could. As if I could ever sleep again, after feeling this, knowing this . . .
But it was all slipping away, water through my fingers, air flowing free through the sky. I was falling, and falling, and falling.
His hand moved slowly down and came to rest over the aching emptiness of my womb. It pressed flat and burned his warmth into my deepest places.
"Dream well," he whispered.
Pleasure came in a wave, drenching me from head to toe, and it went on and on and on. It was the last I knew, except for the dreams.
I dreamed of rain.
* * *
It was raining the night Lewis showed up at my door . . . the slow, steady, nuturing rain people believe is their birthright on this planet, the kind that had to be squeezed out of Mother Nature with a fist of power. I'd been working at it all damn day, and by the time I got home and sank into a hot bath, I was worn out.
I'd been soaking for about ten minutes when I heard the doorbell ring. Let it ring, part of me sighed. The other part reminded me that I was a responsible adult, a Warden, and besides, the visitor might be either Ed McMahon with a Publishers Clearing House check or-even more unlikely-a gorgeous hunk.
It was the gorgeous hunk possibility that lured me out of the bath. I wrapped a thick ratty blue robe around myself and made wet footprints to the door.
I swung it open to find . . . nobody there. And then I looked down.
There was a guy huddled in a sitting position against the wall, soaking wet, his brown hair sticking up like porcupine quills. He was shaking, hugging himself for warmth. It took me a full ten seconds to recognize his face and feel the shock.
"Lewis!" I blurted, and before I could think what I was doing, I got my hands under his arms and tugged. No way I could have lifted him myself, but he cooperated and stumbled over the threshold and into my living room, where he proceeded to drip and shiver uncontrollably. I slammed and locked the door, ran to the hall closet, and came back with the warmest blanket I had-considering it was Florida, not so very warm. When I came back, he was sitting down again, this time on the tile floor of the entryway.
I used a tiny jet of power to suck all the water off him and out of his clothes and directed it down the kitchen sink, where it gurgled and drained away. I warmed the blanket at the same time and threw it around his shoulders.
"Hey," I said, and crouched down. "Not that the floor's not comfy, but I do have a couch."
He opened his eyes, and I was surprised by the fear in them. Lewis, afraid. What could scare the most powerful Warden in the world?
"Can't make it," he admitted. He did look bad- skinny, almost skeletal, with dirty-pale skin as if he'd been someplace dark for a long time. "Thanks."
"I vacuumed you off and gave you a blanket," I said. "Don't thank me yet. Come on, up."
We repeated the grabbing-and-hauling and got him to the couch, where he sprawled and proved that a normal-size couch wasn't designed to accommodate a six-foot-plus guy at full length. I spread the blanket over him. "When's the last time you ate?"
"Don't remember," he murmured. I started to go into the kitchen, but he caught my wrist. "Jo."
The touch, skin-to-skin, started a burn between us. He let go the second he felt it.
"You're in trouble," I said. It wasn't exactly a stretch. "I get it. And no, I won't call anybody."
It was what he wanted. He nodded and closed those warm brown eyes.
When I came back with a microwaved cup of soup, he managed to squirm to a sitting position and sipped it faster than good sense allowed. I pulled up a pale plaid hassock, sat down, and watched him. When he'd sucked the last noodle out of the cup, I took it and laid it aside on the coffee table.
"Good," he murmured. I put a hand on his forehead. He was burning up with fever. "I'm all right."
"Yeah, like hell." I fetched cold medicine from the bathroom and made him swallow two gel capsules with another cup of soup.