Love on the Line (23 page)

Read Love on the Line Online

Authors: Pamela Aares

Tags: #Romance, #baseball, #Contemporary, #sports

He hauled in a breath and willed his body to submit to his command. Then he parted her robe and cupped her breast. The sensation of her smooth warm skin and the beauty of her body tested him. He ran his thumb over her already hard nipple. She arched up with a gasp that he hoped was pure pleasure. He smoothed his hand down her belly, then followed it with his lips. When she tried to sit up and reach for him, he pressed her back to the bed with his forearm. And gave silent thanks that his physical power could constrain her and allow him to continue on the path he’d charted for her pleasure. He held her pinned and traced his mouth along the crease of her thigh. When he parted her folds with his tongue and tasted her silky, salty wetness, she cried out and plunged her hands into his hair. He resisted her effort to draw him away and back up to her mouth.

“I promised you slow, Cara.”

He teased her with his tongue and wasn’t sure when he heard her muffled sighs, when her hands gripped the sheets and her hips bucked up against his mouth, that he had the control he’d imagined. But he focused on her pleasure, drinking in her cries and keeping her pressed down into the bed. He circled his tongue over her and felt her shudder, drank in her moan and slid a finger into her. Her muscles contracted around his finger as she cried out his name. Never had his name sounded so good. She grabbed his hair again and tugged, hard, making him more intent on staying right where he was and doing exactly what he was doing.

“Ryan—”

He dipped a second finger inside her, and she gasped.

“Ryan, you’ve”—she dragged in a breath—“you’ve proven... your point.” She tugged at his hair once again, harder this time. “I’ll die if I don’t feel you inside me and—Oh!”

He loved the feeling of her hands in his hair, the passion her grip telegraphed. He moved his fingers slowly inside her, angling them to the spot that would send her over. He ignored the insistent throbbing in his groin and traced slow, near-teasing circles with his tongue. A shudder of ecstasy took her, and her legs tightened around his shoulders as she arched up. And then she went still.

He stood and kicked off his jeans, pulled his shirt over his head. She leaned up on her elbows, the aftermath of pleasure still pooling in her eyes, the glisten of sweat lighting the curves of her body. Her cheeks were flushed, and she looked thoroughly loved. When her robe slipped from her shoulders, she wriggled free of it. Ryan drew on a condom and watched her watching him as he unrolled it up his erection. And prayed that the insane pulse of want that flooded him was his to harness and control.

She held out her hand and he took it, pinning it above her head. He took her other hand and did the same. Her eyes went wide as he teased her, circling and barely dipping the tip of his erection inside her. She fought to free her hands, but he held firm. She moaned and bucked up against him, sheathing him with her heat, her muscles contracting around him and flooding him with intense sensation. He held her captive as he stroked into her, holding his weight up and away from her so that the only place they were joined was inside her and at their palms. She tossed her head in the side-to-side almost uncontrollable rhythm that revealed her pleasure and matched each of his deep thrusts. She tried again to release her hands, but he met her effort with deeper thrusts. How long he could hold back, he didn’t know. All he knew was that in that moment, she was his. His. And he’d do what it took to keep her that way.

He wedged his hips between her thighs and released her hands, running his palms up her hips to cup her bottom and pull her tightly to him. She wrapped her legs around his hips, and he plunged, each thrust taking him nearly beyond his control. He slowed and dipped down to once again taste her lips, and met the ecstatic thrusts of her tongue against his.

Never had he wanted to pleasure a woman as he wanted to pleasure her. Never had he known such beauty as he saw in her. He wanted the moment to last, wanted to hold time back and to forever feel the power coursing between them. But she arched into him, pressing her breasts against his chest, digging her fingers into the muscles of his back and writhing against him so that her nipples danced over his, and he was lost.

He lifted her hips high and drove into her until her cries and his were indistinguishable, until the fire in him exploded and he could hold back no more. He held her gaze as the power took them, shuddered with the force of it and the stripped-to-the-bone pleasure that flooded her eyes.

He lowered to his forearms, holding his full weight off her and willed his breathing to settle. She looked up at him, and he had no words for the emotion he saw in her eyes. He touched his forehead to hers, then kissed her cheek and then her lips.

“I’m thinking that you can’t possibly know how beautiful you are,” he whispered against her lips.

Her eyes widened and even through the flush of their lovemaking, he saw her blush. He kissed the tip of her nose and slid out of her.

“I thought you didn’t.” He propped himself up on an elbow and brushed a strand of hair back away from her face. “And you know why?”

She shook her head. Her breathing hadn’t settled. She shivered, and he pulled the edge of the duvet to cover her. “Because there aren’t words for such beauty.”

She laughed. It was a laugh like he’d never heard—a laugh that a person who believed in heaven or angels might hear from a creature inhabiting those realms. Nothing could have made him happier.

She lifted up to her elbows and motioned for him to lie beside her.

“I’d be lying if I told you that the power I feel when we connect doesn’t scare me,” she said in a soft, still-breathless voice.

“No,” he said, stroking her cheek with his thumb. “There’s no need to be scared.” He lifted his other hand and cradled her face in his palms. “Our bodies are meant to harness this power, to share it. But I’ll admit it’s a mystery. It’s as mysterious as knowing before a pitch is thrown that I’ll connect. The resonance between people, no one knows what it’s made of.”

She put her palm to his chest, above his heart.

“I hadn’t meant to love you, Ryan.”

Love. The word stopped him.
Light speed
. That seemed to be the pace of what was happening between them. From the way Cara colored and slipped her gaze away from his, the speed had taken her by surprise too. And though she said she loved him, she’d said it as if it were a painful confession rather than something she was happy about. That she’d be unhappy about her feelings for him hadn’t crossed his mind.

And he sure didn’t want their morning together to end on an unhappy note. That wasn’t part of his plan. Not part of his plan at all.

He looked around the room, searching for something to say, something to do, some bridge to stretch between the life-rocking moments and the day-to-day world. He saw a small painting hanging next to a poster of wildflowers. A painting of the countryside.

He stood and walked over to the painting. It was simply done; the stippled colors reminded him of the hills near his childhood home in the spring. “This is beautiful,” he said. Words were still stubborn, elusive, not at his beck and call. He peered closer. The painting looked remarkably like the ones he’d seen at the exhibit opening that Alex had dragged him to after a day game the previous week.

Perhaps he imagined it, but Cara darted between him and the painting as if there was something she didn’t want him to see.

“How about that coffee I promised?” she said.

Her voice had a cool tone, but he could feel the heat of her body even though she was inches away. He batted away a ridiculous ping of warning and reached for her.

“Um... sure. But first—”

He pulled her to him and cradled her face with his hand, dipped his lips to hers and tasted. Their bodies were still slick with sweat, and he felt her nipples go hard against him as he pressed her closer. She didn’t stop him as he tracked his hand down the curve of her belly and slipped it between them, lowering it to touch her slick, wet sex.

An alarm sounded from beside her bed.

She groaned and walked over to silence it.

He glanced at his watch. Though it seemed like hours had passed since he’d carried her upstairs, it was only seven thirty. “Do you have to drive the bus?”

“Parent-teacher day,” she said with a near-wicked smile.

He moved toward her.

“No,” she said, backing away. “
You
may have had breakfast, but I haven’t.”

She lifted the robe from her bed, slipped it on and tied the belt. Maybe she knew that the silk hugged her curves and accentuated the swell of her breasts beneath it. Maybe she didn’t. Either way it had the same effect on him. He hoped it’d be a quick breakfast.

In the small kitchen she moved like a dancer running through a well-rehearsed routine. Her movements lent a grace to the simple activities as she scooped a gray porridge-like cereal into a pan on the stove and made coffee. The aroma of the coffee melded with the scent of their lovemaking.

He’d never think of coffee the same way again.

He was grateful for the simple routine, the activities of her making breakfast. He’d felt awkward after sex in the past, but never had he felt odd tension that gripped his chest as he watched her move about the kitchen. Making love with her had cut through to a place he hadn’t even known he’d needed to guard. As he watched her, it occurred to him that she might feel the same vulnerability. Though it wasn’t kind to wish it so, he did. He’d hate to be traveling that territory alone. She hadn’t spoken of the sex that’d just blown his mind, but she had used the word
love
. Evidently he’d made an impression. But the way she’d said it, it felt almost like past tense. He was still sorting through his thoughts as she poured two mugs and set them, along with her bowl of steaming cereal, on the table.

“Why a ranch, Ryan?” She sipped at her coffee. “I mean, I get the donkey rescue. Love it, really. But how’d you decide to buy the ranch in the first place?”

She spooned a bite of the cereal from her bowl, and he had a hard time not staring at her lips as she ate it off the spoon. She saw him staring and smiled.

“Are you sure you don’t want some?”

He shook his head.

“I’m always curious how people figure out how to orient their lives,” she said. “I’m still working at that myself.”

She’d lost her job, and he hadn’t even mentioned it. He felt like a heel. Her livelihood had been pulled from under her and here he was acting like everything was fine, selfishly chasing after his own dreams.

“I was sorry to hear about your job.”

She rested the spoon in the bowl and shook her head. “It’s okay, I’ll get another one. But I liked driving the bus. The kids. The routine.”

She nibbled at a half-burned piece of toast. He resisted the urge to lunge across the table and kiss her.

“But really,” she went on, “I’d like to know how you decided to come out here, buy the ranch and get involved with the town.”

He was grateful for a topic he could talk about easily. Since they’d come downstairs, his mind had been reeling with scenarios he’d spun of a future with her, scenarios it was way too early to explore. At least he knew how to talk about the ranch.

“I came out here to...” Why exactly had he come out to Albion Bay? He knew the steps he’d taken that had landed him in the town, but they didn’t add up to the reality.

“Well, the first thing you should know is that baseball’s as addictive as a drug for guys like me who’ve loved it most of their lives. It seems like the hankering’s always been in me, driving me, and it only settles down if I’m playing.”

He tapped his fingers on the edge of the table, remembering. “For years it was all I cared about. But when I got called up to the majors, I wasn’t prepared for the warp-shift. Most guys aren’t. All of a sudden, the game has a world spun around it, like arms and legs of a strange creature—the press, the fans, the lifestyle. Nobody’s ever ready for the mind-bending ramp-up when it happens. And it happens fast if you’re lucky. If you’re not, you can wallow down in the minors and watch it all go by.”

He stopped. “Sorry. You asked about the ranch, not baseball.”

“No. I want to hear what you’re moving toward, what you left behind, what comes up—that’s all part of it. It is for me.”

“What did you leave behind?” He knew so little about the woman who’d just rocked every cell in his body.

“We were talking about you,” she said. “I want to hear, Ryan.”

And to his astonishment, he wanted to talk, wanted to see how she’d respond to the rest of his world, not just his body.

“You probably guessed that I’m still working out the money thing. I grew up without it. My parents never talked about money, never told me that we were poor, but it didn’t take a genius to see how my mom took on odd jobs so I could have a new bat or glove, saved so she could get a second car to drive me to games in the summers.”

He stood and paced to the sink, looked out the window at the pots of herbs and vegetables she’d planted. Looking for the threads of the story he’d never told before.

“My dad, he just worked all the time. He’d rope me into jobs on the ranch. I liked those times. When I was doing ranch work beside him, I felt like he saw me. When I played baseball, he didn’t. I thought he was afraid that if I gave up my schooling, that I’d be stuck being a ranch hand, that I’d end up just like him. He was furious when I quit college to sign with the Red Sox.”

He glanced over at Cara and noticed she’d stopped eating. “Your cereal’s getting cold.”

She picked up her spoon, but rather than putting it into her bowl, she waved it at him. “How did you end up with the ranch?”

Embarrassment flooded him. He’d been rambling, not making any sense. “I’ve been told I’m a lousy storyteller, I—”

“Whoever told you that is an idiot,” she said with a light laugh.

Her laugh freed something in him. He wanted to tell her his story, yearned to. So what if he couldn’t follow a solid storyline?

“When I came out here, I had it in my head to buy my dad a ranch, a place of his own. I found the place up here—well, Alex helped me—and I bought it. I sent my dad the pictures. Told him it was his.”

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