Reflected in You: A Crossfire Novel

Reflected in You: A Crossfire Novel by Sylvia Day Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: Reflected in You: A Crossfire Novel by Sylvia Day Read Free Book Online
Authors: Sylvia Day
Tags: Fiction, Romance, Contemporary
closed. Caging me with his body, he leaned down and hissed in my ear, “Yes. Yes, you goddamn will spell it out.”
    I squeezed my eyes shut as our position at the door brought back a flood of heated memories from the first time I’d been in Gideon’s office. He’d stopped me just like this, seducing me deftly, drawing us into a passionate embrace on the very couch that had recently seen some kind of action forceful enough to shove it out of position.
    “Doesn’t a picture say a thousand words?” I bit out through clenched teeth.
    “So Corinne was manhandled. What does that have to do with me?”
    “Are you kidding me? Let me out.”
    “I don’t find anything even remotely funny about this. In fact, I don’t think I’ve ever been this pissed off at a woman. You come in here with your half-assed accusations and self-righteous bullshit—”
    “I am righteous!” I twisted around and ducked beneath his arm, putting some much-needed distance between us. Being close to him hurt too much. “I would never cheat on you! If I wanted to fuck around, I’d break it off with you first.”
    Leaning into the door, Gideon crossed his arms. His shirt remained untucked and open at the collar, a look I found hot and tempting, which only made me angrier.
    “You think I cheated on you?” His tone was clipped and icy.
    I sucked in a deep breath to get through the pain of imagining him with Corinne on the sofa behind me. “Explain to me why she was here at the Crossfire, looking like she did. Why your office looks like this. Why you look like that.”
    His gaze went to the couch, then to the cushion on the floor, then back to me. “I don’t know why Corinne was here or why she looked like that. I haven’t seen her since last night, when you were with me.”
    Last night seemed like it’d happened forever ago. I wished that it had never happened at all.
    “But I wasn’t with you,” I pointed out. “She batted her eyelashes and said she wanted to introduce you to someone, and you left me standing there.”
    “Christ.” His eyes blazed. “Not this again.”
    I swiped angrily at a tear that slid down my cheek.
    He growled. “You think I went with her because I was overcome with the need to be with her and get away from you?”
    “I don’t know, Gideon. You ditched me . You’re the one with the answers.”
    “You ditched me first.”
    My mouth fell open. “I did not!”
    “The hell you didn’t. Almost the second we arrived, you took off. I had to hunt you down and when I did, you were dancing with that prick.”
    “Martin is Stanton’s nephew!” And since Richard Stanton was my stepdad, I thought of Martin as family.
    “I don’t care if he’s a damned priest. He wants to nail you.”
    “Oh my God. That’s absurd! Stop deflecting. You were talking business with your associates. It was awkward standing there. For them as well as me.”
    “That’s your place, awkward or not!”
    My head jerked back as if he’d slapped me. “Come again?”
    “How would you feel if I walked away from you at a Waters Field and Leaman party because you started talking about a campaign? Then, when you found me, I was slow dancing with Magdalene?”
    “I—” God. I hadn’t thought of it like that.
    Gideon appeared smooth and unruffled with his powerful frame lounging against the door, but I could sense the anger vibrating beneath that calm surface. He was riveting always, but most especially when he was seething with passion. “It’s my place to stand beside you, and support you, and yes, just fucking look pretty on your arm sometimes. It’s my right, my duty, and my privilege, Eva, just as it’s yours in reverse.”
    “I thought I was doing you a favor by getting out of the way.”
    His arched brow was a silent, sarcastic comeback.
    My arms crossed in front of me. “Is that why you walked off with Corinne? Were you punishing me?”
    “If I wanted to punish you, Eva, I’d take you over my knee.”
    My gaze narrowed.

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