“Sleep well,” his deep voice came out of the gathering darkness.
It wasthe noise that woke her. A strangled sound of silenced pain. She came awake in a rush, heart pounding, in a strange bed full of unfamiliar textures.
There was the faintest possible glow from the fireplace. For a second, she couldn’t place the cavernous room, the shadowy furniture, the plush bedding, until the memories exploded in a rush.
Drake’s mansion.
Drake’s bed.
There was that sound again. Coming from her left. She turned her head on the down pillow and saw him, lying on his back like a statue on a sarcophagus. He hadn’t budged since falling asleep. Something about his stillness told her that he always slept in stillness, perhaps had learned to do so as a child on the streets.
The sound was of a man unconsciously stifling a groan of pain. The fact that he could do this in his sleep spoke volumes of the man, of the kind of life he’d led.
Grace knew it was insane to feel sorry for a man like this. He was clearly very rich, immensely strong. He commanded enormous resources, including what appeared to be an army of men and staff. There wasn’t anything in the waking man that would make you feel sorry for him.
But the sleeping man, ah, that was a different story.
There was just enough light from the embers to see his face, lines of pain drawn deep, jaws clenched to stifle any sounds. And yet, a soft noise sounded from deep in his throat, however he fought against it.
The anesthesia had long since worn off. Ben hadn’t offered painkillers and Drake didn’t seem to her to be the kind of man who would take them unless he absolutely had to. But right now, his body was contending with the minor surgery of the removal of a bullet and the stitches taken in his shoulder, without anything to dull the pain.
Had he sent himself to that place he’d gone to in thesurgery? It seemed so. He looked utterly gone, eyes still behind the closed lids, body rigid. Feeling pain at some level but refusing to give in to it.
Grace listened to his labored breathing for another couple of minutes and then couldn’t stand it any more. Moving softly, she slid across the enormous bed until she was close enough to touch him.
Another stifled moan. She touched his hand, intending to see if she could wake him up, ask him if he needed anything.
But when she touched him, amazingly, he stilled. The tense muscles went lax, the frown smoothed out, his breathing slowed. His hand grasped hers tightly, his grip warm and unbreakable.
He seemed to have found instant peace, the grooves in his face gone, breathing calm and shallow.
Quiet reigned in the room and as the last light from the fire waned, Grace felt the dark mantle of sleep fold over her once more.
Chapter Nine
November 18
Drake had often woken up after being wounded. Less often, he had woken up beside a woman, though he never liked it. Usually, he dismissed the woman after sex, preferring to sleep alone. But he’d never woken up next to a woman after being wounded.
Never fuck while vulnerable.One of Drake’s hard and fast rules.
His women had no loyalty to him, and he had no reason to trust them while he was in a state of weakness. So, when he woke up with the familiar feeling of having been wounded, he couldn’t factor in the softness on his arm.
Even the way he came out of sleep was unusual. Drake was used to becoming instantly awake, rising up out of sleep in a flash, combat-ready. It was the only way hecould have survived his boyhood. Coming awake instantly was second nature, whether he was in a dangerous situation or not.
Yet now, he came up out of sleep in long languorous swoops, aware of someone beside him who wasn’t a threat. Aware of a certain warmth in the air and softness touching his skin. Rising, rising slowly until his eyes finally opened. His wounded shoulder ached, but that was nothing. What was astonishing was what was on his other shoulder. A mass of soft, reddish brown hair, pale skin showing from his too-large pajama top, long lush eyelashes, a full mouth that begged for kisses.
Grace. Grace Larsen. Migrated, by some miracle, from her side of the bed.
No, not migrated. The night-time memory came up from his subconscious like a cork bobbing up from a dark sea. He must have shown signs of distress in the night. The shoulder had been painful. Not the greatest pain he’d ever known, not by a long shot, but enough to pull him out of sleep. And she’d come to him, touched him, given him comfort.
He swallowed heavily, dry-mouthed.
She had offered comfort.
He looked down at the beautiful woman whose head lay so trustingly on his shoulder, barely breathing so as not to disturb her.
He tried really hard to concentrate on his gratitude to her in order to take his mind off the erection that had sprung to life. What the Americans called ablue-steeler. If he needed any sign that he was going to live, it was right there, under his pajama pants, between his legs.