A Sweet Life-kindle
Page 108
Their bodies already had their own rhythm, but skin to skin, everything was elevated, bigger, more, including her cries of pleasure. Faster, harder. He broke into a sweat, braced his arms, and powered into her.
“Yes. Oh God, right there.” She arched again, and he made sure the head of his cock hit the same spot inside her.
“Come, baby. I’ve got you.”
Her body stilled and clenched, and she convulsed around him, crying out with each pump of his cock.
“Ian!” She screamed his name, triggering his own hard, fast release.
He came, spilling himself into her, opening his heart and gutting him at the same time.
***
Riley woke up because her stomach was grumbling. She rolled to find Ian watching her in amusement, his lips twitching with a grin.
“Something funny?” she asked.
“I like watching you sleep. Listening to you? Not so much.”
She punched him in the arm. “You made me leave the party before dinner,” she reminded him. “I’m starving. And craving ice cream.”
He rolled his eyes and laughed. “Luckily for you, I keep a stocked freezer for the girls. My sisters,” he added quickly when she raised her eyebrows in question.
“Feed me?” she asked.
He leaned over and kissed her hard on the lips. “Only because you asked so nicely.”
He slid out of bed, perfectly comfortable in his nudity, and headed for the kitchen, returning with a large tub of ice cream and one spoon. “Hope you like chocolate swirl.”
“Mmm. Works for me.” She scooted back in the bed, sitting up as he turned on the bedside lamp and settled in beside her.
“You’re not having any?” she asked, holding out her hand for the spoon.
He shook his head and laughed. “We’re sharing.”
“You’re a mean man, making me share my ice cream.”
Ignoring her complaint, he popped off the top and placed it on the nightstand before settling in beside her. He dug into the tub and held out the spoon for her to eat.
He fed her, alternating one for him and one for her until they’d had their fill. This was the most relaxed she’d ever seen him, and she understood that something had changed tonight.
Not something, she thought. Everything.
It was as if once she’d verbally committed to him, the walls he’d kept between them had crumbled. Her heart swelled with emotion and the knowledge that somehow she’d captured this man for her own.
The rest of the night continued the same way, with them holed up in his apartment, sharing food, making love, and shutting out the outside world.
Until Sunday morning, when Ian went downstairs and returned with the morning paper. He drank orange juice; she sipped her coffee. She was looking into the back of the sports section that completely covered his face from hers.
“So this is how it’s going to be now? You ignoring me for the morning paper? That didn’t take long,” she joked, reaching for another section of the paper to keep her busy while he read.
“This from the woman who can spend half an hour looking through the apps on her phone?” he asked lightly.
She grinned, still enjoying this lighter, happier Ian.
She flipped through the lifestyle section, pausing at a black-and-white photograph. “It’s us!”
The picture had been taken as they exited the limo, Ian obviously holding her protectively. She smiled at the stern expression on his face.
“You’re not upset this time?” he asked.
She shook her head. “It’s not like everyone doesn’t know about us now.”
She’d called Alex earlier this morning, as promised, and assured him that Ian wasn’t upset, things were good, and he no longer had to worry about her. Ian had been by her side, and she’d chosen her words deliberately, wanting him to know she meant what she’d promised him.
He would come first.
Her cell rang, and she glanced down. “Alex,” she murmured.
Ian met her gaze, his expression bland. Whether it was a controlled look or not, she appreciated how hard he was trying.
“I’m sure my sisters will be next once they’ve seen the paper. They love gossip,” he muttered.
She answered the call. “Hi, Alex,” she said into the phone.
“I take it you’ve seen the paper?” he asked.
“We’ve seen it.”
“I hope your father hasn’t. The last thing you need is to be a public spectacle, and that’s what being with Ian will do for you.”
She frowned. “Don’t start.”
Ian met her gaze with a hard one of his own.
“I have to go. I’ll talk to you soon.” When she hung up, she forced a smile. “He saw the picture. He’s worried it’ll provoke my father somehow.”
“There’s a simple solution for that.”
Wary now, she raised her eyebrows. “What would that be?”
“Move in here.”
And things had been going so well. Had she expected Ian to change overnight? As long as he was being reasonable and compromising, she reminded herself.
“That’s ridiculous. And premature.” She’d planned to go home tonight. To take a long bath in her own tub, to play her music, and to gather her thoughts about this intense, emotional weekend.
She rose and walked to the sink to rinse out her coffee cup.
He came up behind her and bracketed his big body around hers, pressing against her, his erection thick against her backside. “I agreed to be reasonable and to back off outside the bedroom, but not when it comes to your safety.”
“A couple of heavy-breathing calls and one phone message don’t mean I’m not safe.”
“You’re safer here. With me. And for once, I think Alex would agree with me.”
She turned, only to find her front pressed against his. “That may be true, but it doesn’t make you two right. He hasn’t threatened me.”
“Yet.”
“I need to go home tonight. We have work Monday, I need to get my clothes, and I already told you I can’t be seen coming to work with you in the mornings.” She eyed him warily, really hoping he wasn’t going to turn this into a fight.
He let out a frustrated groan. “Okay, answer this one question for me, and then we’ll decide together. Would you put it past your father to lay a hand on you?”
He had her, and she knew it. She hung her head, her shoulders dropping in defeat. “No.”
He braced his hands on her shoulders. “Listen to me. I’m not trying to run your life. I’m not even trying to get you to move in here just because it’s what I want.”
Her stomach did a flip at the admission.
“I’m doing it for your safety.”
“Never mind that you get what you want in the end.”
He grinned. “That’s just a side benefit. Can you deny that apartment building of yours is too easy to get into?”
“No.” She hated that he was right. Not because being here with Ian didn’t appeal to her but because it did. She wanted them together for the right reasons, when they were both ready.
Riley had spent too many years on her own, rebuilding her ego and her belief in herself after the time her father had spent tearing her down. Giving into Ian was something she’d prefer happened slowly, at her own comfort level. Instead, her bastard father was forcing her hand.
“Let me drive you back to your place. You can pack your things and follow me back here in your own car. Tomorrow morning, nobody will know where you’re arriving from.”
She blinked, startled at his concession. “I really thought—”
“I was pushing my own agenda,” he finished for her.
She averted her gaze, embarrassed. She figured he’d pulled the danger card and then she’d have no choice but to drive to the stadium with him, allowing him to put his stamp all over her at work.
“I may not have given you any reason to trust me, but I said I’d compromise. And I’m doing it.”
She heard the hurt in his tone. “You are. I’m sorry I’m such a bitch,” she said.
“As long as you’re my bitch.” He grinned, swatted her on the ass, and walked away, leaving her with her mouth open in surprise.
THIRTEEN
Riley arrived at work on Monday morning to find Dylan wanted them to take a quick trip to Manhattan to check out a city hotel owned by the same company as the place in Phoenix. Forty-eight hours, in and out. She agreed to head home and pack.
She called Ian first, knowing he’d appreciate the gesture. Although he was in a meeting across town, he took her call immediately. He wasn’t pleased they’d be apart so soon after she’d moved in, but he didn’t ask her not to go or interfere. He couldn’t leave the meeting he was in and instead insisted she take a car service to her apartment, charge it to the company, and make sure the driver walked her up to her door and waited for her to return to the car. He didn’t want her alone.
She didn’t argue, not wanting to add pressure to his day. She already knew how difficult he found it to let her go on these trips, and she understood so much more now, especially since many of his father’s business trips had been a cover for time with Savannah and his other family.
While away, Riley made sure to call him often, and though her room was full of flowers, Dylan had no complaints about phone calls from Ian.
In other words, Ian was living up to his word. In return, she picked up souvenirs, silly things like a miniature Empire State Building and an I Love NY hat just to show Ian she thought of him too.
She arrived home Wednesday morning, heading straight from the airport to work.
Angie greeted her with a smile and her messages.
“You’re amazing,” Riley told the other woman.
“Thanks! Let me know if you need anything.”
“I will.”
“Oh! There’s a package for you on your desk,” Angie added.
“Got it!” Riley said as she entered her office.
She parked her small travel suitcase in the corner and flopped into her chair. “Home sweet home away from home,” she muttered, kicking off her shoes beneath her desk.
She might have work to do, but she wanted to see Ian first. Still, the package in brown wrapping called to her. She wondered if he’d bought her something while she was away. She immediately touched the pendant he’d given her. She only removed it to shower then put it back on to sleep.
She wasn’t stupid, knew it was ridiculously expensive, but its worth wasn’t in its dollar value. For Riley, the necklace was Ian’s statement, proof of how well he knew her taste and what she meant to him. She didn’t want or need anything else from him, she thought, as she ripped into the package.
Inside was a box and inside that, a picture frame. Had the silly man framed the picture of them from the newspaper? That was something she’d cherish, their first photograph together.
She turned over the rectangular frame, took one look at the picture, and screamed, dropping it onto her desk. “Oh my God!”
“Riley, are you okay?” Angie popped around the doorframe.
“I’m fine,” she lied.
The other woman narrowed her gaze. “Are you sure?”
“Yes,” she whispered.
Angie left, and Riley turned over the offending picture. Riley’s beautiful mother, her face bruised and battered, stared back at her. Obviously an old photo, it was faded and had been crumpled and straightened again to be sent here.
Ian. She had to show Ian. Not because she’d promised him, but because he was the only person she wanted now.
She held the frame against her chest, not wanting anyone else to see, and ran for his office.
His secretary smiled when she saw Riley.
“Is he in?” she asked.
The older woman nodded. “But he’s on a call.”
Riley didn’t care. She passed by the woman’s desk and let herself into his office.
He looked up when she burst in, his serious expression transforming into a smile. “I have to go,” he said to whomever was on the phone, disconnecting the call.
Ian rose and started toward her, stopping when he caught sight of her pale face and wide, panicked eyes. “What’s wrong?”
She shook her head, and he realized she was clutching something close to her heart. He wrapped his hands around hers. “Can I see?”
She released her grip. “It’s my mother,” she said in a pain-wracked voice.
He looked down at the gruesome reminder of her past pain, and a combination of nausea and rage filled him. “Where did you get this?”
“The package was delivered here,” she said, her voice dull.
Ian narrowed his gaze, trying to decide what concerned him more. The delivered photograph or Riley’s reaction. “Come sit.”
He led her to his leather couch and eased her down, setting the picture facedown on the table in front of them. “Riley?”
“I’m going to kill him,” she said, color returning to her cheeks.
Not if Ian got to the son of a bitch first.
“We need to call the police. They need to document what’s been happening, okay?”
She nodded. “My mother never did. I want it on record,” she said, sounding stronger.
He let out the breath he’d been holding, relieved she seemed to be coming back to herself.
“Have you been home yet?”
She shook her head. “Dylan was coming straight here, so I did too. I wanted to see you.”
He smiled at that, touching his forehead to hers. “I’m right here.”
“I came straight to you,” she said, her gaze on the picture frame. “I opened it up and came right to you.”
He gathered her hair and pulled it back, off her face. “You did good. And I’m going to take care of it,” he promised her.
She blinked at that, her posture stiffening.
Wrong direction, he thought. She didn’t want him fighting her battles or acting like she couldn’t take care of herself. He got that about her.
“I missed you,” he said, changing the subject.
“Me too. I brought you presents.”
His heart warmed at the gesture. “How about we take the day off?” he suggested, needing to be alone with her. He needed to slide deep inside her willing body and know she was safe. And his.
She frowned. “I have summaries to write.”
“Did Dylan say he needed or wanted them today or first thing tomorrow?”
She shook her head.
“Then relax. You earned the rest of the day. And I’m the boss. I can do whatever I want.”
She rolled her eyes and laughed. “You sure can. But we need to stop at the police station on the way home,” she said, her tone growing more serious.
“I’ll be right there with you,” he promised her.
She grasped his hand and squeezed tightly. “I don’t know what he wants from me after all this time.”
Ian couldn’t imagine. But he intended to find out. Until now, he’d been okay letting Alex handle looking into the son of a bitch, but now that her father had stepped up his game, Ian was getting involved. In deference to Riley’s feelings, he’d talk to Alex, but that didn’t mean he’d leave things solely in his half brother’s hands.
***
Ian had not only lived alone, but he’d planned to remain that way. He wanted Riley with him, but he’d expected some internal tension over having her clothes in his closet and drawers, her feminine bottles and things in his bathroom and personal space. To his surprise, they blended seamlessly.
Once she’d returned from New York and made herself at home, spreading out and not keeping to one small space, he found comfort in the things that assured him she was there and real. The problem, in his mind, was that she wasn’t there by choice. Her father’s implied threats may have forced her to move in with him, but if he had his way, she wouldn’t be leaving when the bastard was taken care of.
If left up to the cops, th
at might be awhile. Their stop at the nearest precinct was, as he’d feared, a waste of time. Short of documenting the phone calls and gift, there was no proof either of those things had been the other man’s doing. Though the cop who’d taken Riley’s statement had been sympathetic, especially after seeing the picture of her badly beaten mother, he didn’t think she had enough evidence to rise to the level needed for an order of protection.
Riley would need to prove she had reasonable cause to believe she was in immediate danger of becoming a victim of domestic violence, and given that she hadn’t seen her father in ten years, one phone call that wasn’t even a direct threat didn’t suffice. The officer couldn’t suggest anything more than to remind her to be in touch if she heard from her father or received anything more harassing than the calls she’d received so far.
Riley left defeated, and Ian hated seeing his normally spunky, bright girl feeling so beaten down. He swore to do more than the cops in order to make things right.
He started by arranging for a surprise for later that would put a smile on Riley’s face. It would also give him a chance to poke further into the situation and see if there was anything more he could find out about her old man.
***
Riley awoke from a long nap feeling refreshed and calmer than she’d been earlier today. She stared at the ceiling of Ian’s bedroom, the events of the morning coming back to her full force. She closed her eyes, refusing to think about her father at all. If she allowed him any space in her mind, be it fear or anger, she gave him power. And that was the one thing she refused to cede ever again.
Instead, she shifted focus to her location, looking around the beautiful and massively large bedroom, amazed at how much her life had changed in such a short time. From the new job, to the new man in her life, to moving in with Ian, albeit temporarily, nothing was the same as it had been just a few weeks ago. And it wasn’t just logistics, career, and Ian that had changed.