Total pages in book: 97
Estimated words: 92136 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 461(@200wpm)___ 369(@250wpm)___ 307(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 92136 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 461(@200wpm)___ 369(@250wpm)___ 307(@300wpm)
I knew I should get up and get a condom, but I didn’t. I paused right before entering her, and we locked eyes. She knew what I was asking.
“It’s okay,” she whispered. “It’s what I want, too. And we’re safe.”
As insane as it sounds, I felt safe. Safe and strong and powerful. Protective and protected. And I realized, as I began to move inside her, our hands clasped above her head, her legs wrapped around me, what it truly meant to trust someone. After my childhood, I’d lost the ability to trust, and she’d brought it back.
Feelings for her overwhelmed me. With my eyes pinned on hers, I watched her spiral upward once more, watched her surrender to everything she felt and all the passion she evoked in me. I saw agony and pleasure intertwine on her face, felt her body tense beneath me, listened to her say my name, softly at first and then louder, louder, louder, until she was shouting and gasping and wrenching her hands free to pull me in deeper and deeper as she came and I held nothing back, gave her everything, everything, everything I had, felt it flowing from me into her, my body, my heart, my soul, my trust.
I fell on top of her, and rolled to my side, taking her with me. We kissed and clung to one another, my mind a mad jumble of unspoken thoughts I wanted to give voice to but couldn’t. There were so many things I needed to tell her. But my head—it was spinning. Or was that the room? The world? The universe?
I needed something to anchor me in the chaos that had become my life. I needed to feel like I was going to be okay. Because this room, this private little corner of heaven, wasn’t ours to keep. We had to turn the key in when we left, and we had to leave soon. And out there, nothing was certain. I didn’t know who I was. I didn’t know what I was doing. I didn’t know who to become.
I didn’t know how to let myself love someone.
But maybe it was time to try.
“What time is it?” she whispered. We were lying on our sides, facing each other on the bed, our legs still twined.
I picked up my head and looked at the digital clock on the nightstand behind her. “Almost eleven.”
She sighed. “I don’t want to go.”
“I don’t either.”
“But we should.”
“Yes.”
She started to get up and I put a hand on her shoulder. “Wait one minute. There’s something I want to tell you.”
She stretched out again with her head on the pillow, her hands tucked beneath her cheek. “Okay.”
For a moment, I panicked. How did you tell a girl you were falling in love with her? That she was part of what was changing your world—and you—for the better? That you might be an emotionally stunted, jaded divorce lawyer and completely inept as a dad and boyfriend, but there was a good reason for that and you were going to try harder to deserve her faith and trust?
No. That was no good.
I had to go back to the beginning.
I reached for one of her hands and took it in mine between us, just like she’d done to me the first night she’d slept over. My first night with Paisley. She hadn’t abandoned me then, and I hoped she wouldn’t now.
“I lied to you,” I said.
She blinked, her expression blank. “What?”
“I lied to you. About not having any siblings. I had a brother.”
“You did?”
I nodded, my throat closing. “His name was Adam.”
“What happened?”
“He died when he was nine. Leukemia. I was twelve.”
Her eyes grew shiny. “Oh, Nate.”
“It pretty much destroyed me. It destroyed all of us.” I wiped at my eyes with a thumb and forefinger.
“Of course it did. I don’t know how you get over something like that.”
“You don’t.”
“Were you close?” she asked softly.
I nodded, unable to speak.
“Best friends, probably. Like my sisters and me.”
After a moment, I found my voice by thinking about pain other than mine. “We’d been a perfectly normal, happy family before that. And then afterward…my mother developed her obsessive fears about germs and crowds and touching things. She blamed them for Adam’s death—of course, that wasn’t the truth. What she really blamed was herself. But she couldn’t handle that. She tried to externalize it. It was the only way to deal with her grief and guilt. Eventually she disappeared into her fears. The mother I’d known was gone.”
Emme nodded and wiped her eyes. “What about your dad?”
“He drank his sorrow. Abandoned us emotionally if not physically. He died of heart disease three years ago but the man I remember as Dad was gone long before that.”
“And you?” she asked, another tear slipping from the corner of her eye. “How did you cope? You lost everyone, didn’t you?”