‘No. So we don’t need to go to the clinic for a clean bill of health before we do this…’
She kissed him to stop him saying any more.
Ryan’s tongue was in her mouth, seeking her own, demanding a response. She felt his fingers encounter the melting wetness of her own desire. With gentle, expert movements of his fingers, he brought her to the very edge of her climax in no more than a few seconds. She cried out against his mouth. His own urgency matched hers. As though unable to resist any longer, he mounted her.
Penny cried out again as she felt the swollen length of his manhood between her thighs—a feeling so familiar, so thrilling, so achingly beautiful. She locked her arms around his neck and looked up into his eyes. Ryan was panting as though he had run a mile, his eyes no longer cold or hard, but glowing with passion.
She raised her hips, her thighs lifting to hold his taut, muscular waist.
The invitation was unmistakable. With a soft, purring sound, Ryan lowered his body so that his erect manhood caressed the wet petals of her sex. Penny moaned, her eyes half closing. He slid himself to and fro across the most sensitive zones of her body, arousing her unbearably.
She had been alone for so long, locked in her own misery. Now he was back, and deep inside her. Penny had not known that there was so much need in her, so much emptiness aching to be filled. So much tenderness aching to be given.
She dug her fingers into his powerful shoulders, demanding that he enter her; but it was not until she was already starting to climax that he finally thrust slowly and deeply into her body.
Ecstasy flooded her whole being. She felt herself arching against him, calling his name inarticulately. He filled her so completely, each movement bringing new waves of pleasure and fulfilment, as though her soul was stretching and expanding.
And at last he reached his own vertex and crushed her in his arms, covering her face with burning kisses.
Slowly, like leaves settling to earth after a gale, normality returned. They slid into an exhausted tangle by the fireside.
‘Now that I’ve found you, I will never let you go.’ He pulled her head onto his chest and cradled her there, the way he used to do, long ago.
They lay in silence for a while, listening to the crackling of the flames. Then he spoke.
‘I almost lost you forever, and I didn’t even know. You’re not safe to be out on your own. Why won’t you let me cherish you for the rest of your life?’
‘Because I need to live it for myself,’ she said.
‘I don’t want to live your life for you, sweet girl. I just want to be next to you.’
‘You don’t. You want to swallow me up.’ This was getting perilously close to the sort of arguments they’d had in London. ‘And you couldn’t have stopped me from getting encephalitis, anyway.’
‘I would have made sure you got the best treatment, the best doctors in the world.’
‘Oh, I know that, Ryan. If you could, you would have had the illness instead of me, wouldn’t you?’
‘Of course.’
‘But I needed to have that illness for myself, my love. It was part of my life, part of my destiny, for good or for bad. To take it from me would have been to cheat me.’
‘I don’t agree with that,’ he said. ‘Avoiding misfortune is sensible. You don’t have to run to it with open arms. You’re too much of a pessimist.’
‘A fatalist,’ she corrected.
‘Tell me the name of the hospital you were admitted to in Exeter.’
‘Why do you want to know?’
‘I would like to speak to the doctors who treated you.’
She felt icy cold, and then burning hot. ‘So you can check the hospital records? To see if what I’ve told you about the miscarriage is true?’
There was enough strong feeling in those words to make him frown. ‘Have I offended you?’
‘No.’ She pushed away from him and sat up, her slender body silhouetted against the firelight. ‘As a matter of fact, you’ve just proved that you’re the heartless bastard I always knew you were.’
He cocked his head at her. ‘I’m the heartless one? I know I have a heart, because you broke it this morning, Penny. That was the last news I expected to hear.’
‘I’m sorry, Ryan, but it was far worse for me, believe me.’
‘Are you going to give me the name of the hospital?’
‘So you can try and obtain my medical records? No, Ryan, I’m not. If you choose not to believe my simple word, then nothing else really matters, does it?’
‘I suppose not,’ he said in a strange voice.
‘I think you’d better go now.’ She was tying her hair back into a pony-tail, turning her face away from him so he wouldn’t see the tears pouring down her cheeks.
‘I’d rather stay,’ he said, touching her naked shoulder.
Penny shook her head. ‘You got what you wanted. Go now.’
‘I want all of you,’ he said, caressing her shoulder. ‘I’ll never be happy until I have all of you.’
‘Why not be content with what you’ve had?’ She wiped her tears away clumsily. ‘You’ve proved I’m still a fool. You can go back to London now and forget me forever.’
He was silent for a while before answering. ‘You were never this cold, this hard,’ he said at last.
‘As you said, I’ve changed. I used to be soft as putty. But not any more. I’ve learned to fight for myself at last.’
His arms slid around her, strong and male. ‘I’ll be back.’ She felt him kiss the nape of her neck. ‘Sweet dreams, Penny.’
Her eyes were so full of tears that the firelight was no more than a dancing orange blur that dazzled and hurt her brain. But she kept staring at it while she listened to him dress…and long after she heard the door close and his sports car drive away.
CHAPTER FOUR
SHE had given Miles Clampett the key to the workshop, and he was putting the finishing touches to the door when she arrived the next morning. Despite the bitter weather—it had snowed overnight, and the world had gone white and silent—he was whistling cheerfully.
‘You look bright-eyed and bushy-tailed,’ he grinned. ‘You must have had some lavender under your pillow.’
‘What?’ she asked suspiciously. Miles was a notorious snoop, and she wondered what he was talking about.
‘Us country folk,’ he said, putting on a Farmer Giles accent, ‘we puts lavender under our pillows to get a good night’s sleep.’
‘I’ll remember that,’ she said, stepping over a pile of shavings to get inside.
‘You don’t need to. I’m sure your gentleman friend knows how to ease your tensions.’ He winked. ‘Saw his car outside your cottage last night. And smoke coming from the chimney. Cosy.’