Total pages in book: 42
Estimated words: 40057 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 200(@200wpm)___ 160(@250wpm)___ 134(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 40057 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 200(@200wpm)___ 160(@250wpm)___ 134(@300wpm)
His grip tightened, almost painful in its desperation. His voice was rough when he rasped, “Not my blood, baby.”
A shuddering exhale rushed out of me, and I pressed my forehead harder into his chest as my whole body shook. I’d barely managed to keep myself together, but the thought of him getting hurt because of me was too much. That was what finally broke me
Reeve didn’t hush me. Or tell me to breathe. He just held on, his arms locked around me like he thought someone might try to rip me away again.
My pulse slowly synced to his, the tremors in my muscles easing even as tears continued to stream down my cheeks. I was returning to myself, safe in his arms.
Reeve had found me. He’d gotten to me in time. And killed for me. To make sure I was safe. The truth of that burrowed deep. Instead of freaking me out, it was more grounding than his embrace.
Rage still simmered in every line of his body as he carried me to an SUV. It didn’t scare me, though. I knew he’d never hurt me. He’d do whatever was needed to protect me.
I clung to him because he was the only thing that felt real. Something settled inside me with absolute clarity. I would never walk away from him. Not after this.
Reeve had proven he was a man who would burn the world down before he let me be hurt.
Because he was mine. And I was his. Not just in the heat of sex. But with every breath I took.
I knew Reeve’s emotions were as high as mine because he didn’t let anyone touch me. He carried me the whole way to the SUV, his muscles rigid with leftover fury. Rebel opened the back door for us, and Reeve gently settled me onto the bench seat. Then he quickly circled around to climb in beside me, positioning my body against his like he couldn’t stand the idea of even an inch of distance.
Rebel got behind the wheel without a word. Reeve tugged me closer the second the engine started, sliding his arm around my waist to keep me against his side. His other hand found my thigh, his fingers tightening just enough to let me know he needed the contact as badly as I did.
I let my head rest against his shoulder, letting his nearness and the vibration soothe me. We didn’t speak. Every stroke of his thumb against my leg said more than words ever could.
I knew I was safe. That he had me. And he wasn’t letting go.
The world outside blurred past the tinted windows. Reeve’s breathing slowly evened out, but mine stayed unsteady, catching every time the memory of that cold room tried to claw its way back into my mind.
He seemed to sense when I struggled, pressing his lips to my head and stroking his thumb against my leg.
As we neared the Hounds compound, I twisted my fingers into the fabric of his shirt. Shame clawed at the edges of the calm he was giving me. “I’m sorry.”
Reeve stilled, his muscles tightening.
“For what?” His voice was low enough that Rebel probably couldn’t hear it.
“For all of this.” I had to swallow the lump in my throat to continue. “If I’d seen what Jareth was sooner. Hadn’t let myself be used. You wouldn’t have had to—”
He turned his head just enough that I felt the heat of his stare burn against my cheek, cutting off my words. “Don’t.”
The single word cut through my spiraling thoughts.
“But you—”
“You lived.” His hand slid from my thigh to my hip, gripping me tightly. “That’s the only thing that matters.”
Warmth rushed through me, wobbly and overwhelming. I tucked myself closer, my knees angled toward him and my fingers fisted in his shirt. He pressed a kiss to the top of my head, and tears streamed down my cheeks again. Healing ones this time.
Feeling guilty didn’t solve anything. I hated what he and his club brothers had been forced to do to rescue me, but he was right. I’d told myself that I just needed to survive. And I had. That needed to be enough for now.
As soon as Rebel pulled up in front of the clubhouse, Reeve climbed out of the SUV and tugged me with him. He didn’t stop moving until the door to his room slammed shut behind us, keeping one arm around me like he expected someone to rip me out of his grip again. Only when the lock clicked did he finally turn me toward him. His palms slid over my body, barely-contained violence simmering beneath every breath as he made sure I wasn’t hurt.
“I’m okay,” I whispered, lifting a hand to grip his wrist. “The drugs wore off. And I was careful not to fight the restraints too hard. I knew you’d come for me.”