The Seduction of Suzanne (19 page)

BOOK: The Seduction of Suzanne
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“Sure is,” he said, lifting her slightly and parting her legs so the warm water ran between them. With a gentle palm he wiped her clean of her response to him, reached out for a tiny squirt of shower gel, lathered her feminine folds and then rinsed them. She quivered and sighed, blushingly allowing him to minister to her.

When the last suds were gone he set her on the bathmat and soaped himself more briskly while she watched. It was such a private thing, witnessing a man’s ritual of cleanliness as he matter-of-factly handled those parts of himself that still felt mysterious and taboo to Suzanne. Not that she hadn’t done a fair amount of handling them herself in the past days. Taboo or not, he had certainly encouraged her to become as familiar as she liked.

“So I guess that’s the first time you’ve had sex straight after an argument,” he stated.

“Yes.” She hesitated, unsure whether to explain further. He hadn’t pried into her past relationships, and she certainly hadn’t asked about his. But it felt okay to share a little.

So she explained about her abortive connection with Gavin. As she spoke he turned off the shower and stepped out onto the mat, pulling a towel off the rail to wrap around her, and getting a second one for himself. She gathered the folds in her hands but didn’t dry herself, concentrating on telling the bare bones of the sad little story.

It took little more than a minute.

Hearing herself speak of it so calmly felt very peculiar. Something had happened over the past days, weeks. Some immense shift inside her. There was still the echo of pain, but faint and far off. She
felt. . .healed. Yes, healed. Like she could finally put the whole event into its proper place: the past.

She had thought that thought before, but this time it was more than wishful thinking. What had made the difference? Was it all about Justin being a man she could trust? That didn’t seem quite right. Oh, that was certainly part of it but somehow not the entire story.

She went to him and wrapped her arms around him, so glad this man, this particular strong, wise man was here in this particular room with her. She surprised him but his arms opened in welcome for her. Though he probably thought she was seeking comfort for the pain of her memories. He dropped a kiss on her wet head, squeezing her gently and rubbing his hand up and down her spine.

“You never saw him again after that night?” he clarified, lifting a corner of her towel to soak up the water beaded on her face. His eyes were narrowed and a muscle flexed in his jaw. The towel was bunched in his clenched fist but his tone stayed cool and even.

“I didn’t go out much for a while after that, and he left a few days later so no, I didn’t see him.”

“And you didn’t chew him out, then or later.”

She had never confronted Gavin, either in the moment or after it. She had never stood up for herself and told him how awful he was to treat her as he had.

“It didn’t occur to me. I felt sick and ashamed, not angry. It took me a long time to feel angry.”

“Interesting. It only took you seconds to get in touch with your anger today,” he said, picking her up and carrying her to her bedroom, where she saw he had remade the bed with the rescued bedclothes.

He was right. That had not occurred to her.

In Justin she had found a new target, and this time she took verbal and physical power into her hands and defeated her enemy. This time she was strong and fierce, indomitable. This time she protected herself and said: ‘Never again.’ And this time her attacker apologised and promised: ‘Never again.’

And she believed it. She believed him.

“I suppose that’s true. Maybe I felt safer with you,” she said, as he put her down in the centre of the bed and lay down full length next to her.

His eyes warmed at the compliment, but he shook his head in disagreement. “I think you’re a stronger woman today than you were at seventeen. You have good boundaries in place, and you’re ready and willing to defend them. That’s something very few teenagers can say. But if Gavin,” she heard a faint sneer as he said the name
, “took photos of this Suzanne,” he tapped her nose meaningfully, “he would live to regret it.”

She thought about that for a moment, imagined screaming abuse at Gavin as she had at Justin, hounding him, shoving him over and sending him running away with his tail between his legs. Justin was absolutely right. That was exactly what she would do, if it happened to her today. She wasn’t a doormat. She was a force to be reckoned with. She had the power and the will to defend herself from exploitation. The knowledge was liberating.

“I also want to say I’m sorry for touching those old wounds. I can understand why you reacted as you did.”

“Don’t worry about it. You didn’t do anything wrong.”

She finished the explanation she had started: about her lack of experience with make-up sex, or indeed any sort of sex, following the misjudgement she had made as a teenager. It was still odd to share this, to be vulnerable with someone. Had it been so long since she opened up to another person? Perhaps it had. Too long.

He listened without judgment, and when she had trailed to a halt he laid a gentle kiss on each of her cheekbones and said:

“I think it’s extraordinary someone as passionate as you managed to keep yourself pent up for so long. If you feel the need to make up for lost time then I’m willing to place myself at your service.”

“Oh, really?” she laughed as he tried to look angelic, then shrieked as he rolled her over for a moment’s tussle in revenge, before starting to kiss
her softly. She wrapped her arms around his neck, wrapped her legs around his waist, held him tight as he made tender love to her, taking a long, luxurious time. She soaked in the sensation, in his quiet words of praise, feeling for the first time that she had lowered her walls against him and let him inside.

As they lay together afterwards, spooned, her head on his bicep, his hand on her ribs against her breasts, she had just started thinking about the food he had brought when he said, “I think you should come back to the States with me. We could have an exhibition of your paintings. I have a connection with a rather good gallery. You could sell enough to fund you. Would you like that?”

The silence stretched out as Suzanne’s heart started to pound, the blood rushing in her ears. He said it so easily, yet he spoke of an upheaval greater than anything she had ever contemplated in her life. Leave the country for the first time. Sell her work for the first time. Depend on it for a living for the first time. Travel with a man – one who was not her father – for the first time.

Her mind flicked from one idea to the next so fast she could not register how she felt about it all. Frightened? Excited? Delighted? She thought she might be hyperventilating.

“I’ve been thinking about it for a little while now. You wouldn’t be leaving forever,” he continued when the silence had stretched unbearably long. “Neither would you be by yourself. You’d be with me. That’s what has stopped you going in the past, isn’t it? It’s certainly easier to travel as part of a couple than as a single woman alone. I know my way around, so you’d be completely safe. We could travel a bit. I don’t have anywhere I need to be. I wouldn’t mind seeing Europe again, or wherever else you’d like to go. As long as I have an internet connection that’s all I need to do what I do. I’d be happy to help.” He spoke in an easy, reasonable tone of voice.

“But why would you want to do that?” she said, seizing on the most bewildering part of his suggestion.

“There are people who deserve to do well in the world. And you’re one of them. You’re good people, Suzanne. And you should be out there, thriving in whatever way you want. But you’re not. You’re cooped up and caged in, for all you love this place and the people here. I can understand that love and attachment, and I’m not trying to say that it’s wrong. But you could feature on an international stage with your painting. I know you want that, even if you refuse to acknowledge it. I hate to see a person restricted like you restrict yourself.

“And as for me, I’ve been on my own for a long time now. I have friends all over the world, but wherever I go I leave them behind. Anything is better shared, when you’ve found someone you like. It heightens and enriches experience. I’d forgotten how much, until these past couple of
weeks we’ve been hanging out. I’d like to have someone with me. And,” his voice lowered to that sexy purr of his and his hand moved to deftly cup and stroke one of her breasts, “we are so damn good together in bed.”

“You like me, you desire me, and for that I should pack away my life and follow you off to the ends of the Earth,” she said incredulously, her voice rising with every word. “For Heaven’s sake, I’ve known you less than a month!”

“You wouldn’t be following, necessarily. I’m happy to go wherever you want. I have no particular agenda. As for the time which we’ve known each other, that’s simply irrelevant.”

“You’re not talking about a little trip. This could be months. Longer. I don’t have the money for that. And to be going away on a trip like that with you is, well, complicated!”

“Complicated how?”

“Just complicated! It’s not a matter of trusting you-”

“Well as I said, we have lust and liking as well as trust.”

She glared at the wall, found that dissatisfying, and wriggled around in his arms until she was facing him and putting her glare where it belonged. How could he be so obstinately obtuse!

“Can you really not see how impossible this all is?” she demanded, frustrated and entreating.

“It’s not at all impossible. We’re two people who enjoy being together, you’d get that travel you’ve
been craving, you could study here and there, sell your art. It’d be fun. Where’s the complication in that?”

Love! she wanted to shout at him. Even as she thought it, she was startled by the intensity of her wish that he would say it himself, that he would tell her that he loved her.

How irrational! She had never sought his love, never expected it. In fact she had spent the past weeks trying to avoid thinking about love at all.

But, oh God, how could she stay with him, be with him and not fall d
esperately in love. It was just . . . impossible.

“Money!” she said a little desperately. “I haven’t got enough to spend months travelling, or to study.”

“No savings at all?” he asked.

“Well, some. But you’re talking about tens of thousands. I certainly don’t have that!”

“If you’ve got something to start you off with, you’ll be fine. You just have to get overseas and have a couple of exhibitions of your work. I have the contacts. There’s no need to worry about that side of things. I can even lend you some cash in the meantime, which you can pay back to me once you’ve had a few sales. I’ve got enough put aside for that.”

There was a moment of silence as
Suzanne stared at him, unseeing, her mind churning. It was such an incredible prospect! Incredible and terrifying! How could she take the risks? She could end up in another country, penniless, a failure and far from her friends and resources. To put her work up for public examination and critique . . . it was a fright-ening prospect. So close to her soul and so private, if it were rejected she would be shattered.

But perhaps worse was the risk of going with Justin. Of daring to hope that he might grow to care for her
. To . . . love her. Because she realised in a flash of pure terror she
longed
for him to love her. To want her with him always.

So it was not just her talent as an artist that she would be laying on the line. It was her heart too.

He derailed her train of thought by cupping her chin in his large hand, tilting her face up to meet his and placing his lips on hers.

He kissed her with a fiery passion so strong, that it was as if the calmly cajoling man of moments before had never been. His mouth held both persuasion and possession, and
Suzanne melted back into her pillow. His fingers slid down to circle her neck, covering her tumultuous pulse.

He lifted his face from hers a little, remaining close enough that his breath stroked her lips as he said: “We both know how much you want to go. But left to yourself you’ll never leave your nice, comfortable, safe shell, and venture out to do the things you dream of. Instead you’ll stay tied to this beautiful island, dozing your life away.”

She stared at him, mesmerised by the intensity of his blazing blue eyes, so close to her own. “There is no doubt that we’d be very, very good together,” he whispered softly. “Sometimes you have to take risks, Suzanne. Think about it. I’ll be back tomorrow morning. Tell me what you’ve decided then.”

With that he left, not looking back to the bed where she lay, boneless and bewildered.

 

Chapter Eleven

 

 

 

It was a long time before
Suzanne moved. For hours she remained there, running his words over and over in her head, and trying to work out her jumbled feelings.

It was almost midnight before she admitted to herself that she felt far more for him than the crush she had initially been willing to court, more than the lust and liking of which he had spoken. Somehow he had eased past her defences and engaged her heart. That tall, intelligent, humorous and handsome man had made her fall in love.

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