Tailspin(92)
But some other time.
He dipped his head lower and brushed the triangle of lace with his lips, back and forth several times. Then, with Brynn working at the panties as urgently as he, they were finally cast off. Again, he forgot how to breathe. She was beautiful.
His fingertips grazed the delta of soft hair, then he slid his hand between her thighs. His fingers dipped into warm honey, into her, then went deep and stroked. Her hips came off the bed. She fitted her mound into his palm and ground it against the heel of his hand with a feverishness that matched his.
He withdrew his hand and stretched out on top of her. He kissed her neck, ravenously, but a bit awkwardly, as he fumbled with the wrapper and got the condom on.
Then—God, finally—he pushed into her in one long, uninterrupted glide, until he was completely, solidly embedded. Seized again by a primal possessiveness, he clamped the slender cord of her neck between his teeth and held it for several heartbeats, then raised his head and looked down into her face.
Her cheeks were flushed. Catching the dim light, her eyes shone silver as they looked into his. Breath rushed past her lips, made swollen and red and damp from kisses.
“Pride be damned,” she whispered. “I wanted this. I wanted this.”
Sliding her hands down to his butt, she secured him inside her even deeper and began a sinuous belly dance under him. The rhythmic curl and tilt of her hips started a throb in his cock that would have been painful if it hadn’t felt so damn good.
With his nose, he pushed her hair aside and placed his lips against her ear so that she would hear every panted word, each curse, praise and blessing, every syllable of the sex-talk chant that urged her toward her orgasm, and his inarticulate, mating growl when he allowed himself to come.
The only thing he wished he could take back, the one thing he wished he hadn’t said where she could hear it, where he could hear it, spoken on a serrated sigh as he sank onto her in sweet repletion: Brynn.
Chapter 27
12:37 a.m.
Nate had gone home.
He had the uneasy impression that the Hunts couldn’t have cared less.
Earlier this week, Richard and Delores had pleaded tearfully with him to stick his neck out and smuggle out the dose of GX-42. “Name your price. Anything,” Richard had told him. “Get me the stuff that will beat this thing.”
Delores had been almost too emotional to speak, but her brimming eyes had implored him. She’d managed to croak, “You’re our only hope, Nate.”
So much for her worship. Tonight they’d looked at him with cool disdain and distrust, as though it had been he who had double-crossed them, not Brynn.
Brynn. Trusted colleague and conspirator, she had yielded to the final choice of the recipient with disappointment, but also with an unbending devotion to this chancy move they were making as a team. It was now obvious to Nate that she had wanted the inevitable fame of a medical pioneer.
Jonas Salk. Christiaan Barnard. Nathan Lambert.
He had envisioned GX-42 ultimately being named for him. Never in his fantasies had it been Brynn who achieved such heights.
Arriving at his high-rise residence building in Buckhead, he had relinquished his Jaguar to the parking garage valet and taken the soundless elevator up to the twenty-second floor. The view of the skyline from his living room was dazzling, but tonight it had been obscured by rain, and, in any case, Nate hadn’t been in the mood to admire it.
He’d poured himself a neat whiskey. Usually, he limited himself to two drinks in an evening, and he’d had those in the Hunts’ sitting room. He’d had the third in the hope that it would either induce sleep or, even better, relieve some pressure so that his mind could free-float.
In that semi-stuporous state sought by mad artists and drunken writers, perhaps he would be creatively inspired. His subconscious might devise a genius plan that would restore him to the Hunts’ good graces and salvage this debacle before time ran out.
He’d finished the whiskey, gone through his routine bedtime preparation, turned off the lights, and had gotten into bed. But sleep had eluded him for more than an hour, and the alcohol hadn’t evoked any brilliant ideas.
He’d finally slipped into a light doze when the building intercom buzzed. Initially he’d wondered if the buzzer had been part of a dream. When it went off again, he questioned why the building concierge would be calling him at this hour. If there had been a medical emergency with one of his patients, he would have been contacted on his cell phone. He decided to ignore the summons.
But it was persistent. He threw off his cashmere blanket and walked across the silk-and-wool-blend carpet to the box on the wall. He pressed the blinking lighted button and put annoyance behind his voice. “Yes?”
“I hate to disturb you, Dr. Lambert, but there’s a man at the main entrance, demanding to see you. He says that he’s been sent by a Mr. Hunt, that the matter is urgent, and that you’ll know what it’s regarding. Should I let him in?”
“Did he give you his name?”
“Goliad.”
Nate’s heart thumped. They’d found Brynn! And the GX-42. And Goliad had been dispatched to swiftly escort him back to the mansion.
“Send him up.”
He slid his bare feet into his house shoes and pulled on his robe. He was hastily belting it when his doorbell chimed. He moved quickly through the apartment and eagerly pulled open the front door.