Authors: Joey W. Hill
scented with lavender and eucalyptus
oils, she’d tried to
keep her eyes on the gold band of her
wedding ring, the
protection that il usion gave her.
Instead, her gaze strayed
to his closed eyes, the set of his firm
mouth, the slope of his
jaw. The way his hair brushed her
skin as she laid her
fingers on his temples.
She imagined what would happen if
he lifted his hands,
closed them over her wrists, holding
her manacled there as
he opened his eyes, looked up at her
and made entirely
different demands. Just the vision
made her wet, a
shocking development. It had been
quite a while since
anything had caused her to have that
response.
As if some kind of devil on her
shoulder was determined
to make things worse, Jon had lifted
his chin as she settled
her fingers on his brow. Though he
kept his eyes closed,
his nostrils flared. “I like this scent,
Rachel,” he said, his
voice low.
Of course he meant the eucalyptus
and lavender. Right?
* * * * *
Of course he did. He was a business
executive who had
the confidence to handle people wel .
For heaven’s sake,
he’d never made a single
inappropriate move toward her.
She needed to put him out of her
mind. Particularly right
now, with Peter and Dana here. It
made thinking about him
al the more hazardous. The idea that
her smal world had
rol ed into the trajectory of
two
ful -
blown sexual Dominants
was an irony that smacked of the
Universe’s cruelest sense
of humor. It was best for her to
pretend she’d never heard
that powerful word fal from Dana’s
lips, a word that
unlocked al sorts of wild things in
Rachel’s soul.
The same word she’d been certain
had belonged in that
empty space when she’d asked Jon if
she could touch him.
And how insane was that?
Jon Forte. Just saying his name in her
mind made her
breath shorten and crazy things
happen to her body. Things
that her body didn’t do, hadn’t done,
for a very long time.
Unlike Peter, he was not engaged and
therefore far too
tempting. He might as wel have been
happily married
though, because he was no less off
limits, for a variety of
reasons. She reminded herself of the
least painful one, that
the man was at least ten years
younger than she was.
Probably fifteen, though she winced
to push it that far. He
was closer to her son’s age than hers.
The age her son would be now, if he
were stil alive.
Another sharp hurt came with that
thought, even higher up.
In a moment, she was going to be as
rigid with pain as one
of her new patients, fresh from a car
wreck.
Damn it, she was done with al the
things that Peter and
Jon represented. She’d tried to go
down that road and
ended up nearly destroying herself.
Squaring her shoulders,
she turned away from her thoughts,
her desires and her
memories, and gave herself the here,
the now and the
realistic—a much safer trinity.
Chapter Two
“Al right, there you go. Take a deep
breath. Think we can
go a bit further?” Rachel leaned on
the triceps, ready to
push the arm back another notch if
Dana gave her the
slightest indication she was ready for
it, though she was
pretty sure the woman had reached
her limit.
Dana gave her a quick jerk of a nod
and closed her eyes,
focusing. Watching the tension
throughout the rest of
Dana’s body, Rachel cut the hold
time down to half before
she released. “I think that’s plenty for
today. You’ve made
progress since last time. You’re
doing your exercises
religiously.”
“Try getting out of them with an ex-
captain who wants to
be a dril sergeant when he grows
up.” Dana managed a
wan smile.
Reaching into the drawer next to the
cot, Rachel withdrew
a gold-foiled chocolate and put it in
Dana’s hand. “Your
reward. You did real y, real y wel ,
honey. I know it’s slow,
but you’re improving your flexibility
at the rate someone like
me wants to see.”
“Improving, but it wil never be the
same as before.” Dana
pressed her lips together, showing
the strain behind the
words, but then she sat up with a
quick snap, a shake of her
head. “Sorry. Weak-assed thing to
say.”
Rachel put a hand on her shoulder,
but merely said,
“You’re stil doing the Iyengar poses I
showed you, with the
straps?”
“Yes.” Dana nodded, offered that
half-smile again. “Peter
likes the straps.”
Rachel normal y would have
managed a witty comeback,
but it caught in her throat. She
couldn’t joke today. She was
too ful of envy for what Dana had.
“Hey.” Dana moved her hand to
Rachel’s knee. “You
okay?”
“Yes. Definitely. I was just…smiling
at you two. Being so
in love and al . It’s a nice thing to
see.”
“It’s a nice thing to feel.” Dana
cocked her head. Rachel’s
left hand was resting on her knee, so
now her patient was
touching the gold band on her ring
finger, a plain contrast to
the diamond engagement set that
flashed on Dana’s. “I
hope you’re going to tel me you stil
feel that way about
your husband. It might keep me from
bashing in Peter’s big
rock head before we even make it
down the aisle. Or are
you stil newlyweds?”
It happened on occasion. Rachel
would never lie about it,
but she did everything to avoid being
asked. “I’m not… I’m
divorced.”
“I’m sorry.” Dana’s fingers tightened
on her hand, over
that ring. “Was it recent?”
Dana was planning to attend
seminary. Though she’d
only just begun prep courses for it,
Rachel could tel she
was going to be a good minister. She
already had that
quiet, soothing way of talking that
made it feel like she was
inviting a confession and forgiveness,
instead of being
intrusive or nosy. Of course the idea
of forgiveness for a
passionless crime…
She didn’t want more questions, so it
was best to get it
out, rip the bandage off fast. “No. It’s
been a few years. I
wear the ring so I don’t have to fend
off male attention.” She
forced herself to sound light, breezy.
“It’s appal ing how few
men are deterred by it these days, but
it does help some.”
Rachel was far more curvy than
Dana’s regal Ethiopian
physique. Ful -breasted, with a
generous ass and hips that
didn’t bother her, because the yoga
kept it al firm and
healthy, even if she didn’t match the
standard for thin. She
knew from experience she was far
more likely to catch the
eyes of passing males than the
pencils in designer wear a
couple decades younger. She did
understand that about
men, that they liked a woman to hold
in bed, liked the way
clothes could be made to amplify
those fertile attributes of
breast and backside. But it was
bolstering knowledge only,
not designed to catch the passing fish
who couldn’t meet
her needs. She’d learned it was best
not to cast the line.
“So no one in your life now?”
“Do I detect a matchmaking note? If
so, remember I can
actual y tie your body in a pretzel
shape and leave it that
way.”
The problem with having this kind of
conversation with a
blind person was they couldn’t be
thrown off by visual cues
—the false smile, a casual shrug.
Rachel tried hard to
make her tone teasing, relaxed, but
the crease across
Dana’s smooth brow said she wasn’t
fooled.
“You feel like a woman who has so
much love to give a
man, Rachel. I never would have
guessed you didn’t have
one. Do you have other family?
Children?”
I had a family. And one beautiful
child.
“Oh heavens.” Rachel gave a
strained laugh, one she
was sure sounded fake, but she was
out of courage to
handle the conversation. She was too
fragile today. That
word kept running through her head.
Master, Master,
Master…
With each beat of her
heart, she felt anew the
thril that had run through her vitals
when she’d heard it. Only
now it was starting to feel like an
electric shock applied to
the soles of her feet. “It’s almost
eight o’clock. I have to run
an errand upstairs before my next
appointment. I’m sorry,
honey, I don’t mean to cut us short…”
Withdrawing her hands with a quick
pat of Dana’s, she
rotated on her stool and jumped,
surprised to see Peter
leaning against the wal a few feet
behind them. She hadn’t
heard him enter, so she guessed he’d
arrived during their
brief, far-too-intimate interchange.
Dana rose then, gesturing as if she’d
give Rachel
another reassuring touch if she was
stil in range. “I’m sorry,
Rachel. I didn’t mean to get too
personal. You don’t have to
pretend. You can tel me not to be
such a nosy bitch, I can
tel you to bite me and we’l be square
again.”
The warmth that wel ed up in Rachel
now was real. She
liked this woman and her fiancé, so
very much. There were
too few people like them. Since she
had no trouble being
physical y demonstrative in such
circumstances, she was
able to put her arms around the
slighter woman and give
her a pure warm energy hug, rubbing
her back a moment
before letting her go. “Okay. Nosy
bitch.” She laughed as
she stumbled self-consciously over
the rough language, but
then added, “Remember to keep up
with your exercises
and I’l see you next Tuesday. Ice
pack and heat when you
get home.”
“Bite me. And no problem.” Dana
gave her another
squeeze. When she reached out, Peter
was already there,
putting her cane back in her hand and
giving her his arm.
“How’d she do?” he asked.
“Exceptional y wel ,” Rachel said.
She meant it sincerely. However,
looking at the two of
them, another impulse gripped her.
Something needy
uncoiled in her bel y, a desire to
connect on this level, even
if it was only in some miniscule way.
Knowing she could be risking a vital
faux pas, she
added, “Except she was a little tough
on herself at the end.
Thinking her hard work didn’t
deserve praise because it
would never restore her to what she
was. Just a brief
moment, but I thought you should
know about it.”
“Real y?” Peter arched a brow,
holding her gaze an extra
minute before glancing down at his
fiancée. “Wel , I guess
we’l have to go home and deal with
that attitude, won’t
we?”
He gave Rachel a significant nod
then, an expression
that made something quiver inside
her. Her hands closed
at her sides, terror at her own daring.
“Most il uminating,” he
murmured. “Thank you, Rachel. See
you next week.”
She was relieved to see the smile
playing on Dana’s lips,
and accepted the additional press of
the woman’s hand
before it slipped away to rest on
Peter’s biceps, trusting
him to lead her wherever she needed
to go.
* * * * *
By the time she finished the week’s
appointments and
three yoga classes, Rachel decided
she needed to start
the weekend with a stiff drink and a
serious reality check.
She’d been oddly euphoric right after
that little interchange,
but ever since, she’d been
unbalanced, raw. She knew
better than to go down that road, even
with a seemingly
innocuous tease. But for one solitary
second, she’d put a
foot inside a circle in which she’d
longed to be al her life.
Though it was only as a pathetic side
character, a walk-on
part where she facilitated something
for the main players
she couldn’t share with them, it had