White Lies Read online



  “Actually, I’ve gained a little weight,” she whispered, beginning to shake at his warm touch.

  Calmly, deliberately, he moved his hands down to her breasts and molded his fingers over them. Jay inhaled sharply, and he said, “Easy, easy,” as he stroked the soft mounds.

  “Steve, no.” But her eyes were closing as warm pleasure built in her, her blood beating slowly and powerfully through her veins. His thumbs rubbed over her nipples and she quivered, her breasts beginning to tighten.

  “You’re so soft.” His voice roughened even more. “God, how I’ve wanted to touch you. Come here, sweetheart.”

  He ignored the pain in his hands as he pulled her against him, and he wrapped his arms around her as he had dreamed of doing so many times since her voice had charmed him out of the darkness. He felt her slenderness, her softness, her warmth, and the gut-wrenching pleasure of her breasts flattening against the hard planes of his chest. He smelled the sweetness of her skin, felt the thick silk of her hair, and with a harsh, muffled sound of want, of need, he sought her mouth.

  He already knew her mouth. He would beg, cajole, insist until she would give him a kiss in the morning and again at night before she left. He knew it was wide and full and soft, and that her lips trembled each time she kissed him. Now he slanted his mouth to cover hers, pressing hard until her lips parted and gave him the entrance he sought. He could feel her shaking in his arms as he moved his tongue into her mouth and tasted her sweetness. Damn, how had he been fool enough to let her get away from him five years before? Not being able to remember making love to her made him furious because he wanted to know what she liked, how it felt to be inside her, if they had been as good together as every instinct he possessed told them they would be. She belonged to him; he knew it, felt it, as if they were tied together. He deepened the kiss, forcing her to respond to him the way he knew she could, the way he knew she wanted to. Finally she shivered convulsively, and her tongue met his as her arms crept up around his neck.

  He shouldn’t be this strong, Jay thought dimly, not after all he’s been through. But his arms were hard, and so tight around her that her ribs were being squeezed. Steve had never been this aggressive before; he certainly hadn’t been a passive man, but now he was kissing her with naked demand, forcing their relationship into an intimacy that frightened her. He wanted her more than he ever had during their marriage, but now his attention was intensely focused on her because of the circumstances.

  “We shouldn’t do this,” she managed to say, turning her head aside to free her mouth from the hungry pressure of his. She brought her hands down and pushed lightly at his shoulders.

  “Why not?” he murmured, taking advantage of the vulnerability of her throat with slow kisses. His tongue touched the sensitive hollow below her ear, and her hands tightened on his shoulders as wonderful little ripples of pleasure radiated over her skin. His lack of sight didn’t hinder him; he knew his way around a woman’s body. Instinct went deeper than memory.

  Both conscience and her sense of self-protection made Jay push at his shoulders again, and this time he slowly released her. “We can’t let ourselves get involved again,” she said in a low voice.

  “We’re both free,” he pointed out.

  “As far as we know. Steve, you could have met someone in the past five years who you really care about. Someone could be waiting for you to come home. Until you get your memory back, you can’t be certain that you’re free. And…and I think we should be cautious about jumping back into a relationship without knowing more than we do.”

  “No one’s waiting for me,” he said with harsh certainty.

  Her movements were jerky with agitation as she slid off the bed and walked to the window. The morning sky was a leaden color, and snow flurries were drifting aimlessly on the light wind. “You can’t know that,” she insisted, and turned back to look at him.

  His face was turned toward her even though he couldn’t see her, and the hard line of his mouth told her he was angry. The sheet was around his waist, baring his broad shoulders and chest, as he had disdained both pajamas and a hospital gown, though he had finally consented to wear the pajama bottoms with the legs cut off and the seams slit so they would fit over the casts on his legs. He was thin, pale and weak from what he’d been through, but somehow the impression he gave was one of power. Nor was he all that weak, not if the strength she had just felt in him was any measure. He must have been incredibly strong before the accident. Those five years when she hadn’t seen him were becoming even more of a mystery.

  “So you’ve stayed here with me all this time just because you have a Florence Nightingale complex?” he asked sharply. It was the first time she had refused him anything, and he didn’t like it at all. If he could have walked, he would have come after her, sightless or not, weak or not, even though he was still in pain most of the time. None of that would have stopped him, and for the first time she was grateful for his broken legs.

  “I never hated you,” she tried to explain, knowing that she owed him at least the effort. “I don’t think we were all that deeply in love, certainly not enough to make our marriage work. Frank asked me to stay because he thought you would need me, given your condition. Even Major Lunning said it would help if you were around someone familiar, someone you knew before the accident. So…I stayed.”

  “Don’t give me that crap.” Her attempt to explain had made him even more furious, and it was a type of anger she hadn’t seen before. He was very still and controlled, his guttural voice little more than a whisper. Chills ran up her spine because she could feel his temper like both ice and fire, lashing out at her even though he hadn’t moved. “Do you think that because I can’t see, I couldn’t tell you were turned on just now? Try again, sweetheart.”

  Jay began to get angry at the harsh demand in his voice. “All right, if you want the truth, here it is. I don’t trust you. You were always too restless to settle down and try to build a life together. You were always leaving on another of your ‘adventures,’ looking for something I couldn’t give you. Well, I don’t want to go through that again. I don’t want to get involved with you again. You want me now, and you may need me a little, but what happens when you’re well? Another pat on the head and a kiss on the cheek while I get to watch you ride off into the sunset? Thanks, but no thanks. I have more sense now than I did before.”

  “Is that why you start shaking every time I touch you? You want to get involved again, all right, but you’re afraid.”

  “I said I don’t trust you. I didn’t say I was afraid of you. Why should I trust you? You were still looking for trouble when that explosion almost killed you!”

  Abruptly she realized that she was all but yelling at him, while his voice hadn’t risen at all. She turned and walked out, then leaned against the wall outside his door until both the temper and the shaking subsided. She felt sick, not because of their argument, but because he was right. She was afraid. She was terrified. And it was too late to do anything about it, because she was in love with him again, despite all her warnings and lectures to herself against it. She didn’t know him anymore. He had changed; he was harder, rougher, far more dangerous. He was still a leaver, probably far more involved in the situation than Frank had wanted her to know.

  But it didn’t make any difference. She had loved him before when it had gone against her better judgement, and she loved him now when it made even less sense. God help her, she had left herself wide open for a lot of pain, and there was nothing she could do.

  CHAPTER SIX

  STEVE LAY QUIETLY, forcing the lingering cloudiness of anesthesia from his mind. He was instinctively still, like an animal in the jungle, until he was aware enough to know what was going on. A man could lose his life by moving before he knew where his enemies were. If they thought he was dead, he gained the advantage of surprise by lying still and not letting them know he was still alive until he could recover enough to make his move. He tried to open his eyes, but something c