Vengeance to the Max (12 page)

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Authors: Jasmine Haynes

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Paranormal, #Ghosts

BOOK: Vengeance to the Max
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She’d been so close that her body jumped to the precipice the moment he touched her clit. She jerked, opened her mouth wider, and sucked him in. This time she ate him, going at his lips and tongue as if he were candy she had to devour. She moaned and made little noises in her throat, and when she didn’t think she could get enough breath, he clamped a hand to the back of her head and held her tight while she fed off him. When she came in a blinding light show, he consumed her cries and kept his finger to her clit until she thought her body would break into a million pieces.

Then he released her lips. She gasped in sharp air and keened the last remaining vestiges of her orgasm. Her arms went limp around his neck, hands dangling down his back. Gathering her up, he put a hand beneath her butt and carried her out of the bathroom, her legs still hugging his hips.

“You didn’t watch me come,” she muttered against his throat.

“I tasted it. Just as good. Let’s go to bed and snuggle.”

Snuggle? That wasn’t a Witt word. But it burrowed beneath her ribs and into her heart. “I’m too tired to argue.” Too satisfied. Too in awe. Too warm. Too safe.

She wouldn’t give up one of those enormous feelings.

At least not for the rest of the night.

 

 

Chapter Ten

 

 

Witt tapped his thumb on the steering wheel. “Couldn’t wait till I got up, could ya?”

Witt’s comment sounded like a grouse, but his tone was mild, almost docile. Like the cat calmly licking his paw before he jumped on the unsuspecting mouse.

Max stared out her window at the snow-covered ground flashing by. “You were sleeping so peacefully. Like a little baby. I hated to wake you.”

“Liar.”

Well, she couldn’t deny that. She’d crawled out of his bed and used her own shower in her own room. They’d made love last night. Real flesh to real flesh, eyes wide open. And while he’d snuggled her close in his big arms on the warm mattress that sagged in his direction, she’d fallen asleep with happy thoughts. She never had happy thoughts. Happy thoughts weren’t in her nature. Upon waking, she could hardly recall what they felt like.

“Two steps forward and one step back,” he quipped, still with that bland tone.

That about summed it up. The steps forward were the things she’d felt last night when he made love to her in the mirror. When
they
made love in the mirror.

The one step back was Bud Traynor.

She didn’t tell Witt over breakfast. She wouldn’t tell him on the short drive to Evelyn Hastings’ house.

She could have used the excuse that it was because she didn’t want to worry him. Or that it wasn’t his business. Or that she knew he’d come back at her with the same old line; she was obsessed with Bud and had lost her judgment where the man was concerned.

Bud was her battle, her nemesis. She couldn’t make Witt understand the full power of Wendy’s possession of her, what that had done to her emotions and beliefs about Wendy’s father.

To be honest, maybe keeping this secret was also one step back from the enormity of what she’d shared with Witt last night. Just as climbing from the bed before he woke had been.

“This is the place,” she said, hoping to end the conversation.

Witt put his hand on her arm when she would have gotten out of the car. “I’m not going to let you step back, Max. Last night was too damn good for that. I want it again. And I’ll take it if I have to. I’ll make you beg if I have to.”

In the dim morning, his eyes were a dark, stormy blue that should have made a skinny thing like her quake.

“I’ll beg,” she said simply, “if that’s what you need.”

“It’s not. All I want is the middle ground.”

“And what’s that?” She didn’t mean to sound flippant, but middle ground had never been beneath her feet for long.

“Halfway. You give. I give. Like last night.”

She filled her lungs with air, then blinked to clear a sudden ache. “I do try. I’ll keep on trying.” She tugged on her lower lip with her teeth. If she really was trying, she’d tell him about Bud. She
should
tell Witt. She didn’t. Her feelings about Bud had never been middle ground. “Please don’t throw me away because I’m not moving fast enough.”

He skimmed her cheek with an index finger. Then climbed from the car without another word. She supposed that was him agreeing for the time being.

Evelyn Hastings’ house sat well back from the macadam of a quiet, tree-lined street on the fringes of town. In this neighborhood, no fences separated the houses, just hedges of varying sizes and varieties. No sidewalks had ever been laid, the road sloping in to meet lawns of winter-faded green where blades of grass poked through the covering of snow. The oaks were tall and the maples bare and forlorn against their winter backdrop. Snow, if it had stuck at all when first falling, had long since abandoned those naked branches. The yards were sweeping in this old neighborhood, the lots created in a time when the all-mighty dollar and sky-rocketing real estate prices didn’t demand building houses on top of each other. But that was in California, not necessarily Lines, Michigan.

Against the overcast sky, lights shone from most windows, Evelyn’s included. The walk and circular driveway had been shoveled, the concrete now dry. Max expected a Victorian with a wide front porch, even a swing. This house, though, was long, one story, with yellow wood siding, green faux shutters, and the faint outline of lace curtains. The bushes surrounding it, denuded of leaves and flowers, lent the place a lost and lonely air.

Having parked across the street rather than in the large drive, Witt stood by the side of the car, watching the house and waiting for Max. She opened her door, reluctant to face the inevitable.

For some reason, she couldn’t see this simply as a means of finding Cameron’s sister. All she thought of was bearing the bad news of Cameron’s death, something she had not done at the time, something that clogged her throat now.

The air was cold around her legs. The down parka didn’t cover her butt, leaving her rear exposed to the elements despite her jeans. The temperature still shocked when leaving the heat of a car or the comfort of a motel room. She’d shored up with a pair of boots, ones she’d worn for hiking when Cameron was alive and now used for long walks when she was in a contemplative mood. Thick, woolen hiking socks kept her feet warm. She needed gloves.

Stuffing her hands in her coat pockets, she threw Witt a glance, gave a shrug of her shoulders to say let’s-get-this-the-heck-over-with, then crossed the road. His boots crunched on the exposed gravel at the edge of the lawn.

Max stood on the narrow stoop and rang the bell, the sound echoing in the house. Evelyn took a long time answering. Max rang again. Finally, quick steps sounded on the other side of the door.

Fidgeting with the gold buttons on her blue sweater, Evelyn Hastings looked beyond Max’s shoulder to Witt standing one step down on the walk.

“I hope you don’t mind I brought my—” Her what? An appropriate description failed Max.

She was saved by Evelyn cutting her short. “I don’t mind at all.” Her hair, recently set and minus the harsh florescent lighting of the library, now glowed with vitality.

Max turned for a glimpse. Witt’s brow was up, and she suspected he knew she’d been at a loss. Damn him. His cheeks had pinkened in the frosty air. Like Max, he’d chosen jeans, boots, sweater, and parka against the cold. As he stepped into the hardwood entryway, Evelyn’s eyes moved over his pants legs down to his boots, and Max wondered if perhaps they’d underdressed.

“Please, let me take your coats,” Evelyn said, then looked at the doormat they stood on. Witt wiped his feet, Max followed suit, then they both handed over their coats and waited as Evelyn hung them in the closet. Most people probably took their boots off before entering. Somehow, walking through Evelyn Hastings’ house without her shoes wasn’t an option, even for politeness sake.

“I’ve put coffee in the living room. Go on in.” Evelyn held out a hand to indicate the large room to their right and at the back of the house. “Let me get another cup.” Her full pleated skirt, a perfect match for her blue sweater, swung in rhythm with her walk as she glided from the room. Max was reminded of Beaver Cleaver’s mom from the old fifties show.

The rich scent of freshly brewed coffee greeted them. On the table in front of the couch sat two cups, spoons, creamer, and sugar bowl. Instead of taking a seat, Max wandered the room. There were no family photos, as she’d hoped, the pictures on the walls being prints of hunt scenes. She moved to the window covering three-quarters of the room. The snow-covered lawn sloped down to a forested backdrop. Concrete stepping stones had been tamped down since the last storm, slushy footsteps leading deeper into the woods along what was probably a well-worn trail.

“So I’m your ... what, Max?” Witt stood close behind her, lips near her ear. She hadn’t heard him move, but she’d scented him there, that elusive yet tantalizing mixture of aftershave and man.

Now wasn’t the time to be thinking about that. Nor to answer his question. But she would have to answer eventually.

“Here we are,” Evelyn sang out as she entered the living room, carrying another cup, the spoon nestled beside it on the saucer.

Ah, saved by the tinkling strains of Evelyn Hastings’ voice.

Evelyn sat in the middle of the pale green sofa, less than an arm’s length from the coffee pot on its metal trivet. It was impolite for Witt and Max to remain standing. Witt chose the matching green chair. Max took the corner of the sofa, positioning herself to face their hostess, her back slightly to Witt. The furniture was plain yet quality, the beige carpet still plush as if the room saw little foot traffic. Evelyn poured coffee into the unadorned white ceramic with those elegant Cameronesque hands.

It was obvious Cameron’s aunt liked plain, from her clothes to her furnishings to her choice of cups.

She had yet to ask what Max had come to tell her about her nephew. As reluctant, no, downright afraid, as Max was of doing that, it also struck her how odd the lack of questions was.

Witt looked to her, steady gaze, expectant demeanor in the way he sat forward in his chair, elbows on knees, coffee cup idle on the table in front of him.

Max cleared her throat. She’d rehearsed her little speech through breakfast and the drive in the car. The words had now flown out of her head. She couldn’t remember what the right ones were, couldn’t remember how to segue into the news that Cameron had died two years ago.

In the end, Evelyn saved her, asking the first question. “So you’re married to Cameron.”

Max gulped from the coffee cup in her hand, Evelyn’s voice startling her, the instant knowledge that she had to say everything aloud, explain it all, making the pain fresh again, for both of them. Thank God the coffee wasn’t too hot.

“Actually, Cameron’s ...” What was the problem? She’d said it aloud to Witt more than once. More likely, it was the look in Evelyn’s eyes, the hope begging not to be crushed. “Cameron was involved in a shooting.” Evelyn’s hope still flared, Max’s words themselves heightening it. “I mean he was ... killed in a robbery.”

Evelyn sucked in a breath. Her lip quivered. She set her cup gently on the table, but her shaking fingers spilled liquid into the saucer. “When did this happen?”

Shit. Here was where Max had to admit what a scumbag she was. “Two years ago.”

“Two
years
?” Evelyn’s pain and disbelief was in the way she drew out the two words.

Max licked her lips. “I only had Cameron’s mother’s address,” she rushed into the explanation, as if it could justify why she’d kept his death from his family. “But the letter I sent came back.”

“But you’re here now.” Implicit in the statement was a question, why the hell had it taken her so long to fly to Michigan?

Max didn’t turn to Witt for help. It was her own mess. She could think of something.

How about the truth
? Oh God, Cameron. She latched onto his voice inside her head like a drowning woman grabs a life preserver.

“I had a difficult time afterward.” Stumbling, hesitant, still the truth. She was painfully aware of Witt to her right.

But you’re coming to terms with it now
, Cameron prompted when she couldn’t seem to go on. “I’m starting to deal with it.”
You need closure
. “I need closure. I’m sure you do, too.”

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