“Play for me,” Alex says softly, brushing his hand across my shoulders. He stoops down and kisses my cheek. “Play your songs for me, please. I’ve been desperate to hate them again.”
I tilt my face toward him. “You mean that?”
“Ever since Paris, your music’s been in my head. I can’t let it go.”
Slowly, I begin to play. My fingers feel rusty, but that quickly fades as I feel myself falling into the music, and the world fades into nothing.
This is what happens every time I get a chance to play. It’s like nothing else matters but the next note. All I want in the whole world is to find the next phrase, the next chord, the next melody, and it’s like I can find myself in the way the piano sings for me.
And Alex listens. He really listens. I feel him there watching, and after a while he makes coffee, but he doesn’t walk away. He sits on the couch behind me and drinks and he listens and he watches, and for the first time in my life, I feel like there’s a person who actually understands.
He feels this music the way I do. It draws him toward me and I can’t really explain how it works.
But it’s there, the connection.
I don’t know how long I play for, but by the time I finally turn around to face him, I’m feeling pretty hungry.
He nods at me. “That was beautiful,” he says.
I walk over and straddle him. I lean down and bury his lips with mine. “Thank you,” I say and kiss him again. His hands grip my ass.
“I know you needed this, and honestly, I’ve been wanting to hear you play again.”
“It means a lot that you’d let this old, beat up piano ruin your perfect apartment’s decor.”
He scowls at me. “You’ve already done that with your shoes. How can one girl who barely leaves the apartment have so many pairs left scattered all over?”
“Ah, Alex, you can’t ever fully change, can you?” I pat his cheek and get out of his lap.
His scowl deepens. “Don’t get me started on the sticky notes. You leave the all over the place, but they end up crumpled on the floor half the time and don’t even serve a function.”
“They’re reminders.”
“They’retrash.” I sigh and go make myself some coffee. He follows with a smile on his face like he knows he’s just messing with me. “I actually have another surprise for you,” he says casually.
“Seriously? What else? And you better not call me spoiled anymore. If I’m spoiled, it’s your fault.”
He smirks and walks over to me. His fist reaches into my hair and he tightens it. “If I spoil you, that’s my prerogative. I’m your husband, remember? And you’re carrying my child.”
I let out a little whimper. “Sometimes I think you enjoy hating me.”
“Just a little bit. Makes it that much sweeter when I finally break you down.”
I release a moan and he kisses me, but he pulls away before it goes too far. “You have a friend coming in an hour. I don’t want to get you all ruined before she shows up.”
“Really? Who?”
“That old woman, Patricia. When I bought the piano she practically demanded that I let her visit you. I think she thinks I’m abusing you or something.”
I press my hands together in excitement. “Are you serious right now? You’re going to let some stranger into your apartment/”
“She’s an old woman. It’ll be fine.”
“And you really don’t mind?”
“So long as you clean up after yourselves, I don’t mind.”
“Thank you.” I throw my arms around him and hug tight.