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The Song of David (The Law of Moses) Page 47
Author: Amy Harmon

“I don’t want to leave.” Tag’s voice rang out behind me.

I jerked and cursed loudly, making Kathleen whimper in my arms.

Then I realized with a start that Millie had changed the cassette. It was just Tag’s voice coming through the window, nothing more, and I cursed again.

“I DON’T WANT to leave,” I moaned. We were standing on the front porch and it was cold, but I wasn’t ready to go home. I didn’t know if I’d ever be ready.

“Then don’t,” Millie said firmly. We’d been wrapped around each other all night, and it was messing with my willpower. I had the Santos fight in ten days, and fighting was the last thing on my mind. I needed to go home. I needed to sleep. I needed to get up early and hit the gym. But I didn’t want to leave.

“I’m afraid of the dark, so I guess I’ll have to wait until morning,” I whispered. I was trying to make her laugh, but somehow the words rang true and I winced, grateful that she couldn’t see me do so. But she was too attuned to the nuances in a person’s voice to miss it. She stiffened a little. I felt it, just a tremor that traveled through her arms and down to her hands resting on my chest.

“Are you really afraid of the dark?” she asked, and I allowed myself to get sidetracked once more.

“No, not really. It’s more tight spaces. Dark, tight spaces. I had asthma when I was a kid. I guess it’s the feeling of not being able to breathe, of feeling helpless. Being trapped.”

“I see. I won’t make you sleep with me in my coffin then.”

“That’s right . . . you’re a vampire. I forgot.” I smiled, and she heard the grin in my voice because she smiled with me.

“The darkness is huge, though. You don’t need to be afraid of the dark. Whenever you start feeling trapped or helpless, just close your eyes, and you have more space than you’ll ever need.”

I nodded and kissed her forehead because she was so earnest and sweet.

“Close your eyes. Come on, close your eyes,” she commanded.

I did, but immediately felt dizzy, disoriented, and I reached for her. My balance had been off lately, and I blamed it on lust.

“Don’t be scared.” I could hear the smile in her voice. “I’m right here. I’m touching you, and you are safe.” She was enjoying this game.

“Go down.”

“What?” she asked.

“Your hands are on my chest,” I said.

“Yeah, they are.”

“Keep moving them down. I’ll tell you when to stop,” I demanded.

She burst out laughing, understanding dawning. “You have no idea how often I’ve used my blindness to “accidentally” feel someone up.”

“Really?” My voice rose in surprise.

“No. Not really. Now shhh!” she commanded. “I need to look at you a little.”

I swallowed as her hands slid across my chest and down my torso, her fingers brushing against the swells and valleys that made up my well-muscled abdomen. If it was possible, I felt more naked, more vulnerable than I’d ever felt with a woman, even though I wasn’t naked at all. The fact that she couldn’t see me made me more aware of the attention she paid to every detail. She slid her hands beneath my shirt, and I smiled into her hair. I was both ticklish and turned on.

“Your skin is smooth. But it’s bumpy too. I adore bumps, you know.”

I chuckled, thinking of all the braille, the “bumps” in her house that helped her order her world, and I tried not to moan as she ran her fingers up the swell of my lats and rested her head against my chest, pulling me close. I leaned down and kissed the top of her head, the silk of her hair welcome against my lips.

“I am going to touch you a lot,” she said sincerely.

“I’m okay with that,” I said magnanimously.

“But the things I can’t touch, you’ll have to describe.”

“Okay.”

“Your eyes . . . what color are they?” she asked.

“Green.”

“Like the grass?”

“Yeah, maybe a little paler.”

“And your hair?”

“Dark and light. A mixture of both. Yours is chocolate, mine is . . .” I thought for a moment, trying to come up with a description. “Do I really have to describe it? You can feel it.” She ran her fingers through it, and I tried not to purr.

She reached for my hands and brought them to her face.

“Now, look at me the way I look at you.”

I ran my fingers over her cheek bones, closing my eyes so I could see the way Millie did.

“Your cheekbones are high and pronounced, and your face is slightly heart-shaped,” I declared, though her face was in my mind as my hands traced the features I described.

“I have a big forehead,” she interrupted.

“And a pointy chin,” I added.

I felt the silk of her hair and pushed her hair behind her ears.

“And big ears,” she said.

I traced them with my fingertips. “You have pretty ears,” I said. And they were. Between my fingertips they felt dainty and detailed, little whorls of soft skin in the shape of a question mark, always waiting for answers.

“What’s your favorite thing about my face?” Millie said after I’d explored a little more.

I touched her mouth, pressing the pads of my thumbs against the fullest part of her bottom lip and then sliding them upwards to rest in the crease so I could part them slightly.

“This. This is my favorite part.”

“Because you can kiss me?” Ah, my girl knew how to flirt. I liked that.

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Amy Harmon's Novels
» The Song of David (The Law of Moses)
» The Law of Moses (The Law of Moses #1)
» The Bird and the Sword
» Making Faces
» Infinity + One
» A Different Blue