“Keep going.”
“Can we sleep together without you wanting more?” she blurts, taking her time looking at me, as if she’s afraid of the answer. “Be honest with me.”
A churn starts in the pit of my stomach. I could say yes and have her.
Maybe even tonight. She’d lead me into her bedroom, and I’d finally get my taste of her pussy. She would work up a sweat riding my cock all night.
I’d stuff her so full and so hard, she’d have to scream into a pillow. But I vowed never to lie to Britta again—and I don’t break vows. Especially not to this girl. She’s my wife. “No. I’ll want more.”
I’ll want everything.
And that’s the hundred percent truth.
It’s more than a little absurd that having feelings for my wife is a negative thing, but here we are. Her lips press into a flat line in the wake of my confession, and she nods. “Thank you for telling me the truth. You could have lied.” She covers her face with her hands and laughs a little hysterically. “The fact that you didn’t only makes me like you more.”
My chest is in shreds.
“Are we still able to go to the concert as friends?” she asks, beautiful eyes hopeful.
“If that’s our only option, then yeah,” I say hoarsely. “Because there’s no way I’m letting you go alone. And I . . . want to go. I want to watch you enjoy yourself.”
“As a friend.”
“As . . . a friend.”
We stare at each other for several seconds. “I’ll just get my purse, and we can go.”
While waiting for her, I sort through my mail. Since most of it is junk, I tear it in half and cross the kitchen to throw the torn envelopes and advertisements into the trash can.
Sitting right there, on the top of the garbage, is the Sports Illustrated swimsuit edition.
It’s got my address on it.
Did she throw it away?
She must have. Britta threw out my swimsuit edition. And listen, it’s not like I wait by the mailbox for the damn thing to arrive once a year. I actually do subscribe for the stories. The special edition comes as part of the package. But Britta didn’t want me looking at it.
Interesting.
If she were merely attracted to me, she wouldn’t go to these lengths to keep me from looking at other women, even if they’re just photographs.
Right?
Maybe there’s more. Maybe she has feelings for me, and she’s just not ready to admit them yet. Fortunately, we’re married for three more months . . . which gives her plenty of time to figure those emotions out, work through them, while I wait patiently.
The longer I stare down into the garbage can, the wider my smile grows.
And it has nothing to do with bikinis.
Chapter Six
BRITTA
Iprobably shouldn’t drink tonight.
That’s what I’m thinking as my temporary husband escorts me through the lobby of the venue with his huge hand on the small of my back, his heat making me feel protected. Or maybe it’s the fact that his upper lip curls when someone gets too close to me. The way he guards me like the crown jewels shouldn’t be such a turn-on, but Lord, it is.
Everything about him is a turn-on, frankly, from his fall breeze scent to his complete honesty earlier.
No. I’ll want more.
My dumb heart ticks fast at the memory of him rasping those words.
If I drink alcohol tonight, mistakes will be made. That truth might as well be written on a stone tablet and brought forth by Moses from the mountaintop. I will not get through the night without begging for a horizontal workout from this thunder god of hockey who loves his grandma. And then I will hurt his feelings afterward when I tell him I’m still not interested in anything resembling a relationship.
Although, if I’m being completely honest with myself . . . that resolve is beginning to wane.
Just the tiniest pinch.
When we reach our seats and he rests his arm along the back of mine, I don’t feel alone. And that’s not merely because I’m with another person.
I’ve felt extremely lonely while on dates in the past. Sometimes I even feel lonely in the packed bar where I’m conversing with several people at once.
It’s a very singular, unfamiliar thing to sit beside another person and know they’ve got my back. I’ll never again underestimate what it’s like to be understood by someone. That’s what it’s like in the nook of Sumner’s arm.
Warm understanding.
With a razor-sharp undercurrent of lust.
It’s dark in the small arena. The opening act, a female country duo with a harmonic style, is finishing their set. The seats around us are filling, but no one is sitting in front of us, because we’re in the first row of the mezzanine overlooking the general admission floor, the stage beyond. The air is cool and smells a little bit like marijuana—and there’s an exhilarated buzz dancing down the sensitive skin of my arms. It’s that preconcert excitement. More than that, though, it’s the need to cut loose a little bit.