On the Edge

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On the Edge Page 6

by Jayne Ann Krentz


  “Come to me, Jed. There’s no one else for me. No one when you’re away. You know that, don’t you?” She lifted herself, inviting him into her warmth.

  He came to her then. Amy felt the scrape of his bandaged leg against the softness of her inner thigh. The wide, solid tip of his manhood was a throbbing pressure that her body resisted at first. For a moment there was an aching, almost painful tightness that made Amy breathe more quickly. He was so big and she had never known anyone like him.

  “Hold me, Amy. Take me inside and hold me. I need it. God knows, I need it.” He flexed his hips powerfully, forging completely into her in one long, smooth movement.

  Amy exhaled on a little whimper of excitement and feminine uncertainty. Her tautly stretched body was caught between the promise of pain and the promise of pleasure. And then she felt herself adjust slowly to the invasion. She realized that Jed was straining to hold himself still, exerting all his control to give her time to accept him.

  “I should have waited,” he said roughly. “I should have given you a little longer. I told myself I wasn’t going to rush you.”

  “Hush.” She touched his hard mouth with her fingertips to quiet him. “You’re not rushing me. This is exactly what I want. I want you.”

  “Amy.” He bent his head and took her mouth, entering her with his tongue just as he had entered her with his manhood. Slowly he began to move both within her, using the exciting friction to generate more of her feminine dampness. Her body responded at once. Amy sank her nails into Jed’s shoulders and lifted herself to meet his increasingly fierce thrusts. The bright passion caught them both up in its blaze, flaring high and heralding even greater fulfillment. Streams of energy flowed together into a quick, roaring fire that preceded the explosion of the volcano. Amy forgot about everything else in the world except the aching need that was about to be satisfied.

  Jed’s harsh, muffled shout was accompanied by a last, deep plunge into Amy’s tight, moist sheath. Hot lava flowed. She clung more tightly, poised on a brink and aware of the taut, spiraling response of her own body. And then the sweet spasms rippled through her, over her, around her. Amy’s soft cries chased Jed’s panting echoes as she followed him into the temporary exhaustion of the sensual aftermath.

  Silence and peace filled the room. It was the first real peace Amy had known for eight months. She knew it wouldn’t last, but the respite was sweet and she savored it.

  It was a long time before Jed could bring himself to move. If it hadn’t been for the dull ache that started again in his ribs, he decided, he probably wouldn’t have moved until morning. He liked his present position, liked having his head pillowed on Amy’s soft, delicate breasts, liked the lingering dampness between her legs that deepened the sense of intimacy between them and her feminine, sensual aroma. And he liked the contentment in her body.

  Her intense response to him filled him with a purely masculine combination of wonder and satisfaction. Later, he promised himself, he would give her the slow, lingering pleasure he had intended to give her their first time together. Later he would take his time. But tonight his need had overtaken him with little warning. When Amy had put up no resistance, indeed, had welcomed him, there had been nothing to stop him. Jed had taken from her what he’d been wanting to take for the past three months.

  His head was already full of the things he would do to her, the things he would teach her in the future. Her startled, uncertain response to the way he had touched the sensitive valley between her curving buttocks told him that she was not a very experienced woman. But then, he had guessed that the moment he met her. Her throbbing tightness told him that it had been a long while since she had been with a man. That didn’t surprise him, either. She was the kind of woman who would always be cautious about risking an affair. She had too much to give and, therefore, too much to lose.

  “Jed?” Her voice was sleepy.

  “Sorry. My ribs are bothering me a little.”

  She stirred beneath him, concern replacing the relaxation on her face. “Maybe you should take one of your pills.” She touched his forehead. “You don’t feel feverish.”

  “I’m fine.” He smiled. “You took care of the fever that was bothering me tonight. What about you? Anything left of the nightmare?”

  She laughed. “What nightmare? I think you’ve found a definitive cure.”

  “You think so?”

  “It seems to have worked for me.”

  “Good. Then I suggest we run an experiment.” He sat up slowly, letting his hand trail down across her breasts and come to rest on the softness of her stomach.

  “What sort of experiment?” Amy punctuated the question with a catlike yawn.

  “Come and spend the rest of the night with me, Amy.” Her yawn was cut off. Her eyes widened. “Jed, I don’t think that’s a good idea.”

  “Let’s try it and see what happens.”

  “I’ve told you. I’m a restless sleeper. It’s not just a matter of an occasional nightmare. I’m a first class insomniac. I wake up several times a night. And I toss and turn a lot. Believe me, you wouldn’t get much sleep.”

  “I’ll chance it.”

  She shook her head and her instant refusal to even consider the suggestion annoyed him. “No, I don’t think so,” she said flatly.

  Jed got to his feet and reached down to catch hold of her shoulders. She was slender and light, even though she had a woman’s strength. It was easy to pull her up beside him until she was standing in front of him. “Don’t be silly, Amy,” he said calmly. “We’re going to give it a try.”

  “I don’t…”

  He hushed her with a kiss. “There is no good reason for you to sleep out here on the couch.” When he lifted his head she didn’t say anything, just looked up at him with an anxious, searching glance that told him nothing except that she was genuinely nervous about sleeping with him.

  “For pete’s sake,” he muttered, turning her around and steering her toward the doorway with his hands on her shoulders, “why the hell should sleeping with me be so upsetting after what just happened between us?”

  She ignored the question. “I’m cold.”

  He reached down to sweep her nightgown off the couch. The downward, twisting movement put stress on his injured leg and Jed swore softly. “Here, put this on.” He dropped the flannel gown over her head.

  She disappeared briefly beneath the soft material and then her frowning face reappeared as she put her arms through the sleeves. “You’ve got a lot of nerve calling me bossy, you know that? In fact, I think you’ve got a lot of nerve, period.”

  “Fortunately, I compensate for my drawbacks by being good in bed.”

  “Hah.”

  “You got any complaints, lady?” He had her almost into the dark bedroom now. He kept his hands on her shoulders as he guided her toward the bed.

  “If I did have any complaints, who am I supposed to take them to?” she demanded as she crawled under the covers and leaned back against the pillows to glare at him.

  “Always go to the source of the problem, I say.” He slipped in beside her, tangling his feet with hers. “Come here and tell me exactly where I failed to meet your expectations and requirements.”

  “Dammit, Jed.”

  “Can’t think of a single problem area, can you? I knew it.”

  She sighed. “Your ego could become a major problem.”

  He chuckled softly and cradled her in his arms. “If I’ve got an inflated ego where you’re concerned, you have only yourself to blame. After the way you just responded to me, I’m bound to think I’m hell on wheels in bed. Go to sleep, Amy.”

  “I don’t think I can,” she said very seriously.

  “You will.”

  “What makes you so sure?”

  In a dramatic singsong voice he droned, “Because you look extremely sleepy. Your eyes are getting heavy. You can barely keep yourself awake. Your body is limp, relaxed, you’re pleasantly comfortable. You want nothing more than to just
close your eyes and go to sleep.”

  “I’m not susceptible to hypnotic suggestion.”

  “Sure you are. Creative minds are the most susceptible, didn’t you know that? And anyone who writes science fiction for a living would have to be twice as susceptible as the average person.”

  She shook her head a little ruefully and finally gave in to the inevitable. “All right, but it’s not going to work.”

  She was asleep within ten minutes.

  For a long time Jed lay very still beside her, not daring to move for fear of waking her. She looked very sweet and vulnerable lying in his arms. Her golden brown hair was spread in sensual disarray over her shoulders. The old-fashioned nightgown added a charming, piquant touch.

  Jed realized for the first time that one of the reasons he was attracted to Amy was the odd combination of emotions she elicited from him. Every time he looked at her he felt an urge to ravish her and an equally strong need to protect her. The mixture was fraught with an emotional danger he’d never before faced.

  It was a relentless curiosity that finally drove him to disentangle himself from Amy’s soft body. He didn’t like loose ends. Carefully he eased away from her, watchful in case she started to awaken. She stirred once or twice, but her eyes stayed closed and her breathing remained even. Jed grinned to himself. Maybe she was one of those so-called insomniacs who believed they were awake half the night when in reality they slept peacefully through most of it.

  But the nightmare had been real enough, Jed reminded himself. And he knew something about nightmares.

  He wanted to see what kind of writing could cause such a chilling, frightened scream. He’d read all three books in Amy’s Shadow trilogy: Wizard’s Eye, Lady’s Bane and Shadow’s Master. The last one wasn’t due out for another few months, but Amy had let him read the manuscript. He’d found it different from the other two, although all three were tied together with common characters and a quest theme.

  Jed knew from what Amy had told him that she’d finished Shadow’s Master only a few months ago, just before he’d met her, in fact. The tone had seemed darker than the others, not as adventurous and lighthearted in its dealing with the perils faced by the hero and heroine. In a way it had been a better book, richer in detail and characterization, but there was no doubt there had been an uneasy edge to it that set it apart from the others.

  He made his way haltingly out into the living room, absently scratching the healing wound on his right arm. Amy kept her home computer in a corner of the room near the kitchen. She also kept a bottle of brandy in a kitchen cupboard. It was an expensive brand and she tended to dole it out in tiny, carefully measured quantities. Jed headed for the kitchen cupboard first. He would have preferred a glass of Scotch, but Amy didn’t keep any in the house. She hadn’t kept any since the evening she’d paid him a casual visit and found him well into a bottle.

  She hadn’t said anything that night, but her concern and disapproval had been evident. Whenever she offered him a drink after that, it was usually white wine. Instead of taking offense, Jed had found her gentle maneuvering rather sweet and amusing.

  A couple of minutes later, brandy in hand, he sat down in front of the computer. Amy had shown him how to run the word processing program and load a disk before he’d left on the last assignment. At the time he’d merely been curious, his engineering mentality coming to the fore, he supposed. Sometimes it still did that on occasion. He’d been a good engineer once upon a time. He frowned intently at the dark screen and began to fumble through a box of diskettes.

  He was about to load the program when he spotted a pile of printed manuscript pages lying on one comer of the desk. Dropping the program disk back into the storage box, Jed hefted the stack of paper.

  It was labeled Private Demons. Amy must have decided to print out what she had done so far. Jed picked up the manuscript and the brandy and ambled back to the rumpled couch. He sat down, flipped on the end table light and quickly scanned through the pages, starting from the back. He wanted to read Amy’s most recent work.

  The story seemed to be a straightforward sword and Sorcery tale about a very normal young lady from California named Wanda Madison, who found herself transported against her will to another world to fight mysterious creatures or an even more mysterious dark power. The new world was an aquatic environment, and somehow in the transition process Wanda was endowed with the ability to live underwater.

  Somebody, however, had made a serious mistake in recruiting Wanda for the dangerous task of demon fighting. Wanda spent a lot of time trying to explain the error, but it was too late. The problem was that the demons she was supposed to battle came from the darkest part of the sea. They represented a power that thrived in the deep, and any attempt to master them meant swimming into the black depths of the sunken caves where the creatures lived.

  As it happened, poor Wanda had a lifelong fear of the dark. She also had claustrophobia.

  It was a major disaster. Unfortunately, for Wanda and the aquatic people who had kidnapped her, there weren’t going to be any second chances. She was their one and only hope for survival.

  She forced herself to swim steadily on through the murk, half blinded by the silt that had been kicked up in the creature’s death throes. She was certain that at any moment her lungs would suddenly revert to normal, human lungs and she would no longer be able to breathe water. Telling herself that the drowning sensation was purely her imagination, she struggled forward into the cavern.

  The oppressive, watery darkness was a distilled version of all the childhood fears she had ever known. Every instinct warned her there would be no escape. She would be trapped forever. Still, she kicked out awkwardly with her strange, webbed feet, struggling to maneuver the dead weight of her burden. She couldn’t look at what she was dragging into the darkest, watery corridor. To do so would surely drive her over the edge of sanity. But she could sense its leg gliding limply alongside hers as the thick current caught it, could feel the occasional brush of the dead hand as it floated through the water beside her.

  The eyes. If she looked at the eyes it would be all over. The sightless, staring eyes would be full of accusation and a curse that would follow her for as long as she lived. She must not look at the eyes.

  In that moment Wanda would have sold her soul for a glimpse of clean light, fresh air and freedom. The trouble was, she wasn’t at all certain she would have a soul to sell after she completed her grisly task.

  Thoughtfully Jed set aside the last page, took a long swallow of the brandy and asked himself if describing such a scene was really enough to give a woman nightmares. Surely someone accustomed to such writing wouldn’t have found the description unnerving. He wondered if Amy herself was afraid of the dark. There was so little he knew about her.

  He did know what it was like to be afraid of the dark, he thought bleakly. He also knew what it was like to have it as an ally. During the past eight years he had learned to make it a friend, not a foe. At times his survival had depended on it.

  He finished the brandy and slowly got to his feet. He switched off the light and headed back toward the bedroom. Amy was curled into an inviting lump under the quilt, still sound asleep. Her hair was a dark fan on the white pillow.

  Feeling gratified, as though he had a right to take credit for her being asleep, Jed slid into bed.

  As the bed gave and she was jostled, Amy started to rise from a dreamless oblivion. A rough, masculine leg touched hers. Subconscious panic formed from nothing, swirling to life as quickly as a thunderstorm. Dark water surrounded her again, and for an instant she couldn’t breathe.

  This time she knew she was drowning. Then the hand lightly grazed her thigh.

  It was just the movement of the water around her that had caused his hand and leg to brush against hers, she told herself. He wasn’t alive. She mustn’t panic. She was committed to this now. There was no choice but to go through with it.

  But the panic swamped her completely when she felt th
e masculine foot snag hers. Amy surfaced from the depths of sleep, flailing wildly at the big hands and heavy legs that were seeking to clutch her and drown her. There was no scream on her lips this time. She didn’t dare open her mouth. The water would rush in and steal what was left of her air supply. Desperately she fought to free herself, struggling violently against the restraining hold.“Amy!”

  She heard Jed’s voice calling her, but there was no release. She was being pinned more tightly than ever. Her arms were trapped at her sides, her legs were locked beneath the weight of a man’s thigh. She couldn’t move.

  “Amy, stop it. For God’s sake, wake up. Open your eyes. Look at me. Look at me!”

  The harsh command penetrated her mindless panic, calling her back to reality. Amy drew a deep breath. No water rushed into her lungs. She was in bed. Her bed. It was Jed’s voice she heard. Her eyes snapped open.

  His face was fierce and unrelenting in the shadows. It was the face of a man who could make her believe in hell, Amy thought. Or perhaps it was the face of a man who would walk through hell to save her.

  Her breathing slowed to normal. She closed her eyes and opened them again. “I’m sorry, Jed. I warned you I’m a restless sleeper.”

  His grip eased. “So you said. Are you all right now?”

  “I’m fine.”

  “Uh huh.” He sounded distinctly skeptical. “I think I’m going to get you a medicinal glass of brandy. I’ll be right back.”

  “It’s alright, Jed. I don’t need anything.” But her protest was weak and she knew it. She most definitely needed something. The panic attacks were getting worse, just like the nightmares. Jed didn’t bother to respond to her mild denial. He left and she soon heard him opening a cupboard in the kitchen. When he reappeared in the bedroom a few minutes later he was holding a hefty dose of brandy in one hand. She sat up, hugging her knees under the quilt.

 

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