I kick the door closed behind me and Ellis pulls off her gloves finger by finger, watching me with this wary look, like she still expects me to bolt.
“I told you I’m fine,” I say. It comes out more persuasively now, my voice steadier away from the dark.
“I know what you said.”
“And you know I’d tell you if I wasn’t fine.” I offer her a small and wavering smile. “Shame has never stopped me from falling apart on you before.”
She laughs and the taut thread tied between us eases a little. Eases, but doesn’t unravel.
Ellis presses her bared hand to my sternum, right above my heart. I wonder if she can feel it beating against her palm—too fast now.
“You’re brave, Felicity,” she says. “You’re the bravest person I know.”
And then she kisses me.
The dizzy feeling doesn’t abate. Instead of swaying on my feet, I cling to her with both hands, my head spinning and her tongue in my mouth. Ellis’s body is hard and firm, and I can’t stop touching it; she presses me back against the shut door as her open mouth skims my cheek. I arch closer as she peppers kisses along my jaw, my throat.
“I’ve wanted you,” she murmurs, and those three words are sudden heat; when she pulls back, my lipstick is smeared across her mouth, a scarlet streak cutting past her jaw. Her lips are parted and still damp.
I need to kiss her again, but when I try she tilts away, then smiles. “I want to hear you say it.”
My breath cuts out of me in shallow half gasps. Both my hands twine in fists around the fabric of her shirt.
“I want you, too,” I say.
Ellis’s smirk widens. This time when she kisses me, it’s harder, more desperate. I’m desperate, too, shucking off her jacket and waistcoat, Ellis’s fingers fumbling over the buttons on my shirt in turn.
My hands find her waist, smoothing down toward her narrow hips. God. I can tell just from this, even with her body clothed in thick tweed and wool, that she’s strong. Powerful.
I need more.
Ellis’s forearms bump against mine as she unknots her tie and yanks it free. The drag of that fabric against her collar sends an unexpected shiver down my spine.
Maybe any other day, or with any other woman, I would have been embarrassed. But there’s something about this night—or about Ellis herself—that makes me feel confident. Sexy.
Invincible.
The rest of our clothes come off, and then we’re moving, the backs of my legs hitting the edge of the mattress. Then we’re on the bed, and Ellis is there, touching me.
I wonder if my skin feels hot against hers. I’m burning up inside.
“Fuck,” I gasp, and Ellis laughs against my collarbones.
“Oh dear,” she murmurs. “Language, Felicity.”
I love the way my name sounds on her voice: husky and low, gravelly in a way that makes me shiver. Being here with Ellis, like this, feels inevitable: as if I could trace our friendship back to the day we met and discover roots there, the original seed of something that would becomethis.
And what isthis? I’m not sure I know the answer. Maybe it doesn’t matter.
Ellis performs her work with the slow, determined care with which I imagine she writes her books, leaving me breathless and blinking up at her as she leans down to kiss me again.
“Not fair,” I say—accuse, really—and Ellis smirks into the kiss, reaching for my wrist to slip my hand down the waistband of her underwear instead.
She’s flush-cheeked and breathless once she’s finished, lifting her head to meet my gaze. This time when she kisses me, it’s languorous and warm. Then she shifts to kiss my throat, my sternum…and lower.
“You’re—”
You’re incredible. You’re inexorable. You’re merciless.