Authors: Erica Spindler
F
or a long time after Richard left, Julianna sat alone in the dark, reliving Richard's visit, their kiss. She brought a hand to her mouth, still feeling the imprint of his lips against hers. Hot. Searching. Desperate.
Julianna shuddered at the memory. She had wanted him just as desperately. Pushing him away had been one of the hardest things she'd ever had to do. She had only found the strength of will to do it by reminding herself of the things her mother had told her over the years about winning a man. To reel him in slowly. To never give in to sex too quickly. That nothing would send a man scurrying back to his wife faster than guilt. That a man had to feel his behavior justified, even when he was cheating. He had to feel righteous for having held out as long as humanly possible.
Julianna smiled. Richard had tumbled once, he would again, falling deeper under her spell. How could he not? Now that he'd had a taste of what he could have with her, Kate's distracted kisses and hurried lovemaking would be less satisfying than before. More frustrating.
Besides, she simply couldn't lose. She had destiny on her side.
Richard didn't know it yet, but he was already hers.
T
he next morning, Richard was contrite. Distraught. He begged Kate's forgiveness and cuddled Emma to him, saying how much he loved her. He blamed his behavior on stress and booze; he must have been out of his mind, he said and promised it would never happen again. During the day he sent Kate a huge bouquet of flowers; that evening he came home from work with a stuffed bear for Emma.
Kate agreed to forgive him. How could she not? He was her husband; she had made him a promise of for better or for worse, had made it in front of their family, friends and God.
And this was definitely one of those times in the “worse” category, she thought later that night as she stood on the upper gallery, gazing out at the dark lake. She lifted her face to the starless sky. She had said she would forgive him and she would. Forgetting would be the problem. For as hard as she had tried, she'd been unable to put out of her mind the way he had forced himself on her, the things he had said. Especially the ones about Emma.
And she couldn't shake the feeling that something had gone terribly awry in their marriage, that they were being manipulated by forces outside themselves.
She had felt that way for weeks.
Kate frowned, thinking back. Since the day of Luke's book signing, she realized. The day the photo of Richard and Emma had disappeared, the day Old Joe had told her about the girl on the swing.
The girl on the swing.
Julianna. Emma.
Kate rubbed her arms, chilled despite the warm night, her head whirling with thoughts of Emma falling into their lives so suddenly. Of Richard's new assistant and of the surprising and intense dislike she had taken to her. Of Richard's behavior and the missing photograph. Of her own feelings of helplessness.
One had nothing to do with the other. Nothing except swirling together to create an unsettling brew, one that had knocked both her and Richard completely off balance.
“Kate?”
She turned. Richard stood in the doorway, his expression boyish and guilty. She couldn't control the anger that speared through her, though she tried.
“Trouble sleeping?” he asked.
“Yes.”
He crossed to her, but didn't touch her. She glanced at him, then back out at the lake. Had things gotten so bad between them that he was afraid to touch her? And that she didn't care if he did?
“I'm sorry,” he said. He turned to her. “I really am, Kate.”
She had heard those words from him, said in exactly that way so many years ago. She sighed. “I know.”
“Will you ever forgive me?”
“I'm trying.”
But it wasn't as easy as it had once been. And that frightened her to her core.
He caught her hands. “Come to bed. Let me make love to you. Let me prove how much I love you.” When she hesitated, he brought her hands to his mouth. “Everything's going to be okay with us, Kate. The way it's always been. Trust me.”
She acquiesced and he led her to their bedroom, to their bed. They made love and she clung to the familiar, to the Richard she had known and loved for so long. The Richard she had been happy with.
But even as she did, she feared that nothing would ever be the same between them again.
R
ichard lay on his side and watched Kate as she slept. Two weeks had passed since the night he and Kate had fought. Two weeks since he had run to Julianna and held her in his arms. Two weeks of hell.
He moved his gaze over his wife's face, knowing each curve and hollow, each line and shadow by heart. They had been together long enough to know each other inside and out. He loved and admired her. He wished he had her goodness, her strength. He couldn't imagine his life without her.
Yet even as he lay beside her on their bed, he felt himself slipping away from her and toward Julianna. It was wrong. He knew that. Each day he headed to work armed by a night with Kate, by a night spent reminding himself of his responsibilities, his moral obligations, that a man was only as good as his word.
The minute he saw Julianna, reason, reminders and moral responsibilities flew out the window. She made him feel young again. Sexually potent. She awakened in him feelings, urges, he hadn't had in years.
He had become obsessed with the other woman. With thoughts of sex with herâhow she would taste, how it would feel to be inside her, the sounds she would make when she climaxed.
It had been two weeks of hell, of being torn between two different women, between right and wrong, love and lust.
Richard rolled onto his back and stared up at the ceiling and the gently whirling fan. Only an hour ago he and Kate had made love. When he'd climaxed he'd thought of Julianna. He had pictured her writhing under him, bucking against him with her own release, crying out his name.
But it had been his wife crying out his name, and his guilt had been a bitter, sobering brew.
He threw his arm across his eyes, disgusted with himself. What was wrong with him? He loved Kate. He loved their life together.
But he wanted Julianna. So much, he sometimes thought he would go mad if he didn't have her.
Julianna hadn't encouraged him. Quite the opposite, she had held him at arm's length, seemingly more conscious of his responsibilities and moral obligations than he.
They'd talked about their kiss, agreed it had been a mistake and that it would never happen again.
Easier said than done, he thought, stifling a groan. The air between them was electric; it all but crackled with awareness and unrelieved arousal. During the middle of a meeting he would find himself staring at her mouth, remembering and becoming aroused. While working, their hands or shoulders would brush; they would both look up at the same time and their gazes would lock.
And he would see his own longing mirrored back at him from her eyes.
If it were only sexual, he thought not for the first time, his head beginning to hurt, he could deal with it, could somehow conquer it. But everything about her called to him. When he looked at her he felt a deep urge to hold her close, to protect and possess her, the way men had been protecting and possessing women throughout time. She was everything a woman should beâsweet, vulnerable and bright, sexy as hell.
She had offered to quit. Had urged him to find someone else for the job. His family, she'd said, came first. They had to be strong, had to do the right thing.
He had refused. He couldn't do that to her; it wouldn't be fair or right. Besides being good at her job, she needed it.
No, it was up to him to be a man. To be strong; to exert self-control. It wouldn't be easyâfor either of themâbut they could do it.
The jangle of the phone startled him out of his musings. He grabbed it before it could ring a second time, not wanting Kate or Emma to be awakened.
It was Julianna. She was crying. Nearly hysterical.
“What wrong?” he asked alarmed.
“I don't know what to do. I'm so frightened.”
He glanced over his shoulder at Kate. She stirred, but didn't awaken. He sat up and pressed the phone tighter to his ear. “Tell me what's happened?”
“Someone tried to break in. I was sleeping andâ” she sucked in a broken-sounding breath “âhe rattled the doorknob and Iâ¦I saw someoneâ¦a figure at the window.”
“I'll be right there. Make sure all your doors and windows are locked, and just sit tight.”
He hung up the phone and climbed out of bed.
“Richard?” Kate mumbled. “What's going on?”
“The office,” he said. “There's been a break-in.”
The lie slipped so easily, so convincingly, past his lips it frightened him. He wished he could call it back. But he couldn't, he realized, stomach sinking. Now spoken, he was stuck with it.
“A break-in?” She eased up on an elbow, her expression concerned.
“I'm going to check it out.” Unable to look her in the eye, he turned his back to her and pulled on a pair of khakis and a golf shirt.
Fully awake now, she sat up, pushing the hair out of her eyes. “Are you sure it's safe? I don't know if it's such a good idea for you toâ”
“The police are there. They need one of the partners to come down and look the place over, reset the alarm, things like that.” He looked over his shoulder at her, smiling reassuringly. “Lucky me, my number must have topped the list.”
She frowned. “If you're sure it's safe?”
“I am.” Blood pounding in his head, Richard went around the bed, bent and kissed her. As he did, he was struck with what a big part of his life she was, how long they had been together, how much he loved her. And how close he was to losing it all.
No. He wouldn't allow that to happen. He was letting his imagination run away with him. He was going to help a friend in need. A woman who was alone and terrified. He'd lied about it becauseâ¦because it was late and he'd wanted to avoid a scene. That was all.
He bent and kissed Kate again, this time more deeply. “I love you, Kate,” he murmured, his voice catching. “Believe that.”
When he broke away, she clung to him a moment. She searched his gaze. “I'm scared, Richard.”
He knew she wasn't talking about tonight or about his going down to the firm to check out an attempted robbery. She was talking about them, the forever they had taken for granted for so long.
He kissed her one last time. More, he acknowledged, to reassure himself than her. “There's nothing to be scared of,” he said, forcing an easy smile. “I'll be back before you can say Jumpin' Jack Flash.”
J
ulianna opened the door and Richard stepped into her apartment. He closed and locked it behind him, then turned and met her eyes. They were both adults; they knew exactly what they were doingâwhy he had run right over, first lying to his wife, then kissing her three times before leaving.
They didn't speak. Julianna moved into his arms and pressed herself against him. Through her sheer gown he felt every curve and hollow of her body. He dropped his hands to her backside and pulled her closer, wanting her to feel how desperately and completely he wanted her.
At the contact, the breath shuddered past her lips. She rubbed herself against his erection, clinging to him, trembling.
He stripped off her gown; she his clothes. Naked they sank to the floor. She took him first in her hands, then her mouth, doing things to his body he had only dreamed of before.
Gasping, he rolled onto his back, lifted and impaled her. She thrust her hips forward and back, driving him to a fever pitch. And when she arched her back and screamed, he orgasmed violently.
Still shuddering with his release, realization set in. He'd fucked another woman, had broken his wedding vows, every promise he had ever made to his wife.
Only this time he couldn't blame his actions on booze or Kate's inattention; he couldn't blame Luke Dallas. What he had done had been with a clear head and full awareness of the consequences.
The consequences.
He sucked in a choked breath.
Dear God, he'd ruined his picture-perfect life. He'd thrown it away. On a woman, on a quick, sweaty roll in the hay.
Julianna purred and rubbed herself against him, and he felt sick. At what he'd done. That, God help him, he wanted to do it again. Now. Tomorrow. The day after that.
His body cooled. He tightened his arms around her. Even as he scrambled for a way out of what he'd done, a way to return to the honorable man he had been a minute before he'd succumbed, he realized he couldn't go back. That he didn't want to.
Now that he'd had Julianna, he couldn't imagine not having her again. She was in his blood now.