He rolled to bring their faces just inches from each other, his gray eyes burning with the will to convince her. “Why do you not believe that you are beautiful? And brilliant. And perceptive. And so many other things that I could continue for the rest of this six-hour flight without running out of adjectives.”
Because he was a duke and could have pretty much any woman he wanted. Women who had never spent time in prison. Women who didn’t have criminals for fathers. That was why.
“Nope, that wasn’t over-the-top at all,” she said.
He growled and rolled them again so that she lay draped on top of him. “Quinn, you are the best thing that’s happened to me in a long, unhappy year.”
His words were dangerous, tempting her to imagine that she had helped this extraordinary man when no one else could. That kind of thinking could seduce her into believing he actually needed her. She sighed, her breath ruffling his chest hair. “It’s just good timing. You were ready to hear what I had to say.”
“Por el amor de Dios!” he swore in exasperation.
The plane bounced on a blip of turbulence. “You see? You shouldn’t swear when we’re thirty thousand feet in the air.”
His arms tightened around her. “Are you all right?”
Oddly, she was. It was stupid, but she felt safe lying in his embrace. “My nerve endings are so fried that I can’t work up any anxiety.”
He half laughed, half sighed. “I’ll have to make sure you have a couple of orgasms in the limo on the way to the airport tomorrow.”
The plane vibrated through a series of gentle bumps, but it was soothing rather than terrifying. “Was it doing this while we were having sex?” If so, she hadn’t noticed.
“No idea. I was focused on more important matters.” She felt his lips on the top of her head.
Her eyelids began to drift closed while her body melted over Gabriel’s like sugar glaze on a freshly baked cake. He was so warm and solid and strong. One of his arms was wrapped around her shoulders, while his other lay across her hips, his hand lightly cupping her buttock. She wanted to stay like this forever, gliding above the world and all its hard-edged realities.
The jet jolted again, making the soft folds of the blanket that he had tossed over the king’s coat of arms cascade down over them.
Gabriel laughed and flipped it over to cover her back, but Quinn tilted her head up in a silent salute to the dragon on the plaque. She got the message. The universe was not going to let her forget the vast chasm between them.
Chapter 31
Quinn gaped in disbelief when the Customs officer boarded the plane after they landed at Teterboro Airport in New Jersey. No standing in an immigration line for el duque. Of course, she would have breezed through since she was a U.S. citizen.
“Welcome home, Ms. Pierson,” the officer said, handing her U.S. passport back to her with a smile.
Home. And not home. She didn’t feel like anywhere was home these days, but it would be nice to be an American in America for a little while.
The officer gave Gabriel something that nearly resembled a bow as he returned his passport. “We hope you enjoy your visit here, sir.”
“Unbelievable,” Quinn muttered once the officer was out of earshot.
“What?” Gabriel asked.
“He bowed to you. In the USA! We fought a whole war to get rid of kings and dukes.”
The tension in Gabriel’s jaw eased, and amusement lit his eyes, which made Quinn happy. The closer they’d gotten to landing, the more withdrawn he’d become. “It’s my noble air. People just want to bow to me.”
Quinn glanced around to make sure no one was watching before she held up her middle finger. “That’s what your noble air makes me want to do.”
He laughed outright. “And you wonder why I love you.”
It was a figure of speech. She knew that, but it still made her heart twist. “For my charisma?”
“For your utter disrespect.” He leaned forward to plant a quick kiss on her lips.
Quinn didn’t want to leave the plane. She didn’t want to load up the Glock in the limo. She didn’t want to take on the responsibility of being one of Gabriel’s bodyguards. Most of all, she didn’t want to be racked with guilt for his pain if Marisela Alejo told him his playing stank.
She waved her hand toward the exit. “We should go. There might be traffic going into the city.”