Sweet as Honey (The Seven Sisters)

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Sweet as Honey (The Seven Sisters) Page 2

by Robertson, Caitlyn


  She dropped her gaze to look at her hands. It felt important to make him comprehend how strong her feelings were about this. “I know everyone thinks I was weak for staying with him. My family doesn’t understand. But I’m not weak, Dex. It was like he had some kind of power over me. I know it sounds like I’m making excuses for not being independent and a modern woman—but at the time, I believed everything he said. I suppose it was because it happened over a long time—it wasn’t as if the day he met he started telling me what to do.”

  “I know.”

  “It was like a disease that gradually make me sicker, or like gorse spreading through a garden. It wasn’t until the end I realised how much he’d taken over, you know?”

  “You don’t have to explain yourself to me. You don’t have to talk about that fucking arsehole ever again.” The fierceness in his voice belied the gentleness in his gaze.

  She swallowed. “I know, but it’s just… All the things he used to say… I’ve spent months telling myself they were all lies, but the things he used to tell me in bed, about being frigid and boring… I keep worrying you’ll think the same.” Her cheeks grew warm and her eyes filled with tears again. She’d lied—this was more to do with her mother than she’d thought. Emotion simmered too near the surface for it to be a normal reaction to the closeness of her wedding.

  Dex raised her chin with a hand until her eyes met his. She caught her breath. He really had the most amazing blue eyes.

  He kissed her. “Honey, forget him. You’re mine now. And all I know is that I find you the sexiest, most gorgeous woman on the planet, and I can’t wait until I get you into bed.” He caught the tear that spilled out with his thumb, but didn’t scold her. “The key to good sex isn’t technique, knowing secret moves and a hundred different positions. It’s about being with someone you love. When you make love with someone you’re crazy about, it’s fantastic just being together.”

  She chewed on her bottom lip. Was that how he’d felt about Cathryn? She wasn’t stupid—she knew he had a list of conquests as long as her arm and was pretty experienced in the bedroom. And it was idiotic to think he still had feelings for Cathryn when the woman had treated him so badly. But the thought of him saying these lovely things to anyone else made her shrivel inside.

  She just hoped their joint decision to wait to sleep together didn’t mean they’d built up the first time in their heads to be some cataclysmic coming together when in fact it would probably be the usual bumping of noses and awkward manoeuvring to get into position, possibly with her worrying about achieving orgasm and hurting his feelings, causing her to fake it.

  It had seemed like the perfect decision at the time. Ian had damaged her to such an extent that she knew it had influenced her parents’ move to New Zealand, although obviously her mother’s wish to return to the place of her birth before she died had also played a part. But Marama’s death on top of Honey’s escape from the destructive relationship had almost destroyed her, and for the six months before she met Dex, she’d been plagued with depression and thoughts of Why bother? Why carry on?

  Meeting Dex had felt a little like meeting an archangel. From the beginning he’d been gentle, caring and affectionate, and she was conscious of being dazzled, and also afraid of what would happen when the glare wore off. Not that it had yet—she was still waiting for that to happen. But she was aware that if anybody showed her kindness, she warmed to them instinctively, and she knew she had to be careful not to fall for Dex just because he wasn’t the complete bastard her ex had been.

  She’d tried to keep their relationship light, to have fun and keep her worries to herself, but things had turned serious rapidly in spite of her attempts to cool it, and within the first two weeks she’d told him everything, including all her fears and worries. To be fair he’d done the same, not holding back, and explaining everything about his past, from his miscreant youth to the disaster with Cathryn. It had been his suggestion they hold back from sleeping together until they were married as a way for each of them to prove to the other how serious they were, and she’d agreed with relief, thankful that even though she wanted him desperately, she wouldn’t have that side of things to worry about for a while. They could concentrate on being with each other, on getting to know one another, and by the time they were married, sex would be a way to share their love rather than a power struggle to control each other as had happened in the past for both of them.

  She closed her eyes and slid her arms around him again. She didn’t want to think about Ian—she’d fled to the other side of the world to get away from him, and Dex was right—the only power he had over her now was that which she chose to give him. And whatever Dex had felt for Cathryn was well and truly gone after what she’d done to him.

  The past didn’t matter. Who they’d been with, what had happened before they met—that was all irrelevant. All that mattered now was being with him, and being loved by him.

  “I love you,” she whispered. She nuzzled his neck, smelling his subtle aftershave, and touched her lips to his warm skin.

  “And I’m crazy about you.” He lifted her chin and kissed her again. “Want me to show you how much?”

  Her lips curved. “You’re such a wicked man. Doesn’t it worry you that people might see you canoodling in your uniform?”

  “I’m off duty. And ‘canoodling’? What century are you from again?”

  She gave a happy sigh as he continued to press his lips across her cheeks and nose. He did adore her. She should be thankful for what she had rather than keep fabricating problems. “We are canoodling. It’s the perfect word for what we’re doing. We’re the most old-fashioned couple I know. Besides which, people don’t know you’re off duty. It’s not like there’s a sign above your head or anything.”

  His thumb brushed the nape of her neck, making her shiver. “Want to canoodle some more?”

  She thought about it. “Will you put your hat on?”

  In answer, he retrieved it from the fence post and pulled it on. “Yes, ma’am.”

  Another little shiver ran through her. “Ooh, I love it when you call me that.”

  Laughing, he pushed her back against the wall and lowered his lips to hers again, the warm sun highlighting his features with bright gold.

  Chapter Three

  Wanting to make the most of Honey while he had her to himself, Dex prepared for a long embrace, but they’d only managed a brief smooch before a voice interrupted them.

  “Put him down, Honey. You don’t know where he’s been.”

  Irritated, he pulled back and glanced over his shoulder to see a dark-haired, cheeky-looking guy watching them with amusement. Dex grinned. “Hey, Chase.”

  “Koru around?” Chase asked.

  “He’s in the café.” Honey straightened her apron. Her cheeks had flushed an attractive pink. Dex winked at her, and the flush deepened. He stifled a chuckle. She was very easy to embarrass, and he enjoyed teasing her, loving the way she reacted to him.

  “You may not want to go in, though,” Honey added as they followed Chase toward the café. “Reuben’s in there.”

  Chase stiffened visibly, and his brow darkened. “What’s he doing here?”

  “Waiting for his girlfriend,” Dex said wryly.

  “Ouch.”

  Pity swept over Dex, and he clapped the other guy on the shoulder. “Sorry. That was a bit harsh.”

  “I’m mortally wounded.” Chase pushed open the café door and the smell of coffee and hot pastries wafted out. “I may never recover.”

  Unfortunately, Dex thought, that statement was probably true. Honey had told him the story. Chase had adored Daisy Summers since the first day Koru had taken him to the café to meet the rest of his family, and he had been smitten as soon as his eyes fell on the tall, blonde-haired sister.

  Daisy had cast her gaze over Chase, sized him up in ten seconds flat and dismissed him just as quickly. Smart, astute and having taken a business degree back in England, Daisy ran the commercia
l side of Matariki, but wasn’t satisfied with that. She wanted more out of life than the rest of the Summer siblings. Money. Possessions. Status. Three things Chase Jackson didn’t have.

  Chase worked in his father’s building firm and wrote science fiction novels in his spare time. Unpublished science fiction novels. He had no savings, not an iota of business sense and spent every cent he earned on computer paper, surfboards and beer.

  Daisy wasn’t impressed.

  She was, however, a romantic at heart, or so Honey said, although Dex couldn’t see it himself. The oldest sister always seemed aloof, cold even, and he couldn’t imagine her relaxing her guard enough to be won over by a bunch of flowers or a love poem, however well written it was. But somehow Chase had touched the dreamer inside of her, or maybe she’d just been entranced by the muscles he’d developed lifting bricks all day every day. Either way, they’d dated for over six months before Daisy had finally realised that inside the idealistic lover was a lazy layabout who was never going to amount to anything. She broke up with him and soon after hooked up with Reuben. “Rebound,” Honey had stated when she’d told Dex that.

  Ever since then Chase had been trying to get her back.

  So far, it wasn’t working. Dex admired his persistence though.

  Chase clapped Koru on the shoulder and wished him happy birthday, nodded at Reuben, who nodded back just as dismissively, then crossed the café and leaned on the counter. Daisy came over to the till and put her hands on her hips. Slim, beautiful and sharp as a bee sting, with bright blonde hair rolled into an elegant chignon, Daisy could make men wither at twenty paces by fixing them with her cool green eyes. Dex could see why other men found her attractive, but she wasn’t his type at all.

  “What do you want?” she asked impatiently.

  “Hello, beautiful,” Chase said in a low voice so Reuben couldn’t hear. “What’s the best kiss you have on the menu?”

  She gave him a look that would have shrivelled a lesser man, like sprinkling salt would shrivel a slug. Chase, used to her disdain, just blew her a kiss. Dex laughed and took his seat.

  “I’ll only be five minutes,” Honey said.

  “No worries.” He sat back in the chair and sipped the cooling latte, watching her as she moved about behind the counter, tidying away.

  Shorter than Daisy, maybe five seven or eight, with hair the colour of her name tumbling down her back in waves, Honey Summers had a beautiful spirit that radiated from her and filled him with a light he’d never experienced until the day he walked into the café. He’d been captivated from the moment she gave him the extra chocolate fish, entranced by the flush in her cheeks, her delightful English accent, the frequent smile in her eyes and the way she appeared completely naïve and innocent—qualities he’d never thought to find in a grown woman. She seemed to cleanse away all the bad things he’d done in the past, all the destructive emotions and feelings that had infected him like a disease. When she looked at him with love and joy in her eyes, he felt reborn, and he never wanted to let that sensation go.

  The more he’d got to know her, the more he’d discovered the darker, haunted side to her personality. As Chase settled beside him with his mocha, Dex watched the sun stream through the window causing a pillar to cast a shadow across the counter, thinking how it mirrored the way her sunny character was offset by the depression that plagued her every now and again, usually when she thought about her previous boyfriend.

  Dex would happily admit that he wanted to kill Ian McFarlane. Or Ian Mc-Fucking-Idiot as he liked to call him. How a man could take a spirit as bright and fresh as Honey’s and corrode it like seawater does copper, he had no idea. In spite of her insistence to the contrary, he knew Honey thought herself weak for letting Ian treat her badly for so long. He didn’t blame her—he’d seen enough of that type of man in his job to know it was entirely possible for one person to hold another in thrall, to possess them and control them so completely that their own personality almost dissolved.

  Part of him felt resentful that her family hadn’t intervened earlier. He supposed they’d all been too caught up in their own lives to notice how bad it had got. Koru had told him that Campbell Summers had been too worried about Marama’s cancer diagnosis to realise his daughter was suffering. Certainly their reaction when they found out how unhappy she was—immediately organising the move back to Marama’s home country—convinced Dex that they felt guilty for not paying more attention to her. And he knew Koru felt the same.

  Following the consumption of a good portion of a bottle of whiskey celebrating the All Blacks’ success on the rugby field against Australia shortly after they met, the ‘seventh sister’ had confided that he blamed himself for not rescuing her earlier. Koru admitted that when he’d found out what had been going on, he’d tracked Ian down in a dark alley one night and beaten the crap out of him, kicking the bastard so hard in the crown jewels he’d probably never father a child. Koru had looked wary at what his new police officer friend was going to say to that revelation.

  Dex didn’t usually condone violence, but he’d shaken Koru’s hand and said vehemently, “Fucking great result,” and that was that. They never mentioned it again.

  When he and Honey first dated, it had taken her two weeks before she told Dex the story about what had happened before they left England. He’d listened, appalled, already half in love with her, sick to the stomach to think that someone had treated this butterfly spirit so cruelly. Clearly, even though it had been nearly a year since she broke up with Ian and the family moved to New Zealand, she was heavily scarred, plus of course the death of her mother had only served to make things worse.

  And Dex decided there and then he was going to make her the happiest woman on the planet. He proposed three weeks later, and suggested that they wait until their wedding night before sleeping together. By then she already knew about the disaster surrounding Cathryn, and the thought that both of them needed to take it slowly, to learn to trust before making that final step, sealed the deal for her.

  He watched her now moving about the kitchen, cleaning the utensils she’d used to make the pastries and wiping down the counter, and he smiled at her loveliness.

  He’d yet to see beneath her clothes. When they made out watching the TV or lying in the grasses surrounding Stormwind—the large house and estate where all the Summers clan lived bar Daisy, who’d recently moved to Auckland with Reuben, and Koru, who shared a house with Chase—he always stopped short of removing her clothing, wanting to somehow try to preserve the innocence and…he wasn’t exactly sure what he’d call it…the cleanliness of their relationship, maybe, until their wedding night, wanting it to be right.

  But that didn’t stop himself imagining taking it further. What colour would her nipples be when he finally removed the white lacy bra he knew she favoured? A light rose pink? Or darker, reflecting the fact that even though she was blonde, her skin wasn’t English rose but tanned easily, reflecting her Maori heritage. On their wedding night, he’d peel away her white dress, slowly remove her underwear, then he’d push her back onto the bed and kiss her senseless for a while before moving his lips to her breasts. He’d admire her nipples and tell her how beautiful she was, then he’d close his mouth over them and suck until she squirmed beneath him. He’d brush his lips down her ribs, over her soft stomach, and then even lower, kissing, tasting…

  Dex closed his eyes, leaned forward and rested his forehead on the table.

  Chase and Koru started laughing.

  “What’s the joke?” Reuben asked.

  “Dex isn’t getting any,” Chase said.

  Reuben frowned. “I thought you were engaged.”

  “He is. They’re not sleeping together until their wedding night.” Koru grinned.

  Reuben looked baffled. “Jeez, why? I didn’t think anyone waited till they were married anymore.”

  “Long story.” Dex wasn’t in the mood to spill the intimate details of his life. The recent letter he’d had from Cathryn
remained fresh in his memory, even though he’d immediately ripped it into a dozen pieces and then ceremoniously burned them before tossing the ash angrily in his garden as if hoping he could scatter the words just as easily. He hadn’t told Koru about it, or Honey, and he wasn’t going to with the wedding only a week away. He just had to hope Cathryn had been bluffing, although dread sat coiled in his stomach at the fear that she might have been telling the truth.

  He especially wasn’t going to confide his innermost feelings to the boorish city dude who’d looked down his nose when he walked into Matariki and found out the restaurant Daisy ran with her family wasn’t a chic bar with chrome stools and printed menus encased in leather booklets, but instead a village-style friendly café with checked tablecloths, creaky wooden chairs and a blackboard with specials of the day written in chalk. Never mind that they served the best coffee in the Northland and their selection of pies and pastries wouldn’t have looked out of place on the table of a medieval king.

  “Don’t know how you do it,” Reuben commented. “I couldn’t go a week without sex, let alone…how long have you been engaged?”

  “Six months.”

  “Jeez. You must have balls the size of space hoppers.”

  Koru met Dex’s gaze, his lips twisting wryly. Chase also sniggered, although he was too busy glaring at Reuben’s reference to having regular sex with Daisy to pay attention to Dex’s reaction.

  Dex decided to change the subject, not needing Reuben to remind him how desperate he was to get his leg over. “So what are you up to tonight?” he asked Koru. “Out celebrating, birthday boy?”

  “Yeah. Jude should be here in a minute. We’re going to Paihia, meeting some mates and going to one of the clubs for the evening. You sure you don’t want to come along?”

  There had been a time when Dex would have jumped at the chance of half a dozen beers and an evening at a nightclub with the hope of finding a pretty blonde to take home for the evening. He was only twenty-eight—the same age as Koru, and Jude and Chase were only a year younger. It was hardly old, and certainly his other three friends showed no sign of slowing down their fun-filled evenings.

 

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