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Kitabı oku: «Taken Beyond Temptation», sayfa 3

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4

“To YOUR NEW STORE.” Molly raised the glass of champagne the waitress had just poured. “To Memories. I love the name.”

Jillian touched her glass to Molly’s and sipped the wine. “Thank you so much for agreeing to have dinner with me tonight.”

Molly rolled her eyes. “Right. Just keep the gratitude flowing my way. I get a free meal at the best restaurant on the island. Which also has the best view.”

The view was pretty good, Jillian thought as she followed the direction of her friend’s gaze. Although the open courtyard in the center of Haworth House didn’t offer the spectacular vantage that the second floor and the tower did, a wide stretch of the Atlantic was clearly visible through one of the arches. And the sight of the sun lowering into it—well, it was one of the reasons she’d fallen in love with Hattie Haworth’s retreat at first sight.

Molly lifted her glass again. “Plus, I get to drink champagne, I get an evening of girl talk. And what else?

Oh, yes, one of your sister Reese’s spectacular desserts. Clearly, you owe me big-time.”

“I do.” Jillian smiled at her over the rim of her glass. “Girl talk is exactly what I need tonight. And my sisters are currently otherwise engaged.”

“Naomi is happy with Dane, isn’t she?”

“Very.” Which was why Jillian didn’t want to call her. Her oldest sister, the person she’d always turned to for advice, deserved a little time to be something besides a big sister.

“And how is Reese?”

Jillian smiled. “Very busy and loving it. She’s filming the pilot for a cooking show in L.A., and the hope is that it will go into syndication. She’s close to getting everything she’s wanted since she was five. That’s when she pleaded with me to sneak her into the kitchen in the middle of the night so that she could bake a surprise birthday cake for Naomi.”

“You accomplished that in a convent boarding school?”

Jillian shrugged. “I was the risk taker in the family.” She supposed that it was her way of dealing with the confinement she’d always felt. “Naomi was the role model. Reese was the baby and had to be protected. So I was the one who could push the envelope. Most of the time I got away with it.”

“How was the cake?”

Jillian grinned. “Spectacular.”

Molly tilted her head to one side. “I’d say you’re still a risk taker. You’re the one who found this place and talked your sisters into buying it. Now you’ve bought your own store.”

Jillian glanced around. “We vowed when we were still together in school that we would one day start a business together. I knew the moment I walked through the front door that we were meant to make Haworth House our home base. But I never expected to buy a retail space so soon.”

Molly raised her glass again. “Let’s toast to the future success of Memories.”

Once they had, Jillian leaned back in her chair and toed off her shoes. “I haven’t had a second to breathe since I got to the island this morning. You’re relaxing me.”

Molly studied her friend. “Good. I’m not sure I’ve accomplished the same myself.” Setting down her glass, she reached to cover Jillian’s hand. “I’m so sorry about what you found in your store.”

“Nate did a good job of settling my nerves. He thinks the vandalism may be connected to another incident at the high school. I never thought I’d be grateful that some bored and mischievous teenagers decided to have a little fun. And luckily, it didn’t happen after I’d rehabbed the place. That would have been disheartening.”

Molly reached for her glass. “Nate is good at settling people.”

Something in her tone drew Jillian’s closer scrutiny. She knew that Nate and Molly had a history. “How is it going between Nate and you?”

Molly sighed. “It’s not going. At all. When he dumped me in high school, I thought I wouldn’t ever recover. But I did. I decided that I could do very well without him. And I did that, too. I went to New York, graduated from fashion school, and I was on my way to L.A.—I was going to fulfill my dream of dressing stars for the red carpet. Then Gram got sick. And when I came back,

I found that I hadn’t gotten over Nate Kirby at all. But he’s evidently gotten over me.”

“He said that?”

“In every way possible but words.”

“Have you asked him?”

Molly shook her head. “Too chicken. Words are so final. And I’ve never forgotten the ones he said to me at our senior prom when he took back his class ring. It’s over, Molly.”

Jillian opened her mouth, then shut it. Words were final. And what right did she have to offer advice to anyone? She certainly didn’t have a knack for developing long-term relationships with men. She couldn’t even figure out what to do about the stranger she kept running into. She couldn’t seem to avoid him.

Once she’d returned to the hotel, she’d filled Avery in on the vandalism at her store, and then she’d done a dry run of the tour she was going to give Colonel Jenkins on the following day. Mr. Hunk seemed to be everywhere. Once or twice she’d caught a glimpse of him out of the corner of her eye, and each time her system had gone into overdrive. When she’d been in the bar, she’d turned and found her gaze directly locked with his. For a moment, her mind had gone completely blank—just as it had when she’d plowed into him in front of the bookstore.

It had been like running into a rock—except that her skin had burned at each contact point. And she’d had to fight to hang on to where she was going, what had just happened. All she could think about was him, and whenever she did.

“Men,” Molly said.

No, it was one man, Jillian thought as heat churned in her center. And it was happening again. She could feel him. He was watching her right now.

Molly’s eyes narrowed on her. “What?”

Jillian pitched her voice low. “Keep it very casual, but I want you to look over my shoulder and tell me what you see.” Then she waited while Molly’s gaze slipped beyond her and then back. Nothing registered on the other woman’s face.

Molly lifted her wine, sipped, then said, “There’s a drop-dead-gorgeous man standing on the balcony—second floor. I think it’s the same hunk you ran into when we raced out of the future Memories.”

“I knew it,” Jillian said. “He’s watching me.” Then because she couldn’t help herself, she twisted around in her chair and met his eyes. Big mistake. That was the one errant thought that tumbled into her mind even as her heart gave that now-familiar thud, and her throat went dry. Heat wasn’t the only thing she felt. Laced through it was an achy need that tempted her to get up, leave the table and go to him. Just go to him.

Baffled, she gripped the arms of her chair. But she couldn’t find the will to drag her eyes away.

“Should I call Nate and have him make an arrest?”

The sound of Molly’s joking voice caught her just as she was about to lever herself out of her chair. To do what? Go to his room? That possibility gave her the strength to jerk her gaze away from the stranger and back to her friend. “No.”

She felt breathless as if she’d just run to the top of a very steep hill. And nearly jumped off.

She moistened her lips, keeping her eyes on Molly even as she felt him turn away. “He’s a guest here. I just can’t seem to stop … running into him.”

“And that’s a problem because?”

Jillian hesitated. Maybe talking about it would put what she was feeling—what he made her feel—into some kind of sane perspective. “I’m attracted to him.”

“I got that much. For a second there, I thought you were going to leave me flat. Not that I would have blamed you. How long have you known him? ”

“That’s just it. I don’t know him.”

Molly lifted her glass. “Tell me everything.”

She told Molly about their near collision on the hillside and then what had been happening all day. “There’s no reason for what I’m feeling.”

Molly’s eyes widened. “I’ve only seen him twice—and my mind wasn’t really on it right after we’d seen the mess in the bookstore—but I think I could come up with quite a few reasons. If I weren’t so stuck on a certain sheriff, I’d consider putting myself on a collision course with Mr. Hunk. What’s his name by the way?”

“I don’t know.”

Molly tilted her head to one side. “You don’t know his name and you’ve got the major hots for him.”

Jillian swallowed hard. “That would be it in a nutshell.”

Molly spread her hands. “Well, there’s an explanation for it.”

Jillian’s eyes narrowed. “Don’t keep me waiting.”

“Part of the reason he’s so attractive to you is because he is a stranger.”

“And you know this because?”

“I didn’t just take fashion courses in college. My minor was women’s studies. Being swept away by a stranger has been a classic fantasy for women for ages.”

“A fantasy.” Jillian’s stomach plummeted. Her throat went dry.

She thought of the fantasies she’d had at fourteen. There’d been reasons then why she’d wanted to be swept away. But that was then. This was now. “Why would a woman want to be swept away by a stranger?”

“The fantasy has remained popular because it takes away all responsibility and fear of judgment for the woman. It boils down to really good sex without any of the morning-after and relationship worries.”

Jillian reached for her glass and took a healthy swallow of champagne. “Well, it’s not my fantasy.”

Molly studied her for a moment. “Methinks the lady doth protest too much.”

Jillian thought of the fantasy box. Choose carefully. What you draw out will come true. “I came here to Haworth House to work.”

Molly smiled. “You know what they say about all work and no play?”

STANDING JUST INSIDE his room, Ian was able to keep his gaze on Jillian in the courtyard while he waited for Avery to join him.

He’d lingered in Belle Bay until she’d finished with the sheriff, and keeping a discreet distance, he’d followed her back to the hotel. She’d spent the first hour after her return closeted with Avery. He’d used that time to scope out the hotel, something that he’d postponed when he’d decided to head into Belle Bay.

He didn’t regret his decision to follow her into the village. He’d let Avery know his intention before he’d left, but they hadn’t had a chance to do more than set up this meeting since he’d returned.

For the remainder of the afternoon, he’d done his best to keep her in sight while he stayed out of hers. Not that he’d been successful. Though they hadn’t actually physically collided or even had a near miss, she’d seemed aware of him several times.

After she’d talked to Avery, she’d spent the rest of the afternoon touring all the public rooms of the hotel and furiously jotting notes on a pad. Once when she’d been in the hotel bar, their eyes had met briefly before he’d taken a stool and ordered a beer. Another time, she hadn’t turned, hadn’t even given him a glance, but he knew that she’d sensed him by the way her back had stiffened.

Just as it had only moments ago when he’d stepped out onto his balcony. And before he could step back out of sight, she’d turned and met his gaze. He’d felt the impact slap into him with the power of a punch. Heat had seared through his system and ignited a fiery churning in his gut. For a moment everything else had faded except the desire to go to her. He wasn’t even aware that he’d moved until he bumped into the balcony railing.

And it wasn’t until she’d turned back to her friend that he’d blown out a breath he hadn’t known he was holding. No one—nothing—had ever pulled at him the way she did. Sure, he could rationalize the decision to follow Jillian around all day instead of interviewing hotel staff. The vandalism at her store could be connected to what had happened at the hotel. But when it came to what he’d been feeling a few moments ago, what he was still feeling now—he couldn’t figure that out at all.

He glanced at the balcony railing. When she’d turned and met his eyes, his hands had closed around it. What had he been planning to do? Climb over it and drop to the courtyard below?

There was definitely something about her—a connection—that he’d never felt with another person before. Not even with family. Perhaps that was why she had such a heightening effect on his senses.

Earlier in town when he’d parked his car, he’d felt her gaze on him before he’d seen her out of the corner of his eye. And when she’d run out of the bookstore and nearly knocked him off his feet, he hadn’t wanted to let her go. He’d very nearly kissed her right there in the middle of Main Street. While he was supposed to be keeping a low profile.

His training in tailing someone had been limited to what he’d seen in movies and read in novels. And those fictional guys seemed to have a lot more luck than he was having. Sooner or later, she wasn’t going to ignore him. As far as he could see, practicing avoidance wasn’t in Jillian Brightman’s nature. She took life on at full tilt. And he wasn’t going to be able to avoid her. He could hardly do what he’d been asked by hiding away in his room.

When she did finally confront him, the results would be … interesting at the very least. She’d have questions and he’d have to come up with answers. He’d just have to make sure that nothing interfered with his protecting her.

Because he had a nagging feeling in his gut—the one he’d always gotten when he was pulling a good research thread—that Jillian Brightman was in danger.

The knock on his door had Ian striding forward and opening it.

Avery entered, his usually beaming smile absent, and walked straight to the open balcony doors. “So what’s your take on what happened in the village?”

“I’m not sure I have a ‘take’ yet. But I have worries.”

“And here I was hoping you’d ease some of mine.” He turned back. “I promised I’d join Jillian and Molly for coffee. That should give us half an hour. One of the bartenders is keeping an eye on them.”

Ian gestured Avery into a chair and sat down on the couch. “Why don’t you tell me what your take is.”

“I want to think that the vandalism in her store was totally unrelated to what’s happened here. The sheriff told her it may be a random act. A prank by some kids. School’s out, and a few of them have been busy decorating the water tower by the high school with graffiti. So they see an empty store …”

“Is the sheriff aware of the incidents that have occurred here?” Ian asked.

“No. I only called you.”

“Did Jillian describe what was on the walls to you?”

Avery waved a hand. “She told me the cupboards had been bashed in and paint thrown against the walls. She was stingy with the details.”

“The two of you are dealing with the same problem. You don’t want to worry her. She doesn’t want to worry you. I got my description from Emmy Lou Pritchard right after they’d discovered it.”

Avery stopped, turned to stare. “You were there?”

“Johnny-on-the-spot. Although I didn’t intend to be smack in front of the bookstore when they came running out. I’d been keeping my eye on Jillian. When she came out of Discoveries, Molly and Miss Pritchard were with her. I kept my distance and when they went into the bookstore, I stepped into the real estate office across the street and made the acquaintance of Vivian Thorley.”

“Our local real estate star. Ever since she sold Haworth House to the Brightman sisters, her business is booming. Rumor has it that she’s tripled her income, and she’s riding the wave. She wines and dines her clients here and uses the place as a selling tool.” Avery’s lips twitched. “I hope she didn’t talk you into signing anything.”

“No. But her hopes were high. I could see dollar signs in her eyes until I introduced myself as Jack Ryan. Once I gave her my cover story, her megawatt smile dimmed and she eased me out the door. I guess she figured a struggling writer wasn’t about to buy an expensive beach house. After that, I started to walk up and down the street in front of the bookstore, and I was in the wrong place at the wrong time when the three women came out. According to Miss Pritchard, there was a message on the wall. Get out while you still can.”

“Shit,” Avery said. “Jillian wasn’t here when the other incidents occurred. But that sounds personal.”

“Seems to be. Graffiti on a water tower is public—urban art. This was more private.”

“What is going on here?” Avery asked.

“I’m not sure yet. And I could be overreacting. You should know that my job at the CIA was always to hypothesize worst-case scenarios.”

“Better safe than sorry,” Avery murmured.

“I can tell you that I’m thinking of calling in backup. I have a friend. Cody Marsh. He used to work as a field operative for the CIA. He left the agency a few years back and he’s working freelance on his own. He picks and chooses his cases, but this one will probably intrigue him. I could use him for research the way Dane has used me since we hooked up. I can’t be sitting at my laptop and keeping my eye on Jillian at the same time.”

“Go ahead,” Avery said. “You can add him to my tab. What else can I do?”

“While Jillian is in the hotel meeting with this Colonel Jenkins tomorrow, I figure that’s a good time for Jack Ryan to begin his research. I’ll interview the staff members, establish my persona. You might want to mention that Jack Ryan is here and what I’m doing to Jillian when you join her. We seem destined to run into each other. I think it’s best if she knows who I am—who I’m supposed to be.”

“You’re right. I’ll fill her in. Anything else?”

“What do you know about this Colonel Sam Jenkins?”

Avery frowned. “Just what Jillian’s told me. According to her, he’s made quite a reputation for himself in the hotel industry, mostly in the Southeast. Why?”

“Just curious. When I was tailing the ladies to the bookstore, I caught snatches of their conversation. According to Miss Pritchard, Colonel Jenkins might have been born right here on Belle Island. If it’s the same one she remembers, the colonel’s father died here tragically and the family moved away.”

“Jillian never mentioned that.”

“It might be a different Jenkins.”

Avery’s cell rang. “Yeah?” When he repocketed his cell, he said, “That was Jillian. The girls are ready for coffee.”

As he let Avery out of his room, Ian thought of what he hadn’t told the man. If Jillian decided to confront him, he had two problems to worry about. Number one was his rapidly escalating and so far uncontrollable response to her. The second was how long he could keep the Jack Ryan cover story going. The woman was no dummy.

5

“OKAY. SO WHAT YOU’RE working with are three disturbing incidents at the hotel and one occurrence of vandalism at a property Jillian Brightman has purchased in the village.”

“That would be correct.” The beats of silence on the other end of the line told Ian that his friend was scribbling ideas down. Cody was a copious note taker. Ian had always preferred to store things in his head.

While he waited, he moved to where he could see Jillian still seated at the table in the courtyard below with Molly and Avery. Though he didn’t step outside, he noticed the way her back stiffened slightly. The fact that her senses were as finely attuned to him as his were to her had his palms itching to touch her. What would happen when he finally did and when she touched him? How far would they take each other?

“Could the ghost be behind everything?” Cody asked.

Turning to walk into his room, Ian ruthlessly dragged his thoughts back to his conversation. And very nearly smiled. “I never mentioned a ghost.”

“No, you very carefully avoided that. One of the things I’ve always admired about you, MacFarland, is your subtlety. Dangling the hint of the paranormal in front of me would have been an obvious ploy to get me interested.”

Cody’s last assignment for the CIA had involved some paranormal goings-on and Ian suspected that it was that case that had triggered Cody’s decision to take an early retirement. Since then, several of the cases his friend had taken on had similar phenomena.

“You must know your brother’s capture of Michael Davenport got some fairly extensive coverage on the twenty-four-hour news channels,” Cody continued. “Hattie Haworth was even mentioned in the blurbs that run along the bottom of the screen. And Entertainment Tonight did a little retrospective on her film career.”

This time Ian didn’t bother to stifle a laugh. “You don’t watch Entertainment Tonight.”

“It’s actually become one of my guilty pleasures since I’ve retired from field work.”

“Liar.”

“Okay, okay. I did a quick Internet search while you were going over the possibly more salient points, and there’s a link to the clip of the Entertainment Tonight story. My question stands. Not that I’m an expert on ghosts.”

“You’re the closest thing I have to one.”

“Some of them do have the reputation of being a bit mischievous.”

“Not to mention downright mean. I still get the chills when I catch a rerun of Poltergeist.” Ian ran a hand through his hair. “You actually want to talk about the possibility of a ghost being the villain here?”

“Welcome to my world, MacFarland. And that’s part of what you wanted to do when you called. I know how your analytical mind works. Either your conscious or your subconscious wanted to cross the possibility of paranormal shenanigans off your list.”

Cody might be right, but he’d also just wanted to talk to someone. There’d always been a colleague at the CIA to bounce ideas off of. And in the past year, Dane had often used him as a sounding board.

“I don’t think the ghost is the villain in this case,” Ian said. “According to Dane, she’s been good to the sisters. She seems to want them here. Dane swears she helped Naomi save his life.”

“Did he actually see her?” Cody asked.

“No. But he believes that Michael Davenport did.”

“Interesting. So our ghost is selective about who she appears to. You’re probably right about her not being the villain here. According to the more scholarly research I’ve read, ghosts are usually tied down to a place. So if we buy into that, Hattie Haworth couldn’t have just skipped down to the village and thrown red paint at the walls of that store. And smuggling in bad mushrooms, cutting up the hoses in an air-conditioning system and tying a wire across a staircase are pretty physical activities, which argue against someone who’s limited to an incorporeal form.”

“You really have the lingo down,” Ian commented.

“You’re dealing with a pro. Sooooo …”

Ian could hear Cody’s pencil tapping on the notebook.

“I’m not a fan of coincidence, so I think we definitely have a villain here,” Cody mused. “Standard motivations for crimes are greed, love, survival. So far, the

Brightman sisters have made a rather stellar success of their business venture. So who stands to benefit if they suddenly fail? Or who’s pissed off at their success?”

“According to Miss Emmy Lou Pritchard, no one. The hotel has been a boon to the local economy, so everyone is benefiting from their success.”

“And we should value Miss Emmy Lou’s opinion because?”

“I think she’s going to be my other research assistant on this one. She’s the town librarian and keeps her eyes open.”

“Tell me she’s as pretty as the Brightman sisters.”

Ian grinned. “I’d guess she was even prettier in her heyday.”

“Hey, I like older women.”

“You like ghosts better. Are you going to help me?”

“One condition.”

“What?”

“After I solve this thing for you, I get a free vacation at Haworth House. I’d like a chance to meet Hattie in person, so to speak.”

“I can arrange that.”

“I’ll start by researching all previous owners of Haworth House. Then I’m going to dig deeper into Hattie Haworth. The quick search I’ve done doesn’t mention anything about the time she spent on Belle Island. She built the place, lived there for years. Maybe our villain has some connection to either Hattie or the house.”

“One other thing I’d like you to check into. A Colonel Samuel Jenkins. He’s thinking of hiring Jillian as a consultant. There was a Samuel Jenkins here on the island who died tragically and he had a son, Sam Junior.”

“You’re thinking of the motivation I didn’t mention—revenge.”

“God, you’re good. Why do I keep forgetting that?”

“I’ll just have to keep reminding you.”

The moment Cody disconnected, Ian walked to the window again. When he saw the table was empty, he hurried out of his room.

JILLIAN WAVED AS MOLLY pulled away down the circular drive in front of the hotel. Just as soon as her friend’s car was out of sight, she whirled, raced back into the hotel and entered the nearest stairwell. She didn’t want to run into Avery right now so the lobby stairs were out. She’d managed to get through dinner, she’d even enjoyed it, but now she needed to think and get to the tower room.

She and Hattie were going to have a talk. Ever since she’d turned around and seen her stranger watching her from his balcony, she hadn’t been able to get the warning on the hatbox out of her mind. The one you draw out will come true, the one you draw out will come true—it had been playing and replaying in her head like an annoying tune she just couldn’t shake loose.

So what if the fantasy that Naomi had drawn from the box on that day a little over a year ago had come true? That didn’t mean that hers had to. And it didn’t matter that maybe one small part of her—the impulsive risk taker—wanted it to. Because there was another part of her—the focused business person she’d become—who needed to concentrate on her new store and her meeting with Colonel Jenkins tomorrow. That part of her couldn’t and wouldn’t let herself be pulled into the fulfillment of an adolescent fantasy.

A door above her slammed. Her heart took several thuds, then skipped one beat entirely as she heard the footsteps thundering toward her. It wasn’t fear she felt. It was anticipation—because she sensed who it was even before he rounded the landing.

Even knowing he was approaching, she couldn’t stop her forward momentum. He caught her on the fly, and for a moment they teetered on the top step. Then he swiveled to brace both of them against the wall.

They were both breathing fast. The sound vibrated in the air around them. Seconds ticked by, but neither of them moved. She couldn’t. The hard planes and angles of his body trapped her, triggering a torrid river of heat that melted every part of her—muscle, sinew, blood and bone. If she’d had the power to raise her hands, she might have pushed him away. And perhaps he would have let her go. Or maybe he wouldn’t have.

She’d never know because as her mind clouded, any will she might have had to escape disappeared. Everything else faded but this moment. Nothing existed but this man.

She’d never known anything between two people to be so consuming. So necessary. She swore she could hear her own blood racing through her veins.

“If we keep running into one another like this, we could get hurt.”

“Then we should stop.” But her voice sounded thready even to her own ears.

“Is that what you want?” His hand moved to the side of her face, and she felt the pressure of each one of his fingers.

“No.”

“Let’s try this instead.” His other hand gripped her hip, urging her up on her toes. Then his mouth lowered slowly toward hers until his breath warmed her lips. He was going to kiss her—and she wasn’t going to stop him. Why should she? It was what she wanted. What he obviously wanted. What would be the harm? They were strangers. The perfect fantasy.

But fantasy short-circuited into reality the moment his lips molded to hers. Because there was no way she could have imagined what it would be like. The man didn’t kiss the slow, leisurely way he moved. Hard and hot, his mouth took complete possession of hers. The scrape of his teeth sent a sharp arrow of pleasure through her, and she moaned when his tongue slid over hers.

Strength flowed into her and she finally moved her hands—not to push him away but to dig her fingers into his shoulders to draw him closer. Desperation filled her, new, terrifying, wonderful. She had to have more.

IAN HAD KNOWN HE WAS IN trouble the moment he’d caught her in his arms. He might have saved them both from a nasty tumble down the stairs. Chalk one up for hero-of-the-day. But he hadn’t been able to let her go. Oh, his mind had sent the release command. His body just wasn’t having it.

Not surprising. He’d wanted her from the first moment he’d seen her, and each time they ran into each other, his desire had escalated. So he could understand his reluctance, perhaps even his initial inability to draw away.

But he should have been able to prevent the kiss. Or at least postpone it. He had a logical mind, a cautious nature. There were so many reasons why he shouldn’t, couldn’t kiss her, but as he’d stood there with every soft curve of her body pressed to his, he simply couldn’t remember even one of them.

If she’d just pushed against him, offered even the slightest sign of resistance, he might have been able to keep even a slim grip on his rationality. But the instant his lips finally met hers, logic vanished. Senses ruled.

Taste. Her mouth was a feast, and the flavors astonished him—not delicate and sweet as he’d expected but wild and rich and exotic. Each time her tongue tangled with his, he discovered something new.

Sound. There was a hammering—as loud as an anvil. It was a wonder guests weren’t pouring into the stairwell to investigate the commotion. He was almost sure it was his blood pounding. When she formed a word against his mouth, he couldn’t hear it above the racket. But he felt it.

More.

So he gave her more. His hands sought her, racing down her sides to grip her hips, lift her. She wrapped her legs around him and pressed against him, center against center. He felt something inside him snap.

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Yaş sınırı:
0+
Hacim:
201 s. 2 illüstrasyon
ISBN:
9781472056436
Telif hakkı:
HarperCollins
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