Marriage On The Edge. Sandra Marton

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Marriage On The Edge - Sandra Marton страница 7

Marriage On The Edge - Sandra Marton

Скачать книгу

style="font-size:15px;">      Gage shut off the shower, stepped out and strode into the bedroom with a towel tied around his waist.

      Natalie wanted out? Fine. So did he. Wasn’t that exactly what he’d been thinking while he’d dressed for the party last night?

      What they’d had, what he’d thought they had, just wasn’t there anymore. The truth was, they quarreled all the time. Over everything. Natalie didn’t hurry to the door when he came home. Hell, most of the time she wasn’t even there when he came home, not even after he’d busted his tail flying through five time zones to get to her, the way he’d done a couple of weeks ago after he’d opened the newest Baron’s in Samoa, where he’d had to grin like an idiot while some broad with too many teeth and not enough clothes had propped her boobs against his arm.

      “Miss South Pacific,” the hotel manager had hissed into his ear. “It’s good for local business.”

      And it would have been good as a little joke to share with Natalie. But the days of shared jokes and smiles were long gone.

      Oh, she could still turn him on. There was no question about that. Gage reached into his closet, then stopped.

      Except, now that he thought about it, even sex hadn’t been the same lately. There were the nights he thought about reaching for Natalie in bed, but didn’t do it. He was tired. She was tired. But hadn’t there been a time he hadn’t thought about reaching for her, a time he’d just done it? And, after they’d made love, hadn’t there been a time he’d never had to wonder if Natalie had—if she’d—

      Gage grabbed for a shirt, a tie, a suit.

      What did any of it matter? Last night, tossing on that couch, he’d admitted to himself that she had simply spoken the truth before he had. Their marriage had run its course. Marriages did that in his family. Just look at his old man, tucked in with wife number five. Just look at Travis, one down and swearing he’d never get trapped again.

      Gage snorted.

      And then there was Slade, who worked at staying single. And Caitlin…well, forget Caitlin. Not because she wasn’t really a Baron by blood but because his stepsister was too smart to even consider becoming a participant in the marriage wars.

      Gage stepped into his briefs, pulled on his trousers and zipped them up.

      Yessirree, today was the first day of the rest of his life. A life without a wife who’d made it clearer and clearer she didn’t love him.

      She had, once. He knew she had. Maybe—maybe, if they hadn’t lost the baby…

      His face hardened. The baby had nothing to do with it. Natalie hadn’t really wanted a baby, anyway. He knew that, now. That was something else it was time he admitted.

      “Okay,” he said aloud. “It’s over. And I’m damn glad it is.”

      “So am I,” Natalie said, and Gage whirled around to face her. His face reddened.

      “I didn’t know you were there.”

      “So I gather.”

      “I didn’t mean—”

      “Didn’t you?”

      The coldness in her face was like a blow to the heart. Gage’s mouth thinned.

      “Did you want something?” he asked politely.

      “No. I mean, yes. I mean…”

      What did she mean? If only she hadn’t stumbled in without knocking. If only she hadn’t heard him say those words. He was right, of course. It was over and, dammit, she was as relieved as he was. Only—only he didn’t have to sound so happy…

      “Natalie?”

      She blinked. Gage had come closer. All she had to do was reach out her hand to touch him…

      “Natalie? Are you all right?”

      She swallowed hard and nodded.

      “I’m fine. I’m sorry I barged in on you, Gage. I should have knocked, but the door was open.”

      “Don’t be ridiculous. You don’t have to—”

      “You’re busy. I’ll wait until you’re finished and then I’ll—”

      “No.” The word shot from his throat. “No,” he said carefully, and ran his fingers through his hair. “I’m not busy at all. I’m just getting dressed.”

      Yes. She could see that for herself. He was wearing nothing but a pair of gray trousers, zipped but open at the waist so that they drooped low on his hips. And he’d just come from the shower. His dark hair was still damp and uncombed. It lay over his forehead in a way that made her want to go to him and push it back.

      Habit, she thought, and stood straighter. It was habit, too, that made her gaze drop lower, to survey that familiar body. The broad shoulders. The muscled arms and chest. The narrow waist that tapered to long legs…

      Her gaze shot back to his face.

      “That’s—that’s all right.” She cleared her throat. “I’ll wait.”

      “Natalie.” His hand fell on her shoulder as she turned away. “Did you, uh, did you want something?”

      “My clothes.” She made a little gesture that took in the white robe, hanging almost to her toes. “I need my clothes.”

      “Oh.” He nodded. “I, ah, I thought you might have wanted to talk.”

      “About what?”

      About what? Gage’s vision clouded. How could she ask that? How could she sound so damned polite?

      “About us,” he said tightly. “That’s what I thought you might want to talk about.”

      She nodded. “I don’t think there’s anything to say,” she said quietly. “We both know our marriage is over. We’ve known it for a long time. I just finally put it into words last night.”

      A muscle knotted in Gage’s jaw. “Of course,” he said politely. “You’re right. Now that I’ve had time to think it over, I know that.”

      Natalie forced a smile to her lips. “I just…I’m not sure what we’re supposed to do next.”

      “No. Neither am I.” He walked to the bed, where he’d dropped the rest of the clothes he’d taken from the closet. “Talk to a lawyer, I guess.”

      “A lawyer.” Natalie stumbled a little over the word. “Yes. Yes, of course. Do we use one or do we use two?”

      “Two,” Gage said in that same polite tone. He slipped on his shirt, began doing up the buttons. “Why don’t you call Jim Rutherford?”

      “I assumed you’d want Jim.”

      Gage shook his head. “That’s okay. You might as well deal with somebody you

Скачать книгу