Home>>read When You Are Mine free online

When You Are Mine(29)

By:Kennedy Ryan


Sitting on the dryer, she closed her eyes against the remembered  sensations, shamed that her body was melting from the inside, not  because of Cam's touch, but from the memory of Walsh's kiss. She knew  that would be an unconscionable betrayal, to make love to her husband  with the fire stoked by her memory of another man. She pushed Cam away,  gentling the rejection with a smile before sliding down from the dryer.

"Baby, not now." She gave him a quick kiss on his perfect mouth. "I have a million things to do for the party tonight."

"Sorry, babe." Cam kissed her neck, drawing the skin into his mouth, sucking hard.

Kerris pulled back, her hand flying to her neck.

"What are you doing? Did you just give me a hickey?"

"Probably." He watched her, mouth smug and eyes satisfied. "I've marked you, babe. Everyone will know you're mine."

"This isn't high school." She stepped past him and down the hall to the  bathroom, inspecting the already-forming bruise on her neck. "How  embarrassing."

"Why? We're married. People know we fuck."

"Language, Cam." She rolled her eyes at his crudity. "You have the worst potty mouth."

"Potty mouth?" He barked his amusement, leaning over her shoulder and  catching her eyes in the mirror. "When we have kids you can get on me  for cussing."

Kerris's irritation dissolved when he mentioned children. She'd made her  choice. She was Cam's "only." She belonged to someone, and he belonged  to her. And one day, they would have a family. It was her greatest  desire. They both wanted to start a little tribe of people they'd do  better by than their parents had done by them. She was carving out the  life she'd always wanted.

She walked through the cottage door a few hours later, juggling grocery  bags and reaching for keys. Hearing steps behind her, she glanced over  her shoulder.

"Jo, you're just in time. Could you grab this bag before it falls?"

"Sure thing." Jo smiled, grabbing the tottering recyclable bag. "Is all this food for tonight?"

"Yeah. Of all things, Cam wanted Mexican for his birthday. So I'm making  tamales, quesadillas, enchiladas, and my soon-to-be-famous guac."

"Sounds delish."

Kerris noticed Jo had let her dark hair grow out some, the angles of the  bob softening and settling on her shoulders. She followed Kerris  through to the kitchen, admiration clear in her silvery gray eyes.

"Kerris, you have really transformed this place."

"Thank you."

Kerris ran pleased eyes over the warm tones of the kitchen. The granite  countertops, stainless steel appliances, and colorful backsplash  seamlessly integrated modernity into the cottage's old-fashioned charm.
                       
       
           



       
She and Meredith had pillaged every peddler's market, antique shop, and  high-end thrift store in the greater Triangle area and beyond. They'd  had the best time redecorating the lovely cottage, updating it without  destroying its character.

Kristeene had given her and Cam the cottage as a wedding present, making  it the first home she had ever owned. That's what she loved most.

Kerris put the groceries away, leaving out the things she needed to start Cam's birthday dinner.

"Your aunt Kris couldn't have given us a better wedding gift."

Jo's face clouded, her smile slipping. She lowered her lashes, running  her fingernail along the newly installed granite countertop.

"Is everything okay, Jo?"

Kerris's heartbeat seemed to pause along with her hand, which was poised  over a jar of chiles. She'd grown up waiting for something bad to  happen. Maybe she had overactive Spidey senses, but Jo's expression made  them tingle.

"I'm a little worried about Aunt Kris." Jo's fingers drummed an anxious cadence on the counter.

"Is she sick or something?" Kerris's heart resumed its regular beat. She  opened the chiles, keeping her face as deliberately blank as Jo's had  become.

"She's probably tired. I'll make sure she gets some rest. The fall is  such a busy season for her, gearing up for all her holiday projects."

"You'd let us know if there was anything wrong, though, right?"

"Sure." Jo looked back at her, the usually clear eyes opaqued with  something Kerris couldn't quite identify. "I think, more than anything,  she wants to see Walsh. I could kick his ass for staying away so much  this year."

Kerris turned to the sink, washing her hands before she started cooking. She acknowledged Jo's remark with only a grunt.

"I know Uncle Martin has him learning the ropes, but damn." Jo leaned a  slim hip against the sink, and Kerris felt the weight of the searching  look Jo settled on her profile. "If I didn't know better, I'd think he  was avoiding Rivermont."

"I'm sure he's just busy." Scrubbing the corn required all of Kerris's  attention. "Okay, I'll need cilantro from my herb garden. Excuse me  while I run out and grab some."

"No, I'll get going." Kerris still felt Jo's close regard. "I was hoping  to see the birthday boy before the party tonight, but we'll catch up  later."

Kerris grimaced at the thought of a roomful of people she barely knew  and with whom she would have little in common. They would all spill out  into the backyard to the picnic tables and benches she'd borrowed from  the rec center. She'd already strung lights through the trees. People  could play horseshoes, Xbox, poker-whatever they wanted. Cam hadn't  wanted much, just to be surrounded by his friends. That was the least  she could do. It would be a pleasure.

She tried to remind herself what a pleasure it was a few hours later  when her peaceful cottage had been invaded by Cam's sophomoric friends,  mostly male. There were a few women mixed in other than Kerris,  Meredith, and Jo, but not many. The testosterone in the air was thick  enough to choke a lady. Kerris replenished the beers in the coolers  outside, offering a grim smile to a Neanderthal or two along the way.

She dashed back inside to whip up another batch of guacamole. They'd run  out twice. She'd asked Cam to grab a couple of tomatoes from the garden  for her when he got the chance, but he'd probably gotten caught up in  the festivities. She should go get them herself, or snag Meredith when  she surfaced from under a pile of men. Her friend loved being a single  bee in this male-dominated honeycomb.

Two ripe tomatoes plopped down on the counter beside her. She barely took her eyes off the cilantro she was dicing.

"Thanks, baby." She glanced over her shoulder, almost cutting a finger when she faced Walsh instead of Cam.

Walsh grinned with his arms outstretched. She stumbled toward him,  experiencing a shiver and a shock when he pulled her close. The scent  that was so distinctly his insinuated itself into her nostrils. The knot  of tension she'd been carrying in her stomach ever since she'd heard he  was coming liquefied, pureeing her insides until she could barely  stand.                       
       
           



       

"You're welcome … baby." She felt his wide grin in the curve joining her  neck and shoulder. "Meredith asked me to bring these in to you."

"I didn't know you were here."

She pulled back, needing some distance to stand the ground she'd gained  in the last year. They had not spoken to each other since that night at  the gazebo. Hadn't exchanged even a glance since the toast he'd offered  at the wedding reception. She'd dreaded this moment for the last year,  while perversely looking forward to seeing him again. Now she didn't  know what to say. Pretending with him never came easy, and certainly not  now. Not after so long. Not when he was here, siphoning all the air  from the room.

* * *



The skin on Walsh's face tightened, his smile becoming harder to hold.  There was still something just beneath her honeyed skin that he could  never ignore. All the defenses he'd built up in the last year and had  hoped would hold against her appeal gave way. The familiar scent of  vanilla and brown sugar reached his nostrils and made his mouth water.

"Yeah, I've been busy." He adopted a casual tone. No need for her to  know he wanted to crush her against him and never let go. "It was  impossible to get home."

The quick glance she threw up at him, her fingers pausing in their  chopping, told him she might know he was lying. He couldn't care. They  had become experts at lying to each other, and consequently to those  they loved. He wasn't sure he could stop now, or ever. The truth could  destroy them.

"I was disappointed you couldn't come with Cam to Kenya," he said.

"Disappointed?" Confusion pleated her forehead. The chopping stopped altogether. "I thought … "