Laura Iding

New Year, New Man


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      He nodded. “And I do like you.”

      “Like. You like me.” She seemed to be testing the words, turning them over in her mind.

      He’d never in his life felt so completely inadequate. “Is that so bad? That I like you?”

      “Not...love? Not the forever kind of man-and-woman love?”

      “No. Not that.”

      “But...could it grow into love? Is that possible?”

      “God, Luce. What do you want from me? You know how I am. I told you. I’ve seen the kind of love you’re talking about. My parents have it. Most of my brothers and sisters have it. I understand myself well enough to accept that I don’t have the attention span for that kind of love.”

      She tipped her head to the other side and she looked him up and down in a measuring way that made him want to grab her and pull her under him and bury himself in the welcoming wet heat of her. “But you want me? You still want me, even after what I said about loving you, about lying to myself about loving you. You want me right now. You want to grab me and kiss me and do all those things to me that make both of us happy, that make both of us burn.”

      He readjusted his robe, though he knew she’d already spotted the evidence that she had it right. “What are you getting at?”

      She canted marginally closer. The scent of her drifted to him, unbearably womanly, so damn sweet. “You want me.”

      He gritted his teeth. “You keep saying that.”

      “But only because you keep saying it. Because I can see it in your face every time you look at me.” She licked her lips again. Why did she keep doing that?

      “What the hell?” He jumped to his feet and glared down at her. “What are you doing? What’s going on here?”

      She stared up at him. Proud now. Defiant somehow. “I’m not sure I can have children, Dami. I’m not sure it would be safe. Pregnancy puts a big burden on the heart and the circulatory system. I would have to consult with my doctors, assess the risks.”

      “Risks?” Now she was scaring him. “Children?” He backed away from her, from the bed. “What do children have to do with anything?”

      “Nothing.” Her eyes filled again. She blinked those tears away. “I just, well, I wanted you to know. I want you to know everything. All the truths that are so hard to say.”

      “Why?”

      She closed her eyes, looked away. But then she straightened her shoulders and faced him again. “Because you are my hero, Dami. You’re the one who danced with me and treated me like a woman when no one else could. You’re the one who encouraged me to follow my dream. And then when Noah wouldn’t let me go, you’re the one who came and got me, the one who freed me, the one who brought me here to New York where I needed to be. You’re the one who sat with me all day Sunday in the hospital, making the fear and the worry bearable for me, because I had to be there for Viv. You’re the one who taught me the magic that can be between a woman and a man. You showed me...everything. And everything that you showed me has been so very beautiful. That’s why I want, why I need, to tell you the truth. That’s why I love you, am in love with you. How in the world could it be any other way for me?”

      He felt shame then, a twisting, sour sensation deep in his gut. “I’m not. Not all that.”

      “Oh, Dami. You are. And I hope, I pray, that someday you will see that you are.” She pushed back the covers. Naked, glorious, she swung her slim legs over the edge of the bed and stood.

      He feared she would come to him, touch him, lift her mouth to him. If she did, he would take her, make love to her now. And that would be another wrong to add to all the rest of it. “What are you after?” He growled the words at her.

      She faced him, so beautiful in the gray light of that December morning. Naked and self-contained, her eyes dry now. “I’m going to get my things together and go back to my place.”

      “Right now. Just like that?”

      “Just like that.”

      He wanted to argue with her, to shout at her that they weren’t finished here. But why tell more lies? He might not be ready to let her go yet. But that didn’t mean it was any less over. He couldn’t give her what she needed, what a woman like her deserved.

      The least he could do was to let her walk away now that she was ready to leave him.

      “Suit yourself.” He went over and poured himself some coffee from the carafe on the tray. Then he dropped into the chair there and sipped slowly as she put on her clothes and gathered up the few things she’d left around the apartment.

      In no time, she stood before him, her overnight bag and purse on her shoulder, the fat orange cat under one arm. “Can you just send Quentin down with the litter box and food and water bowls and anything else I’ve forgotten to take?”

      He set down the empty coffee cup and considered maybe begging her not to go.

      A hero, she’d called him. She had it all wrong.

      He said, “Of course I’ll send Quentin down.”

      “Merry Christmas, Dami.” And that was it. The end.

      He watched her until she went through the door and disappeared from his sight down the hall.

       Chapter Fourteen

      Montedoro was beautiful at Christmas. This year, the beautification committee put up a forest of brightly lit trees in a rainbow of colors around the casino and the Triangle d’Or. As always, all the staterooms of the palace were decorated, each with its own Christmas tree, with swags and lights on every banister and mantel.

      There were parades and special Christmas markets, and an endless round of gala celebrations. Damien went to the market as was expected. He attended the parties. At the Christmas Ball, he danced with his mother and sisters and sisters-in-law.

      He went through the motions required of him. He smiled. He chatted. He held up his end. If anyone noticed his heart wasn’t in it, they had the good sense to keep their observations to themselves.

      Noah surprised him with a call on Christmas Eve. “Merry Christmas, Dami. I saw the pictures of you and Lucy and that hot blonde. Didn’t like seeing those.”

      What could he say? “It was embarrassing. I should have handled it better, seen Susie coming.”

      “Her name is Susie, huh?”

      “We all have regrets, Noah,” he answered flatly. “Things we should have done better. Things we probably shouldn’t have done at all.”

      “Hey. I hear you there.” And then Noah actually laughed. “I talked to Lucy about those pictures. She told me—again—to stay out of her business. I’m trying to do that. She says I’m getting better. Alice says so, too. I’m telling myself that’s progress.” A pause, then, “Lucy says you’re not seeing each other anymore.”

      He felt a definite twinge somewhere deep in his chest. “That’s right.”

      “That’s too bad. I was kind of getting used to the idea of the two of you together.”

      He really didn’t want to talk about it. He said nothing. Maybe Noah would take a hint.

      No such luck. “Alice says...” Noah let his voice trail off, leading him on.

      And Dami took the bait, demanding bleakly, “Alice says what?”

      “That you’re in love with my sister and that Lucy loves you back. That the two of you have been in love almost since you met—it just took you both a couple of years to figure it out.”

      Dami had no idea