"Be careful. It's hot."
"Thanks." Megan took the mug of steaming chamomile tea
from Nate, a part of her craving something stronger.
While he put more wood on the fire, she sipped, struggling
to pull the pieces of herself back together. She felt
drained, weak, ragged. It seemed unreal to her that she'd
just bared the darkest side of her soul to a man she'd
known only for a week, but she had. She'd told him
everything.
More than that, she'd buried her face in his shirt and
sobbed while he'd held her. The only other men she'd let
touch her like that were Marc and Julian, but that was
different. Marc was her brother, and Julian... Well, he
was like a brother.
What she felt for Nate was very different.
She couldn't deny that she was attracted to him. Usually
that meant she'd want to get as far away from him as she
could, and yet something about him set her at ease.
He poured himself another drink and sat on the sofa. "Are
you warm?"
She nodded, grateful for the blanket he'd wrapped around
her shoulders.
He leaned back into the cushions, his eyes narrowing as he
looked at her. "Can I ask you a question?"
"Sure. Why not?" She no longer had any secrets where he
was concerned.
"That reporter your brother took hostage when he broke out
of prison—he got her pregnant while they were on the
run, and she married him, didn't she?"
Nate's question, as blunt as it was, wasn't what Megan had
been expecting.
She laughed. "He and Sophie have been married for almost
four years now, and they have two kids—Chase and
Addison."
Nate shook his head, a bemused expression on his
face. "That's ... interesting."
Megan smiled. "Believe it or not, Marc can be very sweet.
You haven't exactly seen his soft side."
"No I suppose, I haven't." Nate chuckled. "I don't blame
him for watching over you the way he does. If I were in
his shoes and spotted some strange guy walking up to my
little sister's front door after she'd been attacked, I
probably would have done the same thing."
"Marc knows I get ... uncomfortable around men, and I guess
he does his best to make certain I feel safe." Megan
looked away, took a sip of tea.
"Do you feel uncomfortable around me?" It was a sincere
question, no defensiveness in his voice, no hint that she
needed to lie to protect his ego.
Megan found herself studying him from his short sandy brown
hair to his deep set blue eyes to the tanned skin on the
left side of his face to the scars on the
right. "No—which is kind of strange."
It was both fascinating—and frightening.
"Well, that's good—I think." The smile lines around
his eyes crinkled, a hint of humor in his voice.
And she knew she would never get a better time than now to
let him know where she stood. "I'm never going to be with
a man, Nate. I'm telling you this now because ... because
I don't want to mislead you. I don't like being touched.
I don't like sex. I've never once enjoyed it."
"Never?" His brows bent in a frown.
"Never." She glanced away for a moment, unable to bear the
scrutiny of his gaze. "When a man touches me, I feel ...
revulsion. I instantly feel sick to my stomach. It's all
I can do not to shove him away. What those men did to
me—it's in my DNA."
Even years of therapy hadn't changed that. A hug from a
male acquaintance, a man's arm around her shoulders, an
overly long handshake—they all made her want to pull
away and run. She couldn't even go to a male doctor.
"I'm sorry. If I'd known... " Nate's frown
deepened. "Did I make you feel that way just now when I
held you?"
"N–no." Warmth rushed to Megan's cheeks.
"I'm glad to hear that." His forehead furrowed, and he
seemed to think about this for a moment as if it were a
puzzle he needed to solve. "How about when I caught you
when you fell getting off the horse?"
"No." Her cheeks burned hotter.
"What about the times I've held your hand?"
Could he see that she was blushing? God, she hoped
not! "No, not then either."
His gaze locked with hers. "And last night—when I
kissed you?"
"No." She rushed to explain. "But we were interrupted,
and I... I think maybe there just wasn't time for me to
react."
Nate set his drink down on the coffee table. "Do you want
to test that theory?"
Megan's heart took off at a sprint. "Wh–what do you
mean?"
"I could kiss you again just like I did last
night—soft and easy—and since we're not going
to be interrupted this time, you'll be able to see whether
that sense of revulsion kicks in. If it does, we stop."
"And if it doesn't?"
He gave her a lopsided grin. "We'll know you've been
kissing the wrong men."
She felt that flutter in her belly again, and time was
measured in heartbeats as he watched her, waiting for her
answer. Some part of her was afraid their little
experiment would fail. Some part of her was afraid it
would succeed.
There's no point in trying. You know how this will end,
girl.
But did she? Everything had been different with Nate so
far.
She drew a steadying breath. "How would we do it?"
"We could do it like we did last night." He spoke
matter–of–factly, as if they were discussing
how to change a tire. "I'll sit close to you and kiss you
nice and slow, and we can see where that takes us."
She nodded. "O–okay."
In a single slow motion, he shifted so that he sat beside
her, his face inches from hers, his arm stretched out on
the back of the leather sofa behind her. "You tell me if
you start to feel queasy or repulsed, alright?"
It was hard to think with him sitting so close. "All
right."
"Ready?" He reached out, stroked her cheek with the
knuckles of his right hand.
"Uh–huh."
Without closing his eyes, he leaned in, brushed his lips
over hers once, twice, three times, the feather–light
contact sending shivers through her.
"How are we doing so far?" His eyes looked straight into
hers, his voice husky.
"Good." She didn't wait for him this time, but rested her
palms against the hard wall of his chest, rose up on one
knee, and caressed his lips with hers, increasing the
pressure.
More shivers.
His eyes drifted shut, his lashes long and dark. One big
hand came to rest on her hip as he steadied her. He caught
her lower lip between his, and gave it a soft tug.
Belly flutters.
Her eyes drifted shut, her hands finding their way up his
chest and over his shoulders as she drew herself against
him, needing to be closer to him, her arms locking behind
his neck. She tilted her head, kissed his upper lip, then
his lower lip, then the corners of his mouth, her tongue
tracing the outline of his lips, her senses stirred by the
taste of him, by his masculine scent, by the hard feel of
him.
And Megan forgot she'd always been repulsed by this. All
she knew was that she wanted more.
Author's notes:
This novella takes place chronologically after Breaking
Point. It features Megan (Rawlings) Hunter as the heroine.
Readers will remember her as Marc Hunter's little sister
from Unlawful Contact.
This is my first I–Team After Hours novella.
The "I–Team After Hours" stories have that name to
distinguish them from regular full–length
I–Team novels. They don't take place in the newsroom
or involve I–Team members, but rather focus on some
of the secondary characters readers have come to love.
After all, everyone deserves a happily ever after, right?