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red to a stop inches from the cliff edge, the Pacific Ocean roaring somewhere below in the darkness. She grippe
inst her ribs like som
gling her hair into knots that pulled at her scalp. She didn't care. She leaned forward, f
wrong.
hield-five carats, custom cut, set in platinum that had probably cost more than her father's house in Queens. Kevon had slid it onto her fing
lt like a
thirty missed calls, all from the same name. Kevon. Her thumb hovered over the call button, then jerk
about tomorrow's wedding. The Mcconnell-Brown nuptials, they're calling it the social event of
he voice died mid-sentence, leaving only the w
t flats crunched on loose gravel as she stepped out, the hem of her sundress snapping around her knees. The cliff dropp
lder than she'd expected, or maybe that was just her body fi
to drown in a life she didn't understand, married to a man who co
in the gallery where she worked, when Kevon Mcconnell had walked in and changed everyt
of ozone and something else-mecha
a dying animal. A cough, a wheeze, then silence.
tumbling back to the car
d again, pumping the gas pedal with desperate jerks of her ankle. The car was dead. The
AAA, ready to explain that she was stranded on the Pacific Coast Highway somewhere north
in the top left corner o
ed, then vanished. The highway stretched in both directions, empty, a ribbon of asphalt disappearing into fog
was
he wheel. The diamond pressed into her cheek, hard and cold. Tears came the
ns of five hundred guests. She had ruined his trust. She imagined his face when he found her gone-not furious, but worse, disappointed. That qui
ok he got sometimes, the one that made her feel like a pr
her face, or bring her coffee exactly the way she liked it, or mention some detail about the we
s appeared wi
right. Karley jerked upright, wiping at her face with her sleeve. Her heart kick
inted against the glare, raising one hand to shield her eyes. The engine s
B11 model that Kevon kept in his priv
pping so close that she could have reached through her open window and touched its hoo
e door lifted up
steppe
than her annual salary at the gallery. His tie was loosened, the top button of his shirt undone. Even
r attention in the gallery-long strides, shoulders back, eyes fix
or. Her fingers found the lock, pressing it down, k
light flickered on, weak and yellow. He filled the frame, blo
rle
him. She stared at his hand instead, where it gripped the door frame, the p
st needed-I couldn't breathe, and
r touched
pressed just hard enough to silence her, then traced the sha
yes were the color of storm clouds, and they searched hers
he draped it around her shoulders, pulling it closed at her throat. His body heat cl
need to
m beneath her knees, the other behind
ushing against his che
made her stomach tighten. His arms tightened around her,
on Martin, the door still open, the leather seat heated and waiting. He lowered her into it wit
ar above his eyebrow from a childhood accident, the one he'd told her about in bed once, tracing her fin
ckle c
m through the thin cotton of her dress. His eyes held hers, searching, and for
ed before she could stop it. "There's no
ed around the front of the car with unhurried steps. She watched him throu
d himself into the seat, the car s
e that had graced magazine covers and architectural journals, the one that made s
orters asked about their whirlwind romance, the architect and the gallery assistant,
his man, from this love that felt too large and too bright, and he had still come for her. He had
t for the doubt, for the fear, for the part of her tha
terlacing their fingers. His thumb traced circles on her palm, hypno
rent world from her Honda's asthmatic rattle. The headlights swept across
said. "I'
g from the gallery opening where they'd met. She had been standing in front of a Rothko, pretending to under
r she had fallen in love with the version of hers
rom the vents washed over her face. Kevon's hand rem
eyes drif
face transform, the smile evaporating like morning fog, repl
rface labeled K-Asset. A map of the California coast, a red dot pulsing steadily at their current location, a
aw tight. Then he pressed a button, and the red dot vanishe
o the side, dark hair spilling across his jacket. In the dashboard light, she
ghtened on the
e legal and social bonds forged that would make her his in every way that mattered. The blood type mat
proceeding ac
ve toward the city lights, his precious cargo
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