmmm?”
“It’s storming.” He kissed his way down the column of her throat to the soft hollow, then laved it with his tongue. “We used to make love on the veranda during storms.” He caressed her side, waist to breast, then cupped her fullness and rubbed its turgid center with the pad of his thumb. “Remember?”
Her back arched, straining to the warmth of his hand. A ripple of heat spawned to a wave that flowed through her, rushing to her core. She relished it. Savored it. It’d been so long since she’d felt all these wonderful feelings. So . . . long. “I remember.”
He buried his nose at her neck, inhaled her scent and nipped at her skin, supping. “We could do that again. The Shell Room has a deck. That’s nearly a veranda.”
Yes. Oh, yes.
She opened her mouth to agree.
Lightning flashed. An angry clap of thunder boomed, shaking the house and, Bess swore, her teeth.
The electricity came back on as abruptly as it had gone out. Light flooded the room.
Every
light turned on—the overhead, the lamps on either side of the bed, the banker’s light on the desk—even those that hadn’t been on when the power had been interrupted—and the alarm clock’s red LCD flashed 12:00 and its alarm shrieked a steady, deafening blast.
What was she doing?
She pulled out of John’s embrace, scrambled to her feet, then grabbed her robe. When she’d shoved it on and tightened its belt so hard she could barely breathe—a firm reminder to keep the blooming thing on—she looked at him, sitting there on the floor, one knee on the rug, one bent and on the bare floor, smiling up at her. “Wicked, Jonathan.”
The devil danced in his eyes, right alongside desire. “Who?”
“You!” Even hazed with those emotions, the sadness remained. Grieving, Tony had said. She didn’t feel brave enough to ask John what he grieved. Whatever it was hurt him so badly that even in her arms he couldn’t forget the grief for a moment’s time. That was a forceful blow to her ego and a solid reminder that she had caught him but had failed to hold him.
Digging deep, she schooled her emotions, then turned off the alarm. When the room went silent, she let her teeth sink into her lower lip, determined not to stew on this kissing business or to make too much of it. They’d both been curious. No more than that. “This was a bad idea.” She looked back over her shoulder at him. “People who are divorcing don’t kiss as we did and they certainly don’t make love.”
His hair mussed from her fingertips, he cocked his head, looking darling, dangerous
. . .
and very tempting. “Do they have sex?”
Wicked
and
cute, the rotten grub. Her palms itched to touch him. She stuffed her fists into the pockets of her robe. “Definitely not.”
“Oh.” He hauled himself to his feet, then stared at her, caressing every curve, every plane of her body, from head to heel. When his gaze returned to hers, desire burned in his eyes, yet the sadness remained. “A shame. We might have been lousy together at times, Bess, but in bed wasn’t one of them.”
Boy, was he right about that. “I don’t suppose that much matters anymore, either.” She forced herself to hold his gaze, locked her knees to stay upright, and ordered her feet to stay still. Every acutely honed instinct in her body shouted at her to cross the floor and take him to bed.
“No, I don’t guess it does matter anymore.” He walked over to the dresser, then dragged a blunt fingertip down the spine of a silver-edged comb on a little oval tray. “Unless
. . .
”
What was he thinking? She frowned at his broad back. Sinful what the man did to a pair of jeans. And to her blood pressure. “Unless?”
He turned to face her, leaning a hip against the dresser, stretching out his long legs and crossing one foot over the other, his arms over his chest. “Unless you want to compromise.”
She walked around the side of the bed to the little bench at its foot then plopped down. Her robe spilled open, exposing a healthy expanse of bare legs. She grabbed the fabric edges and clamped them together. “I know I’m going to regret this, but tell me what’s working in that twisted mind of yours.”
“I’m not going through with this divorce unless you accept your half of our assets.”
She frowned, holding no illusions. He was dead serious. “And, according to Francine, not without half of my dog.”
“That’s the part that’s negotiable.”
“Uh-huh.” Bess eyed him warily. He looked a little too cocky for her comfort, and she recognized only too well that half-smirk of his for the signal it was. He was about to drop a bomb. Right on her head. “Negotiable. As in
. . .
?”
“I’ll forget the visitation rights and joint custody of Silk,” he said.
“If I do what?”
“Give me two weeks with all of you. No mention of the divorce whatsoever. Just you and me and—”
“Sex.”
He shrugged. “I prefer making love, but if you can’t bring yourself to it, then, yes, sex will do.”
Good God! She stood up. “You’re propositioning me?”
“No, I’m not.”
She propped her hands on her hips and stared him down.
“Okay, I am, I suppose—if you choose to look at it that way.” He thumped a fingertip to his chest. “I didn’t choose to, by the way.”
“Just how
did
you look at it, Jonathan?” Her teeth ached from holding her jaw so tight.
His eyes gleamed, the look in them heated. “Differently.”
“Why do you want to do this?” He couldn’t be serious. He couldn’t
really
expect her to be a wife to him again for two weeks over a dog. Not that she didn’t love Silk, but this was absurd. Ridiculous.
“Why not?”
Evasion. Clear and simple. “I can think of a dozen good reasons right off the bat. The best is that I don’t sell myself—not even for Silk.”
He narrowed his eyes. “And if you did, you wouldn’t sell yourself to me.”
“No, I wouldn’t.” She’d be an idiot to do that knowing he could hurt her. And damn him for adding insult to injury. In less than a minute, he’d taken her from proposition to prostitute. What was left?
He stepped closer. “Nothing of mine. No part of me. Right?”
He was angry. The white slash of his jaw tightened. Didn’t he see that any part of him would only have her doing anything for a glimpse of the rest of him? All or nothing. That’s how it
had
to be between them. It couldn’t be all. They’d tried that and Bess had ranked a sorry second. That left only one option: nothing. “No, John,” she said softly, a sad tremor shaking her voice. “No part of you.”
An ice-hard look clouded his eyes. “Regrettable.” He walked to the door. “I’ll take odd weekends with Silk. You and Santos can have even ones.” Out in the hallway, John softly closed the door.
Santos? Now why would John think Miguel—
Okay, Bess. Give over.
Bess nearly jumped out of her skin.
Tony, would you stop that? You scared the heck out of me.
Why did you turn him down?
“Good grief.” Avoiding the braided rug culprit that had started all this, she walked to the turret window, propped her knee on the window seat’s soft cushion, and stared out into the night. The rain had started. Strong winds gusted through the trees, whistling. It was going to be a bad one. “I thought you’d gone, Tony.”
You’re avoiding my question. Why did you refuse his offer? I know you want those two weeks as badly as he does.
“I don’t.”
Tony sighed.
You’re doing it again, Doc.
Lying. Inwardly she sighed. Having a man inside her thoughts was getting to be a royal pain in the posterior. She leaned farther out the window, searched the gloomy sky. “The only thing I’m doing is seeing if there’s a full moon tonight.”
What?
“There’s got to be some reason you men are all talking crazy.”
Nice try, but it won’t work. I recognize avoidance as well as you do, and I’m not going to let you lie to yourself, or to me.
“I’ve already admitted the magic’s still there.” She dragged a hand through her hair. “What more do you want?”
The truth.
Shutting the window, she frowned. She sank down onto the cushion, folded her arms and rested them on the window ledge, then dropped her chin atop her knuckles. Her breath fogged the glass panes. “The truth is I’m going to lose him. And my job. And likely full custody of my dog. I can’t risk losing any more.” Like she’d told Sal, she’d lost all she intended to lose willingly.
And two weeks with Jonathan will put more at risk?
She grunted. “Two minutes with him puts more at risk.” Lord, how she resented that. “I’ll just get hurt again. I don’t need a refresher course on what he can do to me, Tony. I remember too well.”
He needs you. He can’t admit it, but he needs you more right now than he ever has needed anyone in his life.
“Lord, you’ve got an imagination. That man has never needed me. He’s wanted me, and, yes, I know he wants me again—for two weeks—but need?” She shook her head. “No, Tony. I needed John, but he’s never needed me.”
He does, Doc. Why else would he make such an outrageous proposition now? Why not five years ago? Three years ago? Why now?
“You tell me.”
I have. I’ve said it before, but it’s worth repeating. You’re hearing, but not listening.
She gulped in a big breath of air. The rain pattered on the roof of the porch below her window and the answer came to her. “He’s grieving.”
Yes! Grieving.
“Do you know why?”
Elise died, Bess.
Her chest went tight. She bit down on her lip. Elise died, and he hadn’t told his wife. “I’m sorry.”
Tell him. Don’t you understand, Doc? Because he didn’t find her daughter for her—