Winter at the White Oaks Lodge
Page 26
I giggled and moved primly from his lap.
“Close your eyes for just a minute,” he said softly, and I did, my heartbeat increasing in intensity with each breath.
I listened as he moved from the blanket and rummaged for something that must have been in his coat pocket; I heard the scrape of a zipper and then he was before me once more, and his hand closed around my left, lifting it to his lips. He kissed me there, gently, and then he said hoarsely, “Open your eyes.”
I blinked and looked at once to his; he was looking so intently at me that all the breath caught in my throat. He cupped my left hand in his and then upon my palm he set the ring from this very cabin, the one that he’d found behind a stone in the fireplace. Tears blurred my vision even before he curled my hand between both of his and said, “Camille, I want you to have this. I want you to wear it, if you’re ready. When I was little I told my sisters that someday my wife would wear this ring, and I want you to be my wife. We don’t have to set a date, we don’t have to rush anything, but I want to know that someday your name will be Camille Carter.” His eyes drove into mine and tears flowed down my cheeks. “I love you with my whole heart, and I know that I’ve loved you long before I met you. I am yours, and you are mine, and I don’t know how I know this to be true, but it is.”
“Mathias,” I said, almost a sob. I took the ring into the tips of my right fingers and slipped it at once over my third finger, where it fit perfectly, as before. He made a sound in his throat and brought my hand to his lips, kissing the ring, before I threw my arms around him and clung. I said against his chest, quoting the inscription on the ring, “My heart is yours for all time. And I know that for truth.”
He rocked against me and we tumbled back to the blanket, where in the firelight we stripped one another of all pieces of clothing, slowly and intently, kissing each inch of bared flesh. Wordless, intense, never taking our eyes from each other. I felt removed from myself, completely melded together with him, to the point where we no longer even seemed to possess names; our names mattered not at all. Him. His. Mine. He was mine, and I was his, and nothing more mattered. He joined our hands, linking our fingers, bracing them just above my head as I curved my legs about his hips and took him within me, gasping as his hard length filled me absolutely. And we made love without saying a word, quiet and shattering and intense. At some point I shifted and clung to his shoulders, my forearms curled under him from beneath his arms, gripping tightly as he buried his face against my neck, driving into me. We grew slick with sweat, heat flowing between us, spilling from between my legs as he kept on and on, unceasing, and my body responded like nothing I’d ever known. I shuddered with release, repeatedly, our breath harsh and our hearts beating in a frantic double rhythm.
I love you so, he told me, without words.
I responded in kind, I love you. I will be your wife.
You are my love, Cora, and I will never leave you, he said.
You are mine, my true love, Malcolm. I trust you.
And in the darkness we held fast, on and on.
About The Author
Abbie Williams has been addicted to love stories ever since first sneaking her mother’s copy of The Flame and the Flower; and since then, she’s been jotting down her own in a notebook. A school teacher who spends her days with her own true love, their three daughters, and a very busy schedule, she is most happy when she gets a few hours to indulge in visiting the characters in her stories. When she’s not writing, teaching or spending time with her family, you’ll find her either camping, making a grand mess in her kitchen at various cooking attempts, or listening to a good bluegrass banjo.
Check out all of her Shore Leave Cafe Books: Forbidden; Summer at the Shore Leave Cafe; Second Chances; A Notion of Love.