“Why didn’t you use the showers in the locker room?”
He turned away and reached for a towel. He ran the terry cloth across his skin before wrapping it around his waist. “Locker room?”
“At the hospital. You had to leave me at the club to treat a patient, right?”
He hadn’t given her much of an explanation when he’d had her lock herself inside the office to wait for the detective. But while she’d been looking at the damage to Sebastian’s car, he had seen the mortally wounded vampire and had known someone needed him more than she had.
“Your patient is stable now?” she asked with her usual concern and compassion.
He flinched and shut his eyes on the image of Owen lying there with his chest open, the stake protruding from his savaged heart. “I wouldn’t say that….”
“Then you should go back to the hospital,” she urged him, “and take care of your patient.”
“There’s nothing more I can do for him,” he said with a sigh. The society of undead buried their own dead. “I wanted to get back to you…to make sure that you’re all right.”
“I’m fine.”
“I wish I believed you,” he said, “but you don’t look fine, Paige.”
She lifted a hand to her face. “I got caught in the rain.”
He glanced around her to the bedroom window; rain ran in rivulets down the glass, but the sky had lightened as there were only a few gray clouds. As always, he breathed a small sigh of relief during the day. The undead didn’t need him then—unless they’d been out in the sunlight. But the undead were not his only patients; he had other ones—human patients at the hospital, to which he’d often been called away from Paige.
“You should get out of your wet clothes,” he suggested, intent on taking advantage of the time he had with her.
Her lips lifted in a faint smile. “Are you trying to get me naked?”
Even with clothes on, she was naked to him, her face vulnerable as it revealed all her feelings. All her pain and fear.
His heart contracted with regret for what his secrets had cost them both. “I came here to make sure you’re all right.”
She turned away from him, toward the window that the rain sluiced down as it had his skin earlier in the shower. “And I told you I’m fine. I reported the vandalism. I have a detective working on the case now. I’ve done everything I was supposed to do.”
Now he suspected she was talking about something else—something they had never talked about.
“I know,” he assured her.
She shook her head. “No. No, you don’t. You don’t know me, and I don’t know you.”
“We’re playing that game again?” he asked. “Strangers?”
“We’re not playing,” she said with a slight edge, but then she sighed and shook her head. “You’re a burglar, and I’m the homeowner who found you in my shower.”
He hated the games, hated more that they actually weren’t playing at being strangers. But if playing the game was the only way he could stick close to her, he’d play….
He would do anything to protect her—even let her go, if he had to…
Chapter 8
Warm lips brushed the nape of Paige’s neck, beneath the swing of her high ponytail. “You should have joined me in the shower.”
She shivered at his touch, or maybe she was just cold because the rain had left her sweatshirt damp, her skin chilled. “I don’t shower with strange men,” she told him.
The lips lingered, nibbling at the skin above her leaping pulse before curving into a smile. “So I’m not just a stranger, I’m strange, too?”
“Yes.” Even more so than when they’d been married. “I have no idea where you go—when you just suddenly leave me. Sebastian said the hospital, and I’ve always assumed that’s where. But you’ve never really told me.”
He tensed. “When we were married, did you think I was cheating on you?”
“I’m a lawyer.” Was a lawyer. “At a firm with divorce lawyers…” But it wasn’t just because of her career that she was cynical. She’d lived through all her mother’s heartaches over picking the wrong men, men who’d used and left her over and over again. God, she had become her mother.
His arms tightened around her waist, his fingers biting into her flesh. “I never—never—cheated on you, Paige, and I never would.”
“We’re not married,” she reminded him. She couldn’t expect him to be faithful to her. If only he could be open with her.
“Just remember, Paige, that I always come back to—”
She turned in his arms and swallowed his words with her mouth. She didn’t want declarations or promises he’d never be able to keep. She just wanted him. Linking their fingers, she pulled Ben along with her, her lips clinging to his as they stumbled a few short steps to the bed. The back of her knees hit the edge of the mattress and she tumbled down, alone, onto the rumpled blankets.
Ben stood above her, clad only in that towel tucked around his thin waist. She wriggled out of her jeans, kicking them down her legs. Then she pulled the damp sweatshirt over her head, baring her breasts. Ben’s dark eyes flared with passion as he stared down at her.
She ran her fingertips from her throat over the curve of one breast to the elastic holding her polka-dot satin panties up.
Something rose beneath his towel, tenting the terry cloth. He groaned, “Paige…”
Leaving the hand at the edge of her panties, she lifted her other one to her mouth, licking her fingers. Ben’s nostrils flared as his breathing grew harsh. His voice rough, he admonished her, “You’re bad…”
With one last lick, she took her fingers from her mouth and slid them down her body again. This time she didn’t skim over her breast, she cupped it, then ran her wet fingertip across her nipple, which peaked beneath her touch.
Her breathing caught as pleasure streaked through her. “Oh…”
“You’re very bad…” His towel dropped, pulled free of his waist by his jutting erection.
Her other hand edged farther beneath the satin, her fingers stroking over the curls visible beneath the thin polka-dot fabric. Then she parted herself, sliding first one finger, then two, into her damp heat.
“Ooh…” she moaned again, rising slightly off the edge of her mattress. She gazed up at him, beseeching him to help her, “Ben…”
He shook his head. “You don’t need me.” Sadness and regret darkened his eyes. “You don’t…”
She started to withdraw her hand, but he shouted at her, “Don’t!” Then he lowered his voice, and his body, onto the mattress beside her, “Don’t stop…”
His hand covered the one at her breast, moving her fingers so that she plucked at her distended nipple. Then his mouth settled onto her other breast, pressing kisses to the swollen flesh before his lips closed over the nipple.
“Don’t stop,” he murmured, licking her areole, then teasing her nipple with just the tip of his tongue.
She shuddered and slid the fingers back in. He reached down with his free hand, above the satin, closing over hers beneath, driving her fingers deeper inside her, grinding her palm against her clit until she came. Tears streaked from the corners of her eyes, falling onto the rumpled sheets.
“Ben…”
He lifted his mouth from her breast, then pulled her hand from her panties. He drew each wet finger into his mouth, lapping and licking. Then he reached down again and jerked at the satin until the panties tore free of her hips.
Before she could reach for him, he rolled off the bed and knelt at the side of the mattress. Then he pulled her to the edge, so that her legs dangled off the high bed, just above the floor.
“My turn,” he said, his voice hoarse. He licked his way from her knees, up the inside of her thighs, watching her as she propped herself on her elbows.
“Ben…”
“Touch yourself again,” he ordered her. “Touch your breasts, imagine my mouth on them, wet and hungry….”
“You’re awfully bossy for an intruder,” she teased.
“I may be dangerous,” he said. “So you better do what I say….”
He was definitely dangerous—to her heart. But she couldn’t resist him. She settled back onto the mattress and reached for her nipples, rolling them between her fingertips. Then his mouth moved between her legs, his tongue dipping into her heat. He pushed her legs farther apart as he devoured her. Hungrily.
Her fingers trembled as she continued to play with her breasts. Pleasure arched her back, raising her from the mattress, as he pulled her tight against his mouth, his tongue delving deep, then pulling out to lap at her clit.
She wept as he teased her, pleading with him for more. But he took his time, savoring her with every lick, every soft bite of his hungry mouth. Finally he drove deep, with his tongue, while his hands skimmed up her body and covered hers on her breasts.
She convulsed, as a powerful orgasm shuddered through her. “Ben…” she sobbed.
But he pulled back, replacing his tongue with his throbbing cock, pushing the thick, long length of his erection into her wetness. Her muscles squeezed him, trying to hold him, as he withdrew, then slammed back into her.
Again and again.
She arched off the bed, meeting his every thrust. More orgasms tore through her until he stiffened, then cried out. Heat filled her as he came. Then he pulled free, collapsing onto the bed next to her.
She rolled to her side, overwhelmed. But he remained facedown on the mattress, his body jerking with each harsh breath he dragged into his lungs.
“Ben…”
He turned toward her. “You’re going to kill me, you know. Brilliant cardiologist suffers heart attack while making love….”
“I don’t know about that,” she mused.
His body tensed for a moment, as if he thought she didn’t consider what they did making love. Only sex.
So she lifted a brow and teased, “You consider yourself brilliant? Really?”
He reared up and leaned over her, nipping at her sensitive nipple with his teeth, as he pushed his thumb inside her, strumming her clit as he might a guitar. Except that Ben wasn’t musical. Just brilliant at making her come.
She tensed, then broke apart, coming again. She bit his shoulder, hard, in protest at how easily he controlled her body. His teeth closed over her nipple, nipping.
She rose up, coming again. “Oh, Ben!”
“You can’t deny my brilliance now,” he teased her.
She knew he was kidding because Ben had never had an ego, just a hard work ethic. And a hard dick, which pulsed at her hip. She closed her hand around him, holding his hot, pulsing flesh. He groaned again but pulled her hand away.
“We have to discuss something.”
She hated how this was straying into a serious conversation she’d rather avoid. She sat up and swung her legs over the edge of the mattress.
“I’m worried about you, Paige,” he said, “about this crazy stalker.” His hands closed over her shoulders, turning her to face him. “I think I should move in here.”
Her heart knocked against her ribs. “What?”
“Or you can move in with me,” he offered, his dark eyes earnest.
“Ben!”
He sighed. “It would only have to be until the stalker is caught, Paige. You’re not safe here alone.”
“I’m not alone,” she pointed out. “Sebastian lives here, too.”
“Casanova?” he scoffed. “How much time does he really spend here?”
“Not much,” she admitted. “But I’m fine alone. You don’t need to worry about me.”
“But I do.” His throat moved as he swallowed hard. “Even before you picked up a stalker, I worried about you.”
“Ben, I take care of myself,” she reminded him, resenting that she had to. “I always have.”
“I know.” His brown eyes grew soft and wistful. “But I wish…”
“What?”
“I wish I had taken care of you when we were married,” he admitted.
She laughed at his thought of chivalry. “I didn’t let you.” If only she’d taken his advice…
“But I should have tried,” he insisted, his fingers clenching her shoulders. “I should have been there for you more.”
She shook her head, suddenly weary from more than making love. “That’s all in the past, Ben, and it doesn’t matter. We’re not married anymore.”
His eyes darkened with emotion. “What are we, Paige?”
She tried to pull out of his arms, but he held her tight, his fingers biting into her skin. “I don’t know, Ben.”
She didn’t have an answer for him or herself.
“We’re not married,” he agreed. “We’re not really dating. We don’t go out to dinner or a movie.”
“Who does that?” she asked. “We never went out to dinner or a movie.” They’d always been too tired from working such long, hard hours. Or he hadn’t been around. He’d been around for so little of their marriage.
“I don’t know.” He shrugged. “Maybe we should have….”
She smiled, amused that he would think they could have. Neither of them was much made for leisure activities…except making love. “We were never those people, Ben, not when we first started going out or when we were married.”
“What people?”
“You know the ones, the couple who hold hands while they walk around the mall, the ones who stare into each other’s eyes over a candlelit dinner.”
His eyes softened with regret, as if he wished they had been. “Paige…”
They both carried too much regret. None of it could change what had happened between them, what had gone wrong.
“It’s okay,” she assured him. “We never had time to be those people. I was busy, too.” Not as busy as he’d been, but she’d submerged herself in her work, too.
At first, because she’d been determined to be exactly the opposite of her mother. But then she’d fallen for Ben. And she’d still worked too much, so that she wouldn’t notice how little he’d been there.
“We should have made time,” Ben said.
“It’s too late now,” she said again.
He shook his head, obviously unwilling to accept the finality. “It’s never too late.”
“We can’t change the past,” Paige insisted.
“No, we can’t,” he agreed. “But I can be here for you now. I can protect you, Paige.”
“You might be able to protect me from my stalker,” she said, “if I have one. But who will protect me from you?”
A muscle twitched in his cheek. But he didn’t profess his undying love or the fact that he’d never hurt her. They both knew he couldn’t promise her those things.
“We can’t change the past,” she said as she drew in a shaky breath. “And we can’t change the fact that we have no future.”
He’d already accepted that they had no future. If only he’d realized it sooner and let her go…then maybe she wouldn’t be in danger now.
“We don’t have a future together,” he agreed, but hated himself for the pain that darkened her usually bright eyes. “But we need to make sure you have a future. I need to move in here, so that I can protect you from physical harm.” As she’d already pointed out, he was the last one who could protect her from emotional harm. “And you need to stop going to the club. It’s not safe for you there.”
Her eyes crinkled at the corners as the sadness left them, and she laughed.
“I’m serious, Paige.”
“You’re deluded,” she retorted. “I may let you tell me what to do there—” she pointed to the rumpled bed “—but only there. You’re not my husband anymore. You can’t tell me how to live my life.”
Frustration had his temper snapping and he bitterly remarked, “We both know I’ve never been able to tell you what to do.”
As the hurt and guilt flashed in her eyes, he wished the words back. It wasn’t her fault. It was his. He was the medical expert—the friggin’ world-renowned and otherworld renowned cardiologist. He should have known.
Pride and anger replaced the hurt in her narrowed eyes. “No, you’d actually have to be around in order to tell me what to do,” she said, the smile leaving her face as bitterness sharpened her voice. “And you weren’t around for much of our marriage.”
He couldn’t argue with her, nor could he apologize—not without offering an explanation that would put her in more danger than she already was.
“Why are you around now, Ben?” she asked.
Guilt. Fear. Love. He could have named any of them and been speaking the truth. But then he’d have to explain something that defied explanation. The damn secret society.
“I’m worried about you,” he said. “You’re in danger.”
She shook her head. “You don’t know that….”
“The flowers, the car…”
“That all could have been a mistake,” she insisted stubbornly.
How had he forgotten how stubborn Paige could be? It was one of the things he loved about her. “You can’t take that chance. And neither can I,” he said. “Let me move in here. Let me take care of you.”
She laughed again, but this time tears sparkled in her eyes. “Oh, Ben, that would only set us both up for disappointment.”
“What do you mean?” If she was worried about him falling for her again, it was already too late. He had never fallen out of love with her, and he worried that he never would—no matter that they had no future.
“You keep leaving,” she reminded him. “You just take off, with no warning, with no explanation of where you’re going or where you’ve been.”
“I’m a doctor, Paige,” he said. “You knew that when you married me. You knew I’d work long hours and be on call twenty-four seven.”
She shook her head. “Maybe when you were an intern you needed to work those crazy hours. But not now.”
“I have patients. I have a responsibility to them.” No matter what they were.
“What about us?”
He flinched. “I know, Paige. I wasn’t there for you…like I should have been.”
“And you can’t promise that it’ll be different now,” she pointed out.
Despite all his secrets, she really knew him too well. “No,” he admitted with a heavy sigh.
“You can’t protect me if you’re not here.”
“I’ll be here,” he vowed. “I’ll stick close to you.”
She shook her head. “Don’t make a promise you’ve never been able to keep.”
He pushed a hand through his still-damp hair and sighed. Damn it to hell, but she was right, as usual. It was another of her traits that had charmed as much as it had annoyed him.
“You always leave me,” she reminded him, the tears overflowing her eyes to trail down her face like the rain on the window. “So do what you do best…leave.”
He sucked in a breath of pain over her resolute rejection. “Paige?”
“And this time, don’t come back,” she said. “I can’t keep doing this.”
“But playing these games was your idea,” he reminded her, with a flash of anger.
He had tried to do the right thing; he’d tried to stay away from her after the divorce. But after a few months of no contact, she’d starting coming to him. A blow job at his office. A quickie in the backseat of his SUV. She’d shown up sporadically, weeks or sometimes months passing before she came to him again. And so desperate to see her, to touch her, to taste her, he’d started coming to her.
“It was a mistake,” she said, “to think that we could keep it light and unemotional. We’ve never been about fun and games.” She released a shuddery breath. “We’re all about secrets and pain.”
“I’m sorry.” Not just about the pain he’d caused her…but the pain she would not let him protect her from.
Paige held back her tears until the door closed behind Ben. But then, instead of shedding them, she blinked them away. She’d cried enough over him.
Her body hummed with the pleasure he’d given her—again and again. And over the past four years, she’d kept seeking him out for more. She hadn’t imagined the pleasure only he could give her, but she had forgotten the subsequent pain.
She couldn’t move on with her life if she kept him in her life. Even if she was really in danger, he couldn’t protect her. He could only cause her more pain, just as she had caused him.
Her heart contracted as she remembered the look on his face—the raw pain of her rejection. He hadn’t looked that upset even when she’d divorced him. In fact, she’d often thought that he’d looked more relieved than hurt when she’d served him with papers.
He hadn’t been relieved tonight. She wouldn’t kid herself that it was because he loved her. He had agreed with everything she’d said and was acting more out of obligation than love.
But it was time she protected herself. And she couldn’t do that by hiding away. That little voice in her head might be convinced she didn’t belong at Club Underground, but Paige was not.
At the moment, she had nowhere else to go.
Chapter 9
Ben expelled a breath but hesitated before drawing in another. He hated the smell of this place. The stench of the blood, the death, the sewer…
Sebastian shuddered. “Why’d we have to talk here?”
“Paige can’t see us together,” Ben said.
And she was out there, just beyond the steel door, down the hall in her office. The club had closed for the night; all the patrons had left but she had yet to go home. God, she was stubborn.
“Why not?” Sebastian asked. “I can’t talk to my ex-brother-in-law?”
Ben shook his head. “Not now. She’ll know what we’re talking about.”
“What are we talking about?” Sebastian asked.
“Her,” Ben replied. “You have to stick close to her. She won’t let me.”
Because she wanted nothing to do with him anymore. She wouldn’t take his calls or return his messages except to leave one of her own. I don’t want to see you. Or talk to you anymore. Please leave me alone….
He’d erased the message, but he would never forget the words—or the conviction in her voice. She’d been hurt and confused when she’d served him with divorce papers. She wasn’t confused anymore; she was certain she didn’t want him in her life.
“She won’t let me protect her, either,” Sebastian admitted with a heavy sigh. “It doesn’t matter if she sees us together or not. She keeps accusing me of hovering. She insists she’s not in any danger.”
“We both know better.”
Sebastian sighed again. “And so does everyone else. After Owen’s murder, I can’t convince anyone else to help me keep an eye on her.”
Ben shrugged. “It doesn’t matter. We can’t trust anyone else. You have to protect her.”
“But I don’t know—”
“This is your mess. You brought me into this,” Ben reminded him, frustration gripping him as he remembered the first time he’d seen this room. With the young man he’d believed his brother-in-law bleeding to death on the table, a stake protruding from his heart. “You brought her into this—you brought her into the world.”
And he had broken the law of the secret society when he had. Vampires were not supposed to procreate with mortals; they weren’t supposed to mate with them, either. But that was a law too many of the undead had broken for it ever to be steadfastly enforced.
Sebastian’s eyes glistened with regret and love. “She can never know that….”
“That you’re her dad instead of her younger half brother?” A claim she had too readily accepted as fact when Sebastian had showed up at their door ten years ago. “Yeah, that would kind of blow the damn secret out of the water.”
“And if she learns it…”
“If…” Ben snorted. “Does it matter? She doesn’t know it now, but she’s already in danger.”
“Is she?” the other man asked. “It’s been over a week and nothing else has happened.”
“Someone is threatening her,” Ben reminded him.
Maybe it was time he threatened back. He’d already lost Paige once because of the damn secret. He didn’t intend to lose her completely.
But then a scream penetrated the metal door, the voice shrill with terror. And terrifyingly familiar. Paige.
Was it already too late?
Paige pressed a trembling hand against her throat, where blood oozed between her fingers. With her other hand she fumbled for the light switch in her dark office. Before she could find it, the lamp flickered on her desk, and the faint glow of the bulb penetrated the shattered green shade and illuminated the trashed room.