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Bachelors In Love by Jestine Spooner (57)

 

The roar of the waterfall was loud, but it wasn’t loud enough for Iris to ignore the gunshots that were ringing out just feet from her. She prayed for shouted words. She prayed to hear Marcus’s voice. She needed any indication at all that he was out there, alive.

She jumped out of her skin when she heard another gunshot, this one closer than the rest. Something thumped to the ground right on the other side of the waterfall. Everything in Iris’s body pulled tight. She scraped her fingers through her hair as she rose halfway from her hiding spot. She couldn’t wait here, she just couldn’t.

But then there was another noise, an unmistakable one. A helicopter. God, let that be the back-up. She held her breath and suddenly, there was another thump right outside the waterfall. And that one sounded unmistakably like a body falling. That was it. She had to see what was happening.

She slipped into the water and resurfaced just on one side of the waterfall. The first thing she saw was the helicopter land right next to the Range Rover. Another one circled the airspace above. Men in bulletproof vests jumped from the landed chopper and streamed toward the scattered, fallen men. She couldn’t see Owen or Marcus, but no one was left standing.

She heard the distant wail of an ambulance and she knew, with all her heart, that it was headed their way.

Please. Please. Please. Please. Please.

The words raced through her head and she wasn’t even sure what came next. What she was asking for. All she knew was that the two people she loved most in her life were somewhere, laying on the ground, maybe dead or dying and she couldn’t see them.

Iris looked down in confusion at the pool water she was treading in and realized that it was slightly pink. She realized with a horrifying drop in her stomach that it was diluted from red. There was blood in the water.

Iris immediately saw who it came from as a stocky, blonde man that she recognized dragged himself from the shallow end, a knife jutting out from his gut. That was the man who’d given her the black eye. Iris watched in stunned horror and sick, disbelieving fascination as one of the men in the bulletproof vests charged the now crawling blonde man. The federal agent pointed a humongous gun at the man’s head and shouted something that Iris could hear, and she knew it was English, but she couldn’t make herself understand the words.

The world was going soupy and strangely colorful as Iris fought to keep her body above water. The blonde man fell to his back, his hands in the air and the knife sticking out from him like a fifth appendage.

Iris managed to drag herself to the edge of the pool and she was grateful. She felt as if her muscles were seizing up, like she wouldn’t be able to stay afloat much longer. She gripped the edge of the pool and turned toward it, clinging. Her eyes slammed shut as she heard more shouting, more men’s voices. She had no idea if they were shouting at her or not, but she couldn’t make herself understand the words.

Iris's eyes came open and focused on something right before her. Her body recognized it before her brain did. And a zipping shot of fear and adrenaline struck through her as Iris’s eyes focused on the hand that lay limply over the edge of the pool. She knew that hand. She’d know that hand anywhere. It was the hand of the man she loved.

A strength she would have sworn she didn’t have had her vaulting out of the pool and across the pool deck toward Marcus’s fallen body.

She didn’t notice that she scraped both of her legs to hell as she slid over to him. She didn’t notice the dead man lying just feet from Marcus, blood pooling around him from where the feds in the chopper had taken him out.

All she saw was Marcus, his eyes closed, blood blooming like a rose across the front of his torn, white shirt.

She was over top of him. She knew she was saying words. Some iteration of “Marcus, baby, look at me. Marcus, please be okay. Marcus. Marcus. Marcus.”

But she couldn’t hear herself.

All she could see was how still he was. It was then that she saw that there was blood leaking from his side as well. Pooling out underneath him.

Iris was dimly aware of men running at her. Shouting. Her eyes blurred and she saw that they wore black but she couldn’t tell who was who. More bad guys? Feds? EMTs? They were shouting and holding weapons and sprinting at her. Worse, they were sprinting at Marcus, whose eyes were closed. Who was bleeding. Who couldn’t defend himself. Iris did what she had to do.

She looked wildly around and her eyes focused, startlingly clear, on the gun that was still grasped in his hand. She grabbed it up, holding it the way she’d seen people do in the movies.

It was heavy, so much heavier than she’d been expecting. The gun was foreign and awkward in her hand. But the next part was natural. Completely natural. She crouched over top of Marcus, pointing her gun in the direction of the men who had just abruptly stopped running.

And she protected him. She was dimly aware that her hands were not shaking.

***

Why was there all this cotton in his mouth? Marcus tried to move his tongue but realized that it was too stuffed full. What was this? Was he hungover? Had he had way, way, way, too much to drink last night? If so, he’d gone overboard. Marcus couldn’t remember ever being this hungover.

It was the dim, beep beep beep of the machine next to his head that alerted him as to where the hell he was. A hospital room.

He was awake, but his eyes wouldn’t open. He tried and failed a few times. And eventually gave in to the darkness.

It was almost a full day later that his eyes allowed themselves to open. It was light outside. And Marcus had the thought that it was weird to see such gorgeous weather when one felt such horrible pain.

It was full body pain. He felt like he’d been hit by a truck. He couldn’t exactly say where it was even coming from. Marcus tilted his head to one side as he attempted to take in his surroundings. Plain hospital room. But it looked oddly familiar. He knew he’d been in a room like this before. But when? His brain waded through water. Everything was swimming, and Marcus recognized the effects of whatever opioids his drip was surely pumping into his system right now.

“Welcome back,” a familiar voice said at his elbow. He moved his eyes, because moving his head was simply not an option.

“Jones,” he grunted in a voice that was more gravel than sound.

His handler lifted a cup with a straw to his lips and Marcus took a grateful sip of lukewarm water. It tasted like heaven.

“Iris is safe,” Jones said, already anticipating what his first question was going to be. “She wasn’t injured in the firefight, besides some scrapes on her knees. And she’s already been put into protective custody for the time being.”

Emotions warred inside of Marcus. She was safe, and that was all that really mattered. But protective custody would mean top-secret location. It would mean next to impossible to see her. Pain stabbed through him and it wasn’t from his wounds.

“Where…” he tried but his voice failed him.

Jones raised an eyebrow. She knew exactly what he was asking, but she chose to answer a different version of his question. “You’re in Miami. You were airlifted here. Flatlined en route, by the way.”

Miami. That was why this was all so familiar. This was the same hospital that Jay had stayed in after he’d almost died in the Bahamas. The rest of the words filtered to him. Flatlined? From a surface stab wound to the chest?

“What happened?” He found he had scattered memories of the event but he needed more information and fast.

“You were shot.” Jones said the words matter-of-factly. None of her emotion made its way in and they were both grateful for her control. “By Kutros himself. Gut shot. Your right side.”

Ah. Well. That explained the excruciating pain.

“And you were stabbed. But I assume you remember that part. By Kutros’s brother-in-law and right hand man. He’s still alive. Kutros isn’t. He was taken out moments after he shot you. The other three that were there are also alive. In custody.”

“And Owen?”

Jones paused. “He’s two floors down.”

Marcus’s stomach dropped out completely and he felt a whirling swirl that was a mixture of fear, pain, and the drugs. “The morgue?”

Jones let out a breath. “No. He’s fighting still. Poor kid got half of that pretty face blown off. But like I said. He’s fighting.” Jones paused again. “Your girl’s a fighter too, by the way. Damn near screamed the hospital down when the agents assigned to her came to drag her away.”

Jones examined her fingernails. “She didn’t want to leave you here. And from what I’m told, she damn sure didn’t want to leave you on the pool deck either. She got a gun, crouched over you, held everybody off for a few minutes before one of our guys talked her down. I think that’s love, kid.”

Marcus squeezed his eyes shut at the image that Jones had just planted in his head. She’d held a gun up to a slew of armed and juiced FBI agents? God, that could have gone so, so badly. But she’d done it for him. To keep him safe.

“Where is she?” This time his question couldn’t be interpreted in any other way and Jones knew she had to answer. She also knew that Marcus already knew the answer.

“I don’t know. It’s protective custody, Marcus. On a case where there was already a mole discovered in the agency. There’s—” She almost cut off completely at the look of mortal pain on Marcus’s face, but she forced herself to keep going. “There’s no way to know until they deem her out of harm’s way. Until then…”

“I wait,” he filled in grimly. “And hope to hell that the FBI doesn’t fuck this up again.”

There wasn’t anything to say to that. Not really. Jones even kept in her sigh. “There’s people here to see you. Your family.”

Marcus knew who she meant. “Send them in.”

But his eyes were closing even as he said it. And soon, he was enveloped into darkness again.             

***

It took three weeks in the hospital in Miami and then another ten days in the hospital in Ocean City before Marcus was deemed fit enough to continue recovering at home. He was forever, infinitely, grateful to Tia, who as a trauma surgeon at the same hospital he’d been admitted to in Maryland, was able to take over a ton of his care. He knew that it wasn’t her job to play nurse, but she’d barely let him out of her sight since he’d gotten back to Ocean City.

So much so, that the day he was discharged from the hospital, Marcus realized that Eli was in fact, not driving toward Marcus’s house, but his own.

“Come on, dude,” Marcus groaned. “I’ve had enough babying. For the love of god, just let me go home.”

“No,” Jay answered from the backseat. “Absolutely not. You were shot and stabbed a month ago. We’re not gonna let you go sulk it off in your depressing-ass apartment.”

Marcus opened his mouth to argue, but it was Eli who got in the next word. “You flatlined, dude. Flatlined. And that means you’re gonna stay in my guest bedroom as long as I say you stay in my fucking guest bedroom.”

Marcus couldn’t help but smile at their vehemence. They’d been like that since he’d woken up in Miami. Fiercely dedicated to his recovery. To taking care of him. The two of them were worse than Ryan and Kat had been. And to be honest, Mari had been hovering quite a bit as well.

“Are you two ever going to forgive me for doing my fucking job?” Marcus grumbled, looking at their two sour faces.

“No,” they answered in unison.

Marcus smiled again. He had news to share with them, but it didn’t feel right to share it with them before he shared it with Iris.

Pain lanced through his gut as he thought of her.

Iris, who he hadn’t seen since he’d tossed her into that pool in the Bahamas a month ago. Iris who, he was told, protected him at gunpoint. Iris, who was folded into the machine of protective custody and was pretty much wiped from the face of the planet in the process.

Marcus was technically on sick leave now. Instead of a suspension. In light of the way the Kutros family had doggedly pursued Iris, his extreme measures to keep her safe had been taken under further review and Marcus had been cut some slack. He strongly suspected that Agent Jones had had quite a bit to do with that.

He was set to return to work the minute he was deemed fit. Honestly, Marcus didn’t really care. The only perk he cared about was that now that he wasn’t on suspension, he was privy to certain information that he hadn’t been before. Agent Jones had been able to slip him bits and pieces here and there on the Kutros investigation.

After the shoot-out at the resort, the case had been blown wide open and they were fast on the way to dismantling the organization. Which meant that they were fast on the way to freeing Iris from protective custody. The sooner she was safe, the sooner she could come home.

Or to Eli’s home, Marcus thought wryly as his two friends helped him inside. In moments he was tucked into bed, a TV remote in his hand and juice on the table beside him. He wondered vaguely if they’d allow him to wipe his own ass.

But he had to admit as the days went by, he was grateful to them. Deeply grateful. His two friends were there to help him limp into the living room when he needed a change of scenery. Eli dragged an Xbox and a huge TV screen into the guest room so that Marcus didn’t get bored. And more than anything, the three of them talked. Especially when Marcus was moments away from despairing about Iris. Those were the moments that Eli and Jay were the most important. And somehow, they always seemed to know when he needed them.

It wasn’t long before Marcus felt good enough to go back to his own house. Tia finally gave her permission. As long as either Eli or Jay stopped in to see him once a day. And Marcus was both relieved and disappointed to be leaving. In a way, staying in Eli’s guest room had been sort of like an extended version of the sleepovers they used to have as kids. Except for the occasional excruciating pain he was still dealing with.

Mostly though, he was relieved to get back into his own space. Another week off his feet and he figured he could be ready to get back into work. He knew that there was no way for him to wheedle his way into the Kutros investigation, but if he was there, he was much more likely to pick up information here and there. Marcus didn’t have a problem waiting for Iris. It was not knowing how long he had to wait that was driving him insane.

So. Exactly six weeks after he’d been shot, Marcus laid in his own bed, in his own home and reflected on how much his life had changed. It was thoughts of Iris that had him drifting to sleep.

And it was thoughts of Iris that had him sifting up from the depths of sleep in the grainy, gray dawn the next morning. Something had woken him and he wasn’t sure if it had been in his dream. The dream had been so clear. He’d smelled her. Felt the soft strands of her hair against his chin. Marcus cleared his throat and scraped a hand over his face.

He knew he wouldn’t be able to fall back asleep after a dream like that.

“Hi,” a voice whispered from next to him.

Marcus whipped his head to the side, startled. His eyes landed on Iris. She laid on her side in his bed, one of his t-shirts on, her hands folded under her cheek and a humongous smile on her face.

Marcus was speechless as his hands grabbed mindlessly for her. He had to know this was real. He couldn’t take it if it wasn’t.

All the air left his lungs as his hands tangled in her hair, blonde again after all this time. His hands slid down her face and she bit the pad of his thumb as it traced over her lips.

“How?” he asked. And it was all he could get out before he decided he didn’t give a fuck and just dragged her to him. His still-healing injuries protested but Marcus didn’t care. All he cared about was her lips on his. And he drowned there.

Because here she was. Kissing him and grinning and crying all at once. She bit his lip and traced over his eyebrows. Her eyes devoured him and then so did her mouth. They tasted and tasted and tasted each other.

“I’m free,” she whispered against his lips. “Safe, I mean. I just got done with a final interview at that same horrible place you took me before. This time Agent Jones rented me a car. And I drove it right here.”

Marcus’s pulse picked up as he thought about how badly his organization had miscalculated before. “Are you sure you’re safe? Jones said you were safe?” She was the only one there that Marcus trusted. She wouldn’t have let Iris leave if there’d been danger, official recommendation or not.

Iris nodded, tears still glistening in her eyes. “She was the one who came in and translated what the other agents had told me. You know how they are,” she grinned. “You guys have all that official lingo that you combine with vague language so that you can go on the record as having answered a question but really you didn’t answer anything?”

Marcus answered her grin. “We actually receive training on that.”

Iris rolled her eyes. “Yeah, well, it’s infuriating. Jones came in afterward and laid it all out for me in plain English. So,” Iris continued as she made herself even more comfortable in Marcus’s bed. His chest was so warm, just watching her talk, watching those big blue eyes as she watched him right back. “I guess the Kutros family was basically destroyed that day, poolside. The head of the organization was chopped off, so to speak. Kutros himself was killed. I think that was the guy who- who shot you? Jones said that technically, everything was pretty much safe for me and Owen the second that guy died. But apparently the FBI had to take six flipping weeks to figure that out.” She scowled. “So I’ve been in protective custody in some dumb townhouse in DC with two grumpy FBI agents this entire time.”

Marcus rolled back and let the information wash over him. Honestly, it was what he’d expected. He hadn’t been investigating the Kutros family in great depth, it hadn’t been his job to, but nothing had indicated that it was a wide-sweeping organization. He’d barely let himself hope that everything had ended that day in the Bahamas. Even with all that rocking through his head, there was only one thought that continually made it to the surface. He rolled back over to stare at Iris’s perfect, sweet face.

“You’re here,” Marcus bit out. He couldn’t concentrate. “You’re here.”

“Yes,” Iris nodded resolutely. “I’m here. And to stay.” She paused for a second, lip between her teeth, and then plunged right in. “I’m moving in. That’s not a request.”

Marcus’s eyes searched hers. He wasn’t really sure what to say to that.

His silence unnerved her. So she cleared her throat and continued on. “My life in Pennsylvania isn’t worth going back to. It’s lonely. And you make me un-lonely. And I- I want to be with you.”

Marcus found that this wasn’t a conversation he wanted to have lying down. So, as the room slowly gathered light, he planted his hands and inched his way up the headboard. The blankets fell away and Iris’s eyes dropped to his chest and stomach.

He winced at her expression. Absolute horror. He knew it wasn’t pretty. There was a ten-inch gash across his pecs that was still healing and a flat round scar on his lower left stomach. The effect was not pleasing.

“Oh my god,” she gasped, tears filling her eyes instantly.

“It’s okay,” he said gruffly, uncomfortable by the fact that she might not find him as attractive anymore.

“No, it’s not!” Iris insisted. “God, he’s such a dumbass.”

Marcus knew that she was talking about her brother. He couldn’t help but vehemently agree. Owen was the person who’d gotten both of them wrapped up in all this in the first place.

“Without his dumbass-ery we wouldn’t have met,” Marcus reminded her gently. She nodded, her eyes still glued to his torso. “And besides, I think Owen paid for it.”

Iris’s eyes darkened. He sure had. Half of Owen’s face was destroyed. His beautiful face. Iris had been to visit him in the hospital earlier that day. Scars webbed over the right side of his face, inching into his hair. And the rest of him wasn’t in better shape. He was deeply depressed. And had mostly stopped eating. Soon he’d be out of the hospital and Iris would have to figure out how to care for him. She’d been very clear with her brother that he’d be moving to Ocean City just as she was. He’d said nothing. Even when she insisted that he owed her this. He’d merely nodded, said he was tired, and rolled over.

Of course, the prevalent feeling she felt when she thought of Owen was relief. Relief that he hadn’t been killed. By the sheer luck that had that bullet landing an inch away from a place that would have surely killed him. But she couldn’t help but feel an overwhelming sadness at what he faced. At how much harder his life was going to be from here on out. He was a man who’d skated by on his looks for his entire life. He was going to have to learn a different way now.

Iris sighed deeply as two of her tears rolled down her cheeks. She leaned forward and pressed her lips to each of Marcus’s scars. She could swear that he wasn’t breathing. “I can’t believe how lucky I am.”

“That you didn’t get hurt in the firefight?”

She looked up at him in surprise. “Well, yes. But I meant to have found you. And to not have lost you that day. I thought you were gone, Marcus.”

He smiled, dark and intense. “They told me that you protected me.”

Iris blushed. “I tried.” She blushed further. “That was a mess.”

She looked up at him and the intensity in her eyes had him pulling up short. She was staring him right down. “And you’re lucky too! You big jerk.”

He raised an eyebrow. “Lucky jerk, huh?”

“Yeah! You blaze in, all Clint Eastwood, and almost get yourself killed for me. Hence the jerk part. And even your scars are sexy. Hence the lucky part.”

Marcus started, peering down at his mottled, altered chest. He still hadn’t gotten used to it. “Sexy, huh?”

She pursed her lips, as if she weren’t done being irritated that he’d almost lost his life for her. But she gave a nod as she cast her eyes over him again. “Very.”

He grinned. But it was brief, and fell away as he took her hands in his. “Iris, there’s something I want to talk to you about. Actually I wanted to talk about it even when we were still in the Bahamas.”

Her stomach flipped. “Oh?”

“Yeah.” Marcus frowned as he brought her hands to his lips. He couldn’t help but tuck her into his side. How to say this? His heart galloped. “I made mistakes, Iris. On this whole operation. I was distracted and disoriented and I made mistakes.”

Her stomach dropped even further as he continued on. “At first I thought it was because I was getting older.”

“Thirty-five isn’t old, Marcus.”

He flashed a quick, white smile down at her. “For a field agent who has seen more than his share of action, 35 is ancient.” He sighed. “But I realized that I wasn’t making mistakes because it was time to be put out to pasture. I realized I was making mistakes—”

“Because of me,” she filled in for him, dread in every word.

“Yeah. I was all wrapped up in you. Even before I realized I had feelings. I was way too concerned with your happiness. Not just your wellbeing, the way I would have been with anyone I was charged to protect. But your actual happiness. I wanted it. More than anything. More than I cared about the job. And that’s—that’s never happened to me before.” He paused and sighed hard. “Remember that damn orange? That first night? I think I was in trouble even then. You hadn’t even looked at me yet. I’ve never been this distracted or thrown off before.”

Oh lord. In the back of her mind, Iris had known that this was a possibility. That Marcus would realize that there wasn’t room in his life for both the job and Iris. She knew that he was a very passionate man, one who defined himself by his career. But now that she was staring down the barrel of him choosing his career over her, Iris felt like she was on a bus with no brakes, careening toward a ravine.

“Well,” she piped up, cutting him off as she sat straight up and shoved her hair back from her face. “I won’t be on any more cases with you. You know? I’ll be all safe and sound at home. So you won’t have to worry about me at all. You can just focus, focus, focus!” Her voice was high and tight and had him lifting an eyebrow. “And I won’t even bother you. And then you’ll come home and I’ll be here and that way you can just go ahead and have your cake and eat it too!”

Marcus clapped his mouth closed, a little flummoxed at the high-pitched, furious word explosion that she’d just spewed everywhere. He was also a little unclear as to why there were tears filling her eyes again. Tears spilling over onto her cheeks. He brusquely brushed them away.

“Iris, baby,” he said as gently as he could. “I don’t want that. I don’t want to live like that.”

She sucked in a breath and her lip came with it. She practically tore that lip apart with her teeth before Marcus reached up with a thumb and tugged it free. And then, because he couldn’t resist, he leaned forward and kissed that lip.

She trembled beneath him. “So, so, so you’re saying that…”

He unhanded her and scraped a hand over his face, over the top of his head. “I’m saying that you weren’t distracting me because you were there with me. I’m saying you were distracting me because you were here with me.” He tapped a hand over his heart and Iris froze. “And that isn’t going to change whether you’re safe at home minding your own business or if you’re crouching over me, pointing a gun at the bad guys.”

Marcus found he had to clear his throat before he could continue. “Iris, I’m saying that meeting you made my focus shift. I don’t care about work the way I used to because I have something else to care about.”

Understanding dawned over her and it was like a sunrise and sunset all at once. He wasn’t saying that he needed her out of his life. He was saying that he wanted to change his entire life to keep her. Iris discovered in that moment that panic wasn’t a very choosy emotion, it could attach itself to damn near anything. Her mood swung the other way on the pendulum and she found herself crying for a totally different reason. “You don’t have to give up your job for me!”

He chuckled and raised his eyes to the heavens. “I’m not. I’m telling you that I don’t want to leave you for weeks at a time. I don’t want to miss you like crazy for half my life. I don’t want to put myself in harm’s way, and know that you’re worrying about me the whole time. I just want to live here. With you.” He paused for a second. “And that dumb-ass kitchen rug that I bought. Do you like that thing? Because I was thinking of returning it.”

“What? No! I love that rug. That was a little love letter from you to me.”

His eyes softened. “Yeah. It was. How did you know that?”

“Marcus, you told me in a hundred different ways how you felt about me. The entire time we’ve known one another. The only thing you didn’t do was tell me.”

“Is that right?” he asked, pulling both of them down on the bed so that they lay on their sides, face to face. “Then you tell me, how do I feel about you?”

Iris pulled her lips between her teeth out of habit, but when her eyes found Marcus’s, she realized that she wasn’t nervous. She didn’t have anything to be nervous about. “Well, first you just had a little shine for me. You liked it better when I was around. You liked my hair, the way I played the piano. And then you had a crush on me. One so big that it kinda hurt when I was around.” She grinned and he couldn’t help but grin right back. “But then, without even realizing that it was sneaking up on you, you loved me. No brakes, no u-turns, full on love.” The smile fell away from both of their faces and the moment was silent, stretching, and completely comfortable. “I know all that, because it’s exactly what happened to me. You love me and I- I love you.”

He took her chin in his hand. “You love me and I love you,” he repeated before pressing his lips to hers. He tore his lips away after a minute.

“Iris,” his voice was low and sounded pained. “I’m not rich. I hope you know that. But I work hard. And like I said, I’ll have steady work at the bureau for as long as I want it. A desk job. I talked to Jones. I might be able to train to be a handler. Or maybe I’ll work at the academy, teach the younger generation or something. But the bottom line is that we can fix this place up, however you want it. Or we can move. You’ll be the number one priority in my life, baby, but Eli and Jay and Ryan and Kat, they’re up there too.”

“Your family,” she nodded. “Owen is the same for me.”

Marcus nodded back, but he wasn’t done. “I’ll always keep you safe. Protect you, with my life if I have to. But I can be a difficult man, I—”

She silenced him with her mouth on his, laughing right into him. “I know all that, Marcus. Just like you should know that I play music at all hours of the night and day. And that we’ll probably have to move to a bigger place because I’ll be bringing all my instruments from Pennsylvania.”

“How many do you have?”

She thought for a minute. “Fifty or so?”

Fifty?!”

She laughed as Marcus groaned, raking a hand over his face.”

“Baby,” he said. “We can’t afford that kind of space. But maybe you can leave some at Eli’s house or something—”

“Also, I’m kind of a millionaire. Ess. Millionaress.”

Marcus was perfectly speechless for going on a full minute. “Are you kidding me?” was what he finally came up with.

Iris grinned and kissed him again. “Nope. Owen’s music made both of us a lot of money. And unlike him, I’m a very frugal person. Of course I’m gonna have to pay you back for everything you’ve bought for me and—”

“No.” They couldn’t stop cutting each other off, with their words or their kisses.
“Oh!” Iris said as she pulled back from nibbling on Marcus’s lower lip. “And one more thing.”

“What’s that?” he murmured, his eyes gone heavy lidded and his blood zinging in his veins as he held her so close.

“I want to ask Eli if we can live at the beach house at least a month or two out of every year.” She looked up at him with those huge, ice blue eyes. “It’s kind of my favorite place on Earth.”

He rolled her so that they fit together like spoons, but it wasn’t innocent. Iris found his frisky hands doing some very frisky things between her legs. “Well, you’re kind of my favorite person on Earth,” he murmured against the skin on her neck as he slipped her underwear down her legs, pressed against her from behind.

“Marcus,” she whispered, though her words were warm and lazy. “We shouldn’t, you’re still recovering.”

“Mmmmm,” he grumbled into her hair as one of his hands slipped underneath her t-shirt. “We’ll go slow, baby.” He pressed inside her and she didn’t have a single thing to say to protest, all she could do was revel in the feel of him, in her body and in her heart.

You love me and I love you.

It echoed in both of them.

“We’ll go slow, baby,” he murmured again.

And they did.

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Phoenix King (Dragons & Phoenixes Book 2) by Miranda Martin, Nadia Hunter

Metal Wolf (Warriors of Galatea Book 1) by Lauren Esker

Running the Risk by Lea Griffith

Mail-Order Bride Ink: Dear Mr. White by Kit Morgan

Touched by Death by T.L. Martin

A Family for Christmas: An MPREG Omegaverse Romance by Reegan Lynch

Cocky Chef by JD Hawkins

Gambling For The Virgin: A Dark Billionaire Romance by Dark Angel, Alexis Angel

Tomorrow: Kingsley series book 1 by Haylee Thorne

Be My First: A Billionaire and Virgin Romance by Lauren Wood

Small Town Secrets: A Forbidden Romance by Cassandra Dee, Kendall Blake