The Boat Builder's Bed (18 page)

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Authors: Kris Pearson

Tags: #Romance, #Contemporary, #Romantic Comedy

BOOK: The Boat Builder's Bed
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Together they retraced their steps up the two flights of stairs and out onto the big deck again. The wind had freshened; the waves slapped harder on the rocks below. Clouds obscured the moon now, and she was glad of his company in the darkness.

“I need to get the outside lighting hooked up,” he said, setting the cable-car on its upward journey and pulling her in against him as usual. She didn’t try and get away this time. After all, she was safe now. Escaping. Out of his clutches.

But his shower soap and his freshly-laundered T-shirt and his warm skin blended into a potent masculine fragrance that held her close...drew her closer... She turned her face towards him a fraction more, sniffing deeply and quietly, feeling herself filling up with frustrated longing.

“Yeah, your scent gets me, too.”

The amusement in his deep voice was obvious. And the sexy edge of danger.

Because her head was tucked in under his chin, Sophie couldn’t see his face. And the arm that held her safe wasn’t letting her draw away in the slightest.

“You can’t fool me, Soph. I felt that big deep breath. You like the way I smell. I like the way you smell, too. Win/win.”

The cable-car continued its quiet upward climb, but Sophie felt as if she was plummeting down into an ever-more-dangerous pit. She’d really given herself away that time. And with something so small. Yes, she loved the scent of him. Loved the taste of him, too, but she wasn’t going to admit that as well. He was becoming more and more difficult to resist, but she knew she had to find the strength from somewhere—she simply had too much at stake.
 

She woke to birdsong and sunshine on Saturday morning.
 
A day by the ocean had never seemed so inviting. After enjoying the luxury of reading until eight o’clock, she showered, slipped into her white robe, and took a slice of toast and chocolate hazelnut spread out into the garden. Mrs. Ferris already worked at the back border, forking out weeds and tossing them into a wheelbarrow. Sophie wandered barefoot over the slightly damp lawn until she was within comfortable talking range.
 

“Fantastic day.”

“Isn’t it just.” Mrs. Ferris pulled energetically at a small sycamore sapling which had taken root in the wrong place. “How’s your new business working out?”

“Slow but steady. I’ve got one really big commission I’m working on. The Severino house on the south coast. The super-yacht man,” she couldn’t help adding.
 

“The one half-way up the cliff? I read something about that.” The landlady pushed her hair back from her face with a muddy glove. “I’ll be planting begonias around here. They’ll look nice from your window.” Obviously her garden interested her far more than any multi-million-dollar home.

“They’ll be pretty. Mom says they’re selling well at the garden centre in Picton.” She took another bite of her toast and turned back towards her door, pondering the ever-present question of what to wear.

Blue jeans or black jeans? They were the only possible choices for Rafe’s big bike. Okay, blue jeans and her white silk camisole would be suitable for lunch. She’d wear her flat black boots and take her old flip-flops and shorts for the beach-walk. Her bikini? She’d tuck it into her little day-pack in case.

Sophie stood waiting by the gate, crash helmet and jacket in hand. Rafe roared up, performed a flashy turn and stopped. He pushed his visor up and grinned.

“Never thought I’d have a pillion in a pink helmet,” he yelled, swinging one long leg over the shuddering machine and setting the bike on its stand.

To Sophie’s surprise he pulled off his gloves and helmet and put them on the seat before taking her jacket, helping her into it, and making sure the little pack was secure on her back.

“Sunscreen? Can’t have my blondie burning.”

“I’m not yours,” she objected, “and I’ve got plenty for both of us. But you’ll burn less than me.”

“One of the benefits of a built-in tan.”
 

“Did you get some sleep?”

“Like I was dead.” He cupped her face in his big hands and drew her up for a kiss she hadn’t expected. Now she saw why he’d taken his helmet off! She leaned into the kiss, overwhelmed by his tall body all in black and his hot eyes and beautiful mouth.

Why did she have no resistance to him? He was danger in every way. Danger because things might go wrong between them and spoil the work that would ensure Subtle’s success.
 

Danger because the closer he got, the harder it would be to keep her single-mother status a secret.
 

And most of all, danger because she knew her heart—indeed her whole carefully-ordered life—was now under unrelenting siege.

So unfair! The last thing she needed was a new lover. But she wanted him fiercely, stirred by his scent, his taste, his constant care for her, and his knockout good looks.
 

She parted her lips and his tongue slid against hers, sweet and slippery, before she found the presence of mind to pull free.

“Better,” Rafe said. “We just need to keep up the practice.” He glanced down at the front of his black jeans with a wry expression. “See, I’m keeping up my practice, no trouble at all.”

Once they were on the expressway he relaxed into the rhythm of the day, gunning the powerful bike so it surged ahead of slower traffic, threading around small hatchbacks with elderly drivers, and overtaking SUVs and wagons full of families headed for the northern beaches. He vowed one day it would be him at the wheel, his wife by his side, his children waving from the back seat of such a vehicle.
 

But for now at least he had Sophie pressed against him as they wove from lane to lane and around the curves of the road. Her arms circled his waist. She’d threaded her thumbs through the front belt-loops of his jeans, and her fingers were so close...so close to where he craved them.

Faye wouldn’t have done this. Getting her into a convertible was a major exercise; the complaints about ruined hair and wind-blown clothes had taken away all the carefree pleasure of blatting along a highway with the top down. As for Faye in a crash helmet? Never.

He emerged from the tree-arched road above Pukerua Bay and started the long glide down the hill towards the ocean. Sophie leaned against him more firmly as the slope of the road increased and her weight shifted. The soft mounds of her breasts nudged his back. Her hands tightened around his waist. Rafe sighed, loving the feel of her so close.

“It’s wonderful,” she yelled.

He half-turned his head.

“Want to stop?”

“No,” she called back. “Not yet.”

On their left, the ocean twinkled and heaved. Long rollers washed in over the rocks, and only the wire-cable safety-fence separated them from the tossing water. On their right the hills rose steeply, clothed here and there with swathes of wild orange nasturtiums. A silver and yellow commuter train emerged from a tunnel high up the slope, slid around a bend and was gone again.
 

Rafe dragged the fresh salty air deep into his lungs.
 
For once he felt like a carefree tourist with no timetable to keep to, no problems to solve.

Soon enough he’d have to head off to Europe for the boat-shows, but for now he felt content to enjoy the day, and the woman riding behind him.

He turned off the main highway at Queen Elizabeth Park, chugged slowly towards what looked like a collection of army huts, and pushed his visor up. “Come and meet my grandfather.”

Sophie pushed her own visor up. “What do you mean?” The bike growled quietly under them.

He braked. “Hop off for a minute.”

She dismounted, pulled off her helmet, and wandered across to the photographic displays that recorded and celebrated the time American servicemen had spent in the local area.

“Sixty years ago,” she murmured, reading the caption under one of the big pictures.
 

Rafe pulled his own helmet off and wrapped his arm around her. They stood looking at the assembled Marines. All so young and hopeful, mostly with their war still ahead of them.
 

“He might be there somewhere, my grandfather John Blackhawk.”

“Yes, he might be,” she agreed. “Can you see anyone who looks like him?”
 

“In all that crowd?” He shook his head. “Only photo I have is a copy from Nanny’s, and it was pretty well thumbed by the time I got to see it.”

He dipped his head and kissed her brow. “But I like to think he’s here somewhere.”

“Looking forward to the dance where he met your grandmother?”

“Nicer thought than worrying about going off to fight.”

Sophie traced a finger across one of the Perspex-cased photos.

“They don’t look worried. But I suppose some of them were scared. Mostly they look excited, and so young.”

Rafe sighed and tightened his grip around her, and they idled past the rest of the display before riding on.

They stopped and loitered over coffees at the big Coastlands Shopping Mall. Community fundraisers had a barbecue fired up outside the main doors. Children clutched delicious-smelling sausages and fried onion rings wrapped in buttered bread. Tomato ketchup leaked over T-shirts. Babies howled, mothers soothed, fathers looked on indulgently.

Sophie saw Rafe watching and misinterpreted his gaze.

“Want one?”

He shook his head, eyes on twin boys in a double stroller. He pointed. “Those two could just about be my brother’s sons.”

“The twin had twins of his own? They’ll keep his poor wife busy.”

“And she’s just given birth to a daughter. Eve’s well-named. She’s a real earth-mother.” He set his cup down abruptly. “Have you finished? Want a look around the shops?”

What had spooked him? A moment earlier he’d been the epitome of relaxed; now he was jumpy as a flea. She tipped up her cup, swallowed the last of her coffee, and rose to accompany him.

They walked hand-in-hand, going nowhere in particular. She watched as Rafe appeared to settle and regain his customary good humor. Time slid by. She found the perfect tiny silver shoes to go with the dress she’d made for Camille’s Barbie doll.

“For the little girl whose drawings are on my fridge,” she said in answer to Rafe’s enquiring expression.

They continued north on the big bike until he turned in under trees flanking a casual café attached to a thriving plant nursery. Sophie dismounted and Rafe remained sitting, pulling his gloves and helmet off and thrusting a hand into his hair.

She reached over and ruffled her fingers through it to re-arrange it. Then she froze, and tried to pull away.

Stupid, stupid, stupid, Sophie. You’re giving him reasons to think you want him.

Waves of dismay rolled through her as he caught her wrist and pressed his lips into her palm. His almost black eyes locked onto hers as he ran a string of small soft kisses over her skin and out along her middle finger.

Everything had tipped sideways again just as she thought things were under control.

She gasped as he sucked the very tip of her finger and teased it with his tongue. Deep inside, her muscles clenched and relaxed, clenched and relaxed, flickered and flamed.
 

Surely her face must have mirrored the sensations because the corners of Rafe’s mouth curled up in a soft smile as he eased off the suction.

“Hold that thought right through lunch,” he murmured after she’d yanked her finger free.
 

And now she was sitting, elbows on the rustic table, head plunged into her hands, silently cursing herself as he went to place their order. Why had she touched him? He could have tidied himself in the rear-vision mirror.
 

But something had drawn her fingers into his dark hair. And she’d loved its crisp softness...loved being so close to him she could feel his heat and dangerous desire...loved the way he’d kissed her hand so sensuously.

A taunting little voice whispered in her ear. Insistent. Ever-gaining in volume.
 

Give in and enjoy him Sophie. Think how good it’ll be to make love with a man who has you almost coming in a crowded car-park in broad daylight.

CHAPTER SIXTEEN

She expected Rafe would stop near public changing rooms so she could slip out of her jeans and into her shorts for the promised walk along the shore. Instead, right before the beach, he turned the bike in to a private driveway, reached into one of the pockets of his leather jacket, and aimed a remote control at the broad garage door of a spectacular two-level house.

The door opened. They moved forward. It closed behind them again.

To Sophie’s consternation, the ground floor was entirely taken up with a huge swimming pool. Placid, blue, and lit by shafts of sunshine through wide windows and floor-to-ceiling glass doors, it seemed to pulse with invitation. The paved expanse where they’d parked was obviously intended for vehicles, but otherwise the whole area invited family recreation. Inflatable toys and outdoor furniture leaned against one wall. Two small kayaks hung from hooks in the ceiling. A big stainless-steel gas barbecue stood beside a matching refrigerator.

Sophie struggled off the bike, pulled off her helmet and shook out her long hair. “Where are we?” she demanded.

Rafe removed his helmet more slowly. His eyes held the same sexy invitation that had mesmerized her at lunchtime.
 

Hot. Suggestive.
 

And yet his voice was quietly matter-of-fact with no hint of impropriety. “A friend’s house. Not currently in use because he’s taken his wife to Sydney for the week. It’s ours today.”

Sophie felt her heart starting to thud and heat pooling low in her belly. She knew she was in real trouble now. All her fantasies were colliding, and that persuasive internal voice had gained in volume and persistence.
 

“But you said the beach.”
 

“The beach is only a few feet away. It’s there any time you want it. We can get changed here in private, grab a drink, lock our stuff up safely.”

She glared at him. Damn. She’d been depending on the public beach as her defense. It was her only weapon left against the dark insistent wanting that pulsed through her in unrelenting waves.

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