For the second time in her life, Rue gave herself up to someone else.
"This is different," she whispered. "This is different."
"It ought to be." Sean said. "It will be." He picked her up in one smooth move. Their eyes were locked.
"Why are you getting into my life?" She shook her head, dazed. "There's so much bad in it."
"You fought back," he said. "You made a new life, on your own."
"Not much of one."
"A life with courage and purpose. Now, let me love you this way." His body moved against hers.
"I'm not scared." She was.
"I know it." He smiled at her, and her heart wrenched in her chest.
"You won't hurt me," she said with absolute faith.
"I would rather die." He was so serious.
"You know I can't have children," she said. She meant only to let him know he didn't need to use birth control.
"I can't, either," he murmured. "We can't reproduce."
If she'd ever known that, she'd forgotten it. She felt oddly jolted. She'd always supposed that her barrenness would be a terrible obstacle to forming another relationship, but instead it was a non-issue.
His tongue flicked in her ear. "Tell me what you like," he suggested, his breath tickling her cheek. He walked over to the pile of exercise mats, carrying her as if her weight was nothing.
"I don't know," she said, partly embarrassed at her own ignorance, partly excited because she was sure he would find out what she liked.
"Light out, light on?"
"Out, please."
In the space of a second, he was back beside her. He had a few towels with him. He spread them on the mats, and she was glad, because the vinyl surface was unpleasant to the touch.
"My clothes?" he asked. He waited for her answer.
"Oh… off." Ambient light came through the frosted glass in the door of the studio, and she could see the gleam of his skin in the darkness. He was built smooth and sleek, as dancers usually are, and he was purely white except for the trail of red hair starting below his navel and going down. She followed that trail with her eyes and found herself gasping.
"Oh… oh. Wow."
"I want you very much."
"Yeah, I get that." Her voice was tiny.
"Can I see you?" For the first time, his voice was tentative.
She sat up on the pile of mats and rose to her knees. She pulled off her white T-shirt very slowly, and her bra was gone in an instant.
"Oh," he said. He reached out to touch her, hesitated.
"Yes," Rue said.
His white hands with their long fingers cupped her breasts with infinite gentleness. Then his mouth followed.
She gasped, and it was an urgent sound. His hands began tugging her shorts, gathering up her panties with them, and she lay down so he could coax them over her feet. He stayed down there for a minute or two, sucking her toes, which made her shiver all over, and then he began working his way up her legs.
She was afraid her courage would run out. She wanted him so badly she shook all over, but her only previous experience with sex had been short and brutal, its consequences painful and disastrous.
Sean seemed to understand her misgivings, and he eased his body up her length until his arms wrapped around her and his mouth found hers again.
"I can stop now," he told her. "After this, I'm not sure. I don't want to hurt you or frighten you."
Rue said, "Now or never."
He gave a choked laugh.
"That didn't sound very romantic," she apologized. His hips flexed involuntarily, pressing his hard length against her stomach, and he began to lick her neck.
"Oh," she said, reaching down to touch him. "Oh, please." His fingers touched her intimately, making sure she was ready. The delicate movement of his fingers made Rue shudder.
Then he was at her entrance, the blunt head pushing, and then he was inside her. "Layla," he said raggedly.
"It's good," she said anxiously. After a few seconds, she said again, in an entirely different tone, "It's so good."
"I want it to be better than good." His hips began to move.
Then she couldn't speak.
CHAPTER EIGHT
She had never imagined she could be so relaxed, so content.
His hair had come loose from its ribbon and trailed across her breasts as he lay on his stomach looking down at her. He had never seen anything so beautiful as her face in the faint glow of the city night that lit the room through the frosted glass.
She wondered how he could have become so important to her in such a short time. She loved every line of his face, the power of his sleek white body, the passion of his love-making; but most of all she loved the fact that he was on her side. It had been years since anyone had been on her side, unconditionally, unilaterally. She thought, I should still be angry that he went to Pineville. But she searched for the anger she'd initially felt and found it was gone.
"I'm a wimp," she concluded, out loud.
"I know what that means," Sean said, his voice dreamy. "Why do you say that?"
"I'm glad you found out. I'm glad I don't have to tell you all about it. I'm glad you care enough to want to find… Carver."
The hesitation before she was able to say his name told Sean a lot.
"What did your parents do?" he asked. He hadn't had time to ask Will Kryder all the questions that had occurred to him.
"They didn't believe me," she murmured. "Oh, my brother Les stood by me. He saved me that night. But he's not a strong-willed, forceful kind of guy. See, my dad works for Carver's dad, and my dad probably couldn't get hired anywhere else now. He drinks a lot. I'm not sure he'd still have the job he's got if he wasn't my father. Dad knows Hutton's got to keep him on, or else he might talk. My mother… well, she decided to think it was a clever ploy on my part to get Carver to marry me. When she found out otherwise, she was… livid."
"She wanted you to marry him."
"Yes, she actually believed that I'd want to be tied to the man who raped me."
"In my time, we would have made him wed you," Sean said.
"Really?"
"If you were my sister, I would have made sure of it."
"Because no one else would have married me otherwise, right? Damaged goods."
Sean perceived he had made a massive error.
"And for the rest of my life I would have had to put up with Carver's little ways, like beating on me, because he'd raped me," Rue said coldly.
"All right, in my time, we would have been wrong," he conceded. "But we would have been on your side."
"I have you on my side," she said. "I have you on my side now. If this has meant anything to you."
"I don't get this close to anyone unless it means something to me."
"That come from being an aristocrat? In your time, were you like Carver?" There was an edge to her voice that hadn't been there before.
"The night we first make love, you can compare me to the man who raped you?"
She hadn't thought before she spoke. "After years of weighing every word I said to another person, all of a sudden I've gotten to be the worst—I'm so sorry, Sean. Please forgive me for the offense."
There was a long silence in the dark room. He didn't speak. Her heart sank. She'd ruined it.Her bitterness and mistrust had twisted her more than she knew. But she'd come by it naturally, and she didn't see how she could have existed otherwise.
After another unnerving two minutes of silence, Rue began to fumble around for her clothes. She was determined not to cry.
"Where are you going?" Sean asked.
"I'm going home. I've screwed up everything. You won't talk to me, and I'm going home."
"You offended me," he said, and his voice wasn't level or calm at all. He was saying, You hurt me. But Rue wasn't absorbing that. Before Sean could scramble into his own clothes, she was gone, wearing her flannel shirt tossed over her dance outfit. She'd thrust her feet into her boots without lacing them. She was out the door of the studio, then out the door to the building, before Sean could catch her. He cursed out loud. He had to check the studio and lock everything up; that was the duty of the last person out, and it was something he couldn't shirk. He could always catch up with Rue, he was sure; after all, he was a vampire, and she was human.