Tempt
Tempt (Take It Off #3)(35)
Author: Cambria Hebert
But I was still here.
I was still standing.
And now I was trapped on a deserted island with a guy I desperately wanted and a band of murdering pirates. To top it off, I was having dreams… dreams that were beginning to make sense.
Well, sort of.
What if those dreams were just one more way my mind was trying to get in the way of something I wanted? Trying to scare me away from getting too close to Nash?
“Ava?” His voice drifted through the breeze and squeezed my heart. I looked over my shoulder at Nash, who was standing there with sleep-heavy features and messy hair. He’d pulled on his shorts but hadn’t bothered to button them or zip them up.
He came forward, wincing a little when his feet hit the cold water, but he didn’t stop. He wrapped his arms around me from behind and rested his chin on my shoulder. “You still having bad dreams?”
“I didn’t want to wake you,” I said, avoiding the question. How did you tell a guy you had a sex dream about him… with another man?
“You can wake me anytime.” He pressed a kiss to my bare shoulder. And then I realized…
“I’m still naked.”
“I know” His voice turned husky.
“I miss home.”
“I know. Me too.”
“It’s been almost a week. Do you think they’ve given up?”
“Would you have given up by now?” he asked.
I searched deep within myself for the answer. For the truth. “No. If it was someone I loved, I would never give up.”
“They’re going to find us, bella.”
“I like when you call me that.”
“I know.”
“You’re a know-it-all.”
I felt his chest vibrate with silent laughter. I brought up my hands to rest over his arms. I didn’t want to let go of him. Not ever.
Conflicting thoughts swirled around my head. Finally, I sighed. Now wasn’t the time to think too deeply about the way I felt about Nash.
Besides, my heart already made up its mind. It was just my head that was struggling. When I first met him, my body’s response had been undeniable. But my head… my head reminded me that all guys were the same. Nash showed me differently. He proved me wrong. Yet my head was still fighting against what my heart already knew.
“What else is bothering you?” he whispered, reading me all too well. “Do you have regrets?”
I turned in his arms, tipping my head back and gazing up into his face. “I could never regret any of my time spent with you.”
He kissed the tip of my nose. “That’s good. I plan to take up a lot of your time.” He swung me up into his arms, cradling me against his torso and walking out of the water and back up the beach where he spread me out in the sand and came over me.
For the rest of the night, I didn’t think at all.
18
I woke up to a strange yet familiar sound. It wasn’t the waves. It wasn’t the ocean breeze. It wasn’t gunshots or drums…
It was a plane.
Nash must have heard it too, and we both bolted up off the sand and rushed out by the water, staring at the sky and waving our arms frantically, trying to get the pilot’s attention.
But the plane was nowhere in sight.
Yet we could both hear it. It had to be nearby.
But where?
“We need a flare,” Nash said, frenzied. “We need the flare gun on the plane!”
We both took off running down the beach. He ran so fast he went out of sight as I struggled to push through the sand, thoroughly disgusted with myself.
I kept glancing up at the sky, trying to catch just a glimpse of the aircraft, praying that it wouldn’t turn and fly off, leaving us stranded once more.
When I finally reached the part of the beach where I could see our crashed plane, I rushed forward, wondering what on earth was taking Nash so long. As fast as he moved, I really expected to see the bright-red burn of a flare across the sky by now.
Seconds dragged by.
He never reappeared.
The sound of the overhead aircraft faded away.
Finally, Nash came running out of the trees, the big flare gun clasped in his hand. He had this wild look on his face. The minute his feet touched the sand, he looked up into the sky.
“Fuck!” he screamed, frustrated. “Did you see the plane?” he asked.
I shook my head no.
“Grab up whatever you can find—wood, shells, whatever. We’re going to write out S.O.S. in the sand.”
I ran off to grab some of the partially burned wood left in the bonfire and some large palm fronds and driftwood lying around. As I started to build the first S, Nash came over beside me and yanked something out of his back pocket.
“What is that?” I asked as I worked.
“Make it big,” he instructed, looking at my handiwork. Then he explained. “This is a smoke flare.”
It was a long, red stick (probably would be better to call it a wand, but whatever), and I watched as he ripped the top off and jammed it in his pocket. Then he pulled the cap off the top and stuck it on his finger like an oversized thimble. He held the flare out and scrapped his covered finger over it once and it burst forward like the giant sparklers I used to play with on the Fourth of July.
“Don’t look into the flame,” he told me, and I looked away, starting to make the O.
When I ran out of supplies, I stood to get more, and I noticed the bright flames had gone out and there was now a deep rust-colored smoke funneling up into the sky, being caught up in the wind.
“It’s too windy!” I worried.
He shook his head. “Smoke flares are designed to be seen from miles away and in the windiest conditions. Maybe it will attract that plane back.”
It was certainly better than nothing. I rushed forward to get some more supplies, but he grabbed my arm. “Stay away from the plane.”
The look in his eyes worried me, but I could only deal with one thing at a time so I nodded and then rushed around for more rocks and fallen branches. When I came back, Nash buried the end of the smoke flare in the sand (in the center of the letter O), keeping it upright as smoke poured into the sky.
“That’s going to attract their attention,” I said, implying the pirates.
“They already know we’re here,” he said grimly.
He didn’t say anything else as we finished the S.O.S signal, and my mind raced wildly, wondering what he meant. At the same time, I listened to the plane, praying it would turn back.
Please see the smoke.
The signal was done and the smoke was still gliding up above the ocean when Nash grabbed my hand and pulled me along with him toward the hammock.