Reading Online Novel

Waking Up Married(27)



Her eyes closed as she once again found herself relieved by his     sense of humor and ability to lighten the mood without undermining the     seriousness of what was at stake.

Finding more breath, she whispered, “We can’t. Not yet.”

“Why not? We’re already married.” His voice dropped lower as he     lightly teased the diamond band around the tip of her finger. “I can tell you     want it.”

Yes, right then, she did. But wearing his ring meant giving up     her plans. Giving up the security of a future she could control completely.     Giving up a promise she’d made to herself...for the chance of something so much     more.

Connor was poised above her, his sharp gaze studying her every     minuscule reaction. Hesitation. Blink, blush and tremor.

Tentatively, she placed her free hand against the center of his     chest. His bare skin was shades darker than her own. Hot. Firm. Tempting her     toward reckless action just to ensure she had more time to enjoy it.

But that simply wasn’t who she was. If he knew her at all, he     would understand.

“I’m not ready. I’m not sure I can give you what you’re asking     for.”

A nod. Then, “Wear it anyway. You’re still my wife for now. Why     not try the whole package on for size and see how it feels?”

Her gaze drifted over to the band of diamonds so close to     sliding home. Each flawless stone throwing off light in all directions. It was     exquisite.

Nothing could compete with this ring.

Swallowing once, she peered back up at Connor, who waited above     her, the possessive intent in his eyes making her ache to give in. But she     couldn’t do it.

“It’s probably better if I don’t.” Trying to match his lighter     tone, she curled her fingers into her palm and dodged, “And about this whole     being-married thing. I was thinking we might not mention it. Let everyone think     I’m just a cheap floozy rather than the honest woman you’ve made me.”





CHAPTER EIGHT

CONNOR SWALLOWED, his body going     still. “You don’t want them to know.”

Guileless eyes met his. “I’d prefer they don’t.”

And then she was wiggling out from beneath him. Crawling off     the bed from one side as he backed off from the other, returning the ring to his     pocket.

Megan stood in front of the bureau mirror frowning at the few     hairs out of place from their brief roll in the sack. They had to leave soon,     and considering he’d actually hired someone in to sculpt her hair into     perfection, it made sense she’d be trying to fix her look.

But suddenly all he could see was a woman concerned with her     image, and for the first time he wondered if he didn’t really know her after     all.

He shook his head. It couldn’t be right.

“I thought you didn’t lie.”

It was the quality in her he appreciated above all others. It     was important to him.

One brow shot high as she turned to meet his eyes. “I don’t.     But that doesn’t mean I walk around regurgitating every personal detail of my     existence without prompt. I’d prefer you not bring it up, because seriously, no     one is going to ask.”

A lie of omission. Well, that was irony.

He knew all about them. Had been one for the first decade of     his life and had sworn never to be one again. And yet here he was, married to a     woman making a dirty little secret of him from the start.

Freud would have a field day with this.

Okay, so it wasn’t as though he’d discovered Megan stowing the     ring in her car’s ashtray while she hit the bars. They’d been married for less     than twenty-four hours, and she wasn’t even certain she wanted to wait another     twenty-four before filing for divorce. But still, her not wanting people to know     rubbed him in all the wrong places. Partly because one of the first things to     attract him about her was the way she owned her life. Her actions. She wasn’t     making excuses or apologies or even taking the easy way out of an explanation.     In the few hours he’d known her before he talked her into changing the plan for     both their lives, she’d made him believe in who she was. How she lived. And     this—this secret didn’t fit with that.