The Red Roots

Read Online The Red Roots by Andrea Johnson Beck - Free Book Online Page A

Book: The Red Roots by Andrea Johnson Beck Read Free Book Online
Authors: Andrea Johnson Beck
Tags: Novel
Ads: Link
stop the tears from spilling. Reed raised her gaze to his. He wasn’t Ronan. Reed wasn’t Ronan.
    He isn’t Ronan.
    Reed thumbed her tears. Smeared them into her skin. She blinked, and they came again. They overflowed her but didn’t drown her. Instead, they carried her closer to him.
    He lowered his head brushing his lips along her collarbone. Isla tipped her head back. Reed’s hair tickled and brushed along her skin. His arms enveloped her waist. God, Reed’s touch took her higher.
    He glided his hands beneath her shirt. Fingers dug into Isla’s sides.
    Along her ribcage, her breast. Isla raised her arms—silk skated along her flesh. She ignored the slight twinge in her shoulder. The neckline glided over her face. Reed dropped it to the floor. Her arms lowered, spine shuddered, skin dampened. Isla wanted to be there with him, in the same emotional space, but fear caused her to pause.
    Reed would see her disgrace. See what Ronan did to her. What she allowed him to do to her. Shame. Pure shame Isla couldn’t hide anymore. She crossed her arms over her breasts and stepped away from him.
    His eyes narrowed.
    Isla shook her head.
    Reed moved closer.
    Prickles swept across her skin.
    He reached out to her. “What did Ronan do to you?”
    Isla’s pulse flooded her ears. The earth fell away. She felt nothing as her feet pivoted slowly. Her back faced Reed. She hunched and closed her eyes. Intricate onyx wings covered her back—and her scars. Her skin weaved together into silver marks of persecution and ink. Each feather was knitted with precision. Many times Isla envisioned her black feathers extracting from her shoulder blades, the soft fringe lifting her up into the sky.
    Cool air pranced along her exposed skin until she felt warmth, skin on skin. Tender fingertips traced the black feathers.
    “Beautiful.” Reed whispered.
    “I’m not.”
    “You are. Don’t ever think or speak differently.”
    His hands dropped to her waist. Reed’s hot breath floated along her skin. His lips grazed each scar. Slow. Excruciating. She stopped breathing for a moment.
    He lowered.
    Reed injected a cure for her despair and blame. He eliminated all her ghosts. Her secrets became his truths.
    Silence cradled them.
    Reed’s touch flowed through Isla, ripening her blood, bringing new life to her dormant heart. The empty spaces filled. Isla warmed. He flooded her. With every breath she took, Reed became a part of her, but panic shook her away from him. She wasn’t ready to be intimate. Isla set boundaries when she became his wife. The scars and the marks of beauty from her pregnancy, she kept covered.
    Isla turned in his arms. “I can’t.”
    Reed pulled her tight against him. Lips lingered. Isla wasn’t ready, though his touch divine, she needed more time. Intimacy was difficult for her. Isla never thought she’d have a connection with anyone. Ronan pounded into her with rage, violated her. He was dead but the marks would never go away. The memories would never go away. For a second, Isla felt like she was losing it. Tears rolled down her face. Reed motioned toward the mirror near the dresser. “Come with me.”
    With one arm crossed over her breast and her across her abdomen, Reed guided her ahead of him, her back pressed against his shirt. He smoothed her hair away from her face, tucking loose strands behind her ear. His chin hovered above her shoulder.
    “Let your arms drops.”
    “No.”
    “Do you trust me?”
    “I’m trying,” Isla said, and tightened her arms until her breasts throbbed from the pressure.
    “I won’t hurt you, Isla.”
    “You will.”
    Reed pressed his lips against her bandaged shoulder. “I won’t, not ever.”
    Isla squeezed her eyes shut. Her heart raged through her veins. Isla uncrossed her arms. Her ample breasts exposed, silvery lines ran across her hips and stomach. Reed slid his hands down her arms; their gazes collided inside the mirror.
    “He can never touch you again.”
    Dark-eyed

Similar Books

The Anathema

Zachary Rawlins

Aurora

David A. Hardy

Lilah

Gemma Liviero

A Song of Shadows

John Connolly