The Night That Started It All. Anna Cleary
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‘So you paint?’
She barely hesitated before she nodded. ‘Partly.’
‘What does that mean?’
‘Well, I write stories for children. And paint—you know, the illustrations. I’m not that good yet, but I have actually had a book published. It’s a picture story book about a cat.’
She pulled herself up, not wanting to babble on about herself and bore the man to tears, but he was gazing intently at her as if genuinely interested.
He drew in a breath. ‘Tiens. Shari, that’s very impressive.’ He spoke so warmly she couldn’t doubt his sincerity. ‘You are a genuine author.’
Inwardly, she absolutely glowed. ‘Oh, in a very small way.’
He took her hand and pulled her to face him. It had been so long since a man had touched her in that special way. She trembled inside her bones with a nervous yearning. What if she froze and couldn’t summon the necessary fire? What if she embarrassed herself and shied away at the crucial moment like a scared animal?
She felt her mouth dry to an uncomfortable clumsiness.
‘You are modest.’ He said rather hoarsely, ‘I think you are not what I expected.’
She said breathlessly, ‘What did you expect?’ Compelled to moisten her lips, she saw a hot flare in his eyes.
He kissed her then, a firm, purposeful sexy pressure that shot a delicious flame through her blood and made her entire being tremble with longing.
Ready to swoon, she moved against his hard body, opening up to the full sexy onslaught, but he pulled back and released her. He gazed at her, his eyes unreadable, then traced the outline of her face with his finger. He pressed her lower lip with his thumb and her insides melted in the blaze.
‘You taste douce.’ His voice was a little gravelly.
Douce. Douce? Was that all? To her parched senses he tasted like man and sex and long, hot nights.
With her adrenaline pumping like crazy, they resumed walking until they reached the end of the path where the boat-house gazed out over the water, its windows blank and enigmatic. As they stepped onto the boardwalk near the landing stage, the moonlight contoured the Frenchman’s face with hard lines and angles. She caught the desire glowing in his velvet eyes, and felt confused.
Having seduced her thus far, was he having second thoughts?
‘What sort of things inspire you to write?’ he said.
‘Oh, well.’ She made an expansive motion with her hand. ‘All sorts. Owls. The moon.’ His mouth was so achingly close. Her lips, her entire being hungered to be touched, stroked, enjoyed, caressed, pampered, kissed, loved …
Would he touch her again, or was that it?
‘Owls?’ He sounded surprised.
‘Oh, owls are really very magical, ethereal beings. Have you … have you ever read—Rebecca?’
He frowned in thought. ‘What is that? Is it to do with owls?’
‘No, no.’ She laughed heartily. ‘It’s … I guess it’s a romance. A—mystery. A bit of a thriller. Rebecca has the family boat-house furnished like a private apartment. Her secret love nest where she can meet her illicit lover.’
He lifted his hands. ‘I don’t think I know it. Romances, enfin …’ He made an amused, negative shrug.
What an idiot she was. Of course men didn’t read romances. Just as well, or they’d know too much.
His eyes glinting, he cast a smiling glance at Neil and Em’s boathouse. ‘What do you think? Would this one—have furniture?’
All the fine hairs stood up on her spine and shivered in suspenseful, gleeful exultation. She hesitated a breathless instant, then spread her hands. ‘Well, we could always see. I know where they keep the key.’
He looked keenly at her. Said offhandedly, like a guy who didn’t care one way or the other, ‘Are you sure?’
The thing was, though, his voice had deepened in timbre just that betraying bit.
She gazed fleetingly into his eyes, not needing to read beyond that hot, lustful gleam. He cared all right. He wanted her, and she felt propelled by a wicked, reckless desire to mount that untamed stallion and do something wild.
‘Sure I’m sure.’ Her breath came faster.
She slipped her hand under the iron tile between the pylon and the floor where she’d seen Neil hide the key a dozen times.
Bingo. It was there.
Her hands shook so badly as she fitted it into the lock, she had to hunch to prevent Luc from seeing.
Once inside, she was assailed with the boat smell of paint and varnish and salty, fishy weekends. Neil’s cruiser floated silently in the lower room, a ghostly presence in the silent dark. A flight of steps led to the upper loft where supplies were stored.
Shards of moonlight illuminated the walls. Shari indicated the way, stumbling once on the stairs. Luc took her arm to steady her.
She didn’t speak, just turned her breathless gaze to him. Even in the dim light his eyes were burning. Her blood ran hot in her breasts, fanned fire between her legs.
They finished the climb to the loft. She was trembling again, in the grip of something more elemental now than mere nerves. She faced him, aflame.
He pulled her to him. This kiss was a rough and hungry collision, his tongue in her mouth, possessive, lustful, his hands in her hair, moulding her shoulders, unfastening her bra. She dragged at his shirt and fumbled to release the buttons, avid to feel his naked skin beneath her palms.
With the mingled scents of aftershave, wine and man rising giddily in her head, she thrilled as he stroked her breasts. Then his mouth closed over her nipple and the blaze in her blood roared. She sobbed in deep quivering breaths as he slipped his hand inside her pants, caressing, stroking her engorged sex until she swooned with ecstasy.
Then he slid a finger inside her and massaged, sending waves of erotic pleasure thrilling through her burning flesh. She rocked against his hand, maddened, desperate.
‘Oh,’ she groaned, clinging to his shoulders. ‘Yes, yes, yes.’
To her intense disappointment his hand paused. She felt his hot breath on her neck.
‘I don’t have any protection with me,’ he said hoarsely. ‘Do you have anything?’
‘What? What?’ She could hardly believe her ears, but the exigency of the moment must have jerked her memory, because she dredged up an image of a thin emergency package in the deepest reach of her purse.
Maybe fate or the devil were on her side, for, scrabbling among the debris, her fingers