World Enough and Time (33 page)

Read World Enough and Time Online

Authors: Lauren Gallagher

BOOK: World Enough and Time
12.84Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Staring at the floor, he chewed his lip and drummed his fingers on the counter.

“I’m sorry,” I said. “The ring doesn’t matter. Honestly, I don’t care about—”

“Do you want to know why I didn’t have a ring?” he said suddenly, meeting my eyes with a look so intense it turned my blood to ice.

I held my breath. Then, even though I wasn’t entirely sure I was prepared for whatever revelation it would bring, I nodded.

Looking anywhere but at me, he said, “I looked at rings. A few times. Found one in particular that I wanted to give you.” He moistened his lips. “But if I’d bought it, then…” He looked up, then closed his eyes and took another breath.

Barely whispering, I said, “Then what?”

When our eyes met again, my heart almost stopped. I’d never seen someone so deeply hurt, particularly not at my own hands. I knew the night I walked away that I’d hurt him, but only now did I understand just how much.

He swallowed hard. “If I’d bought that ring,” he whispered, “then I wouldn’t have had the money to move your horses to California.”

My hand went to my mouth in a futile effort to hold in the breath my lungs forced out. My heart fell to my feet and a lump rose in my throat.

“I tried to tell you that last night,” he said. “But then we… I tried to tell you, but things just went downhill, and…” He sighed, making a gesture that was equal parts dismissive and frustrated.

“Connor…”

He gripped the counter and looked at the floor. “I thought it through, Dani. I thought about it constantly. When I asked you to come with me, I meant it. When I asked you to marry me, I meant it.”

I closed my eyes and clenched my jaw, trying to keep myself together. “Connor, I am so, so sorry.” It wasn’t enough. It wasn’t nearly enough. Nothing I could say could ever scratch the surface of enough, but it was all I could give. It was all I had.

“You’d said no whenever I asked you to come to California with me,” he said. “And I thought it was because you didn’t think I was serious. That you thought I was just flippantly asking you to do it, without thinking at all about the future. About anything but what
I
wanted.” He took a breath. “I asked you to marry me because I wanted you to know just how much I meant it. That, and…” He closed his eyes, his cheek rippling when he set his jaw. Then, taking a deep breath, he looked at the floor and said, “…everything else aside, I asked because I
wanted
you to marry me.”

And the more you tell me, the less I deserve you
. I released a breath that nearly came out as a sob. “Connor, I—” I shook my head. “This all just happened so fast, and I… it…”

“I know we were moving fast,” he said. “When we started out, I had no idea we’d be in this situation. I mean, I knew I was leaving soon, I just didn’t think I’d meet someone I didn’t want to leave.”

Without meeting his eyes, I said, “Would you still have asked if you weren’t leaving?”

He said nothing for a moment. Denim scuffed against a cabinet and the fabric of his Stanford sweatshirt rustled. Barely whispering, he said, “Maybe not so soon, but yes. This isn’t something I would ever rush, but it came down to now or never. If there had been more time. If we—” His voice caught.

The hairs on the back of my neck stood on end as whispered words from our past thundered through my consciousness. My composure crumbling, I closed my eyes and took a deep breath. “‘
If we had world enough, and time
…’”

“‘…
this coyness lady were no crime
.’” His voice tried to crack. He cleared his throat and I thought he’d say more, but he didn’t. Stillness descended around the echo of those two simple lines of poetry.

“Dani, look at me,” he said finally, his voice gentle.

I did, blinking a few times until the tears cleared enough for his face to come into focus.

He took a breath. “If you’d known at the time that I wasn’t asking in the heat of the moment, if you knew how much I’d thought it through and why I didn’t have a ring…” He exhaled hard, then set his jaw. “What would you have said?”

I chewed my lip and focused on the floor between us, not sure what to say.

After a moment, he growled, “That’s what I thought.” I looked up as he gestured toward the door. “Why don’t—”

“Connor, wait.” I put my hands up. “I’ll be honest. That night, I probably would have said the same thing.” He started to speak but I cut him off. “But I guarantee I’d still be here tonight.”

He eyed me, then relaxed a bit against the counter, adopting a slightly less hostile posture that suggested he was willing to hear me out.

“The thing is,” I paused. “You know why I came to Seattle in the first place. I uprooted my entire life to follow someone I thought wanted me. And ever since then, I’ve been afraid of planning my life around someone else.”

“I wasn’t asking you to plan your life around me, Dani,” he said, his voice soft. “I was asking you to plan your life
with
me.”

Fresh tears stung my eyes. “And I see that now. But you understand what I was afraid of, don’t you?”

He chewed his lip, then nodded slowly. “Yeah. Yeah, I do.”

“I can’t apologize enough. For walking away, and thinking you were asking on impulse, all of it.” I wiped my eyes and sniffed, struggling to keep what was left of my composure. “Jesus, all this time I thought you were asking me to give everything up for you, and you…” I slumped against the counter and covered my face with my hand. There was no hiding how fast I was breaking down, but at least I couldn’t see him.

Taking a ragged breath and choking back the tears as best I could, I finally forced myself to look at him again. “All I can say is that I’m sorry and I love you. I never meant to hurt you. I—”

“What would you say if I asked you now?”

I stared at him.

“If I asked you again.” He held my gaze even while his voice shook. “Right here, right now. Yes or no. What would you say?”

My throat tightened around the words. Around the
single
word. I couldn’t breathe. All I could do was stare at him in disbelief.

He took a step toward me. Then another. When we were little more than an arm’s length apart, he spoke so softly I wouldn’t have heard him if he was even a few inches further away. “Dani, if I asked you to marry—”

I grabbed the front of his shirt and pulled him into a kiss. He stumbled, but caught himself with one hand on the counter, his other arm wrapping around me. He quickly found his footing and his hand went to my neck, then into my hair.

When he broke the kiss, he didn’t pull away. Our foreheads touched and every breath he drew rushed past my lips. With the pad of his thumb, he brushed a tear from my face and caressed my cheek.

“Would it be safe to assume that’s a yes?” he asked.

I laughed, quickly wiping away another tear. “It’s a yes.”

He smiled and took his glasses off, setting them on the counter behind me, giving him the perfect opportunity to pull me even closer before he kissed me again.

“I promise,” he said. “I
will
get you a ring someday.”

“I don’t care about a ring.”

“I know, but—”

“Really. I don’t. We’ll just get a couple of gold bands and call it good.”

A playful grin tugged at his lips. “So would you be upset if I
did
get you one?”

“Furious.” I kissed him, letting it deepen and linger for a long moment while every touch and taste said
yes, this is real, yes, he’s still here, yes, we still are
.

When we looked at each other again, his humor faded a bit and he tenderly smoothed my hair. “I’m glad you came back.”

“Me too.” I smiled. Then I let out a breath as reality crept in. “Moving on such short notice is still going to be a headache. I mean, I’ll have to find a job down there, and figure out where to keep the horses, and—”

He kissed me gently to silence me. “None of that has to be ironed out tonight. We have time.” He ran his fingers through my hair and grinned. “The only question we need to worry about right now is what do we do with the rest of tonight?”

I smiled. “Well, in the immortal words of a cunning linguist I know,” I said, pulling him closer. “Life’s short, let’s fuck.”

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

 

Lauren Gallagher is an abnormal romance writer currently living in the wilds of Omaha, Nebraska. She and her husband, along with a coyote-iguana hybrid and two and a half cats, are thought to be in hiding from the Polynesian Mafia and a debt collector in search of a fine for an overdue book from the Library of Alexandria. Lauren continues to skillfully, if somewhat clumsily, elude them, but continues to have run-ins with her arch nemesis, M/M erotic romance author L. A. Witt. The implementation of Operation: I Don't Think So is expected to resolve that problem soon enough.

 

www.loriawitt.com

Twitter - @GallagherWitt

Blog –
http://gallagherwitt.blogspot.com

 

~*~

Additional Titles

Between Brothers

Light Switch

Reconstructing Meredith

 

From Loose Id, LLC:

Damaged Goods

 

From Samhain Publishing
:

Who's Your Daddy?

All The King's Horses

The Princess and the Porn Star

 

 

 

Preview:
The Princess and the Porn Star

~*~

“You’ll be fine, babe.” Quinn waved a hand. “You just haven’t worn heels in a while.”

 

“Right, so should I really be wearing
these
”—I pointed at my feet—“when I haven’t worn anything above two inches in like three years?”

 

“Just be careful. You’ll be fine.” He shifted his gaze to his iPad. “Especially once you see what you’re dancing with today and tomorrow.”

 

“Oh yeah?”

 

“Mm-hmm.” He moved his hand rapidly over the screen. “And thanks to your darling assistant’s third degree black belt in Google-Fu, you may now feast your eyes on your dance partner. I present to you”—he turned the iPad around—“the one and only Buck Harder.”

 

“Buck Harder,” I muttered as I took the iPad from him. “What a name.”

 

“And what a
body
,” Quinn mused.

 

Staring at the screen, I said, “Can’t argue with that.” And I couldn’t. Wow. He was… Well, I could see why he’d apparently done so well in his line of work. He was broad-shouldered, tanned, with flawlessly defined, hairless abs. He obviously spent a good chunk of his time at the gym, but he wasn’t huge. Not a bodybuilder or a steroid junkie, just fit. Very,
very
fit.

 

His thumbs were hooked in the pockets of his jeans, his hands angled just right to direct my attention to his crotch, where the skintight denim clung to at least one reason he’d gone into porn. My God.

 

I made myself quit staring at his package and instead looked at his face. His sandy blond hair was neatly trimmed and perfectly styled, and those vivid green eyes might have been mesmerizing and knee-weakening if not for the arrogance radiating from them as well as that smarmy grin. Forget what he had in his pants. Something told me his ego was his largest appendage.

 

“Cute.” I set the iPad down. “Looks like he knows it too.”

 

“Of course he does.” Quinn scoffed. “He gets to have sex for a living, even if it
is
with women”—he stuck out his tongue—“and he’s one of the most popular and highest earning out of all the other men who have sex for a living. Of course he knows he’s hot!”

 

“Can’t wait to work with him,” I muttered.

 

A knock at the door turned both our heads.

 

Rich opened the door and leaned in. “You ready?”

 

“Ready as I’ll ever be.”

 

He tapped his watch. “Ten minutes.”

 

“I’m on my way.”

 

“I’ll be there in a minute.” Quinn held up his phone. “After I make your appointment.”

 

“Thank you, sweetheart.” I started toward the door, still wobbling a little on those ridiculous shoes. “I think I’m going to need it.”

 

“The way you’re walking?” He snorted. “Honey, I’d better get the paramedics on standby.”

 

“Oh, shut up. I can walk.”

 

“Uh-huh.” He snickered. “Have fun with Buck Harder, darling.”

 

“Shut.
Up.

 

By the time I was out in the hallway outside my dressing room, I was mostly balanced on the shoes. I’d walked in higher, skinnier heels before, and they just took a few minutes to get used to.

 

All the way to the room where we were rehearsing, I was still sure I’d need that cortisone shot later, but no longer afraid of breaking my neck. Or re-breaking my ankle. All I had to do now was get through this rehearsal, a day or two of shooting and hope the press didn’t go psycho on me for being on-camera with a porn star.

Other books

ClaimMe by Calista Fox
A Fistful of Rain by Greg Rucka
Soul Betrayed by Katlyn Duncan
A Very Unusual Pursuit by Catherine Jinks
AdonisinTexas by Calista Fox
Date Night by Holly, Emma
The Green Line by E. C. Diskin
Sudden Recall by Lisa Phillips
Summoned Chaos by Joshua Roots