Husbands and Other Strangers. Marie FerrarellaЧитать онлайн книгу.
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“I don’t know who you are.”
If Gayle was putting him on, Taylor was going to kill her. Slowly.
“You’re not kidding?” Taylor ground out each one of the words slowly, giving her every opportunity to recant. Praying she’d take it.
Why were her brothers doing this to her? “Sam, Jake, what’s going on here?”
Gayle looked from Sam to Jake, then her eyes came to rest on the stranger. Her brothers had played pranks on her before. But this was going a little bit too far.
Gayle gave each of them as much of a piercing, demanding look as she could muster, under the circumstances. “Jake, Sam, one of you tell me. I want to know. Just who is this man?”
Husbands and Other Strangers
Marie Ferrarella
MARIE FERRARELLA
This USA TODAY bestselling and RITA® Award-winning author has written over 140 books for Silhouette, some under the name Marie Nicole. Her romances are beloved by fans worldwide.
To Charlie, and remembering
Contents
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter One
His hands were gentle, so incredibly gentle. They passed over her body slowly, like a warm spring breeze. The hands of a lover. Caressing her. Stroking her. Making her yearn.
She knew instinctively that they were powerful hands—hands that could have just as easily snapped a neck in two if unrestrained anger had flashed through his veins. Which made it all the more wondrous that he could touch her this way. As if he were worshipping her.
As if he were making love to her with just his hands, just his fingertips.
He was making love to her.
A moan slipped from her lips, as if the pleasure that filled her was just too much to contain, to keep captive within the vessel of her body. It overflowed from every pore.
Drenching her.
Drenching him.
And then his hands were no longer blazing a trail along her skin. His lips were there instead, anointing her body. She could feel herself trembling as his mouth, ever so lightly, skimmed along her flesh, following the very same path that his fingers had traced just a moment ago.
A century ago, when time began.
She couldn’t see him.
Why couldn’t she see him? Why, when every fiber of her being felt him, knew him, wanted him, couldn’t she see his face? No matter how she tried, how she turned, she couldn’t see him. His identity remained hidden from her view.
Her eyes were open, but she couldn’t see. She could only sense him. It was as if something inside of her prevented her from seeing him.
He wasn’t a stranger. How could he be? She knew who he was, at least in her soul. Somehow, deep within the secret recesses of her mind, she had always known, that he would be coming for her. Coming to her. Whoever he was, he was her soul mate, her intended, the one she had been destined for from the very moment destiny began.
Destined to love until the last sands of time blew away into the dark abyss of eternity.
So if her soul knew him so well, why couldn’t she see him?
Gayle Conway strained, trying to turn her head, aching for a chance to get a better view. Any view. Aching to see.
But something was holding her back, restraining her movement. A heavy weight was pressing down on her. And there was such exhaustion consuming her she couldn’t breathe. Still, with her last ounce of strength, she struggled against the iron bands on her arms.
A sense of overwhelming loss edged out the pleasure within her, like a blot of ink staining every square inch of the bright, colorful material it had been spilled on, obliterating it.
He was gone.
Gone as if he were nothing more than smoke, as if he hadn’t existed at all. But he had. She knew he had. He had been as real as she. Now she was left alone, shackled to a hard bed of loneliness.
The moan that came from her lips this time was devoid of pleasure. It was a keening sound, filled with the sorrow of bereavement and loss.
And then something else cut into it. Another sound, another voice.
Something…someone…
Someone was calling to her. Calling her from this oppressive, weighted darkness she was lost in.
The heaviness began to lift. Hands were on her again. But this time they were not gentle hands. Rough hands, trying to snatch at her consciousness. Trying to bring her back around. She could feel hands rubbing her arms, her legs, coaxing the color, the strength back into them. Back into her.
Gayle tried to listen. To recognize. But the voice calling her name belonged to someone she didn’t know. A stranger’s voice.
“Gayle, please wake up. Honey, please, just open your eyes. Just look at me. Please.”
Fingers. Gentle fingers, not running along her body but lacing her fingers with them. More words.
Supplications? Prayers?
Prayers. Someone was praying over her. She felt more than heard the words, as if they were being whispered into her subconscious.
Gayle tried hard to open her eyes, but they wouldn’t move. Each lid felt as if it had been sealed permanently shut.
She had to open her eyes to find who’d been loving her. She had to find the man who had so abruptly left her side.
The man she couldn’t see.
Slowly, mercifully, she could feel herself rising from the depths, the almost life-threatening heaviness leaving her. A moment longer and it would be all right. She would be out of this lonely, stark world and reunited with the man whose passion had set her on fire. Already she could feel her body warming again. Warming, as if touched by sunlight.
Sunlight.
It was the sun she felt on her face, on her body. The sun. Nothing more, just the sun.
The realization underlined the emptiness in her soul.
Something moist slid from her lashes and slithered in a zigzag pattern along both cheeks. Gayle opened her eyes and looked up at the concerned ring of faces hovering over her.
It took her a moment before she could focus on them. Sam. Jake. The emptiness within her shifted a little as she recognized the familiar faces of her two older brothers.
And then she saw someone else.
Taylor Conway wasn’t easily given to allowing his emotions to overtake him, but in