Read The Spiral Path Page 13


  "You must leave me," he said with barely suppressed violence. "For both our sakes."

  "To say that, you are more honorable than you believe." More Rainey than Sarah, she stepped nearer, struggling with the desire to touch him. "I will release you if you truly wish it--but only if you will swear that you don't love me."

  "This isn't about love!"

  "How can marriage not be about love?" She stopped so close they were almost touching. "Persuade me that you don't love me, and you are free."

  "Free?" His mouth twisted. "You were with me every moment I was in Africa. In the bleakest hours, thoughts of you were my only link to sanity. You were my salvation then. I can't drag you down into my darkness now."

  "As long as we're together, I won't mind the darkness." Rainey turned her head and kissed his hand, tears stinging her eyes as she abandoned all pretense that she was acting. "Why, Kenzie? I don't understand any more than Sarah does."

  He flinched, retreating into his role as a shield against her loss of control. "Don't cry, Sarah. I can't bear to think I'm hurting you."

  She choked back a sob. "But you are."

  The script called for him to kiss her tears away. For a taut moment they stared at each other, caught between the force of the story and painful reality. She thought he'd withdraw without touching her, but he bent into the kiss. The frayed line between characters and actors dissolved and she tilted her head back. Their lips met, his salty with her tears. It was not the kiss of a Victorian soldier with his innocent fiancee, but the embrace of a husband desiring his wife.

  The script fell from her hands as she clung to him like a drowning woman to a life line. For months she'd hungered for his touch. This was insane, but she didn't want to think or judge, only feel. "Ah, Kenzie, I've missed you so much..."

  "Not as much as I missed you." His arms encircled her and they kissed with explosive force. She wrapped herself around him, trying to melt into his body, until he released her, swearing under his breath. "I should never have suggested rehearsing in such an isolated place."

  Shaken by his withdrawal, she said acidly, "You mean this isn't a planned seduction?"

  "Hardly. I've hurt you enough. The last thing I want to do is hurt you again."

  "Like John Randall, you're painfully honorable, at least in this." She placed her hands on his shoulders, slid them down his arms, feeling his muscles tense at the caress. What did she want tonight, wisdom or passion?

  She began to unfasten his buttons. "I already feel miserable. At least if we sleep together, there are compensations."

  He caught her hand. "Strictly temporary ones, with a fierce morning after."

  She tugged his shirt loose. "I've read that it's pretty common for couples in the process of getting divorced to sleep together, so this is normal behavior."

  "Normal, maybe, but not wise."

  "To hell with being wise." She kissed the hollow above his collarbone, enjoying the shiver that went through him.

  "Are you sure?" His hands slid down her back to cradle her hips, drawing her tight against him.

  She hesitated, knowing she should take this chance to change her mind. But she wanted him so much it was a physical ache, and they would never have such privacy again. "I'm sure. This will change nothing, but ... I want to be with you one last time." Perhaps a final intimacy was needed to say good-bye.

  "Then let's make it a night to remember." He caught her up in his arms and carried her into the bedroom, enfolding her body after he laid her on the bed. As he kissed her throat, he murmured, "No past, no future. Only now."

  "This won't even have happened." She buried her hands in his hair and released the doubts and fears that ruled her life. For now they were lovers, and nothing else mattered.

  They came together with fierceness and tenderness, ravenous hunger and taut restraint, knowing each other so well that no words were needed. She cried out when he entered her, wanting to weep at the familiarity and rightness of their joining. Why had he thrown away something so precious? She buried the thought, concentrating on the fever in her blood, the rising urgency that drowned out mind and pain and anger.

  Until in the firestorm of fulfillment, she was free.

  * * *

  CHAPTER 14

  An apartment carved from a cliff was as deeply silent as a tomb. So silent that Kenzie thought he could hear the beating heart of the woman sleeping in his arms.

  Faint light glowed from the living room to show the elegant contours of Rainey's shoulder and torso. Her body wasn't as dramatically sexy as some, but discipline and hard work had made her supple and perfectly toned, and she radiated the allure of passionate honesty and deep feeling. He wanted to lean forward and lick those soft curves and hidden places until she woke with slow-building desire.

  Swearing silently, he slipped from the bed. Exhausted by days of grueling work, she didn't stir. He wondered how long it would be until she regretted succumbing to their mutual craziness. Probably about half a second after she woke up.

  He pulled on his jeans and shirt and left the bedroom, crossing the living room to go out onto the balcony. Sharply cold night air on bare skin dispelled the physical languor of lovemaking. He braced his hands on the railing, wondering why the devil he'd let them end up in bed.

  Because he had no willpower where Rainey was concerned, which was the underlying reason for letting their marriage end. Tonight's intimacy would rip open the wounds of separation all over again. Even so, he couldn't make himself regret what had happened. For a brief spell, he'd been ... happy.

  He'd even been weak enough to wonder what Rainey would do if he begged for forgiveness and another chance. Probably she'd say no, but the chance that she might be willing was dangerously tempting.

  Luckily sanity returned when his blood cooled. Sex, no matter how great, changed nothing, except maybe to make matters worse. They were still bound for divorce, still facing weeks of painful proximity. Working together had been hard when the barriers were firmly in place between them. Now the treacherous, illogical part of his brain would want to be with her all the time even though tonight's lapse was an unplanned aberration.

  He wrapped his arms around himself, shivering from the cold. Maybe he should blame John Randall, whose helpless longing for Sarah had oozed into Kenzie's brain and emotions. Yes, he'd blame Randall--if they'd been rehearsing a different story, he wouldn't have lost his control so disastrously.

  Uneasily he wondered where Randall would take him next.

  They'd been working on different continents for a month, with Kenzie in Greece and Rainey in California. Even daily phone calls didn't ease the bitter ache of separation. It would be at least another couple of weeks until they could see each other again, and she thought there was a very real chance that she'd perish from longing. Not for sex, even though every night brought scorching dreams, but because she missed the emotional intimacy. The knowledge that Kenzie understood and accepted, and was always on her side. She supposed that kind of closeness was why the institution of marriage survived.

  If she hadn't wanted him so much, she wouldn't have blurted out what should have been said face-to-face, and only when and if the right moment arrived. During one of their daily phone calls, she said, "Maybe it's time to have a baby--I could keep it around for company when we're working at opposite ends of the world. Maybe two babies, so we could each take one on location."

  The silence was palpable even across thousands of miles. They'd never discussed children, and now she knew why--her instincts had tried to warn her that the subject would be a source of conflict. She was about to start babbling to fill the blankness when he said, "An interesting thought, but cats housebreak much more easily."

  Though they'd never had a real fight, his tone put a wall between them more frightening than an argument. "I was just kidding, Kenzie. Kids have their points, but they don't make really good pets."

  More silence. "You wouldn't have mentioned a baby unless the subject was on your mind. It's perfectly
reasonable to want children. Most people seem to."

  Before she could reply, a knock sounded on the door of her trailer, followed by the director's personal assistant. "Miss Marlowe, you're needed on the set."

  "I'll be along in a few minutes."

  The assistant looked worried. "You need to come right away. He wants to shoot against the storm clouds, and the sky is changing fast."

  She clutched the phone, torn between the need to talk things out with Kenzie and the demands of her job. Duty won. She said into the phone, "I'll call you back later."

  "It will be too late--a ten-hour time difference, remember. I'll talk to you tomorrow. Good night, my dear."

  Then he was gone. She followed the assistant outside, biting her lower lip so hard the lipstick needed renewing. Luckily this scene called for her to stand around looking soulful rather than actually act, because her concentration was nonexistent.

  Her anxiety grew until, at the end of the day's shooting, she asked the director to rearrange the schedule to give her three days off. After an initial howl of protest, he cooperated. She'd never requested special treatment before.

  Kenzie was starring in a big, splashy action movie currently shooting on the island of Crete. Since he'd given her a shockingly expensive share in the private jet network for her birthday, she had Emmy arrange a flight to Greece ASAP.

  Two hours later, she was in the air. She debated letting him know she was coming, and decided surprise was best. If he had time to rehearse a response, she'd never find out what he really felt about children, and they desperately needed to have an honest conversation on the subject.

  She flew through the night and into morning, landing in Crete near noon. A hired car waited to take her out to the movie location.

  As the car wound through the stark, sun-saturated landscape, she stared out the window, wondering what she would say to her husband. All her life she'd wanted children--at least two, because she'd hated being an only child.

  She had dreamed of having Kenzie's children in images so vivid she'd wake up reaching for a soft infant form. They'd have three, she thought, two girls and a boy. She could see their faces in her dreams. They would be raised with the stability she hadn't known with Clementine, and the warmth she'd never received from her grandparents.

  But even more than babies, she wanted Kenzie. If he truly didn't want children--well, she would have to accept that. Heaven knew there were powerful arguments against having kids when they both had such demanding careers. But some actors managed it, and she thought they could, too.

  Maybe he'd only been startled by her bringing up the subject of children so suddenly, and he'd like the idea after he got used to it? She suspected that was pure wishful thinking on her part.

  She'd visited Kenzie earlier in the shoot, so it was easy to get admitted to the production site. Recognizing her, the security guard grinned toothily and pointed out the right trailer, assuring her that her husband was inside.

  The trailer was parked in the shade of a cypress tree, its air conditioner roaring. Since the door was unlocked, she swung it open and climbed two steps into the cool interior. Blinking at the dimness after the brilliant sunshine, she called, "Kenzie? I hope you're in the mood for a surprise."

  "Shit!" The voice was throaty and female.

  Rainey's eyes adjusted, and she froze. Kenzie was sprawled against a mound of pillows on the bed, straddled by his mostly naked costar, Angie Greene. Her red-nailed fingers on his zipper, she made a rueful face. "You shoulda called first."

  Rainey felt as if she'd been slammed in the belly with a baseball bat. This couldn't be happening, it was the stuff of cheap melodrama. Maybe they were rehearsing for a bedroom scene. But Kenzie made no move to explain or deny. After the first flash of shock, he just stared at her, his expression as unreadable as granite. She could almost hear wheels clicking in his brain over the best way to play this scene.

  Angie sat back on her heels, her crotch still covering Kenzie's. Flipping her tumbling blonde hair over her shoulders, she said breezily, "Don't look so upset, Raine. This is just a location fuck. No big deal."

  Maybe it wasn't for Angie Greene, a voluptuous chaser of men and headlines, but it was a big deal to Rainey, Unable to bear the thought of breaking down in front of them, she fumbled for control, and found her grandmother's cool detachment. "So inconsiderate of me not to realize that my husband couldn't be trusted out of my sight. I'd expected better of him."

  Kenzie swung Angie to one side, setting her on the bed beside him. "I'm sorry, Rainey. But maybe this is for the best."

  Any frail hope that they might survive this shattered. She tugged off her wedding ring and threw it on the floor so hard that it bounced and skittered across the trailer. "My lawyer will contact yours."

  Then she spun on her heel and left, grateful she hadn't dismissed the hired car, even more grateful that she hadn't arrived five minutes later and caught them in the act. If that had happened, she'd have been violently ill.

  Shock kept her impassive until she was back at the airport. Mercifully, the jet hadn't yet been assigned another trip, so she booked it for the return flight.

  She cried for seven thousand miles.

  Rainey awoke weeping to find Kenzie sitting on the edge of the bed, a gentle hand on her arm and his expression concerned. "Are you all right?"

  She almost blurted out that she'd had a ghastly nightmare of him in bed with another woman, then bit off her words when she realized that she'd been dreaming the truth. Being with Kenzie had brought it all back, as agonizing as when it happened. He'd been right to warn her the night before that the joys of lust would be followed by a fierce morning after. She drew a shuddering breath. "I've been better."

  His face darkened. "I'm sorry. I should have taken you back to the hotel after the spare ribs. Stupid of me not to guess what might happen here."

  She weighed the pleasure against the revitalized pain. "Maybe this was better. You were unfinished business. Now I think there will be some closure."

  "How satisfying to know that the night's exertions weren't wasted."

  He started to rise but she stopped him. "Since we're here with our hair down, this is a good time to ask why you were so willing to throw away our marriage. Was it that horrible?"

  "Not horrible at all." He hesitated, choosing his words. "Like John Randall, I'm not fit to be a husband. The difference is that I was slower to realize it. Less honorable. It would have been better never to have married."

  "For heaven's sake, Kenzie, this isn't 1880. Grand statements about honor don't cut it. You were a pretty amiable husband, and you didn't seem unhappy. Quite the contrary. Was that all acting?"

  "I wasn't acting. But what we had was an affair, not a real marriage."

  "So it was all sex."

  For a moment she thought he was going to agree. Instead he said reluctantly, "There was more than sex. But a marriage requires two qualified and willing people. I proposed on a selfish impulse because I enjoyed being with you, but never really thought about what it means to be married."

  "You could have found a better way of ending things once you decided you wanted out."

  He grimaced. "I'm too right-brained for advance planning. Rather than thinking the situation through, I let events drift until they exploded into a situation that was far crueler than anything I'd have consciously chosen. That was unforgivable on my part."

  "Few things are truly unforgivable." Painful though this discussion was, at least they were finally talking honestly. "If either of us had shown an ounce of common sense, we could have gone our separate ways after our post-Pimpernel fling, and avoided all of the painful messiness of marriage and divorce."

  "Common sense has never been my strong point." He smiled faintly. "Think of the trauma of divorce as adding to your creative repertoire."

  "I prefer to get my experience vicariously." But he was right. No matter how rotten an event, it could be thought of as fuel for the creative process.

&nbs
p; "Some things should be experienced directly." He tugged her blanket down, exposing her to the waist. "I agree that once we go back, it should be as if this never happened. But common sense says that since tonight is off the clock, we ought to take full advantage of it." He bent forward to kiss her navel, swirling his tongue in a circle.

  She gasped as her lower belly tightened in response. "If ... if you do that again, I'm going to be in no condition to analyze whether your thinking is warped."

  He did it again, and she stopped thinking entirely.

  Val looked up from her desk when the office door opened, sighing with relief when she saw that it was Rainey, who seemed to have survived her abduction. Heading for the espresso machine, she asked, "Any catastrophes strike while I was gone?"

  "Nary a one. Probably because it's Sunday, and at least some of the world isn't working."

  "But you are. What about Marcus?"

  "He's having lunch with friends in Santa Fe. I've been covering for you, in case you'd rather not have to explain your extended disappearance with Kenzie."

  The espresso machine gurgled disgustingly as it delivered a shot into Rainey's cup. As she took milk from the refrigerator, she said, "You might as well ask what happened before you perish of curiosity."

  "I could make a pretty good guess about what happened, but I wouldn't mind hearing the gory details."

  Rainey scooped foamed milk into her cup, then settled into a stuffed chair. "Kenzie took me to see some kittens and to a great barbecue shack, then to an amazing bed-and-breakfast apartment carved into a cliff."

  "I read about that place. I'd love to stay there sometime."

  "It was incredibly peaceful--a world away from the stresses of moviemaking. We talked about Sarah, and Kenzie persuaded me that I'm the best choice to play her."

  "Great! I've thought all along that you'd do a dynamite job in the role."

  Rainey made a sour face. "Everyone seems to think that but me. However, the practical arguments are strong, so I guess I'll have to do it. Kenzie had a copy of the script, so we did a read-through."