Reading Online Novel

The Playboy of Argentina(21)



'I don't think space is what you need just now.'                       
       
           



       

She looked up past the black band of his underwear to the golden skin  and dark twists of hair, the ripped abs and perfect pecs, the strong  male shoulders and neck and the harsh, sensuous slash of his mouth.

She trailed her touch down hard, swollen biceps, followed the path of a  proud vein all the way to where his fingers lay around the photograph.  Finally she traced her fingertips over his, and held his eyes when they  turned to hers.

'What can be so bad? There's nothing that isn't better when it's shared.'

Slowly, boldly, she closed her fingers around the photograph frame.

'Can I see?'

His gaze darkened, his mouth slashed more grimly, but she didn't stop.

Gingerly, she tugged it from his grip. 'Is he your son?'

She had no idea where that came from. But suddenly the thought of an infant Rocco was overwhelming.

'You're opening up something that's best left shut.'

His voice was a shell-a crater in a minefield of unexploded bombs.

She climbed up closer to him, balanced on his thighs. Lifted the photo  frame into her hands completely, laid her head against his chest and  scrutinised it.

And he let her.

She felt the fight in him ease slightly as he exhaled a long breath.

She sat there waiting. Waiting  …

Finally he spoke.

'He's my brother. His name was Lodovico-Lodo. He was three years old  when that photo was taken. And he was four years old when he died.'

She held her breath as he said the words.

'I was his only family. Our papá had disappeared and Mamá had lost her mind. Nobody else wanted to know.'

His voice drilled out quietly, his chest moved rhythmically and the haunted black eyes of his poor baby brother gazed up.

'I was with him when he died. I didn't cause his death-I was only a  child myself. I am not responsible.' The words came out in a strange  staccato rush. 'But I feel it,' he added harshly, and a curl of his  agony wound round her own heart.

She swallowed, shifted her weight, slid to his side and under his arm.  She held the photo in front of them, so they were both looking at it.

'I can say those words over and over and they still mean nothing. I've  said them so many times. Meaningless. Of course I am responsible.'

'How did he die?'

It seemed baldly awful to say it aloud, but she knew she had hear it. She knew there was worse to come.

'By gunfire. Shot dead. A bullet aimed at me. Because I was the one  running errands for a rival gang. And when the stakes are high, and the  police are being paid to look the other way, and mothers have gone mad  and fathers can't take the shame of not being able to provide  …  life is  cheap.'

She sat up. He stared ahead. The credits were rolling on the television screen. His face was stone.

'But you just said  …  you were a child, too. How can you be blamed?'

'How can I not be blamed? If I hadn't become little more than a petty  criminal-if I had found another way for us to live-if I hadn't got  greedy and done more and more daring things  …  terrible things. If I  hadn't let go of his fingers when he needed me most  … '

His eyes crashed shut and his face squeezed into a mask of agony.

Frankie tugged him to her, desperate for his warm, strong touch as the hurt of his words and in his face gnawed at her resolve.

'What age were you-six? Seven? How could you have prevented any of those things happening?'

She stared up at him but he merely turned away, as if he'd heard it all before.

She placed her hands on his cheeks and positioned herself round to face  him, held him steady in her grip. 'Rocco. You were a child. And you're  still tearing yourself up over this?'

His face was a ridge of rock and anger.

She kissed him. She kissed the jutting cheekbone that he turned to her,  the wedge of angry jaw, the harshly held crevice of his lips. She felt  her tears slide between them and put her lips where they washed down.

'Rocco, baby  …  you were not to blame.'

His eyes were still closed to her but she didn't care. She couldn't  stand to see her warrior in such pain. With tiny, soft presses she  slowly covered his face with her lips, whispering her heart to him.

He kept himself impassive, cold and distant. He didn't push her away,  but she could feel that he wanted to. As with every other time, she let  her body guide her, not her head. He needed her. She needed to let him  see how much. As instinctively as a flower faced the light, or curled  its petals at night, she laid her body around him and soothed him.

And slowly he began to respond to her heat and light. He sighed against  her whisper-soft kisses, melted into her cradling arms. He sat back  against the couch and she climbed over him, slipped her legs around him  to strengthen him, to imbue him with everything she could. The energy  and emotion they had shared welled up inside her, and she knew she would  gladly gift it all to him to ease his awful pain.                       
       
           



       

'Frankie  … ' he breathed into her neck as she lay over him.

His arms that had been lying limply at his sides, not quite rejecting  her, now closed around her and held her tightly against him. She found  herself rocking slightly, in that age-old movement of reassurance and  care.

'You would never do anything to harm an innocent child. Never.'

His arms slid closer around her, holding her body and her head clasped  against him. He had so much power and strength and yet he was so  vulnerable, lying there in her arms.

'I would do anything to turn the clock back. I could have done so much more to protect him.'

'And who was protecting you?'

He sighed against her. 'I didn't need protecting. I needed to be reined in. Always have.'

She pulled back and stared at him, cupped her hands around his beautiful, broken face.

'Rocco, don't you even see what you're saying? You were a child, too.  And what's even harder to take is that you were trying to be an adult-to  make decisions that your parents should have been making for you.'

He recoiled at that, but she didn't stop.

'I can't pretend to understand what you've been through. But I do  understand that you're adding to the pain of losing Lodo by hating  yourself so much for something that wasn't your fault.'

He was still, his eyes level with her chest, not looking at her. The  hair of his fringe had fallen down over his scar. She pushed it back and  then gently lowered her head to kiss the reddened mark.

'I wish you would leave the hate. There's so much about you to love.  Your body is covered in your history-even this crazy little scar.  Fighting in the streets when you should have been learning Latin  …  I  love it.'

He didn't move a muscle. She moved her lips to the flattened break in the bridge of his nose. Kissed it.

'And this perfect imperfect nose. Getting a polo stick in your face because you wouldn't give up  … '

She curled downward, holding on tightly, not daring to open her eyes,  letting her body guide her, remembering all the things he'd told her  about his injuries. The bones in his shoulder were all out of alignment  from his falls and fights. She lowered her lips and ran them along each  bump and ridge.

Finally she placed her lips over his. Soft, firm, warm. The fires they  had lit between them were always glowing, ready to flare into life.

'I love these lips.' She kissed him so softly. 'The pleasure they have given me  … '

She felt something inside her contract as she spoke. Waves of emotion  rolled and more words formed in her throat. She choked them back and  used her mouth to show him how she felt. Softly pressing their mouths  together, carefully sculpting and moulding and shaping. The familiar  blaze was already taking hold, but this time something bigger, higher,  sweeter sang out through the fire.

'Oh, Rocco  … ' she said as the waves began to break.

He stood up in one smooth movement. She held on as he began to walk, as  he repositioned her, cradled her and carried her forward. She held on to  the thick column of his neck and pulled herself close as he walked  slowly back to the bedroom.

He opened the door and carried her in, walked right over to the bed and  laid her down as if she were a silken cloth. He moved over her and  stared down at her. She stared back. Up at his face, still  intense-always intense-but softer now.

'You sweet, sweet girl,' he said as he slowly unbuttoned the shirt she'd thrown on.

She sat up, threaded her hands through his hair and pulled him down to  her. She kissed him. Over and over. That was all. Just kissed him.  Feeling those lips that she'd come to cherish for the pleasure they  gave. Kissing and holding and adoring him. Nursing him with her body.  And her heart.

Those words welled up in her throat again. But she swallowed them down.

He touched her as if she was treasure, moved her carefully on the bed,  began to stoke their sexual love with his mouth and his hands. She  climbed higher and higher, beginning to lose track of where she ended  and he began.