Silver Borne(214)

"Some of your old school pictures, too, if you want them." "I'd like that," I said.

He looked back toward Adam's house, and I saw that someone else was headed over.

"Looks like you've been missed.

I'll leave you alone." He kissed my forehead and jogged off.

He met Adam at the barbed-wire fence, and Adam said something I couldn't quite hear that made Bran laugh.

"Hey," I said, as Adam approached me.

His response was a blast of warmth that had me blushing.

"Do you have keys to your van?" he asked, his voice a dark caress that gave me goose bumps.

He smelled of need and impatience.

"They're in the van." "Good," he said, taking my arm and walking briskly toward the pole barn that had survived the fire without a scorch mark.

"If I had to go get my truck, someone might notice us leaving.

I have keys to Warren's apartment.

He said the guest room has clean sheets." He stopped at the van.

"I need to drive." Normally, I'd have argued with him just on general principle, but sometimes, especially with Adam so intense that he was ready to explode, it was just better to give Alpha males their way.

Without a word, I headed toward the passenger side of the van.

He didn't speed and he didn't talk.

We made it to Richland without hitting a red light, but there our luck ran out.

"Adam," I said gently, "if you break my steering wheel, we'll have to walk the rest of the way to Warren's house." He loosened his hands but didn't look at me.

I put a hand on his thigh, and it vibrated under my palm.

"If you want to make it to Warren's," he said, his voice almost guttural, "you'll have to keep your hands to yourself." There is something incredibly arousing about being wanted .

I pulled my hand back and sucked in a deep breath.

"Adam," I said.

The light turned green at last.

I had the whimsical thought that my time in Elphame had completely skewed my internal clock, because I could have sworn we were there for hours instead of seconds.

Warren lived in an A house, one of a group of "Alphabet Houses" built during World War II to accommodate the exploding population of nuclear-industry workers in Richland.

The one he lived in was still a duplex.

Both sides were dark-- and the other duplex had a FOR RENT sign on the window.

Adam parked the van and slid out without looking at me.

He closed the door with exquisite gentleness that said a lot about his state of mind.

I got out and didn't even bother to worry about whether my prized Vanagon Syncro was locked-- which I suppose said equally as much about my state of mind.