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Cin Wikkid: April Fools For Love

Page 8

by Mary Hughes


  She came abruptly upright before the doors.

  They stood open to a large, elegant foyer, where she was appalled to see a crowd of posh people staring at her in horror.

  She tottered there, breath frozen, as the mutters began. Faces darkened and hardened with disgust and contempt. “Who is she?” “I don’t know.” “I know she doesn’t belong.”

  Her stomach flared with pain. Didn’t matter if she was just as good as any of them. Being on the receiving end of those belittling looks and whispers hurt.

  For Rafe. Forcing herself to breathe, Cin searched among the dark grimaces for Milly’s sympathetic oval face, or one kind expression, or anyone who wasn’t scowling. She’d even take someone laughing at her.

  A pair of kohl-rimmed eyes edged into view as, with a flash of gold lame, Yl darted within a few feet of the doors. Ez and Mrs. Wikkid crowded close behind her, their expressions disbelieving.

  The Steps!

  Hope filled Cin’s lungs on a buoyant breath. She lifted a hand to wave.

  Yl’s gold-gloved hand rose, too—to hide her face. Behind her, Ez’s gaze met Cin’s…and slid away. Looking anywhere but Cin.

  The Widow Wikkid deliberately turned her back.

  Cin groaned, arm drooping.

  An answering groan came from the rotund woman at her feet as the matron tried unsuccessfully to rise, flopping like a floundering sea creature.

  Poor thing. Help her.

  Cin barely had her own watery muscles under control, her arms and legs trembling with mortification, but she couldn’t ignore a fellow human being in distress. She grabbed the woman’s wrists, braced herself, and heaved.

  The large lady popped up—sending Cin tumbling directly into the two doormen.

  “Grab her!” one rasped, voice like sandpaper.

  They must’ve seen her kamikaze skirt in action, because they caught her by the wrists, one each, and held her between them.

  “Thank you,” Cin began, until their hands tightened, snake-bite hard, on her wrists. She squeaked and tried to twist loose.

  “You baggage,” the second doorman snarled, his tone all gravel. “Sorry, you’ll have to leave.”

  Gravel-voice’s glower said he wasn’t sorry in the least, but she understood. The muttering in the foyer was getting louder, and the nasty squint the matron gave her could have flayed skin.

  If not for Rafe, she’d have hung her head and oozed back down the steps.

  But if she and Rafe were to have any chance for a future, she’d have to fight. She pumped steel into her spine and glared back. “I was invited.”

  “You?” the sandpaper-voiced doorman snorted. “I hardly think the likes of you were invited.”

  “A mere sandwich girl,” Ez muttered, loud enough for the whole foyer to hear.

  Cin felt the words like a knife to the gut.

  Yl scissored open her gloved fingers to stab Cin with a triumphant smirk. See, we told you.

  Throwing off her pain and stoking her courage, Cin ignored the Steps to meet the doorman’s glower, and upped it with a glare. “The invitation was in the newspaper. Every single woman in the city was invited. I’m single. I live in this city. I’m invited.”

  “Indecorous behavior is not tolerated, even from invited guests,” the second doorman sneered.

  “Especially guests like you.” The first doorman’s dismissive gaze flicked over her as if she were the bastard offspring of a hobo and a burst vacuum cleaner bag.

  “See, Cinderella?” Ez poked a bony gloved finger at her. “No matter how good you look in your pretty makeup, you can’t hide the ugly underneath.”

  Shocked, Cin could only gape. She’d known her stepsisters didn’t like her, but this virulent hate was unexpected and took her out at the knees.

  While she wobbled, one of the doormen jerked his head toward the stairs, and the pair began to strong-arm her toward them.

  “Wait! Please.” She dug in her heels, as much as she could. “I have to get inside. I have to find someone. Please. Don’t throw me out.”

  They ignored her, hoisting her between them. Hopelessness invaded Cin’s cells, her lungs, stealing her air, robbing her protests of strength. She sagged, mirror of her spirit plummeting inside. She’d lost her only chance for a future with Rafe.

  Chapter Six

  “Stop.”

  The deep voice cut through the crowd’s muttering by virtue of its sheer power. The doormen halted on the top step as if they’d been flash-frozen.

  “What is going on here?”

  Cin didn’t look up. She didn’t recognize the voice, but what did it matter?

  The men holding her turned though, twisting their snake-bites harder. She barely winced in her depressed, defeated state. The first doorman rasped, “I’m sorry you were disturbed, sir. We’re just showing this interloper out.”

  Forceful footsteps rang nearer. Curiosity finally tipped her head, and she swiveled her eyes to glance behind her.

  A man strode through the crowd, tall and decisive, his dark hair gleaming.

  Cobalt-blue eyes glinting.

  Rafe.

  She perked up, twisting in the doormen’s grip, searching Rafe’s dear face, waiting for his recognition…

  There was none. Not any sign of softness or warmth on his perfect, unscarred face. Absolutely no sign he knew her.

  Absolutely no sign he’d ever cared.

  He stalked closer in his elegant tux, the exact gleaming black of his hair and fit to show up his broad shoulders, and she knew.

  This wasn’t Rafe, not her Rafe at any rate.

  Oh, she realized intellectually this was the same man. But emotionally? This wasn’t the Rafe who’d tenderly kissed her, given her gifts, rubbed her with lotion. Why had she thought he’d be the same here, just without scars?

  Why had she thought Prince was the mask, and Rafe the real expression of the man?

  This forceful male was all Gideon Prince, and his expression was pure outrage.

  Outraged by me? Cinderella trembled, sagging between the mansion’s bookend bouncers. She knew why. She’d flung those terrible words at him, had spat, “I’d never marry Gideon Prince.”

  He was probably thinking, “You turned me down, Cin. I gave up on you.” The fact that she dared show up now? He’d be insulted, hurt, and covering it with anger.

  But twisting, looking again…that wasn’t hot anger in those blue eyes. It was cold disdain.

  She shivered.

  He stood above her on the stairs, staring down his nose at her. Like Ez, though his superiority seemed inborn and higher somehow. Like Ez, too, he stood straighter than straight, but not her stepsister’s ultratense rigidity. Prince held himself with a surety, a knowledge that he was rich and powerful and privileged.

  Cin wondered why he’d even bothered with the Rafe act. A rich man’s lark, dressing up in a middle-class disguise, laughing at the poor souls around him? Maybe that was why he’d never had intercourse with her. She was good enough for a fondle but not good enough for a fuck.

  Ouch.

  That’s not true. I connected with him, I know I did.

  Or she thought she had. Could it all have been an act? Not just the Rafe persona, but his tenderness toward her?

  Seeing him in his element, she wondered how she could have thought he’d give all this up to live with her. Ludicrous. Her, little Cin Wikkid, hardworking poor, sandwich girl. Prince would never give up his billions to embrace Rafe. He’d especially never give them up to embrace her.

  A winter storm invaded her chest, scouring her raw. It crushed her hope for them.

  His eyes met hers. The ice in his gaze matched the hail-filled gales inside her.

  Her heart began to shrivel and die.

  And then a miracle happened. He saw. Saw her pain, her fear. His gaze changed, touched with fondness, exasperation, empathy—Rafe’s wealth of emotions, the feelings he never put in to words, but that she nonetheless knew lived and breathed inside him.

 
The ice in her chest cracked as she finally recognized her Rafe. He’s not just a rich man’s act. His face blurred as tears rose in her eyes.

  “Gentlemen,” he said to the doormen. “You will release Ms. Wikkid. Now.”

  The men instantly obeyed the dark command in his voice, freeing her wrists. Chafing feeling into them, she turned front, blinking to clear her watery vision. As she did, her Rafe seemed to disappear again, leaving only Gideon Prince.

  Beyond Prince’s broad shoulders, Cin’s stepmother had turned to stare. Yl’s hand had dropped, and all three Steps wore shocked expressions.

  Cin wanted to explain, but Prince was waving her inside. Prince, not Rafe, because her muscles automatically tensed to obey him. Damn, the man was commanding.

  A sudden twinge in her thighs and pangs from various bruises reminded her of how clumsy she was in this outfit. Before attempting a step she grabbed the topmost hoop of her skirt, lifted it a few inches, and minced a couple tiny experimental steps toward him.

  He came down the stairs to her, offering his arm.

  She gaped, but again, almost as if she had to obey, she placed her fingertips on his jacket sleeve, feeling the fine wool underneath. Instantly, she felt steadier.

  He led her up the stairs and inside. Elegant men and women parted for her as if she’d suddenly become royalty. And perhaps, on Gideon Prince’s arm, greeted personally by him—by name, nonetheless—she had.

  Bending toward her, he murmured, “We need to talk, but I only have a few minutes before the final selection starts.”

  Relief cascaded through her. Whoever he was really, she had connected with this man, at least on some level, or he wouldn’t want to talk.

  She scurried alongside him as best she was able in the heels and birthday-cake dress. He led her into a large room, an office or den of some sort, releasing her to lock the door behind them. When he turned to her, his hard-planed face was touched with regret, the echo of her Rafe.

  “Cin, I was going to tell you who I am—”

  “It’s okay.” She gave him a small smile. “I don’t know why you hid your identity, but it doesn’t matter now.”

  “It does matter. Because…” He dug a hand through his dark hair. The gesture was Rafe, but not Rafe. “Because you matter.”

  The words filled her with emotion. She choked back a sob.

  “I only have until ten o’clock. But for what it’s worth…I’m sorry I didn’t tell you. I had good reasons, or at least I thought they were good. But I’m still sorry. I ached to tell you, especially when we… When we—”

  “Fooled around?” Cin couldn’t help the pained edge to her voice, remembering how close she’d felt to Rafe during their love-play. They’d connected, but that didn’t mean it wasn’t still an act on his part.

  He looked away. “If that’s what you want to call it.”

  “What do you call it?” she challenged.

  His gaze swung back to hers, and the cobalt fire there made her breath catch.

  “I call it wanting you so much I burn with it. Each day, every day, needing you desperately.”

  Shock dropped her jaw. “Then why, all those times I touched you and you touched me, didn’t you…didn’t we…?” Her hot cheeks finished the sentence.

  “Because you didn’t know who I really was. I wanted to be me when I fully made love to you.”

  His admission stunned her. Emotion flooded her: shock and longing that he’d cherished her so much; regret for time lost; and fury that he’d lied to her all this time.

  Who are you really? Words rose to her tongue, fearful words, hopeful words, angry words. Too many words. She could only swallow them.

  “Tonight was coming fast,” he went on. “I tried to contact you, even though you told me not to…but then, when you waved me off at the sandwich shop…” His broad shoulders slumped ever so slightly. “I gave up hope. You’d said you wouldn’t marry Prince if he was the last man on earth.”

  Her vocal cords finally worked. “I never said that.” Not exactly.

  He laughed, no humor. “Your meaning was clear. But now that you’re here…” He stopped himself and drew straight. “Honor demands that I go through with the test. Will you get in line?”

  “In line? You mean to take the marriage test?”

  “Yes.”

  She searched his face, his eyes. Who’s asking me, Gideon or Rafe?

  Suddenly, she decided she didn’t want to know. She still didn’t understand why he’d disguised himself, but did it matter? She’d come here to stop him from going through with this ridiculous test, not take it herself.

  Maybe she was wrong. Maybe it wasn’t ludicrous to think she could convince him to give all this up for her.

  No, not for her. For them.

  Fifteen minutes before he had to leave. He’d refrained from intercourse until she knew his identity… but she knew now.

  Fifteen minutes to convince him to take a chance on them. She couldn’t waste a single, precious second.

  “Enough talk.” She threw herself into his arms.

  Her skirt betrayed her, tripping her and sending her stumbling full force into him.

  He caught her, but her hoops compressed between them, threatening to spring back and tear her out of his grip. For a moment, he almost let her go.

  Until his gaze met hers. Shock constricted his pupils. “You still want me…?” Suddenly his eyes dilated to dark platters, and instead of releasing her, he cinched her tighter, hoops under perfect compression, his strength the equal of, and then mastering, the steel.

  His mouth crashed down on hers even as a zip and a yank on his part freed her from the awful hooped dress. He kissed her, all the hotter for his being so desperate, his tongue owning her fast and hard as his hands stripped her of her clothes. Within moments her dress was muddled around her feet and her naked breasts peaked in the cool air, her bra discarded and her panties falling around her ankles.

  She was nude, and he was fully clothed. But she was desperate, too.

  Grabbing his tux jacket, she managed to wrestle it off his shoulders in the time it took him to kiss her nearly senseless.

  “You,” she panted around his delving tongue.

  “Me?” His fingers thrust into her hair, dislodging every pin on one side, hand holding her head still as he kissed her deeply enough to brand her soul. “What, me?” His other hand dropped to her bare buttock, squeezing, pulling her into him. The dark, thick quality of his voice gave her to understand he wasn’t quite thinking straight, or at all.

  “You. Naked.”

  “Yeah?” He muttered it between kisses. “Make me that way.”

  “Can’t. Don’t understand these things.” She jiggled a shirt stud.

  “Right.” Releasing her, he stepped back to strip off his jacket and cummerbund, throwing them carelessly across a couch back.

  Pop-pop-pop and the shirt gaped open. Her mouth gaped with it. Rafe, peeling off a T-shirt, was sexy. Prince, ripping open his crisp white cotton was akin to Superman tearing apart his button-down, only there was no costume underneath, just bronzed skin.

  She’d seen Rafe’s chest before, but here his muscles were cut crystal-sharp by the deep shadows of the low light. Pecs, biceps, flexors, and extensors jerked and bunched as he stripped off the shirt then unhooked and unzipped his pants. He wasn’t wearing any underwear.

  His cock sprung out, as proud and full as if it had shouted.

  She had to. She grabbed his erection—and nearly dropped it with a yelp. When he said he burned for her, she hadn’t realized how literally he’d meant it. He was scorching hot, throbbing, and bigger than he’d ever been.

  He wrapped her in his arms and bent, his mouth fastening onto her nipple, suckling. Bright need exploded inside her. Good thing he held her—she bucked with excitement at the onslaught. The rhythm of his suckling coursed through her. Her hips began unconsciously to beat against him in synch, trapping his erection between them. As she undulated in luxurious waves, the
thing actually grew fatter.

  “Cin.” He thrust one hair-roughened thigh through her legs, grabbed her hips, and pulled, scrubbing his hot roped muscles against her sensitive sex. She shrieked, not simple bucking now but wrenching with full-fledged earthquakes of pleasure.

  Convincing him, thought itself, fell away. Only one thing lit her brain.

  She wanted him inside her, and she wanted him now.

  She wrapped a leg around his waist. Reaching between them, she grabbed his cock and raised it like a torpedo, aimed straight where that thick erection would to the most good. The next time he pulled her hips in, his glans rode partway inside her.

  He released her nipple with a shout.

  The feel of Rafe inside her thrilled her to her core. Twining arms around his neck, she wriggled until a full inch was seated.

  He hissed in her ear. “Cin…wait…”

  “No more waiting.”

  “This isn’t right. I wanted our first time to be slow. Beautiful.”

  “Fast and beautiful works too. Move inside me, Rafe.”

  “Gideon.” His voice was strained, his cock throbbing just inside her. Nostrils white with panting, he lifted his gaze, his eyes gluing to hers as if she was his lifeline. “Gideon Raphael Montoya-Prince is my real name.”

  “Your name doesn’t change who you are.” She wiggled on his thigh, trying to get him to move.

  “It does for most people.” His fingers tightened on her hips, biting reflexively. “That, and the scars.”

  “The scars were never an issue for me, except that they pained you.” Tilting her hips, she managed to wriggle another inch of him inside her. “But they aren’t real.”

  “They were at one point. Cin…you win. I think I’ll die if I don’t bury myself in your wet heat. I’d give you flowery words if it was in me…”

  “It’s okay.”

  And it was. She felt his need, his caring, in his actions, more potent than any words. Saw his desire in his blissful, pained expression as he gripped her hips and walked her to the couch. Felt his tenderness and care as he laid her gently on the sofa’s cushions. Experienced the depth of his love as he began to move inside her, gently at first. Then, as their breath quickened together, as mewls of pleasure curled from her throat, he drove deeper and deeper inside her, moving with greater and greater abandonment.

 

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