Read Shades of Midnight Online

Authors: Linda Winstead Jones

Shades of Midnight (29 page)

He was honest and real, unlike anyone she had ever known. She saw so much, even now. She aroused him physically, with her fingers, with her kiss, but what they had was more than that. Deeper than flesh.

Lucien reached down and manacled her wrist, pulled her hand away from him. "Enough." He whirled her over and onto her back, and she laughed as they spun together and the bed bounced.

"Enough?"

Once again Lucien hovered above her. His face was close, his body aligned to hers. "Tonight, I want to give you everything I have. I want to be inside you when I come. I want to feel you all around me, Evie, hot and wet and mine. All mine. I want to see your face, when that moment comes; I want to feel your legs around me and I want to hear you scream."

He guided himself to her, touched her, prodded at her wet entrance.

Eve's smile faded. She closed her eyes and savored the sensation of Lucien entering her body, slowly, gently. Her body was untried, untested, and no matter that she wanted him more than she'd ever wanted anything... it took time for her body to adjust to his. She stretched, opened, dampened for him.

When Lucien broke through the barrier inside her, making her his in the oldest possible way, she cried out. Not in pain, but in awe at the tenderness and pleasure and intensity of joining with the man she loved.

There was more to this than a physical experience, more than pleasure. There was love, so deep and true that the room shimmered with it.

She wrapped her legs around him, and he very tenderly rocked in and out of her, stroking, filling, testing the boundaries of their united bodies. She didn't think it was possible to want more, not so soon, but as Lucien loved her she did want more. Her hips rocked up and met his thrust, her body and his swayed... joined and mated and screamed for more.

She shattered again, with Lucien buried inside her this time. She screamed, clutched his body to hers, and felt her inner muscles clenching and unclenching around him. He drove deep one more time, harder than before, and moaned as he did, finally, give her everything.

Depleted, completely exhausted, Eve melted into the mattress. With her legs wrapped around Lucien's and her arms around his neck, she brought him with her.

"Love is an amazing thing," she said breathlessly.

"Yes, it is." Lucien's breath was warm against her neck.

"I will always love you," she whispered, her eyes on the ceiling, her breath and heartbeat gradually returning to normal.

"I'll remind you of this moment and that promise when I forget an important anniversary or neglect to pack my socks or spend all night hunched over my equipment."

"As long as you never forget to come home," she teased, threading her fingers though his longish hair.

Lucien rose up and looked down at her, and the expression on his face was completely serious. "I will never forget to come home to you, or that you love me, or that I love you more than life."

Using great care, as if he thought she might break, Lucien rolled Eve onto her side and raked his loving hand down her spine. He laid his lips there, and she closed her eyes. He had the most wonderful mouth.

"Are you starting all over again?" she whispered. "So soon?"

"Not just yet," he said, his hand working up and down her back. "Later."

In the dark, Eve smiled. Later and always.

Lucien's hand continued to caress her back. His fingers traced her spine, he feathered kisses on her skin. "When you were lying there," he said, his breath warm against her flesh, "lying on the floor with Viola, I didn't see her. I only saw you. You were lying there on the floor, and I watched while the knife went into
your
back.
You
screamed.
You
bled. And no matter how I tried, I couldn't reach you." His breath hitched. "I tried, I tried with everything I had, and I couldn't get to you. It was without doubt the most horrible moment of my life." He laid his lips on her shoulder. "You must promise not to take foolish chances with the life of the woman I love, with the life of the woman who will be mother to my children."

Eve sighed, smiled, and rocked her hips back so she rested against Lucien. "I didn't intend to do anything dangerous. I was only trying to help Viola."

Lucien wrapped his arms around her and pulled her even closer, until they were again like one, curled and cuddled together. "Promise me, Evie," he demanded.

"I promise," she whispered, and then she drifted into sleep with Lucien, the man she loved, her definitely not-ordinary man, holding her close.

* * *

Lucien opened his eyes to find Eve sitting on the edge of the bed, a tray in her hands and a wide smile on her face. She wore her wrapper and nothing else, and her hair was loose and falling over one shoulder. The very sight of her took his breath away.

The light that illuminated her face so softly was morning sun breaking through the curtains; he'd doused the lamps downstairs hours ago, leaving a sleeping Eve just long enough to extinguish the lights, then hurrying back up the stairs to lie with her again.

"I made you breakfast," she said, setting the tray on the mattress beside him. "Biscuits, eggs, grits and coffee."

"And tea for you," he said as he rolled up on one elbow.

"Yes."

He wasn't hungry, but he sat up and ate some of what Eve had prepared while she sat beside him, drank tea, and fidgeted.

"All right," he said, placing the breakfast tray on the floor by the bed and turning his attention to Eve—who continued to squirm. "What's wrong? Are you hurt?" He placed a finger on her face and made her look at him. "Are you sorry about last night?"

Her eyes widened. "Oh, no! It's not that." She smiled. "Never that."

"Then what is it?"

She placed her teacup on the bedside table. "Are Alistair and Viola... gone?"

He shook his head. "No, I don't think so."

"You're not sure?"

"Things are not as they were. Viola knows Alistair didn't kill her, but everything is not settled."

"The murderer is still out there, somewhere."

Lucien nodded.

"Do we have to find out who the murderer is for them to move on?"

"I'm not sure." He wished he knew. "I don't think they'll relive the murder again. In fact, I'm almost certain they won't. There's no reason for it."

Eve leaned against the headboard, and the wrapper parted to reveal one leg. She seemed not to notice. "Viola didn't visit my dreams last night." She sounded disappointed.

"It was a busy night for Viola." Lucien laid his hand on Eve's knee. "And for you. I'm sure that one day, before they move on, she will visit to thank you."

Eve's head snapped around. "I don't want her to thank me. That's not important. I want to talk to her, that's all. There are so many unanswered questions." She reached out and caressed his cheek. "After last night, I know her so well. There are so many thoughts floating just out of reach, answers that are in my head, so close and yet..." She sighed. "Not close enough."

"I know what you mean. You have a little piece of Viola inside you now. Memories not your own might tease you, for a while. A few days, perhaps."

"And then they'll be gone forever?"

He nodded.

"Oh, but I want to know!"

"What do you want to know, love?"

Eve laid those curious green eyes on his face. "How could she let another man touch her that way, when she loved Alistair? How could she think it wouldn't matter?"

"We'll probably never know," he said. "We're not meant to have every answer, Evie, only the ones we need."

"But..." She shook her head slowly. "Last night was so wonderful, so incredibly beautiful, but only because it was
you
here with me. How could Viola allow another man to touch her on the
chance
that she might find herself with child? For all she knew, she was the one who could not conceive. It just doesn't make any sense."

"She was lonely. She made a mistake. Honey, I know you found a connection with Viola, and it's because of that connection that we were able to reach her last night. You feel close to her, because you two formed a strong bond. You like her. That doesn't mean she was perfect, that she only made good decisions in her life." He leaned over and kissed Evie quickly. "She was a human before she was a ghost, and trust me... both almost always come imperfect."

"But..."

He untied her wrapper, slipped his hand inside to cup one bare breast. "I don't want to talk about your ghosts right now."

"But I can't just..."

He flicked one thumb over a nipple that instantly hardened, and Eve muttered a surprised and soft, "Oh."

Lucien peeled the wrapper off of Eve's luscious body. "I want to make love to you again, and then we'll sleep a little more, and then we'll go to town and celebrate Halloween with the rest of the Plummerville Ghost Society."

He pulled Eve down to lie beside him, and already her eyes were dreamy, her face slightly flushed, her lips parted.

"Tonight will be for Alistair and Viola, if they need us. Today is for you and me. No one else."

She draped her arms around his neck and muttered a very uncharacteristically agreeable, "Yes, dear."

 

 

 

Chapter 18

 

It was a lovely afternoon, the gentle breeze cool but not so cold that Lucien regretted leaving his overcoat behind in Wilmington. The sun shone, on occasion, but every now and then clouds blocked the sunshine and the air grew cooler.

Eve was more beautiful than usual today. She wore a calico dress that was a lovely shade of blue, not too dark, not too pale. She'd rummaged in her wardrobe for much too long, sifting through dark and drab dresses to find this one. He had felt a touch of impatience, then, but she was definitely worth the wait.

That chore done, she'd then spent longer than usual fiddling with her hair, which was pinned atop her head as usual but sported a number of soft curls around her face. Some of those curls had been there when they'd left the house, others had been added by the occasional gust of wind. He preferred to see those honey strands loose and spread across a pillow, but still... the hint of wildness was charming.

Her shawl was cream-colored and fine, probably not warm enough for the day but lovely, and it did offer some protection from the cold.

He and Eve walked, arm in arm, up and down the main street of Plummerville. They strolled around the square, stopped now and then to sit on the benches there, and ate ungodly amounts of pumpkin pie and apple cake. Children played games—organized and of their own making—while their parents and grandparents visited with their neighbors.

Those Plummerville residents stared when he and Eve walked past. Lucien was not dismayed or overly concerned by the bold glares. When people found out what he did, they always stared. The curious onlookers didn't bother him, not today, and Eve seemed not to notice.

Eve.
He didn't know whether he was more amazed by what had happened last night... and this morning... or by the simple fact that she did, indeed, love him. Madly. Completely. Perhaps even as much as he loved her. It was like an unexpected gift, such pure love. He had never expected to receive such a gift.

She wanted this. A home. Neighbors. Some normalcy. Lucien wondered if he would recognize home when it found him. He'd traveled all his life, much as Eve had. More than once he and his mother had fled one small town or another when a young Lucien had let his gift be known and their neighbors had reacted as expected. With fear, and then fear turned to hatred. As he'd grown older he'd learned to hide his gift. And then, years later, he'd learned to use it. He was thirty years old, and he had never longed for anything so simple as home.

Home was here, he supposed, or anywhere else Eve decided to put down roots.

"Mr. Thorpe!"

Lucien closed his eyes and took a deep breath, as he and Eve came to a halt on the street. He recognized that voice, too well.

Like it or not, he still retained too much of Alistair, deep inside. He remembered things, he almost remembered others... and as he turned to face the woman who called his name he felt a little guilt, for what Alistair had done.

Other books

Puritan Bride by Anne O'Brien
Gravity: A Novel by L.D. Cedergreen
Poison Ivy by Cynthia Riggs
WalkingSin by Lynn LaFleur
Can't Stand the Heat? by Margaret Watson
Heather Song by Michael Phillips
Moon Music by Faye Kellerman
Dubious Allegiance by Don Gutteridge
Crow's Inn Tragedy by Annie Haynes