his brother and subsequent divorce.
She frowned thoughtfully, her mind flitting back in time. âI was desperate to belong somewhere. Richard was handsome and fun and seemed to want all the same things I wanted. I desperately wantedto believe that we could build something together. A family.â
She wanted, needed Talbot to understand. She reached out and touched his arm. âHavenât you ever felt passionate about something, about someone?â
âAt the moment Iâm feeling pretty passionate about getting out of here.â He rose to his feet. âWeâd better keep moving in what little daylight is left.â
He limped off under his own steam, and Elizabeth hurried to catch up. Sheâd wanted him to understand what forces had initially pulled her toward Richard and ultimately what forces had driven them apart. But it was obvious he didnât care to know.
As she stared at his broad back, she realized he hadnât answered her question. Heâd probably never felt passion for anyone, she thought. Heâd always struck her as a man who would never understand passion, or love or need.
Heâd always appeared strong in his isolation, content with his aloneness. What she didnât understand was why this knowledge of him created a strange ache inside her.
Chapter Three
T here had only been one thing in his adult life that had inspired passion in Talbot. To his utter shame and guilt, that something had been his brotherâs wife. Heâd desired her, but knew he would never, ever follow through on that desire.
Still, even reminding himself of this fact didnât ease the pressure that had been building inside him. And he felt that if they didnât get out of these woods soon, if he didnât get away from her, he might explode. The consequences of such an explosion could be devastating to his brother.
Ever since sheâd opened her suitcase and heâd spied those red lace panties, his mind had been filled with tantalizing visions of her wearing them and nothing else.
However, what bothered him more than his visions of a half-naked Elizabeth was the vulnerability heâd seen in her for the very first time.
Heâd seen the softness in her eyes as sheâd spoken of wanting to belong, and he didnât want to think of Elizabeth as soft. He had seen a strange, wistful light in her gaze when sheâd told him that sheâd learned early on that venting meant trouble.
He didnât want to think of her as soft and sweet and somehow needy.
They walked until the sunlight had faded and dusk was deepening. âWeâd better stop for the night,â he finally said, reluctant to give up but knowing it was foolhardy to stumble around in the dark.
Elizabeth sank onto the ground with a weary sigh. âI feel like weâre in some kind of demented fairy tale, and our curse is to forever wander and never find our way out of this forest.â
Talbot eased down beside her, not looking at her. âIâm sorry, Elizabeth. I canât tell you how sorry I am about all this.â
Her features were nearly hidden by the deepening darkness. âThatâs the second time youâve apologized, and I told you before, it isnât necessary. I donât blame you for this mess. I justâ¦I just miss Andrew and hope he isnât terribly worried.â
Tears suddenly shimmered in her blue eyes and he saw the slight tremble of her lower lip. Withamazement, he realized she was on the verge of crying.
Surely not. Not Elizabeth. His mind rejected the very idea of her crying. Heâd seen her bail Richard out of jail and never shed a tear. Heâd watched her in the throes of labor, when Richard had been playing basketball with a bunch of buddies and couldnât be reached, and no tears had dampened her eyes.
The luminous shimmer of her tears now affected him deeply. Helplessly he watched as a single tear trekked down her
Marc Nager, Clint Nelsen, Franck Nouyrigat