At the Edge of the Sun (Maggie Bennett 3) - Page 67

Maggie sighed. “I hate Beirut in the winter.”

“Then it’s lucky you don’t have to be there.”

“Aren’t you going after all?”

“I just told you I was going.”

“Then I am too,” she said simply.

She’d finally gotten his full attention. “Why?”

“Because people who love each other live together and I’ve spent too many years without you,” she said.

“No, Maggie,” he said gently, his voice inexorable. “You deserve better than me, and I’m setting you free.”

“But I don’t want anyone better than you,” she cried. She could feel it slipping away, her only chance at happiness, and the more desperately she grabbed for it, the faster it dissolved.

“No, Maggie,” he said.

She opened her mouth to protest, then shut it again. Maybe he was right or maybe he simply didn’t love her enough. Either way, she wasn’t going to be able to change his mind. Not right now.

Maybe not ever. The days, weeks, years stretched ahead of her, alone in that sparse apartment of hers that now seemed more of a prison than a haven. Never had life looked so bleak, when she should have been weak and dizzy with relief. Instead she felt cold, lost, and confused.

“I think I’ll go in the back after all,” she murmured.

Randall said nothing, his narrowed eyes peering into the dawn-lit sky. Maggie rose, skirting his seat, and for a moment she thought she felt his hand brush hers. But when she looked he was still intent on the horizon.

She pulled the curtain behind her and sank into one of the seats in the tiny cabin. For a long moment she stared out into the slowly lightening sky. Her eyes were stinging, burning, and her heart felt like lead. Leaning back, she fastened the seat belt with shaking hands and slowly she sank into a troubled sleep.

When she awoke things were still and silent. She blinked her eyes open, disoriented, and the bright midday sunlight was pouring in the window, washing over her and the piece of white paper lying in her lap.

When you have time to think about it you’ll know it couldn’t work. Part of you will always blame me, and I’ll always blame myself. But I have loved you, the best I know how to love. Even if it was second best.

Her own words flayed her. She’d accused him of coming in a poor second to Mack, and he’d never forgotten. But it had been a lie, a lie she had never confessed to. She’d loved Mack, with all her heart and soul, but she’d loved Randall first, and she loved him last. And there was no way she was going to spend the rest of her life without him.

She was off the plane in a flash. He’d left the plane too damned far away from the terminals, but she ignored the distance, racing across the deserted runways toward the cluster of dun-color buildings. They couldn’t have been sitting on the ground that long—he wouldn’t have been able to get far enough that she couldn’t find him.

It was a close call. The third person she asked spoke English, but he hadn’t seen a tall American. The fifth person had seen Randall, but wasn’t sure what direction he was heading. The seventh person thought he might have been heading toward the Pan Am terminal, the eighth person saw him going toward Lebanon Air.

She’d just wrapped desperate hands around a European businessman’s lapels when she saw him. He stood head and shoulders above the crowds, moving away from her with oblivious determination. Moving toward the boarding gate of Lebanon Air, away from her, out of her life.

Shoving the startled businessman out of the way, she ran after him. She had only enough breath left to run, not enough to call to him. She raced on, watching him disappear out the door with despairing eyes.

If the neatly dressed Lebanon Air boarding clerk thought he’d stop an Amazon like Maggie Bennett he was painfully mistaken. She slammed him against the wall as she raced past him, into the blinding sunlight.

He was almost out of sight. She stopped just long enough to summon enough breath. “Randall,” she scream

ed, but it came out in a rasping croak, one that he couldn’t hear over the noise of the jet engines.

He had one foot on the boarding stairs. If he got on that plane, if he flew back to Lebanon, he wouldn’t come back. He’d die there in that war-torn country, and she’d be left to mourn him, left empty and alone.

“Randall,” she cried again, but the sound was even more strained. She could feel the wetness of tears pouring down her face, drying in the hot Arab sun. He couldn’t hear her, he was lost to her, forever.

He took one more step, and then he stopped. Slowly he turned, to look directly into her desperate eyes.

“Randall,” she said again, and this time her voice was gone completely, only a whisper of sound. “I love you.”

And then he was moving. Past the disgruntled passengers, back down the stairway, across the tarmac. And she was running, her heart bursting, her lungs aching, running, running, with the sun burning down around them, gilding their entwined figures. Into his arms. Into the light at the edge of the sun. And the darkness was gone forever.

Tags: Anne Stuart Maggie Bennett Suspense
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