this townâwhat else was she doing with them?
Their eyes met again, and the way the bright summer sunlight streamed in through the window behind her, lighting her long brown curls to an almost maple color, made any more rational thought impossible.
Rig lifted Naomiâs hand to his mouth. Until it got there, he had no idea what heâd do, but when her fingertips were close to his lips, he knew. He first kissed the injury, already bruising. She gasped. âWhat are youââ
âThis is beautiful,â Rig said. âEngagement ring?â
âNo!â
He kissed the tip of her thumb, lightly, still not believing what he was doing. His mouth moved around the firm flesh at the base, and using his tongue, just the slightest bit, he tasted her skin in a flick, almost too quick for her to feel. But she felt it, he could tell. She kept her eyes on his, and any moment he was prepared to stop. To apologize. To be slapped. But instead, her eyelids fluttered in a way that made his insides clench.
Then as softly as he could, using almost no pressure at all, he bit the tip of her thumb.
He watched her as she fought with herself, the ice in her demeanor warring with the heat in her eyes. He released her hand regretfully.
Pulling her hand back as if it was her idea, Naomi said, âWhat the hell was that? I thought we werenât going toââ But her voice was too breathy to sustain the anger implied in the strong language, and Rig didnât apologize, even though he knew he should.
He shouldnât have done that. But he wanted more.
A buzzer screamed next to them, and both jumped. Brunoâs voice came over the intercom. âDr. Keller, Maddy Walkerâs your first appointment. Iâll put her in three.â
âWhy did you do that?â whispered Naomi, holding her hand as if sheâd sprained it.
âI donât know,â said Rig. He could only be honest with her. âI couldnât help it.â
âWell . . . donât. â She spun on her heel and was inside her office, the door slamming behind her, before he could draw breath to speak again.
Pushing the talk button on the intercom, Rig said, âIâll be right there.â His voice sounded completely normal. But he couldnât get a full breath into his lungs, and all he could think about was how her hand had felt in his, how it had tastedâof antiseptic and a hint of salt, and something that was completely hers . . .
Oh, no. He wouldnât do this. Of course he wouldnât. He understood self-control. He was a grown-up. But God, he ached, both physically and mentally.
Damn, it had been a long time since someone torqued him up enough to get blue balls.
Chapter Twelve
Sometimes we knit the sweater of our dreams, forgetting that the seams will still have to be sewn at some point. Seaming is a small price to pay for happiness, though, donât you agree?
âE.C.
A fter Naomiâs last appointment, she left without checking on Rig. Sheâd seen enough of him today just walking by half-open doors of patient rooms. Invariably, heâd been laughing, presumably at something the patient had said. What was this, comedy-club doctoring? Laughter is the best medicine? She rolled her eyes at the thought.
But he was a grown man, a doctor, with all the papers. Sheâd never owned this placeâsheâd just been spoiled for a while, and it had been nice.
She waved a good-bye to a surprised-looking BrunoâNaomi seldom left before he didâand went outside. She blinked in the sudden sun, and felt the unexpected warmth of coming out of an air-conditioned climate into the coastal summer. She turned right, and went immediately inside again, entering the health clinic from the front entrance, the one she rarely used.
It was an enormous room that had been used as a dance studio until it closed overnight, leaving small dancers outside, knocking on the glass.
Alexandra Ivy, Laura Wright
Joan Bauer
William H Keith
Mark Helprin
Tacie Graves
Susan R. Hughes
Kayla Perrin
Andrea Camilleri
Chris Bachelder
Marion Ueckermann