Misty Blue (20 page)

Read Misty Blue Online

Authors: Dyanne Davis

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Contemporary

BOOK: Misty Blue
9.66Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Mia,” Damien attempted to call out again but felt his tongue heavy and fuzzy.
What the hell
? He thought, as his eyes closed. He’d never passed out a day in his life. Damn, what a time to start now. “I love you, baby girl,” he whispered as he gave up the fight and succumbed.

* * *

 

Mia took another glance at herself in the bathroom mirror.

She was ready. She trembled with the thought of what was about to happen. She walked out the door of the bathroom and stood there in what she was hoping was a provocative pose. “Damien, I’m ready,” she whispered, surprised that he’d not turned around when she entered the room.

“Damien,” Mia called more loudly. Finally hearing the sounds of his soft snoring, she put her hands on her hips and struck a pose.
Oh no he didn’t
. Surely he was just kidding. She hopped on the bed and rolled him over. The sound of his snoring increased. And with the sound came her mother’s laughing words declaring that Damien would fall asleep in the midst of the deed.

“Oh Damien,” Mia pleaded, leaning down, kissing his lips, his eyes and his cheeks. “Please wake up. This is our wedding night.”

It was no use. Damien was dead to the world. This was just a coincidence, she assured herself. It had nothing to do with Damien’s desire for her and everything to do with how much he’d had to drink. That was all. Still, she felt sorry for herself. She was a bride and she’d waited her entire life for this night. It could never be repeated.

Mia lay down next to Damien, her head on his bare chest. With nothing else to hold her interest, she began looking around the room, her eyes lighting on the gaily-wrapped package on the corner table.

At least Damien hadn’t forgotten about her wedding gift. She’d forgive him now. She hopped from the bed and rushed to rip the paper from the package. Mia stared in shock and dropped the box. A porno tape.
Fifty Ways to
P
lease Your Lover
. She looked back at Damien snoring on the bed and the tears slid beneath her lashes. This wasn’t the gift she’d had in mind. Her thoughts had ran more the way of jewelry, or at the least, a sexy gown.

* * *

 

When Damien woke, his cotton mouth reminded him of his overindulgence. He reached a hand across the bed for Mia and found only empty space. He squeezed his eyes shut to blank out the jackhammers going off in his head. A moment later, he realized that the sound was actually running water.

“Damn, how long does Mia need to put on a gown?” he muttered. He attempted to sit but fell back to stop the spinning. That was odd, he thought, but decided to give it a few more seconds to pass. Then he would drag his wife out of the bathroom. It was their wedding night.

Silence, blessed silence. The water had stopped its infernal racket. Mia should be out in a minute. Maybe he wouldn’t have to drag her out, just wait for her to join him on the bed. The bathroom door opened and his wife stepped out.

Dressed.

Not in the sexy white negligee that he’d seen her carry into the bathroom with her, but in jeans and a blouse. Damien frowned and continued his inventory. She even had on shoes. What the hell was she planning?

“Baby girl, what happened to the sexy gown?”

“That was last night,” his wife answered him.

He froze. Something was wrong. She wasn’t looking at him and she definitely wasn’t teasing him. Hell, she wasn’t happy.

“Mia, what happened in that damn bathroom?”

She glared at him.

“Mia, what’s going on?”

“Look at the clock. You’d better get dressed; we’re meeting our families for breakfast. Then we have a plane to catch.”

“What the hell are you talking about?” Damien’s eyes shifted to the clock and he groaned. No wonder his new bride was pissed, he’d passed out and totally blown their wedding night.

“Come here, baby girl, I’m sorry. Come on, let me get you out of those clothes.”

“We don’t have time.”

“We have time for a quickie.” He looked at her face. Damn. Mistake number two.

Kicking away the covers, he jumped out of the bed and reached for Mia. “Baby girl, forgive me.” He pulled her close, ignoring her resistance and holding on for dear life. “Don’t be mad at me. Do you have any idea how mad I am at myself? I’ve been waiting all this time to make love to you and the first chance I get I blow it.”

Oomph.

“What the…Mia,” Damien moaned, offended. “Why did you elbow me?” He moved away from her, knowing he’d somehow made mistake number three, even though he didn’t know what it was.

“I was trying to apologize, baby.” He groaned, still smarting from her blow to his ribs.

“You’re not doing it very well.”

Okay, so she was really pissed. He’d never seen her so, he thought,
cold as ice
. “Mia, what the hell happened to you when I passed out? Did I do something to you? If I did, tell me. I don’t remember.”

Damien was worried, wondering if the reason Mia was staring at him as if she no longer knew him, no longer loved him, was because of something he couldn’t remember. He was trying desperately to pull himself together, to remember. He’d wanted her so badly, but that was nothing different. He’d always wanted her and he’d never attacked her in the past. Still, there was something in her eyes. But no matter how hard he tried, he was drawing a blank. Surely his first time with his wife had not taken place without him being able to remember it.

“Mia, if I was a little rough or impatient last night, I’m sorry. I didn’t know what I was doing.”

“What are you talking about, Damien?” Mia asked.

It was the way she said his name that chilled him, as though he were some insect to be stepped on. He decided to ignore her temper and answer her question. “I’m talking about our making love. I’m sorry if it wasn’t good for you.”

“We didn’t make love. You were asleep.”

Mia turned from him and began putting her wedding gown on a hanger. “You’d better get dressed,” she said.

He tried again. “I’m sorry about our wedding night.”

“Not as sorry as I am,” she answered.

* * *

 

Damien snapped Mia’s bag shut. “Do you have everything?” he asked.

“Yes.”

She was still giving him one word answers. He had hoped by the time he got out of the shower she would have thawed a little. He smiled, their first fight as a married couple. He lifted the bags and made his way toward the door. A strange crinkling sound made him pause. Damien looked down and spotted the torn wrapping paper.

She got my gift
. That would melt her, he thought and carried the luggage downstairs to leave at the desk until it was time for their flight.

* * *

 

Mia carried the bag with her wedding gown as she walked behind Damien. Keefe had agreed to take that home for her. She hated that they’d made plans to meet their families for breakfast. She’d hated it from the first time that it was mentioned. She knew what everyone was going to want to know. She didn’t want them staring at her, imagining what she’d done or hadn’t done.

She shuddered. If she were talking to Damien, she would ask him to cancel, to call everyone and tell them they were eating in…but then she’d have to do what she hadn’t done last night and she wasn’t quite ready for that particular intimacy. To think that they’d both been so looking forward to it.

* * *

 

“Mia, are you not going to talk to me at all?” Damien asked as he turned from the check out desk and reached for the bag that his wife carried.

She sighed. “I don’t have anything to say.”

To that he laughed, moving closer to her, holding her tight and singing, “‘Just the thought of youuuuu…’” He felt a tremble ripple through her body and chuckled. She’d thaw. Then he brought his lips around to hers, kissed her lips softly, then the hollow of her neck. Again she trembled and he smiled.

“I knew you couldn’t stay mad at me,” he whispered.

“Hey, you two, get a room. Oh, that’s right, you just had a room,” Charles said coming up to them, talking in a voice loud enough for the entire lobby to hear.

Damien let go of Mia, sensing a change in her mood. Inside he cursed his father’s bad timing. In a matter of moments their entire family was assembled and he wished they’d never made plans to have breakfast with all of them. What a dumb ass idea.

“So, Mia, how are you this morning?” his father sneered. Damien felt Mia stiffen and closed his hand around hers, giving her fingers a squeeze. “I’m good,” Mia answered at last and Damien headed the group into the restaurant, smiling down at Mia, grateful that she was still holding his hand.

For over an hour they all behaved. True, Mia was quieter than usual, not looking at her mother, and he couldn’t blame her. He hadn’t looked in the woman’s direction either. He was surprised to see her there but hadn’t made a fuss.

For now at least even his father was behaving. Well, almost. The majority of his father’s attention was concentrated on Lillian. So when it happened, Damien had been lured into complacency and had let down his guard.

“So, Damien, tell us. Was your bride worth the wait?”

He was getting ready to answer his father’s damn question, to tell him that Mia was definitely worth the wait, when he caught the smirk on his father’s face, saw the hidden meaning. Before he could stop him, his father started laughing and Mia’s mother joined in.

Before Damien got a chance to say one word, Mia was up from the table and walking away. Though he wanted to tell both her mother and his father to go to hell, to keep their noses out of their private affairs, he leaped up and followed Mia. She was more important. Behind him he heard Keefe’s voice raised in anger. Damn. This had been a bad idea.

“Mia, wait up. Don’t let him get to you.” He caught Mia’s hand as she raced to the desk and saw her eyes glimmering with unshed tears. He cringed. “Mia, he’s…” God, what could he say? “Mia, he was way out of line. I’ll take care of it.”

She was ignoring him, asking the desk to call for the bags and a taxi. Damien peered out the door and saw a taxi waiting. The door opened as if fate had known this would happen.

Mia stormed out the door and he followed, putting the bags in the cab and climbing in beside Mia. “Aren’t you going to say goodbye?” he asked Mia, pointing to her brother who’d run out the door.

“No,” she said. I just want to go. Please.”

No amount of consoling, singing or pleading worked. “I don’t believe this,” Damien mumbled low. “Why are you blaming me for what my father said?”

Mia glared at him, her anger intensifying with each second. “Who would you like me to blame?” she asked, her voice shaking. “God, what did you do, take out an ad, Damien?” She’d held her emotions in for hours and she really didn’t want to cry, not here in a taxi, but she couldn’t stop the tears that came. She pushed Damien away, not wanting his arms around her. She ignored his, “
This is one hell of a start to a honeymoon
” and cried even harder. She agreed completely.

Chapter Thirteen

Sin City, the capital of fun. Mia winced as she woodenly followed Damien from the elevator and down the hall to the room. Because he had decided to bring the bags up himself, Mia said a catty thing to him. “Can’t wait to see what you got, I bet.” His jaw clenched and he ignored her. She was feeling evil, evil and scared as hell. Everything was falling apart. It wasn’t supposed to be like this.

Damien set the bags on the floor, then turned to her. “Are we going to keep fighting,” he asked. “Because I don’t think I want to.”

“I don’t want to either,” Mia whispered. “I thought…I hate this.”

“What do you hate exactly?” Damien asked slowly. “That we’re fighting, or that we’re married?”

“I hate that I’m being judged, that everyone I know is probably right now taking bets on us. God, Damien, how could you tell your father something so personal? He’s making jokes about me right now. I can feel it.”

“Don’t let him…don’t let anyone interfere with us, Mia, we have a good thing here. Come on, let’s stop fighting.”

He held his arms out and she went willingly into them. She was crying and she needed him to comfort her, tell her that she was wrong, that they were all wrong, that he really did love her, that sex was only a tiny part of it. But he was undressing her, pulling her blouse off her shoulder and she felt his hardened flesh pressing against her. Just the thought of what was on his mind made her angry. Comfort was what she needed now. Not sex.

“Let me do that for you,” she snarled and yanked her clothes off, not stopping until she stood before him naked. “Come on, Damien, it’s what you’ve been waiting for. You might as well see if I’m worth the wait.” Without a thought she ran to the bed, threw the covers back and lay down spread-eagled.

“Is this what you want? You’ve got it. You married me, I’m your wife. Let’s see if the wait was worth it.”

“What the hell are you doing?” Damien asked, the anger seeping through. “You’re taking this way out of proportion. Listen, I didn’t ask for a virgin sacrifice.”

Other books

The Night of the Comet by George Bishop
Underground Captive by Elisabeth-Cristine Analise
Caught (The Runners) by Logan Rutherford
A Cutthroat Business by Jenna Bennett
The Tobacco Keeper by Ali Bader
White Lily by Ting-Xing Ye
Debutantes: In Love by Cora Harrison
R. L. Stine_Mostly Ghostly 03 by One Night in Doom House
The Mammoth Book of Regency Romance by Candice Hern, Anna Campbell, Amanda Grange, Elizabeth Boyle, Vanessa Kelly, Patricia Rice, Anthea Lawson, Emma Wildes, Robyn DeHart, Christie Kelley, Leah Ball, Margo Maguire, Caroline Linden, Shirley Kennedy, Delilah Marvelle, Sara Bennett, Sharon Page, Julia Templeton, Deborah Raleigh, Barbara Metzger, Michele Ann Young, Carolyn Jewel, Lorraine Heath, Trisha Telep