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"Just as well," Pete said as he pulled out a key. "You've a couple of
hours before the boys' interview. It's with some new mag that'll
publish its first issue later this year. Rolling Stone."
She took the key, pleased that he was sensitive enough not to intrude on
the two hours he'd given her with Brian. "Thanks, Pete. I'll make sure
he's ready for it."
The moment she opened the door, Brian came racing out of the adjoining
bedroom to sweep both her and Emma into his arms. "Thank Christ," he
murmured, raining kisses over Bev's face. He took the limp, drowsy
Emma. "What's wrong here?"
"Nothing now." Bev dragged her free hands through her hair. "She was
dreadfully sick on the plane. Hardly slept. I think she'll do fine
once she's tucked up."
"Right then. Don't move." He carried Emma into the second bedroom. She
stirred only once as he slipped her between the sheets. "Dad?"
"Yes." It still rocked him. "You sleep now awhile. Everything's fine."
Comforted by the sound of his voice, she took it on faith, and drifted
to sleep again.
He automatically left the door ajar, then just stood and looked at Bev.
She was pale with fatigue, the shadows under her eyes making them huge
and dark. Love welled up in him, stronger, needier than any he'd ever
known. Saying nothing, he crossed to her, picked her up in his arms and
carried her to his bed.
He didn't have words, though he was a man always filled with them. Words
to poetry, poetry to lyrics. Later he would be filled with them, reams
of words, flowing through him, all stemming from this, what might have
been his most precious hour with her.
She was, in that hour, so completely his.
The radio beside the bed was on, as was the television at the foot of
it. He'd chased away the silence of his rooms with voices. When he
touched her, she was all the music he needed.
So he savored. He undressed her slowly, watching her, absorbing her.
The shudder of traffic outside the window-later he would remember it in
bases and trebles. The small, yielding sounds she made were pitched low
in countermelody. He could even hear the whispering song of his hands
gliding over her skin.
There was sunlight pouring through the window, and the big, soft bed
yielding under them.
Her body was already changing, subtly, with the life growing in it. He
spread his hand over her rounded stomach, amazed, dazzled, humbled.
Reverently he lowered his lips to her flesh.
It was foolish, he thought, but he felt like a soldier returning from
war, covered with scars and medals. Perhaps not so foolish. The arena
in which he'd fought and won wasn't one he could take her to. She would
always wait for him. It was in her eyes, in her arms as they tenderly
enfolded him. That promise and patience was on her lips as they opened
for his. Her pa.s.sion was always steadier than his, less selfish,
balancing his edgier and more dangerous urges. With her he felt more of
a man, less of a symbol in a world that seemed so hungry for symbols.
When he slipped inside of her, he spoke at last, saying her name on a