beneath
her,
holding her hips as she leaned over him,
taking his mouth with hers. Their kiss
was almost vicious, nearly too rough,
but hard and arousing, and all the while
he kept moving, up and down, up and
down, feeling her close around him, her
shudders and vibrations as his need built
and built . . .
Wyatt tensed, holding his breath
—
yes
—and grasped the peak as tears
rolled from his eyes . . .
Yes
. White,
fiery,
incredible
pleasure
blasted
through him and he felt his body release.
Pain, pleasure, need, grief . . . pouring
from him in a long, rolling, undulating
fury.
White. Clean. New.
I
t was a long while before Wyatt
became aware of anything but the
draining, soul-threatening gratification
that still sizzled through him. Like the
last bit of electricity left in a downed
wire. The sides of his face were still
wet, and he roughly wiped the tears
away, mildly chagrined at the display of
emotion.
Someone—Remy, because he sure as
hell hadn’t moved—had turned off the
light, and the only illumination was a
glow from a triangular gap in the
curtains he’d drawn. He guessed it was
dawn, or near it. Hard to tell.
He felt the weight of her head on his
shoulder, the warmth of her body
pressed against his, a piece of her hair
tickling him on the cheek. He smelled
their mingled scents clinging faintly to
the sheets and pillow. Her even
breathing suggested she was either
sleeping, very relaxed, or an excellent
actress.
In the event it was the latter, he
remained silent, unwilling to disturb her.
He wanted only to bask in the feeling of
. . .
new
.
Odd. An odd feeling, but not an
unwelcome one. Repletion, satisfaction,
pleasure. And . . .
new.
That word came to mind once more
and he frowned over it a little, turning it
around in his lust-loosened mind as he
smiled in abject happiness.
His body felt languorous and sated.
Weak, in a good way.
God, that was
amazing.
Beyond amazing. Spiritual.
I need a fucking cigarette
—even
though he didn’t smoke. He started to
smile, to close his eyes and sink back
into the basking when he remembered.
His eyes sprang open and his indulgence
evaporated, turning cold.
Last night . . . he’d had sex—no, hell,
he’d gone all the way and made love. To
another woman. Who was not his wife.
No comparisons, no guilt, no grief,
no anger. No superimposed image of his
wife on her face. Just . . . fuck. His heart
was thudding hard now and Wyatt felt
his calm and joy slip away.
Not good.
The iciness grew, chilling him from
the inside and he closed his eyes,
struggling with himself. This wasn’t the
first time he’d been with someone since
coming out of the caves. No—and he
wasn’t proud of the fact that he’d spread
himself around a little. Trying to
exorcise the anger and guilt, trying to
forget. Trying to find something to keep
from going insane. Those nights—or
days, or hours . . . they’d been dark and
difficult and bitter.
They still were.
But, oh, God . . . not this. He
remembered suddenly what he’d said to
Remy—his blunt, honest,
It’s too damn
easy with you.
But why is it so hard too?
Yeah, that about covered it. His gritty
eyes prickled with wetness and he
pursed his lips to hold back whatever
emotion was causing it.
But he knew what it was. Fear. Cold,
frigid fear.
Remy stirred, pulling away, and all at
once she was looking at him with those
shocking blue eyes, clear and steady.
Good actress, he decided ruefully. She’d
been awake all along.
“How are you?” she asked.
He could drown in them. The rich
blue-almost-violet hue was flecked with
black and ringed with more inky color,
and the whites of her eyes were pure and
bright, even after a busy night. “I’m
good,” he said. “What about you?”
Her expression turned wary and she
flattened her lips. “Good. And . . . a
little scared.” She looked away suddenly
and he felt a tremor through her that had
nothing to do with pleasure.
Hell. What was wrong with him?
She’d probably lain awake all night,
thinking about what was going to happen
today . . . while he snored his way past
dawn and worried about his flimsy guilt,
mentally bellyaching about why he’d
shed tears. Dickhead.
“Remy, come here,” he said,
gathering her to his chest. She felt so
good there, dammit . . . and guilt pinged
in his belly. “I’m not going to let you do
it. We’ll tell them you ran away, that you
escaped. I’ll get you out of here—there
are secret tunnels and—”
“Wyatt, stop,” she said. “You’re
making it worse. You know it’s not
possible. I have some ideas—”
“There is another option,” he said
flatly, looking at her with determination.
“You know there is.”
Her eyes shuttered and she bit her
lip. It wasn’t a coy pose, but she did it
often enough that he noticed and found it
extremely sexy. Except at this moment.
Now, he saw a confused but brave-faced
woman, and something inside him
moved
sharply,
deeply.
He
was
breathless.
“We could destroy the crystal,” he
said, pressing on.
She looked at him with unreadable
eyes. “We could.”
Wyatt was aware of a hollow, odd
feeling in his chest. He didn’t know what
it meant, but it was unpleasant and
frightening. “If we destroyed the crystal,
they wouldn’t be after you any longer,”
he said.
“Because they’d all die.”
Their eyes met.
“Yes. All of them.”
“They destroyed the earth, Remy.
They killed millions.”
She nodded, her expressive eyes now
dull. “I know.” She tugged out of his
grip, rolling away. “Do you think I
haven’t thought about it? How easy it
would be? How
free
I’d be?”
“They took my life,” he said, his
voice broken. “Mine and everyone
else’s. I
hate
them.”
Remy’s back, bare and fair and sleek,
was facing him, but she nodded.
A sharp knock startled them both, and
Wyatt surged from the bed as she dashed
for the bathroom with a flash of pale
flank and bouncing breast. He looked
through the peephole and saw David and
Cat, then heard the whine of Dantès as
he scratched at the door.
Wyatt darted a look at the bed, the
mussed sheets, the used condom, and the
clothing strewn around the room. Not
precisely the information he wanted to
announce to his son and granddaughter,
for Christ’s sake. They knocked again,
more insistently, and he called, “Just a
sec.”
Scooping up Remy’s clothes, he
shoved them in a drawer then attacked
the bed as she poked her head, shoulder,
and one breast out of the bathroom.
“Give me my pack,” she said. “Who is
it?”
“David and Cat. They brought
Dantès.”
Her face lit up, and he tossed over
the satchel of her clothing, then yanked
on his shorts—accomplishing all of this
preparation in less than a minute.
But when he opened the door, he
swore there was a knowing glint in
David’s eyes—a reality that set his teeth
on edge and made his insides feel even
more unsettled. He took the opportunity
to crouch down for a reunion with
Dantès, glad to not have to look at his
son’s
expression.
At least it wasn’t Fence darkening his
door this time. The jerkoff would
probably be checking the box of Trojans
to see how many were gone—and
nagging him about the lack of usage.
Just
one, brother? What the fuck’re you
thinking, with a crazy-hot piece like
that in your arms?
Wyatt closed his eyes briefly,
thanking God Fence wasn’t here, and
wishing—
“Remy in the shower?” said David,
glancing toward the closed door.
“Yes.” Wyatt released Dantès and
rose, noticing with discomfort that Cat
was studiously
not
looking at him. She
seemed very interested in gazing out the
window and examining the row of books
on
the
sill.
Great.
Now
his
granddaughter thought he was a pig.
Christ
. He rubbed the spot between
his eyebrows and tried to think about
what to say.
“Sorry for being so early,” David
was saying. “Vaughn wants us to meet at
eight, and I thought Remy might want to
see Dantès first.”
“I don’t give a shit what Vaughn
wants,” Wyatt replied coolly. “Remy is
not going to spend the day at his beck
and call.” But at the same time, the
knowledge that they had a mere fourteen
hours until the deadline made his veins
turn to ice.
“I’m not what?” The bathroom door
opened and Remy came out in a waft of
steam. Her face was flushed, her lips
full and red, and wet hair clung to her
neck and throat. She was wearing a short
blue dress that made her eyes look more
brilliant—if that was even possible. It
also showed off more cleavage than
Wyatt thought necessary. His knees felt
weak.
Any response would have been
drowned out by Dantès, who, finally
seeing his mistress, barked, whined, and
bounded across the room to her. Wyatt
swore he saw something damp glinting
in her eyes as she knelt to hug the
writhing mass of happy dog. She buried
her face in his copper and brown fur,
and even from his position Wyatt could
see her clinging to the dog with every bit
of strength she had.
I’ve got to fix this. She can’t go.
Remy stood up a few minutes later
and greeted David with more warmth
than Wyatt would have been able to
expect her to muster, given the
circumstances. Cat turned from the
window and seemed glad to see her as
well, but she still hardly said a word to
Wyatt.
“How about putting on a shirt,” Remy
said, picking up the one he’d tossed on
the dresser last night. She gave a
meaningful look toward Cat, and then
understanding dawned.
Oh, yeah. Awkward to have one’s
granddaughter checking you out.
As he
pulled on the shirt, he realized it was
probably even more awkward for the
granddaughter . . .
“Vaughn has asked for everyone to
meet at eight,” David said.
“You don’t have to—”
“It’s fine,” Remy said. “He might
have news.” But the light that had been
in her eyes when she hugged Dantès, and
the glint of humor when she gave him his
shirt, was gone. Although she tried to
hide it, he could see the fear and pain in
her face. He recognized it from his own
reflection, and he wanted nothing more
than to get rid of it.
I have to destroy that damned
crystal.
O
n the way to Vaughn’s office Remy
caught Cat for a moment alone and said,
“I need you to help me.”
“How?”
“You need to find a way to distract
Wyatt—get him out of the way. I’ve got
something I have to do.”
Cat looked at her searchingly, and
seemed about to say something but
stopped. “I’ll try. You don’t want to tell
me why, or what?”
Remy shook her head. “Just get him
away. He’s stubborn. So make it good.
Okay? And . . . you can take Dantès back
to the computer lab.”
“You’re not taking him with . . .”
Cat’s voice trailed off, as if she didn’t