I didn't understand it, but I feared it.
God how I feared it.
I crossed my arms and leaned forward on my knees, my hands clenched out of his sight. "What's wrong?"
"Nothing," he said abruptly, then sighed and ran a hand through his thick, dark hair. "And everything."
"That doesn't tell me a whole lot," I said, and this time there was a touch of anger in my voice. But its source was the fear. The concern over the way he was reacting.
He looked at me for a moment, then shook his head. "You really don't see the problem, do you?"
"If I did, I wouldn't be sitting here feeling so sick to my stomach. I'd be trying to fix whatever it is."
He leaned forward and pulled a hand free from under my arm, wrapping his fingers around mine. His skin was warm compared to mine, his touch strong and steady. "Why didn't you ring me when you couldn't make lunch?"
Exasperation ran through me. An exasperation wrapped in anger, and it made my voice sharp. Or maybe that was the fear twisting deep inside. "Because a psycho knocked me out and kidnapped me."
"So why didn't you ring me when you were free?"
"Because there was still stuff to do, things that needed cleaning up."
"So they were all more important than making a simple phone call?"
"I just wanted it all over so I could concentrate on you." You and me. I bit my lip and blinked.
Dammit, I would not cry.
I wouldn't.
Not until I was sure there was something to cry about.
He caressed my wrist with a gentle finger. As warm and as good as his touch was, it only succeeded in stirring the butterflies in my stomach to an even greater frenzy.
"As I said before, I'm never first in your thoughts, Riley. I'm never the one you turn to, never the one you share hurt, or pain, or dreams with. I care for you - care for you a lot - but I'm beginning to doubt the feeling is returned."
"Which is why we go solo - to discover if this is the real, soul mate deal, or just another good thing not meant to last."
"But I can't go solo as things stand. The last few days have proven that."
Maybe I was dense. Maybe the last few days had been tougher than I'd thought, because he was confusing the hell out me. And yet I had a feeling that he thought it should have been all so perfectly clear. "What do you mean?"
He smiled, and it was a tired smile, a smile filled with sadness. "I'm an alpha, remember? As I keep reminding you, it is in my nature to want to protect all that is mine. But there can never be any protecting you. Not with your job."
"I'm not expecting - "
"I know, and that's not my point." He hesitated, then added more softly, "Do you know what it is like, being left behind? Knowing that you're in danger, that at any second you could be killed, and that there's nothing, absolutely nothing, I can do to help you?"
I touched his cheek lightly. He didn't lean into it, didn't react in any way. It seemed he was holding more than the emotion in his words in check.
"But I'm here, I'm safe," I said, after a moment.
"And one day, you might not be here, might not be safe." He squeezed my hand, then released me and sat back. Moving away from my touch. And I felt sick, so sick, that bile rose up my throat and I had to swallow heavily.
"I can't live like that, Riley. It's just not in my nature."
"But - "
"The only way we could work is if you give up your job. Otherwise, there's just no way we could last."