Her hand rose to lie over his, soft, fragile. “But part of who you are is because of me and what you did for me.”
“That goes both ways-part of who you are is because of what I did.”
“Do you think we can ever get past that?”
He shrugged, his leopard gaining strength as a fiercely sexual hunger uncurled inside of him, fostered by the delicacy of her touch, the soft warmth of her scent. The leopard needed to mark her, to convince itself she was okay. “Who says we have to?”
She frowned. “It’s like a white elephant between us, Clay.”
“No.” He moved his hand from her cheek to the side of her neck, closed. Careful, he told himself, be careful of your strength. “That would imply we aren’t aware of it. Which is definitely not true.”
Her frown turned into a scowl. “Are you saying you’re sick of talking about it?”
“Talking never solves anything.” He could feel her pulse, thudding hard, out of time. A panicked beat? Or something else? He was sure it was the latter-she wasn’t scared of him right this second. “I have no idea why women seem to like doing it so much.”
“It’s a good thing I make you talk-left alone you’d forget how to speak,” Talin said, trying to tease. “I’ll talk to your Sascha, too.” She was no use to anyone if her mind kept crashing out of control. “But not now.” Not when she was at such a huge disadvantage. The cardinal Psy was so composed, so elegantly beautiful, that Talin felt like a drab sparrow in comparison.
Clay’s eyes were on her lips and suddenly she remembered what had started this whole thing. Her palms dampened. “I told you not to look at me that way.”
He blinked, but it was the slow, lazy blink of a predator very sure of his prey. “Why does it bother you so much?”
“Because even as you touch me, you’re hating me.” She saw the truth in the rich, sensual green of his eyes. “Admit it-you hate me for what I did.”
“Why?” A stark demand, his hand remaining clasped around the side of her neck. “Why did you give away what you should have protected?”
The question caused an emotional rock to lodge in her throat. “Will you let me go?”
His answer was to stroke his thumb over her skin.
“Clay.” When his eyes focused on her this time, she sucked in a breath. The cat was clearly in charge. Irrational fear spiked, but she refused to buckle under again. “Intimidation never worked with me.”
He growled low in his throat. “Answer the fucking question.”
“I did it so I’d feel something,” she snapped, wanting to growl back at him. “I went through life feeling nothing. I couldn’t love the Larkspurs, I couldn’t make friends, I couldn’t do anything but pretend!”
“And did you?” His hand tightened on her neck.
Cold sweat broke out over her body but she stayed. “No. I’ve never felt as dead as I did when I was in those beds. I went into my mind like I used to do as a child-so I wouldn’t be present while my body was used.”
His eyes shifted back to human, as if she’d caught him by surprise. “Then why keep doing it?”
“Because I thought that that was all I was good for.” A blunt response and the utter truth. “I was messed up, Clay. What Orrin did to me-it twisted me up on the inside. I couldn’t get past all that poison he put into my head. I kept hearing his voice telling me that I was nothing but a whore.”
“I’m glad I killed him,” Clay said, his tone so quiet it was a blade. “I only wish I’d been more patient. I should’ve ripped off his dick first, made him eat it.”
Her gorge rose but she was so damn tired of running, of disappointing Clay. Maybe she was weak, broken,
“Let it go,” she whispered, eyes tracing over the harsh masculine lines of his face. “Don’t let him poison you, too. I’ve finally broken free.”
“Have you?”
“I haven’t chosen to share a man’s bed in eight years. That’s why the fugues hurt so much,” she admitted. The time for lies had passed. “I know I’m worth more now. The therapist I went to for a while helped me see that. But it was the kids at Shine who really saved me-they’re the reason I decided I couldn’t keep going as I had been.”
He watched her, a cool, dangerous predator with rage coating him in a seemingly impenetrable shield.
“So many of them come from the same place we did or worse, and they keep going, keep fighting. How could I possibly think to help them, lead them, if I wasn’t strong enough to do the same?” She swallowed. “They have courage and heart and they’re
“I told you-I’ll find this boy, Jon, for you.”