8
CHRIST, IT WAS GOOD. TRUE TO HIS WORD, AFTER HE’D
MADE HER come in the bathroom, he’d touched her, stroked her,
whispered sex talk in her ear all day, in front of customers, when
they were alone. He’d driven himself mad with desire, had pounced
on her the moment they were back in the room, just as he’d
promised. It had been so fucking unbelievably good. He hadn’t even
needed to take her to another party on Saturday night to seduce
her. They’d had sex all weekend. Erin had kissed him, blown him,
fucked him, bantered with him. Now, on the plane, she slept beside
him.
Dominic dared to let himself hope. He wasn’t an
idiot; he knew they had to talk. They needed a counselor to help
them through all the things they hadn’t managed to say or feel
since the day Jay fell ill. But he felt a surge of optimism that
she would at least talk to him.
He lifted her hand, laced his fingers with hers.
She didn’t wake. He kissed her fingertips, stroked a soft tendril
of hair back behind her ear. He breathed her in, the sweet scent of
lotion and shampoo.
After months of despair, he had hope.

ERIN WOKE WITH HER HEART POUNDING. SHE WAS IN HER
OWN BED again, night, dark, Dominic’s quiet breathing beside her as
the dream began to fade. No, the nightmare. Jay. She remembered
every moment of the nightmare. She felt the reality of it every
day, yet it was so much worse reliving it in the Technicolor of her
dreams. She covered her ears, trying to block out the sound of her
own voice shouting those awful words at her son.
When she was able to sleep, her dreams of Jay
were usually sweet. She would wake longing to return to them. But
then, in the dark, the bad thoughts would begin churning, and she
couldn’t sleep again. She wanted to reach for Dominic now, with her
hands, her arms, her whole being. But Dominic was out of reach. It
didn’t matter what had happened between them this weekend; if he
knew the things she’d said to Jay, he’d never forgive her. She
would always see what she’d done mirrored in his eyes. She was the
one who wasn’t able to forgive, not herself, not Dominic.
Yet the trade show had changed something. She
couldn’t seek the solace of sex now. After everything they’d done
over the weekend, their own bed was . . . different. She now knew
she could step outside of herself, move beyond the perimeter of her
guilt. She could forget for a time, live for a time, and it didn’t
take all that much pretending. They’d woken in Orlando this
morning, showered, dressed, packed, driven to the airport, and
returned the rental car. She’d let Dominic hold her hand on the
plane, though he’d thought she was asleep. She couldn’t remember
the last time they’d simply held hands like that.
She craved his warmth now, yet too much of a
good thing for too long a time was almost like betraying Jay’s
memory. That was the problem. The guilt tortured her, yet without
the guilt, it was like forgetting Jay. God, she hadn’t thought of
him all weekend. And that was sacrilege. The constant pain she felt
was the only thing that kept him alive. Tonight’s nightmare was her
punishment for forgetting that.
She knew she was addicted, knew she’d do it
again, have hot sex, play Dominic’s dirty games. She craved them.
But not tonight. And not in this bed. It was the only thing she
could promise her son.
Sliding from beneath the covers, she made as
little movement as possible, keeping the blankets mashed down to
avoid a rush of cool air that might wake Dominic.
She couldn’t remember where she’d left her
slippers and rather than turning the light on to find them, she
padded barefoot down the hall. The house was split-level; four
bedrooms, one was a guest room that never got used and another
served as her office. Dominic had remodeled the workshop attached
to the garage as his pseudolab and home office.
Her feet were cold by the time she’d booted up.
Pulling her legs up onto the chair, she folded her fingers around
her toes to warm them as she waited for the Internet. Her computer
was old, a castoff from work, and websites with more sophisticated
graphics took longer to load. She’d never been able to throw out
stuff that still functioned. Though she couldn’t afford to lose the
time at work, it didn’t matter at home. Dominic was different; he
loved state-of-the-art.
The desk faced the door. She’d read that was
some sort of feng shui thing, so that you could always see when
someone was coming into your space. It gave you control. She did
the same thing in her office at DKG. She’d also set the computer to
erase her history whenever she exited the Internet. Dominic would
never check up on her, but she couldn’t take the chance he might
see something by accident. So she always made sure she shut down
her browser before she left her desk or if Dominic’s shadow
darkened her door.
Finally, after the tap of a few more computer
keys to open the photo gallery, her son’s beautiful face blossomed
on the monitor. She touched the screen as if she were touching his
face.
Dominic would be pissed if he knew what she did
tucked away in her office late at night, if he knew the things
she’d kept hidden from him.
And she wouldn’t blame him for that.
HE AWOKE WITH A START. HE DIDN’T KNOW HOW LONG
HE’D BEEN alone, but when he ran his hand over her side of the bed,
the sheet was cold.
This was bad. In her worst moments, Erin didn’t
wake him up for sex. Instead, she closeted herself in her office.
He figured that was better than if she’d gone to Jay’s room.
Dominic shut his eyes, concentrated on slow,
steady breathing. They’d cleaned out Jay’s stuff last February. She
hadn’t cried, simply put everything in cardboard boxes, taped them
up, and marked them for the Salvation Army. He’d piled the boxes
into the SUV and taken them to the drop-off. But before he
discarded them, he’d cut open the tape and removed the things he
needed to keep. A baseball mitt from Little League. A kite they
used to take out to the park on Sundays. Stuff. Memories. Picking
and choosing had left a hole the size of a fist in his chest. He’d
kept some things for Erin, too, for when she was ready. The clay
handprint Jay made when he was six, glazed a bright blue and fired
in the school kiln. The animals Leon had whittled for his birthday.
He’d been working on the Noah’s Ark scene, having made it through
the giraffes, the elephants, the sheep, and the lions. Dominic had
kept those and other special things. Erin would be sorry, he knew,
when she thought of all the treasures she’d let go.
Rising from the bed, Dominic donned his briefs.
He couldn’t go hunting for her with his dick dangling. A swath of
light swept across the carpet from beneath the closed door at the
end of the hall. He had to pass Jay’s room to get there.
She hadn’t changed the bedspread on the twin
bed. He didn’t know why. It was still Speed Racer. On Saturdays, as
if it were penance, she dusted and vacuumed his room along with the
rest of the house. It just wasn’t lived in anymore.
Outside the door to her office, he leaned both
hands against the doorjamb, his head hanging, wanting to knock, yet
incapable of it. The only sound was the steady throb of his heart
against his chest. He’d been on the outside looking in for over a
year. Shut out, shut down. Christ, he needed to talk, sometimes so
badly that the words choked him. About Jay, how he died, the pain
and guilt, his belief that Erin blamed him, and how goddamn much he
missed his son, how the hole in his chest was growing ever wider.
All the things he couldn’t say were like boulders between them that
they had to walk around to see each other.
What did she do in there that she didn’t want
him to see?
Fuck, fuck, fuck. They’d had such a damn good
weekend. A step forward. The closed door was two steps back. What
had gone wrong? Maybe she’d wanted him to be jealous and he’d
failed the test. Was it that he’d wanted her to masturbate for
Winter? That he could give Erin to another man and feel only
excitement at her pleasure? Perhaps she thought it meant he no
longer loved her? The truth was he’d moved into an entirely new
territory, where the only thing that mattered was connecting with
her on any level he could find.
Dominic straightened, detecting the click of the
keyboard.
They had connected this weekend. It worked for
seventy-two hours despite the two steps back she’d taken
tonight.
He would not give up on her. He would make it
happen again. The more he forced her to see him, the easier it
would get each time he tried. He had to think of the right thing to
tempt her with. Something better than Winter.
Dominic backed down the hall. Something was
coming to him. And it was going to be good.
MONDAY MORNING ERIN LEANED BACK IN HER OFFICE
CHAIR, GATHERED her hair in her hand, and slipped a scrunchie
around the thick hank to keep the mass of it out of her way. It had
taken several phone calls with Wrainger over the last couple of
weeks, both before the Orlando trip and two more calls this
morning, but she’d managed to raise DKG’s discount percentage. It
went against justin-time principles, increasing quantities so
they’d have more parts on hand, but the cost-benefit analysis she’d
had Bree run proved they’d come out ahead. And they had the
stockroom capacity.
She’d been able to tick one thing off her to-do
list. She still hadn’t done anything about Leon and the
transducers. She’d considered moving the fabrication in-house, but
with the loaded labor rate, which included benefits, not to mention
the learning curve, Leon was still much cheaper.
She needed to take him out for lunch and ask
what he was going to do with all that extra time on his hands. He’d
go stircrazy. He needed them as much as they needed him. She didn’t
have a decent explanation for why she hadn’t already invited him.
Maybe she couldn’t stand it if he said no. Maybe it was because she
hadn’t seen him face-to-face since Jay’s memorial.
Her e-mail beeped, and she flipped tabs on the
monitor.
Dominic. Was he suddenly getting too lazy to
walk over? They hadn’t talked much this morning, not about the
weekend, and not about the week to come. He hadn’t said anything
about the fact that she’d been holed up in her office last night
either, but she knew he wasn’t asleep when she’d gone back to
bed.
She clicked on the message. It took her a moment
to realize it wasn’t a business e-mail. Warmth spread across her
skin, and a kernel of heat sprouted low in her belly.
“Eight o’clock tonight, meet me at Rudolpho’s on
Santana Row. I want the skirt short and the heels fuck-me high. Do
you understand?”
The tone of command in the words raised her
pulse, goose bumps pebbled her arms, and her breath quickened. He
wasn’t in the room, and they were only words on a screen, yet she
felt an overwhelming rush of desire followed by the oddest need for
a little banter. “Forget it, dude.” That should get him
going.
She waited, tingling inside. He didn’t
disappoint her, an e-mail popping up on her screen in less than
thirty seconds.
“You will be there, or you’ll pay the price. If
you’re into a little punishment these days, that can certainly be
arranged.”
They’d never been into BDSM or pain. So what
kind of punishment did he have in mind? Sitting in her office last
night, she’d known she was addicted to this new sex game of his.
Nothing was going to stop her from playing. Not even her shame or
her guilt.
“Maybe I’ll be there. Maybe I won’t.” She wrote,
punctuating with a smile to herself. Then she waited for his
comeback and hoped it was exceptionally naughty.