'And where is he now?'
'At his mother's house,' said Drew grimly. 'Sobering up. Actually, can you pour me a drink?' he asked suddenly, and flopped down into an armchair. 'I think I need one.'
She didn't comment on the irony of his request, just poured him a gin and tonic which was all she had. He took a large swallow and winced, before putting the glass down and delving deep into the pocket of his jeans. Always a distracting movement, thought Shelley as she watched him, like a cat watching a mouse.
He withdrew a wad of banknotes and threw them down on the table. 'These are yours. The exact amount-'
'Minus two hundred,' she agreed.
'No,' he contradicted. 'Minus nothing. It's all there. I made up the amount myself-'
'Drew, I can't-'
'Shelley, you can, and believe me you're going to. Jamie is family-kind of-so he's partly my responsibility. And that's an end to it.'
'I don't deserve it,' she said, in a small voice.
'No, you probably don't,' he agreed, but at his mouth was another glimmer of a smile and she knew that she had to tell him the truth.
'You were right all along,' she sniffed.
'No crying, Shelley. I refuse to be manipulated by your tears,' he warned her softly, then frowned suspiciously. 'You mean about Jamie squandering money?'
She shook her head. 'No-about the reason I lent him the money in the first place! It's true-I did it as a spectacular act of revenge-to use your very own words!'
'I see.' He leaned his head back and his eyes were half-closed. 'And what was your reason for this spectacular act of revenge?' he asked calmly, as if it were the sort of question he asked every day.
'Because I saw you kissing that … that-' She swallowed down her first choice of word. Bitchiness was never an attractive quality. 'Woman at your party.'
The eyes opened an interested fraction. 'And why on earth would that bother you, Shelley?'
She turned on him. 'Why do you think? Do you want me to spell it out for you?'
'Not really. I want you to say it out loud for me instead.'
Her eyes were very bright and very clear. 'That I love you? That I've always loved you? Surely you must know that by now?'
He didn't answer at first, just eased himself out of the chair as though he found sitting down inhibiting, but the blue eyes were as cold as a winter sea. 'Then you fall in love very easily, don't you, Shelley? Last month Marco, this month me.'
She shook her head, knowing that she needed to tread very carefully here. 'But I never loved Marco.'
'No?' He gave a dry laugh. 'You just lived with him for three years? That's some kind of devotion!'
'Yes, it is, I agree-but it's not love.' Her eyes blazed out the truth at him. 'And it never was-it was never anybody but you.'
There was silence and Shelley stared down at her hands, unable to look him in the face.
'Then why didn't you come back sooner if that was the case? Why stay with a man you claim not to have loved?'
She knew that she had to have the courage to face him, but she almost flinched from the accusation in the burning blue gaze. 'Like when?'
'When your mother died.' His eyes asked a question. 'I thought you would have needed me then.'
'Needed you?' She shook her head in despair. 'Oh, Drew-of course I needed you! If you'd shown the slightest indication that you wanted or needed me-then I would have come back like a shot! But you wouldn't even speak to me-bar the absolute minimum that you needed to-so how could I tell you anything? I was waiting for you to say something, anything that would have given me the smallest hint that you still wanted me. But you didn't. Sometimes I used to dream that you would come to Italy to find me, but you never did.'
'Because you were living with another man!' he ground out incredulously. 'What the hell did you expect-that I would walk in and drag you from his arms? Sorry, kitten, but that's just not my style!'
She opened her mouth to answer, but found herself gazing helplessly at him instead. And the only thing which seemed to matter now was whether or not it was too late for them. 'Drew?' she managed eventually.
She read the look in his eyes which made her dare to hope, and then suddenly she was wrapped in his arms so tightly that she could barely breathe.
'And please don't ask me if I still love you,' he whispered harshly, 'when I never stopped! Though God knows it wasn't for want of trying!' And with that he brought his mouth crushing down on hers in a kiss that made her want to melt into him and never be prised apart.
It took some time for him to tear his mouth away, and when he did he cupped her face tenderly with his hands.
'As for that woman you saw me with at the party-'
'You don't have to justify anything to me.'
He carried on as if she hadn't spoken. 'I knew you were there,' he said softly.
Shelley stilled, still sensitive to the possibility of … betrayal? 'Y-you saw me?'
'Sure I did. I saw you watching her kiss me.'
'You kissed her back!' she accused.
'I was a passive participant,' he argued. 'Not an active one.'
'And you think that makes it all right?'
He shook his head. 'I didn't stop her-that was the extent of my involvement. But if you'd hung around you'd have discovered that I rejoined the party minutes later and wondered where you'd gone.'
'You must have known damned well where I'd gone! That I couldn't stay there seeing you with someone else!'
He nodded. 'Yes, I knew what you must be thinking. I knew your mind must have been working overtime, as mine once did when I saw you with Marco. Don't you realise, kitten, just how powerful the imagination can be? And how dangerous? That it can be both weapon and tool? That's what I wanted to show you. All those times you shrugged your pretty shoulders and said, "Oh, Drew-it was just a kiss!" It's never just a kiss! You've always thought that I completely overreacted all those years ago-but you're guilty of exactly the same reaction, Shelley!'
He was right. She looked up at him, slightly shame-faced. 'Yes,' she whispered. 'I stormed out and took all that money out of the bank! I didn't even think of Jamie, I'm ashamed to say. All I could think of was how much it would infuriate you!'
He nodded. 'Both kisses were innocent-logic tells us that-but logic doesn't have much of a role to play when it comes to love. Passion dominates logic.' He gave her a long, searching stare. 'And I think it's about time we gave passion a little room in our lives, don't you, kitten? It's been waiting for long enough to come in.'
She grazed a finger across the rough, dark shadow of his chin. 'You need a shave,' she whispered.
'I need more than a shave. I need you like I've never needed anything or anyone in my life before. But not here.' He gave a slow smile that made her cheeks glow pink, then looked around the room. 'I don't want to stay here.'
'Why not?'
'Too many … memories. Come on.' He took her hand and kissed it. 'Let's go home to bed.'
CHAPTER ELEVEN
THE moon rose high in a sky of flawless navy velvet and silver light flooded in through the uncurtained window, illuminating the rumpled sheets and the two tangled bodies which lay amidst them.
Drew listened to the subsiding beat of her heart before he moved away so that she was at arm's length. More importantly, so that he could see her.
'So why didn't you tell me, Shelley?'
She let her eyelids drift open and yawned. She wasn't going to pretend not to know what he was talking about. 'It's a difficult topic to bring up. I couldn't think of the right time.'
'You could have told me any time. Especially before I … before we … ' Suddenly he couldn't wipe the stupid grin off his face ' … made love.'
She propped herself up on one elbow and raised her flushed face to his with a sleepy smile. 'I didn't want to tell you then.'
'Why not?'
'Because it would have made too big a deal of it-'
'Hell, Shelley-it is a big deal-or rather it's supposed to be! Taking a woman's virginity is one of the biggest-' His mouth quirked when he saw her expression. 'Stop it, will you? I'm trying to be serious! Do you want to tell me … just tell me how you're still a virgin?'
'You know very well how,' she retorted. 'Because I never made love to a man before. I think you mean why.'
'Don't play word-games with me at a time like this, kitten!' he pleaded.
She thought of asking him which games he did want to play at a time like this, but something in the way he was looking at her made her realise how much it meant to him.
And to her.
'Marco was … No, let me start again … Marco is … '
'For heaven's sake, Shelley, don't keep me in suspense, just say it!'
'Gay.'
'Gay?'
'That's right. He isn't interested in women-he never has been. That stupid kiss in the car was a thank-you kiss which went on longer than it should have done. It was always more about my fantasy than his. We lived together like brother and sister, until eventually he fell in love.' She examined his face. 'Are you shocked?'