Home > Books > One Night on the Island(59)

One Night on the Island(59)

Author:Josie Silver

‘I’ve tried not to think about this.’ He shucks off the rest of his clothes and lays down alongside me naked. ‘I’ve tried not to imagine how it’d be with us.’

‘I haven’t thought about anything else since we kissed,’ I admit. He angles his body towards mine and I turn myself into him. We both gasp at the kick-up in intimacy when our stomachs press together.

‘Just since we kissed, huh?’ he says. ‘Longer for me.’

He reaches for my hands and raises them over my head against the pillow, the look in his eyes somewhere close to drugged as he slides his knee between mine.

‘Cleo.’ The edge to his voice is everything.

I curl my fingers into his palms above my head, his mouth against mine as he moves over me and settles himself between my legs.

His parted lips graze my forehead, my cheek, along my jaw. He looks in my eyes when he lowers his hips, slow and deep, biting his bottom lip as if he’s in actual pain. I paint the moment in the sketchbook of my most precious memories in my head.

‘Beautiful you,’ he murmurs, liquid sexy, moving against me, inside me. His mouth drags down my throat, the roughness of his jaw, his hands gripping mine, the arch of my body, the steady thrust of his hips. I’m drenched in him, so hot inside I think I might actually explode. And then I do, and the intensity makes me cry out, unexpected tears on my cheeks. Mack kisses my tears, clutching my hands so tight it almost hurts as he lets go of control, my thighs clamped around his body. It’s powerful. It wasn’t making love because we don’t love each other, but it wasn’t just sex either. It was another level of intimate, fire-hot, a whole new emotion I don’t have the words for yet.

‘Holy fuck, Cleo,’ he gasps, his heart banging against mine.

A shaky laugh rattles through me because it’s still an understatement. ‘I thought I was going to actually die for a minute there,’ I say.

He rests his forehead against mine, catching his breath, kissing me slowly. ‘I’m glad you didn’t.’

‘At least they’d have sent the bloody boat,’ I mutter, making him laugh.

I let my hands learn the angles and curves of his shoulders, the indentations of his spine. I close my eyes. Some kisses have an end. This one doesn’t. It goes on, our new way to communicate. My tongue slides over his, his hands move in my hair, we roll on to our sides. He breathes my name like a spell, I move so I’m comfortable in his arms, and still we kiss. He reaches down and pulls the blanket over our bodies, my legs intertwined with his, and still we kiss.

For a woman who finds her way through the world with words, this is a whole new language.

I’m more asleep than awake when Mack speaks, his breath warm against the top of my head.

‘One – I came here scared that Susie would get over me, and right now I’m more scared that I might get over her.’

I feel his turmoil in the rise and fall of his chest.

‘Two – I drank my first beer at ten years old. I stole it from my dad’s fridge after I walked in and caught him having sex with his dental assistant. Right there in his patient chair. He didn’t see me. She did, but I don’t think she ever told him.’

‘And three …’ He runs his hand lightly down my arm from shoulder to elbow. ‘I don’t regret you.’

I cover his hand with mine. ‘And I’m supposed to be the one who has a way with words,’ I whisper, pressing my lips against his chest.

‘One – I’m worried about going back to London. I didn’t even want to come here, but leaving feels somehow scarier than staying now. I came for one thing and it’s become about something else, and I’m trying to work out what that means for me.’

That’s the way it is sometimes, isn’t it? Life is the stuff that happens between the cracks in your plans and expectations. I cast around for something random to throw in as my number two.

‘Two – I didn’t hate the ending of Lost, although I wish Kate and Sawyer had been together at the end.’ As usual, I was a sucker for the bad boy. ‘And I still don’t understand where those polar bears came from, either.’

Mack laughs at that. Wind howls around outside and rattles the windows of the lodge, but here in bed it’s warm and blissful.

‘Three,’ I say. ‘I don’t regret you either.’

Grey fingers of shadowed dawn slide over Mack’s features as I lie awake and study him. He’s peaceful in a way he usually isn’t, not around me at least. Does he look this untroubled every night when he sleeps? Or has our night together released a tension in him, as it has in me? True to my word, I don’t regret what has happened between us. I hope he feels the same when he wakes, that shame doesn’t diminish the star-bright burn of last night. There was an inevitability and a trueness to what happened between us, and in the quiet hours afterwards, a soul-deep calmness.

 59/115   Home Previous 57 58 59 60 61 62 Next End