THE Drakes were waiting for him in the living roomâall but Hannah. They knew he was angry by the line of his body. Sarah leapt up to intercept him as he started to the staircase, but he held up his hand to stop her, flashing her one, emotion-laden look.
âDonât,â he warned.
She hesitated. âTell us, Jonas.â
He glanced over her head to Joley. âYou take care of that one.â He jerked his head toward her. âAnd Iâll take care of Hannah.â He cast one more furious look at Joley and hurried up the stairs to Hannahâs room.
The door was closed and locked and this time he didnât bother knocking. The hell with it.
He began working on the lock. Joley came up behind him with Sarah.
âYou have to leave her alone, Jonas. It was too much for her, facing Prakenskii like that,â
Sarah said. âShe needs to rest.â
âAnd you need to mind your own business. Hannahâs a grown woman. Sheâs my woman.â
He made the declaration as he freed the lock, opened the door and stepped in, closing it on Sarahâs furious face.
Hannah was pulling clothes from her dresser, tears streaming down her face as she stuffed them into the small sports bag she had open on the bed. He could see the fatigue and the dark circles around her eyes. His heart twisted in spite of his anger. Hannah was a woman of such contrasts. She appeared fragile and delicate, yet had a core of steel. She had panic attacks, yet courageously defended her sisters. She was shy, but made herself into a public icon.
He would never, as long as he lived, get over seeing her come into the room, head up, her face slashed deep and raw, but her eyes steady as she faced Prakenskii with such regal dignity. He knew it cost her pride. He knew she didnât want to be seen. But she had stood up to all of them and insisted on being treated as an adult. He had never been prouder of her. Yet here he was, about to chew her out. Again. He sighed.
She looked up, her wet eyelashes spiky, nearly breaking his heart. Her hand went defensively to her throatâwhere three deliberate slashes had been made, damaging her vocal cords for all time. He wanted to gather her into his arms and hold her close.
âGet out,â she said. âYou have to get out and leave me alone.â
Fury swept through him. So much for good intentions. He slammed the door closed again, this time against Joley as she attempted to enter, and turned the lock, crossing the room in three swift strides.
âWhat the hell did you think you were doing, Hannah?â Jonas caught her by the shoulders and gave her a little shake. âDo you like playing with fire? I told you to stay away from Rudy Venturi. He may seem harmless, but heâs living a fantasy and you donât know what could happen if his fantasy is disrupted.â
âJonas!â Sarah protested, from the other side of the door. âWhat are you doing?â
âIâm going to beat her, thatâs what Iâm doing,â Jonas snapped. âWhy canât you, just once, go along with something I say, Hannah? That man is loony tunes and youâre bringing him a signed photograph personally! I know what Iâm talking about when I tell you about security, but no, you just have to defy me.â His eyes darkened, blazed down at her upturned face as he gave her another shake, anger sweeping through him, building and building as the images of a knife slashing at her while he was thousands of miles away played in his head. âYou do whatever everyone else tells you like some damned puppet, but me, you have to argue and defy me at every turn. Even if youâre taking a chance with your life.â
âStop it, Jonas,â Joley called, pounding on the door. âStop it. You sound like youâre going to hurt her.â
âIâd never hurt her,â Jonas declared, abruptly letting Hannah go. âGet the hell away from here, Joley. You, too, Sarah. This is between Hannah and me.â
âIâm fine, Joley,â Hannah assured her. âLeave us.â
âAre you sure, Hannah?â Sarah asked. âYou donât have to put up with him yelling at you.â
âI donât interfere between you and Damon, Sarah,â Jonas hissed. âDo us the same courtesy. Go away.â He shoved both hands through his hair, waiting to hear the fading footsteps before he glared at Hannah. âDamn it. Why would you risk your safety like that?â
He stepped back away from her, his hands shaking as he paced across the room. His chest heaved as he tried to draw in air, as he tried to push away the images crowding in. There had been so much blood. Her long hair had been everywhere, but instead of platinum and gold, the spiral curls had been red. He could barely breathe and he actually staggered, reaching out blindly for anything to anchor him.
Hannah caught his arm. âSit down, Jonas. You havenât slept in days.â
âWeeks,â he corrected and sank into the large chair by her fireplace. He wrapped his arms around her waist, burying his face against her stomach. His arms tightened, two steel bands, locking her to him, holding her as close as he could get her. A shudder went through his body. âDamn it, Hannah. Youâre killing me.â
Hannahâs fingers tunneled in his hair, made small soothing circles against his scalp in an effort to calm him. âItâs all right, Jonas. Iâm alive. Itâs going to be all right.â
Kneeling, she rested her head against his, not certain she was telling the truth. She wasnât certain sheâd survived. She was living, but she lived with terror and the realization that someone hated her enough to destroy her. She wasnât strong like her other sisters. She preferred the shelter of her home, of her town, the familiarity of things sheâd grown up with. She had always felt safe in Sea Haven. Now she didnât know where safety was.
Whoever hated her was here in Sea Haven and she couldnât risk them harming her sistersâor Jonas. She had to leave and she had to leave alone.
Jonas usually shielded her from the intensity of his emotions, but right now, he was too upset. She sensed in him that same desperation she remembered from so long ago, when heâd tried to hold his mother to him, tried to save her, tried to find a way to take away the pain in her. Jeanette Harringtonâs pain had been, like Hannahâs, both physical and emotional. She didnât want to die and leave her son alone in the world. Hannah didnât know how to live. Jonas felt the responsibility for both of themâhe always hadâand right now, it was all mixed together with rage and grief.
In that moment she knew, with astonishing clarity, that her own uncertainty didnât matter to her. She felt the shudder that ran through Jonasâs body and she had to find a way to take away his pain. She caught the images of the attack on her in his mind. The desperate need to get to her, the agony at the thought of losing her. The rage at himself for not being with her to protect her. She didnât find pity, or horror at the sight of her mutilated body, and that was an unexpected gift. But the love she found there, strongâintenseâdesperate almostâchoked her. How could she leave him when she felt the same way?
âIâm angry with you, Hannah,â he whispered, keeping his face buried in the warmth of her neck. âIâm really angry with you.â
âI know.â She cradled his head with her arms, holding him close, âItâs all right. Weâll get through this. I donât know how, but we will.â She was grateful there were no witnesses to Jonasâs panic. He was a strong, proud man, and falling apart in front of anyoneâespecially his family, whom he believed he needed to protect at all timesâwould be humiliating to him.
âYou have to listen to me, Hannah, when it comes to issues of your safety. I canât function like this. The fear is paralyzing, demoralizing, I canât even breathe thinking about you like that. You have to at least do that for me. Give me that.â
She pressed kisses to his forehead. âI wasnât doing it on purpose, Jonas. It wasnât defiance. I didnât feel a threat from Rudyâonly loneliness. I know what that is.
Sometimes, even surrounded by my sisters, I feel lonely.â
âBecause you think no one knows the real you,â he said. âBut I do. I see you, Hannah.
Youâve never been alone.â But she hadnât seen him. She couldnât read him and she hadnât seen past his frustration and anger. Heâd protected her from knowing his real feelings.
Sheâd coped for so long, bombarded by the people around her, and he hadnât wanted to add to that burden. In the end heâd nearly lost his chances with her.
âHannah.â He tightened his hold on her. âRudy Venturi is unstable. You felt sorry for him, but it didnât occur to you that in his mind he isnât a threat. You wouldnât feel it from him because he doesnât think what he does is wrong. If he decided he had to kill you to keep the bad men from getting to you, he wouldnât think it was wrong. He wouldnât feel evil or even threatening because his intent is to help you. You donât see everything like you think you do.â
Hannah sighed. âIâm sorry, Jonas. I donât mean to make you so crazy. I did feel sorry for him. I didnât think handing him a photograph would be a big thing. I should have listened to you.â
âAll right,â he murmured. âAll right. Tell me about the Reverend. Did you talk to him as well?â
The switch in topics had her flinching. Hannah tried to pull back, but he kept his arms around her, lifting his head and looking down at her. âYou did, didnât you?â
âHeâs here, just in the next county, practically a neighbor, and I thought if he could just see I wasnât trying to unduly influence young girlsâ¦â
Jonas closed his eyes and groaned. âHannah, heâs a couple of hours away. He doesnât have anything to do with you.â
âSome of his followers were at nearly every show protesting. They were saying things specifically about me to the press. I just thought if he met me, heâd see I wasnât such a bad person.â
âAnd what happened at that meeting you knew Iâd say absolutely no to?â
Hannah took a deep breath and let it out, her gaze sliding away from his. âHe made me angry, okay?â She did pull out of his arms and stood up, crossing the room with swift, long stridesârunway stridesâunconsciously graceful and sexy. She whirled around, her large eyes darkening with temper. âHonestly, Jonas, he was the most unreasonable man and very sleazy. I tried not to intrude and read his thoughts, but he was broadcasting so loudly and he was just disgustingâa pervert.â
Jonas groaned and passed a hand over his face. âDonât tell me you called him on it? You didnât, did you, Hannah?â
She put her hands on her too-slender hips, her chin going up. âI certainly did. He stood there with his pompous, pious attitude, all smug in front of his little group of followers, and acted so self-important, telling me what I did was an abomination. Itâs not like Iâm sleeping with designers. And I told him that.â
The knots in Jonasâs belly were becoming permanent. âYou told him you knew he was sleeping with his young followers, too, didnât you?â
âWell, he is! Innocent girls who trust him. I pointed out that he was the one following the path of the devil.â She pursed her lips. âAnd I might have given him a small demonstration of power when he got really nasty with me.â
Jonas groaned, nearly tugging out his hair in exasperation. âNo wonder he fixated on you.
You should have stayed away from him. He would have gone after more exciting prey if you hadnât engaged with him.â
âHeâs a pervert, Jonas, and you should lock him up.â
âThis is getting worse. You should have told me youâd confronted him.â He suddenly frowned. âWhat made you decide to confront him? You never do that kind of thing. Why in the world would you start with the Reverend?â
She shrugged, looking suddenly wary. âGreg thought it would be a good idea if we buried the hatchet. He didnât think it was good media to have a preacher protesting every show.
He thought if we got together, the Reverend would be reasonable.â
Both could hear someone fumbling at the lock.
âJonas, Hannah really needs to rest,â Sarah called out. âI mean it, if you donât stop arguing with her, weâre coming in and making you leave. Stop browbeating her.â
âGo away,â Hannah and Jonas shouted simultaneously.
Jonas curled his fingers into a tight fist and turned away from her. He was back to wanting to shake some sense into her. âYou listened to Greg Simpson involving security matters and not me?â
âYouâre making this personal, Jonas.â Hannah touched her throat as if it ached. âGreg is my agentâ¦â
âWas.â Jonas corrected. âIf the bastard shows up here, Iâm throwing him in jail.â
Hannah closed her mouth abruptly on whatever she was going to say, a small shiver running through her. It was becoming difficult to breathe. Her chest felt tight and her lungs burned, starved for air. âI donât want to argue about this. I did what I thought was best for my career.â
âYeah, because your career was so much more important than your life.â
Hannah hissed at him, her eyes glittering with sparks. âYouâre making me angry, Jonas. Is that what you want? Youâre angry at me so youâre going to say mean things to get me upset? You donât have to remind me that I screwed up. Iâm the one with my face hacked to pieces.â
Sarah thrust open the door, their loud voices disturbing all the Drakes, giving Sarah what she thought was sufficient reason to interfere. Hannah waved her hand and the wind rushed in from the balcony and slammed the door closed before Sarah could step into the room.
âDonât you dare do that,â Jonas snapped, stepping forward, crowding Hannahâs space, stalking her across the room as she retreated. âDonât you play your âpoor me, I just got out of the hospitalâ trump card. Not over this. How many times did I tell you how to handle these nutcases? Iâve been in the business for years, Hannah. Itâs my job to know how to handle them, yet youâre going to take the word of a layman over mine?â
âIt wasnât like that, Jonas,â Hannah protested, coming up against the wall. âAnd stop trying to intimidate me. It only makes me angry.â
âBe angry then. Maybe youâll figure it out this time, baby, because Iâm getting damned sick of always being last on your list. When I tell you something, do you think Iâm making it up just to annoy you?â
Hannah bit down hard on her retort and realized that for the first time since sheâd been attacked, she felt alive. Her blood was singing in her veins and her pulse was thundering in her ears. Jonas refused to treat her as if she was a fragile, delicate flower, too bruised to see the light of day. He was angry and he let her know. She felt normal. Jonas made her feel normal and it felt good. Just moments earlier sheâd been close to a panic attack, but just like that heâd wiped it out.
âSometimes, yes I do. You annoy me on purpose, especially when it comes to my job.
Youâve always hated it and made fun of it. Greg managed my career. I had to believe he suggested what he thought was best.â
Jonas went very still, his body crowding hers, so close her breasts brushed his chest and he was aware of her every breath. âAre you telling me Simpson suggested you give Venturi an autographed picture at every event he attended?â
She put her hand on his chest, fingers splayed wide, bracing herself for the storm. âI wanted to do something, and I asked him if he would see to it that Rudy received a picture from me. He said I should give it to him myself every time Rudy attended. He took photos a few times and had a couple of pieces written up about it. I did tell him I didnât want it used for publicity, but the articles had already been submitted.â
Jonas swore again, biting the words off between his teeth, his fingers sliding through her hair to the nape of her neck. âYouâre in so much trouble, Hannah.â There was both a warning and a drawling caress in his voice. âWhy didnât it occur to you that I had your best interests at heart?â
âMaybe it was the âBarbie dollâ comment. Or the âtaking your clothes off for the entire world to seeâ accusation, or the million and one barbs you like to throw at me.â She rubbed her throat again, wincing a little as the pad of her finger slid over the two deep slashes, still raw and red.
Jonas caught her hand and pulled it to his chest, capturing it there while he leaned in to brash the cuts with kisses. âDonât touch that. Is your throat hurting?â Her voice was even more of a whisper of sound.
âInside. It feels torn and braised.â
âThen donât argue with me. Iâm right anyway and you know it. You should have listened to me.â Jonas pressed feather-light lasses along her throat, and up the curve of her chin.
âSay it, Hannah. Say you should have listened to me.â
She couldnât think very well with his body pressed so close to hers and his mouth running over her skin. Sheâd been so determined to keep him at armâs length. Whatever everyone else thought, she knew instinctively that danger surrounded her. It wasnât coming from one particular direction, but the wind told her. She remained outside as much as possible, hoping to determine her enemy, but the personâs identity eluded her. She could only try to protect the people she loved. And she loved Jonas. She couldnât remember a time when she didnât.
âJonasâ¦â She inserted both hands between her and his chest, trying to get a little space.
âYou know this canât work.â Just the thought of losing him made her cold inside, but even Jonas needed protection. He didnât think so, but sheâd seen him vulnerable and in pain.
Better he be angry with her and know the complete truth, than later despise her.
Swift impatience crossed his face. âDonât even start, Hannah. Youâve pissed me off enough for one day.â
âIt canât work, Jonas. You think you see who I am, but you see who you want to see, just like my sisters do.â
âYour sisters see who you deliberately project for them,â he corrected. âI see you.â
âIâm a coward, Jonas,â she admitted, desperate to save him. âYouâd love me for a while, and then when you realized what I really am, youâd grow to despise me.â
He burst out laughing, bent forward and kissed the tip of her nose. âYou might be a coward when it comes to admitting you love me, but youâre no coward, baby.â
âI am, though.â Panic. It was coming back the way it always did. Full blown, attacking just as the man who had stabbed her had. Gripping her with tight fingers, until she fought for breath, until she couldnât think straight. It had gotten worse since sheâd been stabbed.
The walls closed in on her, and trapped as she was now, with Jonasâs body blocking her from running, she had to reach deep to stay in control.
âBecause youâd rather stay in Sea Haven than travel the world? Because youâre a little shy in public? Or you stutter once in a while when youâre around people you donât know? If you were a coward, Hannah, you wouldnât have tried to please your family by going out and pursuing a career you didnât even wantâa very public career.â
âI should have stood up for myself.â
âYes, you should have, but trying to please people you love doesnât make you a coward.
Exasperating maybe, but no coward. And youâve never had trouble standing up to me.â
She looked down at the evidence of the cuts on her hands and arms. âYes I do.â
âNo, you want to please me, just like you want to please your sisters, but you stand up and do whatever the hell you want to do when you want to do it. Iâm getting gray hair, I ought to know.â
Hannah frowned. Did she? She didnât know anymore. Her life had changed dramatically in seconds. She touched the terrible wounds on her face and neck, but avoided touching her breasts. She still saw every imperfection in her body, every extra pound, and now there were terrible, gaping wounds in her flesh. Jonas had cupped her breasts, looked at her as if she were the most beautiful woman in the world. She couldnât bear the memory of him looking at her so reverently, so lovingly.
Abruptly, she caught up her blanket, and took refuge on her balcony. Although the sun had already set and it would be difficult for a photographer to get a clear picture of her, she slid the blanket like a hood over her head to keep her face in the shadows.
Jonas followed her with a small frown. He had never been all that good with words when it came to Hannah. He was certain he could charm the birds out of the trees when it came to others, but Hannah turned him inside out and made him an idiot. He hated that she was hurting. Every instinct, body and mind, wanted to protect her, wanted to make it all better, but he had no idea how. He was fumbling his way, making mistakes and losing his temper.
Restlessly, he went to the railing to get a better look around them. There were no nearby buildings where anyone could lie on rooftops with rifles, but someone could get an angle from the bluff. The strong winds constantly shifting over the cliffs would make the shot extremely difficult, though. There were probably only a few dozen men in the world who could make that shot and he doubted if any of them had a grudge against Hannah.
âIâm safe up here. The wind would warn me.â
Jonas looked out over the water, noting the rocks. Boats couldnât get too close and the waves were too strong and choppy. Again, it would be difficult to get a good shot.
He leaned one hip against the railing and looked down at Hannahâs bent head. She still wasnât really looking at him, hiding her face in the blanket. He didnât want her hiding from him. Sheâd stood openly in front of Ilya Prakenskii, the wounds stark and raw on her pale face and neck, yet she hid from him. The lump in his throat was choking him and the wind was bringing in sea salt, burning his eyes.
âYou know Iâm not going to let you get away with this. What were you doing packing a bag?â He kept his gaze fixed on her face. Sheâd never been good at hiding her emotions from him.
Hannah pulled the blanket closer around her, obviously trying to shield her expression from him. âI just need a little space.â
Jonas sat on the railing and swung one foot back and forth, letting silence lengthen and grow. The sea birds called to one another as they flew in lazy circles overhead, one occasionally darting down to disappear into the sea before popping back up with a fish on his way back to the rock where heâd perch for the night. The ocean tumbled and rolled, a thunderous music ebbing and swelling in the background.
He let out a sigh. âYouâre lying to me again, Hannah.â He leaned forward to capture her elusive gaze with his. âDo you think Iâm going to let you get away with it just because you have a scar or two?â
She touched the unsightly lines on her face again with her fingertips. âIâm not asking you to. It isnât your business, Jonas.â
His eyebrow shot up. âReally? Youâre not my business?â He snorted derisively. âYouâve been my business since kindergarten. Why did you pack a bag, Hannah?â
Sparks leapt in her eyes and her white teeth snapped together with a bite of temper. âIâm protecting my sistersâand you.â Angry with him, she blurted out the truth and was instantly sorry.
He should have knownâshould have guessed. Hannah who thought she was such a coward. There was a curious melting sensation in the region of his heart. He crouched down in front of her and framed her face with both hands, leaning in to brush his mouth over hers. The softest of contacts, barely there, just a whisper of his lips over hers.
Hannah pulled back, blinking away tears. âYou canât do that anymore. Please, Jonas, just go.â
He sank back on his heels, studying her distressed expression. âYou know me better than that. Start talking, Hannah, and it had better make sense, because you and I both know, Iâm not letting you walk out of here alone. You want to leave, weâll leave together, but youâre not going anywhere alone.â
âI canât be with you. I just canât. You have to accept that itâs my decision.â
âNot on your life, baby.â
âJonas. God. Why canât you just let it be? Look at me. I canât look at myself without feeling sick.â The admission was made in her soft, husky voice, but the whisper of secrecy created an intimacy between them. âI canât bear for you to look at me like this.
And Iâd never, never want to be seen with you in public.â
âOh for Godâs sake.â Exasperated, he glared at her. âAre you kidding me?â
âJonas, youâre very good looking and youâre well known around here. You hold a political office. You ran for sheriff and you were elected. Can you see us side by side? Poor Jonas with his freak of a girlfriend.â
âYou arenât doing this, Hannah.â
âItâs the truth. I canât walk outside without photographers wanting to snap my picture and plaster it all over the gossip rags. With you, Iâd be in all the newspapers. I do have some vanity and some pride.â
âIâm not listening to this crap.â He stood, for one moment looming over her, throwing a dark shadow across her face, his jaw set, his mouth in a hard line, then he simply scooped her up and cradled her against his chest, sitting in her chair, holding her on his lap, blanket and all. âYouâre so silly sometimes, Hannah, you make me crazy. I donât give a damn what people say. I never have.â
He kissed the corner of her eye, pushing the blanket back, so he could rub his chin over the top of her silky curls and kiss her eyebrow, blaze a path to the corner of her mouth, skimming the angry red slashes with tiny butterfly kisses as he went. His mouth settled on hers with exquisite gentleness. Her lips were soft and full and trembled beneath his.
Her answering kiss was tentative, reluctant, so he kept coaxing her, nibbling at her lower lip, teasing the seam of her mouth with his tongue, brushing his lips back and forth over hers, tugging with his teeth until she gave in and opened her mouth to his.
He poured everything he was into the kiss, giving her love and tenderness and support, mixing it with desire and heat and raw need. His palm settled around the nape of her neck, fingers finding the treasure of platinum and gold corkscrew curls, holding her still so he could explore her mouth. He was careful, gentle, never letting his passion have free rein, never allowing it to carry him away. Her chest and ribs and stomach were covered in wounds and he took care not to rub against her skin although holding her wasnât enough.
Hannahâs mouth was warm and moist and tasted like she did, honey and spice and ultrafeminine. He could spend a lifetime kissing her. At first, she was passive, allowing him to kiss her, but as he coaxed, she began to come to life, breathing with him, tongue tangling with his, sending delicious little licks of electricity singing through his veins.
With great care, he brought her closer, angled her mouth for a deeper, more satisfying kiss.
Her lips heated, softened, clung to his. His body turned to steel, hard and hot and so alive he could feel lightning arcing through his bloodstream and heard thunder in his ears. His palm cradled the nape of her neck, and he shifted her just a little so she would fit more comfortably in his lap. He had her trapped, but was careful to make her feel safe, not captured. Loving Hannah wasnât easy. She was always on the verge of taking flight, almost as if she was afraid of the intensity of passion he roused in her.
One hand slid down her spine, a slow journey of discovery, while his mouth tried to sate an ever growing desire. Lust was sharp and deep, mixing with love, so full he couldnât tell where one started and the other left off. Hannah was an explosive mixture of exotic, innocence and pure unadulterated sex. She moved and he was instantly riveted. It didnât take much. Even her new voice seemed erotic to him. Hannah fit with him. Heâd known on some level even when they were kids, that she was the one. She was made for him. He kissed her again and again. Soft, gentle kisses, hard, hungry kisses, probing and exploring her heated, passionate mouth.
Hannah moved against him restlessly, her body in meltdown, her need of him shifting from mental to physical. His mouth seemed to be devouring her, yet she wanted more, wanted to be closer, wanted to feel the heat of his skin beneath her hands and mouth. She was so selfish. It was always about her. Her wants. Her needs. She was putting Jonas in danger, just as she was putting her sisters in danger by staying there. Abruptly she lifted her head, aching with wanting to hold him close, afraid she didnât have the necessary courage to let him go.
âJonasâ¦â She was going to have a panic attack. She was. Again. Right in front of him.
She couldnât catch her breath.
Couldnât think with the thundering beat of terror in her ears and fear pounding through her body. She hated the insidious weakness that crept up and pounced whenever she was certain she could be strong. It stole too much of her life away, it took her ability to function and reason.
âDonât say it, baby, please.â He rested his head against hers. âLet it be for now.â He dragged in a hard breath, trying to bring himself back to reality.
She was getting ready to bolt. Hannah was pulling back, away from him, and it had nothing at all to do with arguing. She was so determined to protect them all, she was making herself sick. And if she had one more panic attack and fell apart in front of him, he was going to pick her up and carry her off where no one else would ever find them, just like a caveman. It was going to happen.
Jonas pushed down his own panic and kissed her mouth and forehead, gently pulling back himself. He set her on her feet as he stood, holding out his hand to her, determined not to lose her. âI swear, Hannah, youâre thinking so much, smoke is coming out of your ears. Just stop. Letâs stay outside together until youâre too tired and Iâll lie down with you.
If youâre afraid of that, Iâll go sit out there on the bluff again and spend another night in the cold.â
Hannah hesitated, and then slowly stretched out her hand until her fingers lay in his palm.
He tightened his hold instantly, not giving her time to change her mind. The air was cooler as the breeze blew in from the sea, bringing salt and mist and the taste of the ocean. Heâd much rather lie beside her warm, soft body, even if it meant his own would be hard and painful, than spend another night worried while he sat on the bluff watching from a distance.
âI knew you were out there. It made me feel safe.â
âYou are safe with me.â He wrapped her back in her blanket to shelter her from the heavier wind. When she sat down, he pulled his chair close to hers. Leaning forward, he framed her face with his hands and looked directly into her eyes, capturing her gaze so she couldnât look away. âI know youâre scared, baby, but thatâs not being a coward. We have something special between us. You canât let this madman take it away.â
Hannah couldnât help herself. In spite of her resolve to protect him, she leaned close, putting her head on his shoulder, and snuggled into him. âI know we do, Jonas. I just donât know what to do about it.â She pressed her lips against his neck and sat up again, pulling back.
âI do,â he answered. âI know exactly what to do.â
She wasnât touching that. Instead, Hannah drew her knees up and stared out over the ocean, where the sun had already sunk into its depths. Earlier, the sun, looking like a giant red beach ball, glowing with promise, rays streaking out with orange and red bolts as it tipped, had seemed to pour molten lava into the churning waves. The entire sky had been layered in bright, vivid color. The sunset was always so beautiful, but she loved this time of day, just as night and day met and passed, like two ships out over the sea.
The sky darkened slowly, as if a blanket was slowly drawn over it. Clouds drifted lazily and stars glittered like gems. The moon, in whatever stage it happened to be in, gleamed a beautiful silver, spilling its light across the dark waves. Peace reigned.
Jonas had deliberately kept her out here, out where she could breathe freely and without too much worry. He had noticed her quickened pulse, her labored lungs and the desperation building in her. She thought sheâd been clever hiding it, she could always hide from everyoneâbut not Jonas.
Hannah rubbed her forehead. Her face itched and burned, but if she touched it, the sensation was worse. She felt revulsion in the pit of her stomach. She couldnât bear to look at her face in the mirror and she had no idea how much longer she could continue to face Jonas feeling so broken. She stretched out her hands to him for evidence. They were shaking.
Jonas caught both of them and brought them to his mouth, his lips tracing the slash marks. âGive yourself time, Hannah, but donât think you can shut me out. Iâm not about to let you go.â
âIâm trapped here now, Jonas. I canât go out in public. I canât remember what I might have done to make someone hate me so much. I canât make love to you ever againâ¦â Her voice broke and she snatched her hands back, bringing the blanket up around her face to cover her sob. âI hate thisâthis self-pity. I promised myself I wouldnât do it, but I have to stay away from you. If I see you, Jonas, itâs so much worse. I canât see you.â
He felt raw inside, torn open with his guts spilling out. He dropped his face into his hands for a moment, trying to clear his brain, trying to allow himself to think clearly. He took a deep shuddering breath and straightened his shoulders. âYouâre confused, Hannah, and itâs understandable. Fortunately for both of us, Iâm not. You need me, whether you think so or not, and I know damn well I need you.â
He waited until she looked up at him. âI do, Hannah. I never thought Iâd look at a woman and know sheâs the reason the sun comes up in the morning, but you are.â
âWhat if they hurt you? Or my sisters? Jonas, what if some madman takes a knife and comes at you in the dark? You just turn around and heâs slashing you. Saying âIâm sorry, Iâm sorry,â but cutting you into little pieces. I couldnât bear that. I really couldnât. Iâd rather give you up and have you stay aliveâunhurt.â
Jonasâs head went up alertly. âWhat did he say?â He reached out and pulled her hands away from her face. âLook at me, Hannah. He said something to you?â
She frowned, trying to remember. âIâm so tired, Jonas, and I canât think straight when Iâm tired.â She glanced inside at the bed. âIâm afraid to lie down.â
He tamped down impatience, his thumb sliding over the backs of her fingers, stroking her sensitive skin. âI am, too. Nightmares are no fun.â He tugged her hand, determined to get her to lie down on the bed with him and rest. She was exhausted, sitting up night after night. Perhaps it had been a mistake bringing her home from the hospital so soon. At least there, they could have knocked her out so she could get some rest.
âCome on, baby, Iâm not taking no for an answer and youâre too tired to argue with me when you know you wonât win.â He tugged at her hand, taking her with him back inside her bedroom.
She went with him reluctantly, settling beside him, insisting he keep the French doors open. Jonas wrapped his arm around her waist and held her close. She was stiff at first, but slowly, as he nuzzled her neck and pressed kisses into her hair without attempting anything else, she relaxed against him, her body soft and feminine.
âIâm hurting my sisters. I hate it. I can feel them all the time nowâexcept Elle. She stays away from me. She doesnât want to intrude on my privacy. But I feel so horrible because I canât go back to the other me.â
She leaned into him more, fitting her body closely with his, brushing his groin with her bottom and sending an electrical current racing through his bloodstream. Jonas gritted his teeth and breathed.
âCan you feel them? The house is filled with grief and sympathy and confusion. Iâve done that, Jonas, and I donât know how to undo it.â
He brushed kisses over her eyebrow and down along the savage wounds to the corner of her mouth and then to her throat. âYou didnât do it, a man with a knife did it. We love each other, all of us, Hannah, and weâll be stronger when we come out of this. He canât destroy our family. Your sisters will give you whatever you need to cope with this, and theyâll cope in their own way. They donât baby you because they think you canât handle it, they do so because they want to show you love.â
âWhy do I get so upset with them?â
There was desperation in her voice. Jonas shifted her against his chest, so that her head rested on his shoulder and he could wrap both arms around her. âAnger is a part of recovery and all of us are here, close to you. Someone hurt you, Hannah, traumatized you, youâre going to be angry one moment and afraid the next. Thatâs natural and we all expect it.â
âI donâtâdidnât. Iâm ashamed that I canât stop hurting everyone.â
His hand slid over her hair, tangled in the silky strands.
âGo to sleep, baby, and let me worry tonight. Your sisters are gathering to aid you. I can feel the surge of power in the house. When you wake up, your wounds wonât be quite so raw and hopefully youâll feel a little more at peace.â
Hannah allowed her eyes to close as she inhaled, dragging Jonasâs scent into her lungs.
He felt, smelled and tasted so familiar to her. Safe. Strong. So Jonasâand he was right.
She felt the rise of feminine power, strong and sure and loving, all directed toward her.
Tears stung her eyes and wet her lashes. No matter how upset they were, her sisters reached out to her with love and healing.
âI love being a Drake,â she whispered.
âI do, too,â he answered and brushed another kiss along the nape of her neck.