He lifted his head to stare back at her in shock.
“It was one of the reasons I was so furious to learn that even though he was bastard enough to try to sneak another into our bed, I was hurt when I learned you had turned him down.”
He grimaced. “Being your third wouldn’t have been enough,” he finally growled. “I knew it then. I’ve always known it.”
“But it’s enough now?” she asked him.
“I’m not the third in this, Kia, and Khalid knows it. I was your main lover. He took his cues from me, not the other way around.”
“Ah, so there are rules even to that?” she asked, almost shaking her head at the thought.
“Rules make things simpler,” he said, his voice a bit distant now. “It keeps emotions from running the show.”
Kia nodded at that. “Yes, things do get rather messy when emotions get involved.”
She could testify to that one.
Silently as they moved through town, the lights decorating the buildings and homes twinkled and flashed in merry chaos.
“I didn’t want this to hurt you, Kia,” he said as they moved toward Squire Point. “I didn’t want it to hurt either of us.”
“It can’t go on the way it was, Chase.”
And perhaps that was what he didn’t want to hear. Chase drove on through the snow, the music soft in the background as Kia rode quietly beside him.
“Your father saw me leave the ball,” he told her. “He didn’t seem happy with me.”
He saw her amused grimace. “Daddy is under the impression we have a relationship. The 'just friends’ line I gave him didn’t go over so well.”
Chase winced. That definitely explained things.
“He’s a good man,” he said. “And a bad enemy. He reminds me some of what I remember my father as being. Dependable, but he had his own rules, and that was how his world ran.”
“That’s Dad.” She turned and watched him curiously. “Your parents are gone, aren’t they?”
He nodded. “Since we were thirteen.” And hell had begun that year.
“Did you have family?”
“If you could call her family.” He grimaced. “Aunt Davinda. My mother’s sister. A demon from hell if one was ever born.”
He could feel the dark bitterness rising inside him, the knowledge that it had been his brother, Cameron, who she had nearly destroyed, and how she had done it. Accepting that in the past six months hadn’t been easy. And in a way, perhaps Kia was paying for that, as well as another woman’s insanity.
Moriah Brockheim. Cameron had nearly been killed by her. Chase had killed her—and ripped a part of his soul to pieces. Even now, he could see the neat little hole that bloomed in her forehead and the innocent confusion that filled her eyes at the instant of death.
His hands clenched on the steering wheel as bitterness rose higher. He hadn’t wanted to believe Moriah had inside her anything that could harm another person. He had cared for her. Not as he cared for Kia, had always cared for Kia. But she had been important to him. And the emotion had clouded his judgment.
And if he made the same mistake with Kia? If he let himself care, let emotion cloud his vision and risked the destruction of his life again?
“Is your aunt the reason you don’t let yourself get involved with your lovers, Chase?” Kia asked then.
He shook his head. “No.”
There were too many reasons, there were too many variables, and none of them were Kia’s fault. Yet she was paying for them, because he was fighting an attraction to her that he couldn’t seem to escape.
“Then why?”
She asked the one question he was hoping she wouldn’t ask.
Chase frowned. Why? he wondered. Because Davinda had first taught him not to trust, and the years that followed had only reinforced it?
That wasn’t a good enough reason. He couldn’t explain the reasons why; he only knew the events that created him. And that was sad. Hell, she deserved better. He knew she deserved better, and still, he couldn’t let her go.
“Some men just don’t have the sense God gave a mule,” he finally stated, remembering something his father used to say. “We could give those mules lessons in stubbornness, you know?”
He flashed her a grin, picked up her hand, and played with her slender, delicate fingers. Even as he shifted the gears of the car, he held her hand beneath his, keeping that contact, that warmth, as they drove into Squire Point and he turned to take the narrow road that led to the back of Ian’s property.
“Where are we going?” she asked softly.
“Ian’s building a house out here,” he told her. “He’ll be turning the mansion over to the club once it’s completed.”
“Really?”
He nodded. “It’s quiet. Sheltered. I thought we could watch the snowfall.”
He pulled into the driveway that led to the half-finished mansion, driving along the blacktop and taking the turn that led to the area where a guest house would be built.
There were no lights here, just the snow falling, the silence of the trees sheltering. He turned the car and brought it to a stop, leaving the engine idling as he pulled the emergency brake and cut the lights.
The snow was falling slow and easy. Flat fluffy flakes that dissolved on the geothermally heated driveway while piling up around them.
He turned his head as Kia opened her door and stepped out.
The cloak flowed around her shoulders as she moved from the vehicle. He watched her. She lifted her head, a smile lifting her lips as the snow caressed her face. The snow swirled around her, melting against her upturned face.
She looked like a princess, like an ethereal, mystical being not meant for mortal man to touch. Not meant for his hands, so stained with blood, calloused by life and rough with the darkness inside him.
“It’s beautiful here.” She moved to the front of the car, staring around before turning to him, the sensual perfection of her face touched by shadows and mystery.
Chase moved to her. Not touching her wasn’t an option. Not kissing her was impossible. He had to kiss her. Right there, as the snow fell around them, as she was touched by ice and filled with flames, the epitome of every lust-filled fantasy he had ever known.
She would never know what she did to him. How she made him soften inside, made him wish he was different, less hard, less bitter. How much she made him wish he could give in to all the dreams he saw swirling in her eyes.
“I’m going to end up destroying both of us,” he muttered, framing her face with his hands, staring down at her, dying inside for her. “Do you know that, Kia? I’ll break us both.”
He didn’t want to break her. He didn’t want to see the tears in her eyes that he knew he would cause. And he couldn’t bear to see those tears just yet.
He needed this night with her. One more night, one more touch. And he needed it like he needed life.
13
Kia lifted her hands, touched his hair, delved into it with desperate fingers, and opened her lips to his kiss. It was like opening herself to magic.
The pleasure filled her entire system. It raced through her veins, pounded in her heart, and had her arching to him, reaching for more.
The snow fell around them, sheltering them, enclosing them in a cloak of white as the towering oak overhead caught most of the flakes, leaving only the smallest hint of icy splendor to melt around them.
Kia could feel the overwhelming sensations moving through her. Chase’s hands moved beneath the cloak, ran over her back, gripped her hips, and pulled her closer, and all the while his kisses fueled the desire raging between them.
“Sweet Kia,” he groaned, his lips moving over her jaw. “I’ve missed you.”
Her heart jumped with the admission; hope surged through her.
Her head tilted back, allowing him access to her neck as his fingers lowered the zipper at the back of her dress. His hands slid inside the material, stroking her, heating her further.