CHAPTER EIGHT

LUC was silent as the sleek car hugged the twists and turns that led up into the hills—but it was a kind of silence that was much worse, Gabrielle thought with mounting trepidation, than anything he might have said.

She could feel him. Without looking at him—because she didn’t dare—she could sense the way he lounged against the butter-soft leather seat, his indolent posture at odds with the dark power that seemed to hum through him like a live wire. She could feel anger come off of him in waves, like heat. The way his dark eyes consumed her sent terrified shivers down her spine. He seemed to fill the entire car with his presence—crowding her, pressing against her, cornering her—though he was not touching her at all.

How could he do such a thing? How could he seem to possess her without so much as lifting a finger?

She called her reaction terror, but some deep feminine knowledge inside her knew better and whispered the truth. Her breasts felt swollen, surging against the confines of her bra, her blouse. Her breath came too fast, too shallow. Her legs felt restless, and a kind of panic made her want to squirm, to run, to scream. It clawed at her throat and teased at her eyes, and she didn’t know what she would do if the pressure grew stronger. Would she burst? Explode?

The car pulled up in front of Cassandra’s house, and Gabrielle stared at the pretty Craftsman façade—though she did not see it. She was aware only of his quiet, brooding presence behind her as she stepped from the car. She could feel only her own body’s panicked response in the staccato beat of her heart, the heat that suffused her, and the tell-tale dampness between her legs.

How could this be happening? When he seemed so angry—so furious with her? Had she no self-respect at all?

But then she already knew that she did not—could not have. A woman with self-respect would surely not have found herself married to a stranger. She would not have married him, and if she had she would not have abandoned him at their wedding, only to be pursued across the world like some runaway bride. Whether she called it weakness or a lack of self-respect, it worked out to the same thing in the end—didn’t it?

“Come,” Luc said, taking her hand with his in a dictatorial gesture that pulled her closer to his body—too close. His dark gaze seemed to glitter in the dark night, and his mouth pulled into a merciless line. “It is time to stop playing these games.”

She did not exactly run. She opened the door and then hurried away from him. Luc watched her move with a quiet satisfaction, knowing she walked far too quickly for someone unaffected.

He knew better. He’d seen the high color on that gorgeous face of hers. He’d watched her growing agitation on the drive home.

Seeing Silvio—that gutter-swine—had only solidified the rage he’d been carrying around ever since the humiliating moment he’d realized that his perfect, proper princess had in fact done a runner and left him to face the consequences of her choices. Silvio was the worst of the paparazzi who had hounded Luc for years. And he’d been after a story like this for ages—ever since Luc had lost his temper in what seemed now like another life, and blackened the lowlife’s eyes at his parents’ funeral.

That had been the last time Luc had been splashed across so many tabloids—the last time he’d excited so much scandalous comment. Since then there had been the odd photograph, depending on who he happened to be dating, and the usual complaint that he was “notoriously reclusive.” When in truth he simply did not wish to fund Silvio’s parasitic existence.

Damn Gabrielle for playing right into Silvio’s hands. Damn his wife for giving scum like Silvio ammunition.

But Luc knew exactly how to make her pay.

His gaze lingered on the sway of her hips, the twitch of her hair against her shapely back. He smiled—hard.

He was looking forward to it.

Inside the house, Gabrielle fled across the living room and found herself face-to-face with her reflection in the sliding doors. She placed her palms against the cool glass, surprised when her hands didn’t sizzle with all the heat she was sure she was letting off.

Luc did not turn on the lights when he came in behind her. A streetlight from outside spilled into the room, lengthening the shadows he stalked through, as quiet and as dangerous as some lethal jungle cat.

She was his prey. She could feel it in a primal way, down into her bones.

“There is nowhere left to run, Gabrielle.” His voice was so low. Menacing. It seemed to vibrate against her spine, sending waves of reaction radiating out and consuming her.

“I’m not running,” she said, tilting her chin up. She hated how childish she sounded. So pointlessly defiant. He laughed. It sent a new chill through her.

“You should have known how this would end,” he continued, as if she hadn’t spoken. “You should have known better.”

“I don’t know you at all,” she said—but it came out as little more than a whisper.

And it was a lie. She knew things she would prefer to ignore. Her body knew him better than she wanted to admit—and it cried out for him in the darkened room, no matter how she longed to deny it.

“You are mine.” Possession and finality rang in his voice.

“You do not own me,” she breathed at him, bracing herself against the glass door and straightening her back against him. “No one can own another person!”

“Does it make you feel safer to think so?” he asked, mocking her. “Do you think political correctness will help you tonight?”

She didn’t know what she thought—she only knew he was too close, and every cell in her body screamed at her to flee. To do anything and everything she could to escape what was coming as surely as day followed night. To hold on to herself—because he would raze her to ashes in his wake, and who knew what she might be when he was finished?

Luc stopped behind her. His hands came up to hold her shoulders. He traced the shape of her arms beneath his palms. The reflection in the glass blurred his features slightly—made him seem more approachable, somehow, less remote.

Or maybe it was the way he touched her that made her blood sing his name, and washed away any half-formed thoughts she might have had left of escaping him.

She felt the warmth of his skin through the thin fabric of her blouse. She felt the surprising hardness of his palms as they moved along the lines of her body.

As if he was testing her. Training her. The thought made her belly clench.

She shuddered, and felt herself weaken. She who was already so weak where he was concerned. A delicious, terrifying languor stole through her, moving like fire in the wake of his hands, daring her to ease back against the hard, solid length of his body, as if she could no longer hold her head high of her own volition. She felt him against every inch of her back—too hot to the touch.

She should say something. She should remind him that they were strangers. She should try to put him off somehow. It was too soon—it would always be too soon. She should refuse to do whatever it was he was planning to do—was already doing.

She knew that there would be no turning back.

But she couldn’t seem to move.

He used his mouth then—heat and breath against her temple, her neck, the fine bones and hollows near her collarbone.

She had the impression of fire—flames licking from his mouth to ravage her body—and then he was turning her to face him, tilting her head back. She saw his dark and troubled gaze before his mouth fastened to hers, and then she could think of nothing but the way he kissed her.

She was lost. Again and again and again.

His mouth plundered hers, taking control and molding her mouth to his will. This time Gabrielle knew how to kiss him back, but she could do little more than that as he took her mouth with the same ruthlessness as he’d done everything else.

It was as if a storm raged through her—crushing and incinerating everything in its path. Gabrielle felt the power and strength of his mouth against hers, and everything else was part of the inferno that swept through her. Fire. Awe. Panic.

She pulled away from him—wanting to wrench herself out of his arms, but managing only to put the barest breath of space between them.

She would be lost forever if she let this happen. Something powerful and old inside her had been telling her this since she’d laid eyes on him, and she could feel the truth of it resonate through her, sending aftershocks through her skin, her blood, her mind. Her lips burned. And—most treacherous of all—she yearned for him. For more.

She searched his dark eyes, his implacable face, but found only stone. Iron.

She felt dizzy, suddenly—overwhelmed. He was so remote, too powerful, and she knew that she could not emerge from this the same as she was now. He would alter her, change her, forever marking her life into before and after—and she was terrified that after would mean the end of her, of who she was, of who she wanted to be. He would reduce her, dominate her, and she had no idea what would become of her. Gabrielle felt her lips part on a half-formed protest, or perhaps a plea—anything to stop the storm that was Luc Garnier, anything to put more space between what remained hers and what he would take.

But he stopped her with another kiss, this one even more frightening for all it was gentle. Gabrielle felt herself shake against him.

“Enough,” he said quietly against her mouth. “The time for talking is over.”

She went straight to his head, far more potent than any alcohol he’d ever tasted.

Luc kissed her again and again, bending her backward over his arm, holding her firmly against him so he could roam freely across her mouth, her neck. She tasted like nothing he had ever imagined before—sweet, addictive, and so hot it burned to touch her. It burned worse when he stopped.

She kissed like an innocent. Like the lies she’d told.

Tasting her, Luc wanted to believe every last one of them.

He groaned and swung her around, pulling her down with him onto the sofa and settling her across his lap, her knees on either side of him. He sucked in a breath as their hips made contact. He surged against her softness and made her moan in response.

Luc’s hands roamed over the curves he’d longed to possess since he’d first laid eyes on her. He pressed his open mouth against her neck, and thrilled to hear the low keening sound she made in the back of her throat. Impatient to see more of her, he pulled the silky blouse over her head, baring her breasts to his view.

“Please …” she said, her voice deep and husky, cascading over him. With a single, sure motion, Luc released the clasp of her bra and tossed the filmy piece of lingerie aside.

Her breasts jutted before him, firm and proud, her nipples standing to attention at eye level. He could no more resist taking one tender bud into his mouth than he could resist his next breath. He covered the other breast with his hand, testing her shape, learning her curves.

Braced above him, trapped between his hardness and the heat of his mouth, Gabrielle swayed in his arms. Her thick, luxuriant hair fell around them in wild waves, smelling of flowers and musk, cocooning them together.

When her moans grew throaty, Luc switched his mouth to the other nipple, laving the tight peak with his tongue while his hand explored the breast he’d left behind.

“Luc—” She gasped out his name and he liked it. He liked the desperation in her tone, the blind need on her face.

She was his. He would never let her forget it again.

“Please,” she cried. “I don’t—I don’t know—”

He sucked her nipple into his mouth, hard, moved his hips against hers, and she exploded in his arms.

Her head fell back, exposing her throat as the shudders racked her slender body. Triumph and a dark, keening sort of need ignited Luc’s blood. He wanted to be inside her. He wanted to personally investigate every last lie her trim body with its surprising lushness wanted to tell. He wanted to explore them all, with his mouth hot against her and himself deep within her, until the only truth she knew was him.

She lifted her head as if it was far too heavy, and blinked at him, dazed.

The worst part was that he no longer cared what she was lying about, how she had deceived him. As long as he could touch her, he didn’t care about a damned thing.

It made him mean.

“Are you always so responsive?” he asked acidly. “Or is this a show for my benefit?”

She shook her head slightly, a faraway look on her lovely face and then a slight frown between her eyes. She shifted position, still straddling him, and Luc bit back a groan as the movement ground her harder against him.

“Why would I put on a show for you?” she asked.

“Touché,” he muttered, and claimed her mouth once more.

Only as he explored her mouth, wondering if he would ever get used to the kick of it, did it occur to him that she had sounded bewildered instead of spiteful.

He thrust the thought aside.

He had to get inside this woman—his wife—or go insane.

Now.