Bücher online kostenlos Kostenlos Online Lesen
In Death 19 - Visions in Death

In Death 19 - Visions in Death

Titel: In Death 19 - Visions in Death Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: authors_sort
Vom Netzwerk:
nipped at her chin and that wonderful hair brushed her cheeks like strands of silk. "That's definitely on the agenda." "No." She laughed again, then rolled over on top of him.
    "When we're just hanging out, when you don't even think about it. I like it." She leaned down to rub her lips over his, and linking fingers, stretching sinuously down, slid his arms over his head. "I like this."
    "Enjoy yourself," he invited.
    "Probably should make it fairly quick, in case I lose this third, fourth wind." She closed her teeth over his jaw, nipping lightly.
    Keeping his hands locked with hers, she ran her lips down his throat, traced them back to his. Then she curled back like a cat to unbutton his shirt.
    "Yeah." She rubbed her hands over his chest. "You're in shape." Then her lips.
    She could feel his heartbeat pick up, drum lightly under her hands and lips. He wanted. Wasn't it amazing he always wanted her? The muscles of his belly quivered when she tasted there, and jumped when she ran her tongue under his waistband.
    She slid down the zipper, freed him. Tormented him.
    Then uncurling, she watched him as she peeled off her shirt, as she took his hands and pressed them to her breasts.
    On a low hum of pleasure her head fell back. His hands were hard and smooth and skilled. The long, liquid tugs began, from heart to belly, from belly to loins, when he used them on her.
    "Let me. Let me have--" He reared up, clamped his mouth on her, and the hum became a sob, the tugs a burn.
    Now it could be desperate, now it could be urgent. Slick body straining to slick body, hands and mouths greedy for more. The sharp nip of teeth, the quick bite of nails, the hot slide of tongues.
    She was trembling when she straddled him. Once again their hands and eyes locked. She took him in, took him deep.
    And cried out.
    Breathless, she lowered her brow to his, fought for breath, for sanity. "A minute," she managed. "It's too much. Wait a minute."
    "It's not too much." His mouth seared over hers. "It's never too much." Never would be. She rose up, and rode.

CHAPTER 15
    While Eve was curled in dreamless sleep against Roarke, a woman named Annalisa Sommers split her part of the check and said good night to a few friends.
    Her monthly post-theater club had broken up a little later than usual as everyone had a lot of news to share. The club was just an excuse, really, for her to get together with some of her friends and have a bite to eat, a few drinks and talk about men, work men.
    But it also gave her the benefit of several opinions on whatever play they'd seen. She used them, as well as her own, for her weekly column in Stage Right Magazine.
    She loved the theater, and had since she'd played a yam in her first-grade Thanksgiving Day pageant. Since she couldn't act though she'd pulled the yam off well enough to have her mother cry a little had no skill for design or direction, she'd turned hobby into career by writing observations, rather than straight reviews, on plays on and off and way, way off Broadway.
    The pay was lousy, but the benefits included free seats and regular backstage passes as well as the buzz of being able to make a semblance of a living doing something she enjoyed.
    And she had a good feeling that the pay was going to improve, very soon. Her column was growing in popularity for the very reasons she'd hyped when talking herself into a job with Stage Right. Regular people wanted to know what other regular people thought about a play. Critics weren't regular people. They were critics.
    After ten months on the job, she was beginning to get recognized on the street and enjoyed having people stop her to discuss, to agree or disagree, it didn't matter.
    She was having the time of her life.
    Everything was going so well. With work, with Lucas.
    New York was her personal playground, and there was no place else on earth she'd rather be. When she and Lucas got married and her friends agreed things were definitely heading in that direction they'd find a mag apartment on the West Side, throw fun and quirky little parties, and be ridiculously happy.
    Hell, she was ridiculously happy now.
    She tossed back her hair, and hesitated at the northwest corner of Greenpeace Park. She always cut through the park, knew the route through like she knew the route from her own kitchen to her own bedroom.
    A very short walk, she admitted, until that pay raise.
    But two women had been killed in city parks in the last week, so a shortcut at one in the morning

Weitere Kostenlose Bücher