Wedding Series Boxed Set (3 Books in 1) (The Wedding Series) (73 page)

But he was more urgent, his strong hands shifting her, steadying her when she hardly kept her sense of balance. He seemed to understand her balance better than she did, bringing her to equilibrium astride his thighs at the same time he dizzied her with his mouth and hands.

She waited for him to complete their joining, but he didn’t, drawing her down to him, but no farther. He slid his hands up her belly, across her ribs and around her breasts, his thumbs brushing the tips with a feathering touch so she wanted to cry out for more. She needed more.

And he gave it to her.

He lifted up to take one nipple in his mouth, tugging gently, then more deeply to suckle strongly.

Still she needed more, and she reached for it in the only way she could, by seeking to take him inside her, just as his hips surged to meet her.

She did cry out then. A cry of completion, and of a beginning toward another kind of completion.

What had started slow and dreamy, ended in need nearly as frantic as the first time. Replaced by the necessity of meeting each other as fully, as strongly, as possible. And left her sated and exhausted.

She fell asleep marveling at that.

Grady knew by the rhythm of her breathing against his arm that she was asleep. It was his first realization when he came back to rational thought.

The second was a kind of self-horror. What had he done? He wished he didn’t know the answer, but he did: He’d lost a precious level of control. Not all of it, thank God, not enough to hurt her in his driving desire—he never wanted to hurt her. Still, too much. Much too much.

He’d always prided himself on being a considerate, patient lover. No woman had ever faulted him there. Smooth, that’s how he liked to think of himself.

But there had been nothing smooth about this lovemaking. Nothing considerate, nothing patient. It had been as raw as the need he’d expressed in words and actions.

His feelings for Leslie had been stripped to a primitive base he’d never recognized in himself, much less expressed.

And now he didn’t know how to reclothe those feelings in polite trappings.

He prided himself on comfortable mornings-after. He worked hard to make them that way, by never doing anything that could be regretted in the light of day. No declarations, no impulses, no revelations.

But hadn’t their lovemaking been all those?

A glance toward Leslie ended almost before it began. He swore viciously at himself. He couldn’t even look at her when she was asleep. How could he when she woke? He tried to imagine enacting the casual, urbane behavior of his customary mornings-after. He couldn’t.

Carefully he eased out of the bed. He stilled when Leslie stirred, but she didn’t wake as he silently dressed. He found a piece of paper and pen by the telephone. He stared at it a long time, finally wrote a few words, signed it and propped it against the phone.

He opened the door but before he crossed the threshold, he turned and looked back.

The shadows seemed to shift, break up and reform, like clouds in a restless sky. But he could make out Leslie’s face, the strength and beauty of the bone structure highlighted like a pen-and-ink drawing. Her right hand, pale and elegant in the faint light, rested on the sheet. It would have rested on his chest if he had stayed where he was, a gentle weight against his skin.

He walked out without closing the door behind him.

* * * *

“So you wrap up the Burroughs deal this afternoon?” Paul asked before taking a healthy hunk out of his hamburger. Since Bette had developed an aversion to onions and pickles, he indulged those tastes at lunch.

“Two-thirty, so we have to keep this get-together short.”

Grady would have preferred not to have it at all. But when Paul asked him to lunch, he could think of no excuse except the truth—he didn’t want someone who knew him so well examining him. Bad enough that his housekeeper, Harriet, his employees and the man at the newsstand looked at him as if he were a bomb about to go off. At least they didn't say anything. Paul wouldn’t be that reticent.

“Bette said you stopped by the house last week.”

"Yes."

“She said you planned to spend the Fourth in D.C.”

“Yes.”

“Suppose, you planned to see Leslie Craig?’

“Yes.”

“Must have been a short trip.”

“Yes.”

“Things didn’t go the way you planned?”

“Back off, Monroe.”

“Boy, you're in a foul mood.” Paul placidly chewed another hefty bite without taking his eyes off Grady. “Here I am, trying to catch up on what’s going on in a friend’s life and he jumps on me. Something bothering you?”

“I said back off, and I meant it. The last thing I want right now is some lecture from you on not hurting people. Unless I do it from—what was it you called it?—honest thoughtlessness. Good to know I’m an honest jerk.”

Paul studied him with narrowed eyes, then put down the burger. His brows slowly rose as his expression changed.

“How the mighty are fallen.”

Grady swore, but Paul leaned back comfortably and grinned. “You know one of the things I noticed when I was first seeing Bette was a tendency to snap at my best friends. First I made some crack to Michael, then I ripped your hide a bit. Strange thing, huh?”

Grady glared at him.

"Looking back I figure it was because I was fighting myself, but it was easier to take it out on you guys.”

Paul was full of it. He wasn’t falling for Leslie, not the way Paul had fallen for Bette. He just...cared about her. And he didn’t have experience at dealing with anyone as a friend and lover. He needed time to adjust.

“On the other hand, maybe it’s simpler in your case. Maybe it’s the Burroughs deal, having something you thought was wrapped up only to have it unravel again, when you’d rather be in Washington getting that operation going. And you’d rather be spending time with someone nice.”

Grady knew Paul Monroe too well not to realize his words, placating as they might sound, carried a strong element of teasing, if not downright glee. But he wasn’t in the mood to battle this one out.

“Maybe.”

“Sure, that’s probably it,” Paul said cheerfully. “You’re overworked and you miss—” Their eyes met, Paul’s dancing, Grady’s warning. “Uh, Washington. Pretty city, Washington. Exciting, too. Center of power and all that. And of course there’s your business there.”

That conclusion allowed Grady to relax enough to get through the rest of the meal on good terms with Paul. But all that afternoon and throughout a celebratory business dinner with Burroughs and the other principals, a persistent thought jangled in his head.

He did miss Washington. But it had nothing to do with the city or business. He missed Leslie.

The next day he flew to D.C.

* * * *

She’d expected it. Though never, even in her most pessimistic moments, quite that quickly.

I will call you. Grady.

That’s what the note on her nightstand said. Should she contact the Guinness Book of World Records? This had to be a record for fastest, shortest brush-off.

She’d gone to bed with a man with a long-standing reputation for being all pursuit, and she’d woken up to a four-word note—five counting the signature. Did signatures count? Why should she be surprised? Or hurt.

This man she’d set out to get to know so she could help him had, instead, come to know her too well. He knew how to short-circuit her resolve to break off with him for good. And he knew, God help her, how to make her happy. She wouldn’t—couldn’t—let that become an ability to make her unhappy. She’d learned a hard lesson when her marriage ended: never look to anyone else for happiness.

But she knew Grady, too.

She’d known what was likely to happen and it had; knowing what to expect, she’d still done it. Craigs learned early to accept the consequences of their actions; she’d handle this. Not even the best mother hen succeeds every time. She’d salvage what she could of her pride and poise, and smooth it over so Tris, Michael, Paul and Bette wouldn’t feel forced to choose one or the other of them.

So when her buzzer sounded early Saturday afternoon and the voice over the intercom announced it was Grady, she knew what she had to do.

She had a bad moment when he walked in. Echoes of his touches still sang in her body, and it was hard not to reach for him. Harder still to take the necessary step back when he stretched out a hand that would have caressed her hair, He dropped his hand to his side and went past her. She didn’t offer him a seat, but he didn’t seem to notice. He paced to the far end of the couch, turned and came back to her, before repeating the pattern.

"I guess I should have called, let you know when I was coming back to town instead of showing up at your door, but I wasn’t sure how to...I mean, what to say to you."

"That’s all right. I didn’t expect to hear from you.”

He spun around and stared at her. He looked irate.

“Why not? I said I’ll call you.” He sounded irate, too. “You didn’t believe me?”

Stifling the questions that surged to her lips—
Should I believe you? Do you want me to believe you
?—she marshaled the approach she’d planned.

She shrugged, as if his calling didn’t matter.

He winced, masking those beautiful blue eyes for an instant.

“I meant it, Leslie. I may be a lot of things not all that admirable, but I am not a liar. I meant it.” He looked at her, then out the window, then at the wall before zeroing in on the back of the sofa. “And I mean it when I say that the other night...It—being with you, making love with you . . .”

His voice trailed off, and she could feel the prickle of awareness shimmer along her skin. No, no, she couldn’t let herself think.

“Making love with you was—” He’d started off well, but came to a stop. “Was good—I mean, it was so good, it was...special.”

She could safely look at him because he was looking everywhere but at her. He’d sounded miserable at the end. The misery of sincerity, the frustration of trying to express unaccustomed emotions and feeling you failed? Could he—

No! How could she let herself think that way? It was awkwardness. The awkwardness of a decent human being in an uncomfortable situation he didn’t know how to extricate himself from without inflicting pain. That’s where she came in—Make-It-All-Better Leslie.

She forced a brightness into her voice she didn’t feel.

“That’s nice of you, but not necessary.”

His eyes snapped to her face and she wished he’d kept studying the couch.

“What do you mean, not necessary?”

“You don’t have to say those things.”

“I know I don’t have to. I want to.”

“I just don’t want you to make a bigger deal of it than it really is, Grady.”

He went ominously still.

“So it wasn’t a big deal to you?”

His intensity was making her uncomfortable. “I don’t mean it the way you’re making it sound, like I do that sort of thing lightly.”

“I know you don’t do it lightly.” Under the heat of his long look that seemed to recall each moment and touch of their Fourth of July night, her resolve began to evaporate. “That’s why I don’t understand what you’re saying.”

She tightened her grip on her reactions and shrugged.

"I'm saying it’s not the end of the world. We can go on being friends. In fact, I think it’ll be easier. You were right. There was that chemistry between us. Probably curiosity more than anything else. But after, uh, after the other night, we’ve gotten that out of the way. So now we can get back to being friends like before.”

He stared at her, but she could read nothing in his face. How could eyes be so unrevealing?

"Gotten it out of the way? That’s how you feel about making love with me? That’s how you felt when I touched you and your skin seemed to hum with the pleasure of it? When you touched me and I thought I would explode’? When I was deep inside you? You were getting it out of the way?”

She was too stunned by the raw pain and anger beneath his controlled voice to react.

“Well, we'll just get all of this out of the way for good, Leslie. You can kiss me goodbye and have it out of the way for damned good.”

He gripped her above the elbows and hauled her against him. Stiff with shock, she felt the hardness of his body against hers, the harshness of his mouth on hers. But before she could gentle either the kiss or the touch, he released her sharply and backed away.

She thought he was going to say something more, but instead, he walked out of the apartment.

“Grady.”

Her own whisper finally broke the spell of immobility. She went after him, starting down the stairs. They had to talk. What would they say? She didn’t know. But she couldn’t have him thinking what he thought now.

“Grady!”

The only answer was the echoing slam of the outside door three flights below.

* * * *

The drive to the airport was a blur of monuments, green vegetation along the parkway and snatches of muddy Potomac waters. Turning in the rental car and buying his ticket moments ago were a vague memory. But each of Leslie’s words was as clear as when she spoke it.

I just don’t want you to make a bigger deal of it than it really is, Grady...Curiosity more than anything else. But after...the other night, we’ve gotten that out of the way.

As clear, and as sharp as arrows. She’d taken aim at him and she’d scored a bull’s-eye.

That’s when it hit him. She’d done it deliberately.

He stopped dead two feet from the gate check-in.

This was another of Leslie’s barriers. Not all that different from the thousand-miles-apart, age-gap, different-lifestyles obstacles she’d raised and he’d disposed of. But there had to be something else, something more basic that caused her to put these blockades in their path.

“Do you mind?” The voice behind him made it clear its owner did mind. Grady came back to the present, and the realization he’d blocked someone’s path to the counter.

Stepping to one side, he looked at the ticket in his hand. He hadn’t made a success of himself in business by giving up. And this was a damn sight more important than business—a damn sight harder to figure out, too.

Other books

Ambulance Girl by Jane Stern
Not A Good Look by Nikki Carter
Thousandth Night by Alastair Reynolds
Living to Tell the Tale by Gabriel García Márquez, Edith Grossman
The Tide of Victory by Eric Flint
Forgotten by Kailin Gow