Chapter 12
Twelve
The door slammed open, ripping Molly from a sound sleep, and the light in the hall streamed in her room, silhouetting the tall, furious figure who stood there.
“What the hell do you mean by locking me out of my own house?” Patrick’s voice was dark with anger.
She turned to the little clock beside the bed, trying to squash down her initial panic.
Three-thirty. “I assumed you weren’t coming home tonight,” she answered haughtily, pulling the sheets around her thinly clad shoulders.
“I’m nervous when I’m left alone at night.
” She switched on the light and met his angry gaze with a cool assurance that matched Lisa Canning’s most intimidating stare.
“Oh, but you weren’t alone, were you?” he demanded with mock sweetness, coming to stand by the bed.
He was even more handsome than usual, the anger and frustration making his deep blue eyes glitter in the dim light.
He’d been drinking, not enough to make him drunk, just enough to give him an edge.
It should have frightened her, but instead she wanted to reach out and soothe away the angry lines in his forehead.
She didn’t dare. Besides, she was equally furious.
“What do you mean by that?” she said stonily. “Of course I’ve been alone. Which is more than I can say for you.”
“Then why did I see Toby Pentick’s blue car driving away from here as I came in?” he demanded in a voice as cold as ice. “At three o’clock in the morning!”
“You’re crazy,” she snapped. “There was no one here, and even if there was, it’s none of your concern, now is it? It’s not as if you have any use for me.” She stared at him defiantly, trying to hide the pounding of her senses, the heavy, frightened beating of her heart.
“I suppose he’s been with you all afternoon and evening, ever since I left you. No wonder I couldn’t find him. I should have known if I left you alone you’d be up to your old tricks. Lisa warned me.”
“She certainly did, didn’t she?” she said tartly.
She felt her mouth curve up in a taunting smile, almost of its own accord.
“Why shouldn’t Toby spend the night?” she asked him slowly, mockingly.
“After all, if my husband spends his night with a lover, why shouldn’t I?
” So this was how rumors got started, she thought almost absently. By her own destructive mouth.
“I told you I wouldn’t have you whoring around anymore.” His voice was calmer now, almost frightening in its quiet fury. “I meant what I said.”
“This dog in the manger attitude is absurd. You don’t want me, but no one else can have me, is that it?
Well, how are you planning to stop me?” She goaded him, goaded him purposefully.
Perhaps she knew what would happen, what she was pushing him toward, perhaps she didn’t.
Tension and violence were strong in the air, and she rose to meet them, mocking him.
There was something else in the air, something familiar yet foreign, in the sudden stillness of his angry blue eyes, the silky menace of his body that had nothing to do with violence.
“That’s the second time in the last minute you’ve accused me of not wanting you,” he said in a slow, mesmerizing voice. “Are you trying to tell me something, Molly?”
Now her fear had suddenly become real. “Listen to me, Patrick,” she said urgently, clutching vainly for the covers.
He’d reached down and yanked them away from her.
“It’s a little too late for modesty, isn’t it?
” he said with deceptive gentleness, undoing his shirt.
“I assume you don’t mind if I take up where Toby left off.
” He pulled the shirt from his jeans. “You’ve made it clear to me that every man in town has had you.
I think it’s about time that your husband tried out your talents. ”
Molly watched him in a daze as he went over and kicked the door shut.
He yanked off his shirt, coming closer, and she looked up at him with a fierce panic mixed with an undeniable desire.
He was strong, lean, muscled, with just a faint matting of hair on his chest. No wonder she hadn’t remembered making love with him.
She never had. Never touched him. Never lay in his arms. And she’d wanted to. Quite desperately.
She wanted him now. But not with rage and contempt, not by pushing him so far into anger that he couldn’t pull back. “No, Patrick,” she whispered helplessly, trying to move back out of his reach. “Not this way.”
“ ‘No, Patrick,’ ” he mocked. “Why ever not, Molly?” He reached out and caught her arm, pulling her upright toward him. “You’ve always maintained you liked it rough.”
Curse my big mouth, she thought numbly, trying to jerk away, but he reached out and caught her, pulling her against the heat and hardness of him.
The feel of his bare skin against her set off new sparks of longing and panic, and she pushed against him, not certain what she wanted.
He was too strong, too determined, too furious.
He pushed her down on the bed, and a moment later his body covered hers.
She almost gave up fighting then. He put his mouth over hers, and there was no denying the harsh, demanding sensuality of his lips, his tongue, thrusting against her.
He was aroused, angry, and she should have known better than to let her humiliation and anger get the better of her. She should have known better.
If she had any sense she’d tell him no. He might be furious, he might have been drinking, but she knew, instinctively, that all she had to say was no, one more time, and he’d walk away from the bed, from her.
And she didn’t want him to do that.
She slid her arms around his neck and kissed him back.
It seemed to startle him. She didn’t know whether it was her lack of expertise, or the very fact that she was responding. If he was bent on hurting her, punishing her, he would have pulled away.
But he didn’t. His kiss gentled, teased at her lips, teaching her, kissing her with slow, deliberate delight that sent waves of pleasure through her body.
There was no longer any question as to what was going to happen, and she wondered if she should tell him the truth.
Tell him to be gentle, to go slow, to seduce her, love her.
She said nothing. If he left her now he would never come back, and she had no doubt whatsoever that he would leave. Abandon her to her unwanted purity.
She could feel him, hard against her belly. She could taste the desire and reluctant passion in his kiss, and all she could think was, at least he wants this much from me. And there was no way she was going to keep him from it.
He reached down and fumbled with his belt, one strong hand more than enough to keep her captive in a prison she didn’t want to escape. He moved her unresisting legs apart, and then paused, staring down at her from his dark, stormy eyes.
“Tell me to go away,” he said, and it was a plea, a dare, a taunt. “Tell me you don’t want me. Tell me no.”
He was resting against the center of her, and she’d never felt such heat, such longing, such emptiness in her life. “Yes,” she said, clutching at his shoulders, pulling him to her, over her, into her.
He filled her, sinking in deep, and she cried out with the sharp pain of it and then was silent.
She thought she could feel the start of surprise in his body, and for a moment he was still.
She could hear his breath rasping above her in the darkness, and she was terrified that now he’d pull away. Leave her.
But he didn’t. His hands loosed their bruising hold on her wrists and reached up to frame her face, and his mouth gently, lovingly kissed away the tears from her cheeks, her eyes, her mouth. Tears she hadn’t even known she’d shed.
Those kisses were a blessing, an apology, a promise, and she could feel the initial panic begin to fade.
Heat returned, as he began to move, slowly at first, coaxing her along, bringing her with him, until she was clinging to him, desperately, as he thrust faster, deeper, carrying her to a place of darkness and delight.
Everything became lost in a swirl of dizziness, a dizziness that was bringing her closer and closer to something she couldn’t quite comprehend.
She moved with him, instinctively, and she held him fiercely, wrapping her arms and legs around him as they climbed higher and higher.
Until the world and Patrick exploded within her.
When he finally moved she made a soft sound of protest. He left the bed and walked out of the room, and she closed her eyes to let the tears pour down her face, no longer fighting them back.
And then he was back, drawing her trembling, unresisting body into his suddenly tender arms and holding her close against the warmth and strength of him. It felt safe, it felt indelibly right. This was where she’d always wanted to be. This was where she belonged.
When her crying finally halted, he pulled back slightly, just far enough to see her face. “What the hell is going on, Molly?” he asked quietly.
She concentrated with deep interest at his muscled shoulder, too shy to meet his fierce blue gaze. He put one hand under her chin and drew her head up. “I said, what’s going on?”
She tried to shrug, but his body was wrapped so tightly, securely around hers that she couldn’t. “It seems obvious enough,” she answered in a low voice. “I was a virgin.”
His other hand moved the curtain of tangled hair from her face. “And all those men, all those stories—they were lies?”
“I suppose they would have to be. I don’t remember.” She shut her eyes in exhaustion and moved closer still, pressing her body against his, instinctively, as if searching for warmth and comfort.
“Don’t do that,” he said sharply, making no effort to move away. She laid her head against his chest, aware of the sudden response in him, exulting in it. She moved her face, pressing her mouth against his shoulder, and the pulse seemed to jump beneath his smooth flesh.