Read Quiet Walks the Tiger Online

Authors: Heather Graham

Quiet Walks the Tiger (10 page)

“No—” Sloan protested, but she didn’t get a chance to say more. She was drawn up, inexorably, into his arms. There was a force to him tonight, a leftover of the coiled tension he had constrained, a shuddering that rippled through sinewed muscles and lent heat and passion to his rough but tender command. His lips taking hers with no question or persuasion but with need and mastery. His tongue invaded the moist intimacy of her mouth, expecting submission with absolute authority and receiving it.

Sloan was at first startled, and then mesmerized. She couldn’t have denied him...had she wanted to...been able to...

His hands were as sure as his lips. With one he held the small of her back, curving her to him in an arch that made her even more aware of his burning heat and his need for her, a need she felt that she melted to like soft wax. The excitement and spark of fire she experienced near him suddenly burst into flame like an inferno. His other hand was firmly caressing her face, sliding down the silken column of her neck, fondling her collarbone, her shoulder, seducing with each firm movement. It crept between them with no thought of obstruction from her to crush against her breast, seeking as it enticed, a work-roughened thumb grazing a nipple with expert enticement until it hardened to a full peak, straining against the fabric of her shirt to receive the intoxicating touch. A moan sounded in Sloan’s throat, a whimper of desire. She was lost in his onslaught, swept away in a great wash of desire that began as a burning need in the root of femininity and spread a weakness rushing through her like a tidal wave. She couldn’t think, only need and crave...from somewhere a voice inside her reminded her that she couldn’t give, but it made no sense...she wanted desperately to give...and give...and keep on giving until she could quench the terrible storm of desire...

Her fingers, limp at first, found life. They curled over his broad shoulders, marveling at the play of muscle, and moved on to the coarse edges of dark hair at his nape, pulling her ever closer as her mind whirled in sensation. She wasn’t sure that she still touched earth...

She never did think of her conniving that night. It was a sudden splurge of fear, spurred as his fingers slipped beneath her shirt to sear her flesh with new pleasure that finally jolted her mind.
What if she wasn’t all that he wanted? What if she froze and just couldn’t...?
It had been so very long...

All the terrors that flitted through her mind were unnecessary. Wesley had remembered where they were and under what circumstances, even if she hadn’t. He drew away with a shake, then pulled her close to his chest again with tenderness. Her head rested against his thundering heart as he spoke.

“There’s so much I want to say to you, Sloan. But I think your other guests are going to start speculating as to what we’re up to. I can’t wait long, though. Saturday night, when your performance and the hectic pace that goes with it is over, we’re going to leave George and Cassie early and find some place to be entirely alone. No crowded dance floor or restaurant, and no car. I want you alone. Agreed?”

Sloan nodded vigorously against his chest, not trusting herself to speak. Please God, she prayed hastily, let it be a proposal. I don’t think I can handle this much longer. And if I’m his wife, I know I’ll be okay, I’ll have to be okay, because I’ll know he wants me forever...

Everyone left shortly after they returned to the patio, Wesley brushing a quick kiss against her forehead as he helped George carry out his sleeping sons.

Sloan slept soundly. She had weighed all Wesley’s words and actions and convinced herself that he was sincere. Saturday night was sure to bring the proposal she so desperately needed.

And she had completely forgotten the other insight she had momentarily seen of the man when his temper had flared.

A man who gave no second chances and slashed offenders with a swift but merciless blow.

CHAPTER FIVE

F
OR SOME INEXPLICABLE REASON
the traffic in town went mad on Thursday morning. Running late to begin with, Sloan found driving the short distance to work a tedious chore. Gritting her teeth but resigned, she wove her way through vehicles that appeared ridiculously confused.

Reaching the parking lot of the college, Sloan quickly collected her things and raced into the Fine Arts building. She and Jim had a rehearsal scheduled before their first classes, and they needed every second of time. The performance was only two days away. Depositing her street clothing and papers in her office, she moved straight into Fine Arts 202, where Jim was already engaging in warm-up exercises.

“Good morning,” she called quickly, making her way to the bar where she began her own series of stretches starting with limbering pliés.

“Good morning, Mrs. Tallett,” Jim returned her call, his voice laced with a teasing amusement. “Or is it soon to be Mrs. Adams?”

Sloan stretched high in a relevé, watching the graceful movement of her hand from side to over her head. “Do I detect a caustic note in that query?” she asked lightly.

“Caustic? Who me? Never,” Jim replied, leaping away from the bar to approach the tape player, where he set the music for their number—a medley of classical, jazz, blues, and rock created especially for them by the music department. “Ready?” he asked.

“Ready.”

The music began. Sloan whirled into his arms, then spun beneath his guidance in a slow pirouette with a high kick.

“Be careful, Sloan.”

Sloan missed a beat of the music and almost fell instead of swirling back into his arms. She kept her expression implacable and swirled across the floor, not answering until she returned to his side to be lifted high in the air. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

“I think you do.”

“I don’t.”

“You’ve got a tiger by the tail, Mrs. Tallett.”

Sloan stopped the dance and walked purposefully to the tape player to halt the flow of the music, crossing her arms and facing Jim. “Okay, Mr. Baskins, let’s have it. What are you talking about?”

“Oh, Sloan, don’t go getting indignant,” Jim said with a sigh. “I’m your friend. I’m just warning you to be careful.”

“With Wesley?” It was really more of a statement than a question.

“Yes, with Wesley Adams. I watched you last night, Sloan, and I know you. I saw all those seductive smiles and that lazy sensuous charm. You’re snaring your beast all right; I just hope you know what you’re doing.”

She could have cut Jim off by simply telling him it was none of his business, but Sloan didn’t want to. He was a friend, but more than that, she had to see what he was reading from her behavior, because if she couldn’t convince Jim, she feared she would never get by the astute, probing eye of Wes...

“I thought you liked him,” she said innocently.

“I do,” Jim told her. “He’s the type of man you respect immediately, and he’s natural—honest. But don’t fool yourself,” Jim advised. “He’s nothing like your Terry.”

“You didn’t know Terry,” Sloan observed dryly.

“But I know of him—just like I know of Wes Adams,” Jim said with a sigh. “I just want you to be aware that you’re not dealing with the same type of man.”

Sloan frowned. “I don’t understand what you’re getting at, Jim. Are you trying to say Wes isn’t the nice person he appears to be?”

“I’m not saying that at all. From what I’ve read, he’s even a bit of a philanthropist. But”—the warning was clear—“he’s not the type man you cross, or play with loosely.”

Sloan smiled slowly but surely. Jim wasn’t doubting her emotion—he was just wondering how far she planned to carry it. Scampering back across the floor to him, she planted a quick kiss on his cheek. “You can stop worrying—
Dad,
” she teased. “I’m not playing loosely with him at all. And I haven’t a thought in the world about crossing him.”

Jim flushed. “Okay—lecture over. And please! Put the music back on! We have about fifteen minutes left.”

But it was Jim who kept talking as they rehearsed. It seemed he was as well-read on Wesley Adams as Cassie. Wes, according to Jim, was a veritable tiger when it came to business. He was considered one of the most ethical men in the field of Thoroughbreds, but demanding in return. He dealt fairly, and expected the same in return. Woe to the man who attempted anything less.

Sloan paid little attention to his dissertation. She was wondering if she had judged Wes to be similar to Terry. Not really, she decided. Terry and she had been little more than children at first, growing together, but still squabbling like children together. Both men were courteous, but Terry
had
been completely carefree, without a serious bone in his body, without that piercing vitality that was part of Wes.

She was startled to realize that in her comparisons, Wesley was coming out by far the stronger man. Silly, she told herself. Terry had died at twenty-eight...he had never had a chance to really be a man...not in that assured, virile sense that Wes was.

It was strange, she noted vaguely late that night as she sat with Wes on her sofa sipping coffee, that Jim had asked her if she was comparing Wes to Terry. Because Wes brought up the same subject, suddenly, abruptly.

He set his mug on the coffee table and took both her hands in his. “You know, Sloan, that I’m not Terry.”

At first confused and disoriented, Sloan made a quick comeback. “Of course you’re not.”

He shook his head with a tender smile. “I’m mean, I don’t think—in fact, I’m
sure
that I’m nothing like Terry. I want you to understand that.”

Still confused, Sloan smiled, quivering inwardly at both the electricity that shot through her with the sear of his gaze and the implications of the deep sincerity of his words.

“I know you’re not Terry, or not like him,” she said softly. The right answer was important now she knew; every man—or woman, for that matter—wanted to be loved for what he or she was. “Terry was part of another lifetime. I loved him, but I’d never look to replace him.” A slight beading of perspiration broke out across her forehead, and her hands went clammy. She needed to say more...“I love you, Wes.” There. It hadn’t been hard, it had been incredibly easy.

And it was out...it was said. He intended to have her, he had told her, so she waited with anxious anticipation for his response. Surely he would take her into a passionate embrace...or make a new declaration in return.

Wes responded neither way, yet the intensity of his voice and the tender reverence with which he lightly lifted her chin to meet his eyes left her trembling, her mouth dry, her senses paralyzed.

“I can’t tell you what hearing that means, Sloan. I think I’ve waited half my life to hear those words from you, and I would have waited another eternity.”

Sloan tried to smile but found that she couldn’t. His eyes burned into hers, deeply green, deeply charged with electric emotion. She was unable to look away, unable to release herself even as she wondered once again if he was seeing through her, reading all the thoughts and sins that existed within her soul. No, he couldn’t be, because if he could read her soul, he would not be sitting there, he would be racing out the door.

He did stand, breaking the moment’s spell. “I’d better run,” he said, his hand settling gently on the top of her head and lightly massaging her hair against her temple. “Tomorrow is a workday for you, and I have an eight
A.M.
meeting a few miles out of town.” He reached to grasp her hands and pull her to her feet. “Come on, walk me to the door.”

Rising and slipping into the easy shelter of his arm, Sloan allowed her worry to cease. Her mind turned to the comfort and pleasure she found with his touch and easy camaraderie.

He paused with his hand on the doorknob and looked at her with a rueful grin. “I guess this is it until Saturday night,” he murmured softly.

“Oh?” Sloan queried, somewhat surprised that he wouldn’t be with her the next night—and startlingly disappointed. Had she come to depend on him so much that a night away seemed like endless time?

“I have another meeting tomorrow night,” he explained. “One that might not end till midnight.”

“You’re welcome to stop by.” Sloan murmured, hearing herself say the words without thought.

“No.” He smiled broadly, his eyes very gentle, as if the thought on her part had meant very much. “Your dance is on Saturday—I’m sure it’s quite a rush with the children and then the students. I don’t want to be the one to keep you from a peak performance, and”—he brushed a kiss against her temple—“I also have selfish reasons for wanting you well rested. I want to keep you out till all hours on Saturday night!”

“Oh,” Sloan repeated, aware that her pulse was racing madly and she was anticipating his mind-numbing good-night kiss.

But again, he did the unexpected. Instead of pulling her into the tight embrace of his arms, he brushed her forehead again with the briefest of feather-light caresses. And yet, the passion was there, barely hooded by sensuously lazy lids over the ocean-deep eyes as he pulled away. “Till Saturday night,” he said huskily.

Sloan watched as his tall form disappeared down the path and into his car. She was dismayed to realize that she was hopelessly frustrated. Her anticipation had taunted her senses unbearably. It was with a raw, physical pain that she watched him leave, a fervent prayer on her lips; let it be soon...please, let it be soon.

But could she force a wedding soon enough while still pretending to be the one to fall heedlessly under the spell of a relentless pursuer?

Sloan would have never admitted it to herself, but no matter what appearances were, no matter what Wes said or did, no matter how much confidence she felt in herself as a human being and a woman, she was running a little scared. At first Wes had been little more than an appropriate pawn, but the more she saw of him, the more she became aware that she had stepped a little out of her league without really realizing it.

She would have to be very careful never to take him for granted, make any type of assumption. Ironically, where she often felt old at twenty-nine, he, just five years older, was young—no, not young, but at a “prime” age for a male. Twenty-nine wasn’t old, she reminded herself—it was being a “widow” that so often made her feel so—that and the responsibility of the children.

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