her breasts smashed against his chest. Above his head, he could feel the heat from the overhead lamp burning into his back. Near his right ear, he heard the timer ticking away.
Next thing he knew, he was kissing her.
She stiffened. And then she began kissing him back.
He moved his mouth over hers, sucking at her lips, pulling away, turning his head, finding her again. He plunged his tongue deep inside her mouth, and she met him, thrust for thrust.
He released her hands and she wrapped her arms around him. Her leg curled around his thigh. With her back braced against the wall, he grasped her leg and lifted it higher, a layer of denim the only thing keeping him from sliding inside her.
She let out a cry of frustration, unbuttoned and unzipped his jeans, freeing him into the heat of her hands.
“You’re beautiful,” she whispered against his mouth. “I want you.” She guided him to her.
“Wait,” he said in a breathless voice. “We need a rubber. You got a rubber?”
“We don’t need one.”
“Yes, we do.”
“Are you afraid of me?”
“I’m looking out for both of us.”
“But if either of us were tainted, it would be me, wouldn’t it?”
“I didn’t say that.”
The heat lamp clicked, engulfing them in darkness. He reached behind him, searching for the wall switch.
“Leave the light off,” she whispered.
“I want to see you.”
“I want to pretend you’re somebody else.”
“You’re making me mad.”
“I’m just being honest.”
“Honest?” he said. “You don’t know the meaning of the word.”
“What about you? You said you were tired and hungry, but this is what you really wanted, isn’t it?”
“And you don’t?” He cranked up the heat lamp. The red filaments came on, giving the space around them a weird, darkroom kind of glow. He bent his head to kiss her. She turned her face away. She was still cradling him in her hands. She let go and pressed both palms to the wall.
He still had a hand to her thigh, her leg wrapped around him. “Look at me,” he said, his voice smooth and low.
She kept her face turned away.
He slid a finger inside her. “Look at me.” She was hot and wet.
He began to stroke her slowly. “Look at me.”
Her face came around. Her eyes were half closed, her lips parted, her breasts rapidly rising and falling.
His strokes became faster and faster, until her entire body tensed, until she threw back her head and cried out, until she went limp and they both slid to the floor.
“It’s too bad you don’t have a rubber,” she said, her voice thick and slurred, still lost in a euphoria he couldn’t achieve. He rested his forehead against hers. “No shit,” he said, his voice tight and strained.
Another minute passed with just the sound of breathing. “You could get one,” she suggested. He sensed that she was holding her breath, waiting for his response.
“I don’t trust you.”
“You think I’ll leave while you’re gone?”
“Let’s put it this way, I’d be surprised if you didn’t.”
She shoved him away. He just kind of fell back. She stepped over him and left the bathroom. Two seconds later he heard the bed creaking, heard the sound of covers being adjusted.
No, he didn’t trust Cleo Tyler for a second. And even though there hadn’t been any penetration, he’d be lying if he said they hadn’t been intimate. And he’d be lying if he said he hadn’t known better.
Cleo fell asleep almost instantly. And this time she didn’t dream the pumpkin dream. Instead, she dreamed something that was disturbing in a new kind of way. She dreamed that she was pregnant-with Daniel Sinclair’s baby.
Cleo woke up to find bright sunlight streaming in the open curtains and Sinclair, fully dressed, the Ozarks T- shirt stretched across his chest and bunched under his armpits, going through her bag.
She bolted upright, pulling the sheet over her breasts. “What are you doing?”
“Trying to figure you out.”
She pulled the sheet free of the bed and got to her feet, the fabric twisted around her.
“A little bit late for that, isn’t it?” he asked, indicating the sheet.
She took a sweep at her bag. He lifted it beyond her reach then lowered it.
“I’ve already seen everything there is to see,” he said. “And I’m referring to the bag, in case you wondered.”
“Go to hell.”
“Money. I should have known. Jo paid you yesterday, didn’t she? That’s why you took off.”
It would do no good to state her case. And it certainly wouldn’t do any good to tell him that she’d planned to give back every last cent. He wouldn’t believe her. She knew he wouldn’t believe her.
He scratched at the day’s growth of stubble on his cheek. “I ordered some breakfast from room service. As soon as we eat we can hit the road. That’ll get us back in time for you to spend the afternoon with Jo and have your voodoo session, reading those tarot cards and shit.”
There was a knock on the door.
Daniel’s eyebrows lifted, and he looked at Cleo as if to ask,
She ran for the bathroom, closing the door behind her.
Chapter Ten
Inside the bathroom, Cleo checked the side zipper in her bag. The money was still there. Reassured, she brushed her teeth and scrubbed her face, then put on the clothes from the day before. She detested having to wear the same panties two days in a row, but she could hardly go without since she had nothing else to wear but the black skirt.
What had gotten into her? She was humiliated. Ashamed. And yet, just thinking about how he’d touched her-
Yes, she could do that. She was good at pretending.
She put on a little makeup, tied back her hair with the black fabric-covered rubber band, and joined Daniel for breakfast.
She stared at the tray, hoping to find something that wouldn’t make her stomach heave. And if she didn’t, well, she’d become proficient at pretending to eat. The crescent rolls were a possibility. Coffee, yes. Orange juice, no. Not only was it orange, it probably had pulp in it. Oatmeal? Definitely no.
She sat down on the bed, poured herself some coffee, and picked up a crescent roll.
“Something wrong?”
She pulled her gaze away from the roll to where he sat at the tiny hotel-room table, a plate of scrambled eggs and sausage in front of him, fork in hand.
“I didn’t know what you wanted, so I just guessed. You might notice that I didn’t order anything for you that was once alive.”
Muted sunlight drifted in, accentuating his perfect bone structure. Sunlight could be harsh and honest and