Bare Devotion. Geri Krotow

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Название Bare Devotion
Автор произведения Geri Krotow
Жанр Короткие любовные романы
Серия The Bayou Bachelors
Издательство Короткие любовные романы
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781516106028



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that they’d be in Tahiti for ten days after the wedding. Thinking about her in a teeny bikini, or better, nothing, had made him harder than the oak desk he leaned against, his hands wrapping around the edge. She’d let him go down on her as she lay across his quickly cleared desk, and with no one in the office, Sonja’s cries had wrapped around him as they both came in a rush of lust. Combined with love, or so he’d thought.

      A true love didn’t abandon you at the altar, though.

      His phone buzzed, and he gratefully grabbed for the distraction.

      “Hey, Gus.”

      “Henry. You back at work?” His brother’s long drawl was indicative of a happy man. Brandon “Gus” Boudreaux should be happy—he’d met the love of his life when Sonja’s maid of honor had showed up for the pre-wedding festivities.

      Poppy and Brandon had been all but inseparable ever since, and Henry believed his little brother when he told him he knew Poppy was “the one.” Henry had thought Sonja was the one for him. Familiar pain squeezed just above his stomach.

      “Bro, you still there?” Brandon sounded worried.

      “Fuck. Yes, I’m here.”

      “A little early for you to be cussing, big brother. Let me guess, Sonja’s back at work today. Am I right?”

      “Yes.” Through clenched teeth.

      “Maybe it’s a good day for you to take a breather. You’ve been working since what, last week?”

      “Yeah. I can’t take off—we have a big client meeting today.”

      “You, or you and Sonja?”

      “Both of us.”

      A long whistle. “Sorry, Henry. That sucks moose cock.”

      He laughed despite his existential struggles. “Yeah. Yeah it does, man.”

      “Whatever you do, keep your chin up and don’t let her see you suffer. Unless you want her back.”

      “Hell no. Never.”

      “Sounds a little too quick on the draw, Henry. You still haven’t hashed out what happened at the wedding.”

      “There’s nothing to hash out. And frankly, it started long before then.” He walked around his desk and lowered himself into the chair, forcing his gaze out the window at the Spanish-moss-draped oak that sheltered the office from the hot Louisiana sun. “It’s over. My only regret is that I didn’t stop it sooner.”

      “Bullshit, brother.” Brandon knew him too well, even with their several-year estrangement. Funny how the wedding-that-wasn’t had helped bridge their pride. “How about you join me and Poppy for dinner?”

      “Ah, thanks, Gus. I’m the worst kind of company right now. Can I take a rain check?”

      “Sure. Always.” He heard the sound of Brandon’s breath, then a swish as he imagined his brother opening his sliding screen door and walking out onto his expansive deck that overlooked the water. “But don’t think you have to call ahead or wait until you feel better. Come over whenever you want.”

      “Thanks, bro.” He disconnected and stared at his cell phone. His estrangement from Brandon had been repaired by the same event that had broken his engagement and ended his marriage to the woman he knew he’d never get out of his blood. And as much as he appreciated his brother’s concern, Brandon was seeing Poppy, Sonja’s best friend. Henry didn’t put it past either Poppy or Brandon to try to fix things by surprising him with Sonja being at dinner.

      They meant well, but were clueless. His and Sonja’s hurts ran deeper than a nice dinner and bottle of wine could mend.

      * * * *

      Sonja bit into the almond croissant with the hunger that had plagued her every day of the past few weeks. Like clockwork, her appetite returned late morning after the morning nausea passed. She knew the exact night she’d conceived the baby. Her body had felt “different” after the lovemaking session with Henry that had lasted the better part of a late winter night after they’d won a particularly challenging case. At first she hadn’t been able to pinpoint it and blamed her exhaustion on prenuptial jitters. The week before the wedding, her breasts swelled, her nipples became sensitive to the shower spray, and she’d felt as though her period was about to start at any moment. But of course it hadn’t. She’d known two days before the wedding for sure. Thank God she’d only shared it with Poppy. If Henry had known, she didn’t think she’d have been able to walk away from marrying him as she had.

      The memory of leaving her soul mate at the altar made the pastry feel heavy in her stomach, and she paused, closing her eyes and breathing in and out slowly to ward off a wave of nausea. Anytime she remembered their wedding day she felt sick all over again.

      “Is it that good?”

      Her eyes flew open at the sexy baritone that only a few weeks ago had coaxed an orgasm out of her as he spoke dirty words into her ear while he moved over her, inside her, again and again. They might not have been completely candid with each other about a lot of things, but their sex life had always been honest.

      “It’s delicious.” She put the croissant down on a napkin, next to her stack of files. Henry’s gaze dared her to look away, and she never backed down from anyone, so she stared back.

      A quick flash of disgust shadowed his face before Henry looked away and sat in the seat opposite her, reaching over for his files. Usually they sat together, ready to work until whenever it took to get the day’s items checked off. It wasn’t going to get easy, ever, to know he thought so little of her. Knowing she deserved it for something he didn’t even know about yet—the baby—made it worse.

      “I imagine you need time to go over these.” A deft verbal pitch to see how she’d react. Would she go high, admit she should have been back in the office last week, or go low and blame him for her staying away, or ignore it?

      “Alesia sent me the files last week. I’ve read through them all.”

      He had to be playing her—Alesia told Henry everything. He’d know she’d had copies to analyze. Their round-trip tickets to Tahiti had gone unused, so it wasn’t as if she’d been out of the country and unable to do any work.

      “Any concerns?” He kept his face low, focused on the paperwork, but she saw the blood vessel just above his collar pulsing in rhythm to his heartbeat. Whenever Henry was agitated that was his tell.

      “No, nothing to speak of.” Her voice was low and throaty, and she wished she’d tendered her resignation. It would be so much easier, especially now when every damned hormone in her body was setting off emotions she didn’t even know she was capable of. But a deft noncompete clause she’d signed when his father had hired her prevented her from going out on her own just yet. She couldn’t afford it. And now the house needed to be renovated.

      Brilliant blue eyes watched her with their usual alertness. “You sure about that, Sonja? You’re acting like something’s not sitting right with you.”

      “It’s just this.” She motioned very slightly between them, using her finger. “Awkward with a capital A, am I right? We didn’t talk about it as much as we probably should have this morning.” Of course, dearest Deidre’s appearance had shut down any chance of the conversation they needed to have in private.

      The curiosity in his eyes turned to frosted crystal. “Let’s get it out on the table, then.” He splayed both hands on the dark polished surface, and she wondered if he’d forgotten about the time they’d both arrived to work early, too early. They’d ended up here, naked, in under five minutes. Did he see her naked body as she’d knelt on all fours, waiting for him to take her? She shook her head, blinked.

      “Sonja, you okay?”

      “Fine. You were going to say?”

      “Whatever we shared was wiped out when you decided to walk out on our