Chapter 3 #3
With a quiet murmur of agreement, he ran his hand up her back until her body was fitted against his.
It amazed him how much he’d wanted to hold her like this.
Her head nestled perfectly against his shoulder, as if they had been made to dance together.
He had a moment’s regret that there wasn’t music, something low and pulsing.
The thought made him smile. None of the women in his life had ever wanted to have the stage set.
Nor had he ever had the urge to set one before.
“Relax,” he murmured, and slid his hand up to the back of her neck. “I’m not going to make love with you. I’m only going to kiss you.”
Panic had her straining away. “No, I don’t . . .”
The fingers at the back of her neck shifted, tightened, held firm.
Later, when she could think, she would tell herself that he had inadvertently touched some nerve, some secret vulnerability.
An unspeakable pleasure sprang into her, and her head fell back in submission.
On the heels of that flash of sensation he brought his lips to hers.
She went rigid, though not from fear, not from anger, and certainly not in resistance. It was shock, wave after wave of it. A live wire, she thought dimly. Somehow she had closed her hand over a live wire, and the voltage was deadly.
His lips barely touched hers, teasing, titillating, tormenting.
It was a caress, mouth against mouth, unbearably erotic.
Then it was a nibble, an almost playful nibble.
And a caress again, sweet and light and compelling.
His lips were warm and smooth as they rubbed a whispering trail over hers.
In arousing contrast, the stubble of his beard scraped roughly over her cheek as he turned his head to trace the outline of her lips with his tongue.
It was intimate, impossibly so, the way he tasted her, toyed with her. His tongue dipped to hers, savoring dark new flavors, before he changed the mood again and caught her bottom lip between his teeth, nipping, stopping unerringly at a point between pleasure and pain.
It was seduction, the kind she had never dreamed of. Slow, soft-edged, inescapable seduction. She could hear the low, helpless sound that caught in her throat as he closed his teeth lightly over her chin.
The hand that had tensed against his chest began to tremble. She felt the solid cabin floor sway under her feet. Her rigidity melted degree by degree until she was shuddering with the heat and pliant in his arms.
He’d never experienced anything, anyone, like her. It was as though she had melted against him, quietly, completely. Her taste was fresh, like the air that wafted through the open window. He heard the soft, yielding sound of her sigh.
Then her arms were around him, clinging. She plunged her fingers deep into his hair as she strained against him. In a heartbeat, her mouth went from submissive to avid, pressing hungrily, possessively, desperately, against his. Rocked by the force, he dived into the kiss and let passion rule.
She wanted . . . too much. Why hadn’t she known she’d been starving?
Just the taste of him made her ravenous.
Her body felt as though it would explode as dozens of new sensations arrowed into it, each of them sharp, separate and stunning.
A muffled cry escaped her when his arms tightened painfully around her. She was no longer trembling—but he was.
What was she doing to him? He couldn’t catch his breath.
He couldn’t think. But he could feel—too much, too quickly.
The loss of control was more dangerous to a pilot than an uncharted meteor storm.
He’d only meant to give and take a moment of pleasure, to satisfy a simple need.
But this was more than pleasure, and it was far from simple.
He needed to pull back before he was sucked into something he didn’t yet understand.
He drew her away with unsteady hands. It helped—a little—that her breathing was as ragged as his. Her eyes were wide and stunned. Yes, stunned was the word, he decided. He felt as though he’d flown into the side of a building.
What had he done? Confused, she lifted a hand to her lips. What had she done? She could almost feel her blood bubbling through her veins. Libby took a step back, wanting to find solid ground again, and easy answers.
“Wait.” He couldn’t resist. He might curse himself for it later, but he couldn’t resist. Before the first shock waves had passed, he hauled her against him a second time.
Not again. The single thought echoed in both their minds as they went under. The pull was just as strong, the need just as gripping. She felt herself seesaw between limp surrender and furious demand before she managed to yank herself free.
She nearly stumbled, and caught the back of a kitchen chair to steady herself.
Her knuckles went white on the wood as she stared at him, dragging air into her lungs.
She knew nothing about him, yet she had given him more than she had ever given anyone.
Her mind was trained to ask questions, but at the moment it was her heart, fragile and irrational, that held sway.
“If you’re going to stay here, in this house, I don’t want you to touch me again.”
It was fear he saw in her eyes now. He understood it, as he felt a trace of it himself. “I didn’t expect that any more than you did. I’m not sure I like it any more than you do.”
“Then we shouldn’t have any trouble avoiding anything like this in the future.”
He tucked his hands in his pockets and rocked back on his heels, not bothering to analyze why he was suddenly so angry. “Listen, babe, that was just as much your doing as mine.”
“You grabbed me.”
“No, I kissed you. You did the grabbing.” It gave him little satisfaction to see her color rise. “I didn’t force myself on you, Libby, and we both know it. But if you want to pretend you’ve got ice in your veins, that’s fine with me.”
The embarrassed flush fled from her face, leaving it very white and very still. In contrast, her eyes went dark and wide. The stunned hurt that glazed them had him cursing himself and stepping forward.
“I’m sorry.”
She shifted behind the chair and managed to speak calmly. “I don’t want or expect an apology from you, but I do expect cooperation.”
His eyes narrowed. “You’ll get both.”
“I have a lot of work to do. You’re welcome to take the television into your room, and there are books on the shelf by the fireplace. I’d appreciate it if you’d stay out of my way for the rest of the day.”
He dug his hands into his pockets. If she wanted to be stubborn, he could match her. “Fine.”
She waited, her arms crossed over her chest, until he strode out of the room. She wanted to throw something, preferably something breakable. He had no right to say that to her after what he’d made her feel.
Ice in her veins? No, her problem had always been that she felt too much, wanted too much.
Except when it came to personal, physical, one-to-one relationships with men.
Miserable, she yanked out the chair and dropped onto it.
She was a devoted daughter, a loving sister, a faithful friend.
But no one’s lover. She’d never experienced the driving need for intimacy.
At times she’d been certain there was something lacking in her.
With one kiss, Cal had made her want things she’d almost convinced herself weren’t important.
At least not for her. She had her work, she was ambitious, and she knew she would make her mark.
She had her family, her friends, her associates.
Damn it, she was happy. She didn’t need some hotshot pilot who couldn’t keep his plane in the air to come along and make her feel restless—and alive, she mused, running a fingertip over her bottom lip.
She hadn’t known just how alive she could feel until he’d kissed her.
It was ridiculous. More unnerved than annoyed, she sprang up to pour another cup of coffee.
He’d simply reminded her of something she forgot from time to time.
She was a young, normal, healthy woman. A woman, she remembered, who had just spent several months on a remote island in the South Pacific.
What she needed was to finish her dissertation and get back to Portland.
Socialize, take in some movies, go to a few parties.
What she needed, she decided with a nod, was to get Caleb Hornblower on his way, back to wherever the devil he came from.
Taking the coffee, she started upstairs. For all she knew, he might have dropped down from the moon.
She passed his room and couldn’t prevent a quick snicker when she heard the frantic sounds of a television game show. The man, she thought as she slipped behind her own door, was easily entertained.