Once Touched

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Once Touched Page 22

by Laura Moore


  Beneath her, the heated steel of his erection burned. She sank lower, riding it, as she kissed her way down the taut column of his neck to the hollow located at the base of his throat. Scooting back, she continued her erotic journey, laving the dark discs of his nipples, the stark ridges of his abdomen while her fingers busied themselves, tugging at his zipper and then shoving his jeans down. Freed, he sprang into her waiting hands. Pulsed as her lips touched his bulbous head.

  “Quinn, oh God—” His words ended on a groan of agonized pleasure as her tongue licked him in a slow sweep.

  Opening her mouth, she took him deep. She’d come to love this, the taste of him, an extraordinary and unique blend of salt and tangy spice, the essence of the male animal. She loved the urgency she was able to rouse in him as she alternately lapped and sucked, his fingers curling in her hair, his tendons standing ropelike against the strong column of his neck, his hips bucking under her as his control slipped. The pleasure stark on his face as she quickened her pace and her hands joined in caressing him, pumping and squeezing.

  She knew he was close, and heat pulsed urgently inside her. When his fingers stayed her, she looked up, questioning.

  “I need you to take me inside and feel you come with me. It’s how I find peace.”

  The unvarnished honesty of his request had her blinking back fresh tears.

  Quick work was made of the condom. Rising onto her knees, she positioned him at the entrance to her core and sank down, taking him inch by inch, reveling in the sensation of him filling her. Their eyes locked as he gripped her hips and began to move, his thrusts as tight and controlled as a great engine gathering steam. She followed him, answering his thrusts with a rolling grind of her hips as their gasps and whispers filled the air. Together they traveled to a magic place far from the shadows that hovered.

  STANDING IN A bridal shop in front of one of those nasty three-way mirrors, dressed in a floor-length satin gown while a woman with a mouthful of very sharp pins knelt inches away from her butt, wasn’t exactly Quinn’s idea of a rockin’ good time. Thank God for great soon-to-be sisters-in-law, crisp champagne, and a bridesmaid’s dress that even Quinn had to admit was stunning—not that Tess, Italian beauty and event planner extraordinaire, would ever choose anything ugly.

  Mia, who was also wearing her bridesmaid’s dress, was grinning. “Wow. Just wow. Tess, you have some kind of crazy talent. Not every woman could find bridesmaids’ dresses that, A, are this gorgeous, and B, can make the three of us look equally fantastic. Don’t you agree, Anna?”

  Anna Vecchio, not to be left out of all the San Francisco fun, had arranged to have her fitting done simultaneously in New York. She twirled in the rectangular screen of Tess’s iPad, showing off her dress, her dark hair flowing out behind her. “It’s beautiful. And we do look amazing. I love the rosy gold color on the two of you. Brava, cara,” she said and then launched into rapid-fire Italian that had Tess laughing and swiping at her eyes.

  “Translation, please,” Quinn said.

  Tess gave a little hiccup and swiped at her eyes. “Anna was just saying that she knew there’d been a reason why she let me leave New York. The reward was seeing me happier and more beautiful than she had ever imagined. And that’s all because of you and your family, Quinn,” she said.

  “Aw,” Quinn said, and risked the seamstress’s wrath by going over and hugging Tess. “You’re not so bad yourself, city girl.”

  “I also told Tess that it was totally worth losing her if it meant my restaurant’s cellar would be stocked with the finest California pinot noir,” Anna said.

  “The jury’s still out on how the few barrels we saved will mature, but thanks for the vote of confidence,” Mia said.

  Quinn plucked two more glasses of champagne off the silver tray, passed them to her friends, and then took one herself. Directing her attention to Anna, still framed in the iPad screen, she asked, “Anna, is your glass full?” At Anna’s nod she continued. “Then I propose a toast to Tess, who’s not only the anti-bridezilla but is also the rare and generous woman in having chosen gorgeous dresses for her bridesmaids rather than cringe-inducing horrors—not that you sell those here,” she said with an extra-bright smile for the store’s manager. “To the future Tess Casari Knowles.”

  Glasses were clinked and then drained, and then Quinn and Mia stood docilely while the two seamstresses made their final pinnings.

  “So I guess this fitting means we’ll have to keep on the straight and narrow for the remainder of the holiday season,” Quinn said after she’d changed back into her own skirt and silk blouse. “Too bad. Roo makes the most amazing Christmas log.”

  Mia gave a pained look and glanced at her bridesmaid’s dress, now back on its hanger. “Do you think I should ask to have the waist let out a little?”

  From behind the heavy silver curtain of the changing room, Tess said, “Don’t you dare, Mia! You looked amazing in that dress. And, Quinn, you haven’t experienced real temptation until you get a whiff of my mother’s panettone. I could eat one every day all December long.”

  Then she stepped out from behind the curtain and Quinn and Mia both gave an “Oh!” followed by “How absolutely lovely!” and “Ward won’t know what hit him.”

  Anna said, “Come closer,” and then gave a happy cry. “Bellissima!”

  No translation needed for that or for the radiant smile on Tess’s face.

  The lace trumpet gown with its off the shoulder sleeves caressed Tess’s knockout curves. The gown was a creamy white, the perfect foil for Tess’s olive skin tone, dark eyes, and long brown hair. She looked elegant and beautiful and wonderfully romantic.

  “It’s the closest I could come to the dress my mother wore for her wedding,” Tess said. “As you can see, Mia, I don’t have an inch to spare, either. What I do have, however, is a formula—a regimen, if you will—designed to keep the pounds off during the holiday season.”

  “Do share,” Anna said, leaning forward.

  “It’s simple. For every slice of chocolate log or, in my case, enormous wedge of panettone, engage in two hours of sex.”

  Quinn had just taken a sip of champagne. She spewed it out—luckily nowhere near Tess and her glorious dress. She patted herself dry while around her the others snorted in laughter.

  “Seriously, I tried it this fall when I made a huge batch of penne with a sauce of tomato, cream, and five cheeses. It worked like a charm.” Tess grinned.

  “Love that recipe of your mother’s. The most delicious calorie bomb in existence,” Anna said. “And you didn’t have to wear your crisis pants all week?”

  “They remained in the closet.”

  “A miracle diet.” Anna clapped. “Fantastic! I’ll put it to the test with Lucas tonight. We’re going out to a friend of mine’s pop-up restaurant tonight. His desserts are divinely decadent.”

  “Report back next week,” Tess told Anna.

  “But make sure you keep the results between us. If news of Tess’s miracle regimen gets out, Reid is going to be hand-feeding me cake,” Mia said. Biting her lower lip, she blushed.

  “I don’t see anything wrong with that picture,” Anna said. “Do you, Tess?”

  Tess laughed. “Can’t say I do. What else is winter for? Come to think of it, I may let Ward in on my secret routine when we get home.”

  “Hello!” Quinn waved her hands. “Could you please remember that two of these men happen to be my brothers?”

  For a woman dressed in a lace wedding gown, Tess’s expression could only be described as wicked. “Don’t tell me you and Ethan aren’t up to the prescribed minutes, because I won’t believe you. Not after what I interrupted yesterday afternoon.”

  Before Quinn could begin to formulate a pithy response, Mia gave a very uncharacteristic whoop. “Yes! I’ve been wondering when the pair of you would be caught out in the open.”

  “Only a matter of time,” Tess said.

  “Well, hallelujah.” Mia grinned at Quinn’s baleful look.
“What? Of course we knew it would happen. You gave Ethan a dog, Quinn.”

  “And who is this Ethan?” Anna interrupted.

  “He’s a photojournalist. Very handsome, very intense. You’ll love him, Anna. He’s coming to the wedding.”

  “He is?” Mia asked.

  “Mm-hmm.” Tess nodded. “Didn’t want Quinn to be all by her lonesome.”

  “You know, Tess, you’re slipping a little as perfect sister-in-law-to-be.”

  Tess gave an eloquent shrug. “Mia, you want the job?”

  “Nope. I’d rather hear all about this much-awaited development. Ethan’s a really good man, Quinn.”

  Mia and Tess didn’t know the half of how good a man he was. A lump formed in her throat as she remembered the raw pain in Ethan’s voice while he recounted what had happened on that dusty road to Kandahar. “Yeah, he is.”

  Something of what she was feeling must have shown on her face, for Tess said, “It’s the real thing, huh?”

  Quinn gave a small nod.

  “I saw that same expression staring back at me in the mirror when I got together with Ward. A little terrified and a lot soul-deep happy. I never felt a tenth of that when I was with David.”

  “David was too busy giving you emotional whiplash,” Anna said. “A selfish man to the end—even when he dressed it up as concern for you.”

  Tess’s first husband, David, had died from a brain tumor. But instead of telling Tess about his illness, he’d decided to keep Tess in the dark and even did his best to push her away emotionally by being deliberately cruel so she wouldn’t mourn his death. A frigging lousy way to treat anyone, let alone a loved one. It was more than simply lousy. It was cowardly.

  It made Quinn appreciate Ethan’s courage in opening up all the more. It would have been easy for him to continue stonewalling her. Instead he’d revealed something he believed to be truly awful about himself.

  “Maybe you’re right, Anna,” Tess conceded. “But perhaps because of what David put me through, I can love Ward all the more and appreciate how good and strong he is and what a wonderful husband and father he’ll be.” Looking at Quinn, she smiled. “I’m glad you and Ethan are together.”

  “Yes, we’re really happy for you,” Mia said, nodding.

  “I’m looking forward to meeting Ethan when he comes to New York,” Anna said. “I’m only sad that I didn’t get to loan you my nonna’s lucky scarf—I’d have been three for three.”

  Anna had inherited a very nice silk scarf from her grandmother and firmly believed that it was lucky. Tess and Mia had bought into the lore, and now it was talked about as if it were a talisman that brought true love.

  “Tess, I’m sorry,” Anna continued. “But I have to go back to the restaurant.”

  “Of course! Say hi to Rupert for me. And call me tomorrow and tell me how every dish was.”

  “Prometto.”

  Tess smiled. “I only wish you were coming with us.”

  “We’ll have our time in New York. All of you come prepared to eat, drink, and dance yourselves silly—almost as fun as marathon sex.” Blowing a kiss in their direction, Anna signed off with a jaunty “Ciao, care mie.”

  After thanking Dominique, the bridal shop’s manager, and the in-house seamstresses for giving them a perfect morning and double-checking that the dresses would be shipped to the Waldorf-Astoria in New York, where Tess and Ward and Quinn’s family had booked rooms for the wedding, Tess slipped behind the silver curtains and reemerged dressed in a navy pencil skirt and a white fitted silk blouse and the high-heel pumps she favored. An artfully knotted bright silk scarf completed the outfit. She looked nearly as glamorous as she had in her wedding dress.

  “The city girl is back,” Quinn noted.

  Tess laughed. “I never thought I’d admit this, but I’ve gotten used to the soft ground and the comfort of my cowboy boots. Still, it’s fun dressing up and going out on the town with you both, isn’t it? And I’m using today to get used to wearing heels on sidewalks again, so be prepared to cover a lot of ground, ladies.”

  With a cheery wave to Dominique and a last round of thanks, they stepped outside. Pedestrians were bundled in wool coats and lightweight puffers, their bags bumping against their legs as they hurried along Grant Avenue. The outsides of the stores were decorated with lots of evergreens, gold and silver, and winter-wonderland-themed windows. The holiday season was in full swing in Union Square.

  “I do love this season.” Tess smiled brightly. “Ready to hit the stores? We’re going to go full tilt and work up an appetite so we can do justice to the lunch Anna’s treating us to.”

  “We’ll do our best to keep up, right, Mia?” Quinn said as they walked past the hardy souls drinking their coffee and curled over their cellphones and tablets in the outside seating areas of the cafés.

  “We’d be lousy bridesmaids if we didn’t,” Mia replied. “I hope I find something for your dad, Quinn. He makes shopping for my uncle Thomas easy. Luckily, I was inspired when it came to finding a present for Thomas and his girlfriend, Pascale.”

  “What did you get them?” Tess asked.

  “I commissioned Madlon Glenn to paint a watercolor of our winery.”

  “Madlon Glenn. Wait, that’s the guest who helped you organize the artists’ retreat at the ranch, wasn’t it, Tess?” Quinn asked.

  “Yes. She’s so talented.”

  “I think Thomas and Pascale will love the scene I bought,” Mia said. “I had it framed and it looks so beautiful.”

  “That’s a brilliant gift, Mia. Maybe I should contact Madlon. She might have a view of the ranch that I could give to Adele and Daniel. Hey—” Tess exclaimed suddenly. “Here’s another idea. What if I ask Ethan to take a picture—”

  Quinn shook her head. “I don’t think Ethan intends to take photographs anymore.”

  “Not ever?” Tess’s surprise showed on her face. “What a shame.”

  “I know.” Quinn couldn’t say more. It was Ethan’s story to share. Nor could she tell Tess or Mia how much she hoped to change Ethan’s mind about his work—if only she could figure out how.

  Luckily Tess didn’t press her. “Well, I haven’t reached out to Madlon in several weeks. Maybe she has a painting she’s willing to part with.”

  “Unfortunately, I’m still clueless about what to give Daniel,” Mia said. “Any suggestions, Quinn?”

  “Yeah.” She made a noise of sympathy. “He’s a tough one. All Dad really wants is a new, bigger, and shinier tractor. He told Mom he needs one,” she said with a laugh.

  “Sorry, no can do. All my money has to go either back into the vineyard or toward the auction and tasting night we’re holding in the spring.”

  “I hear you.” Quinn had her own reasons for saving and rebuilding her nest egg. Her dream of opening an animal sanctuary hadn’t disappeared when she donated most of her money to Marsha and Lorelei’s shelter. It had merely been delayed.

  There was an upscale liquor store in the middle of the block. Naturally Mia’s feet slowed to a stop as they came abreast of it. Tess and Quinn waited as their friend drank in the window display with its cleverly stacked wooden wine crates and bottles propped at an angle so passersby could easily read the labels.

  From the intensity of Mia’s gaze, Quinn knew she was imagining a crate of her own wine displayed so prominently in a San Francisco shop.

  “But you know, Mia, next to a tractor, what Dad loves is a good whiskey. Single malt, the peatier the better. Why don’t we go inside and check out the selection they have here? Perhaps we’ll find one for him.”

  “And you can drop off your business card with the store manager and let him know about the wine auction,” Tess said, catching on.

  With a quick wink for Tess, Quinn grabbed the door handle and ushered her friends inside.

  As Tess passed, she whispered, “Way to go, Quinn.”

  —

  “Oh my Lord, we’re going to have to jump our guys and try your calorie-burning secr
et the second we get home,” Mia said as they finished the last bites of a dessert platter that had included tiramisu, torrone semifreddo, and rose-infused panna cotta, along with chocolate and pistachio biscotti to go with their espressos.

  Tess laughed. “As Anna would say, ‘And where’s the problem?’ ”

  Mia grinned, her smile and eyes sparkling from the second bottle of champagne they’d shared. “I am so glad you and Anna have come into my life.”

  “Man, way to make me feel like chopped liver,” Quinn teased as she handed Mia her shopping bags, one heavy with a very fine bottle of Scotch whiskey.

  “Nah, you’re my BFF, Quinn. Consider yourself a deluxe brownie.”

  “Much better.” She grabbed Tess’s and her own bags from under the table and followed her friends through the now empty restaurant—they’d outlasted the lunch hour crowd—to where the coat check attendant waited. Able to guess what the man, who looked about her age, earned as an hourly wage, she gave him a liberal tip and shrugged into her black wool coat, holding on to Tess’s while she hugged Rupert, Paradiso’s chef, and told him that he’d outdone himself.

  Ward was leaning against their father’s SUV waiting for them. A smile spread over his face as his gaze locked on Tess.

  “Have fun?” he asked, not waiting for a reply before leaning in to kiss Tess. The kiss lasted long enough for Tess to wrap her arms about Ward’s neck and for Quinn and Mia to exchange an eye roll and snicker.

  “The best,” Tess replied when at last they parted.

  Tess’s expression had Ward’s head lowering once again.

  Convinced they might be stuck on Fillmore for the rest of the afternoon if the two lovebirds kept this up, Quinn cleared her throat loudly.

  Ward released Tess’s lips to frown at Quinn.

  “Home, James, if you please.” She grinned at her brother as she opened the rear door. “Believe me, you want to get back to Silver Creek ASAP so Tess can tell you all about her special exercise regimen.”

 

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