Page 3 of Escaping Reality


  his chest and up my arms. Without a conscious decision, I lean closer to him

  and my lashes lift, my eyes meeting his, and the connection shoots

  adrenaline through me. I am no longer in the hell of my head. I am right

  here with this man and he leaves no room for anything else.

  “Is she okay?”

  I jerk back at the sound of the flight attendant’s voice and Liam’s

  hands fall away from me, leaving me oddly cold. “Excuse me? Am I okay?” I

  ask, wondering what the heck I did that would merit that question.

  “She doesn’t like it when I talk sports,” Liam jokes, obviously trying to

  spare me a more personal explanation of…what? What the heck did I do?

  “Too much basketball makes me crazy,” I add, trying to snatch up the

  breadcrumbs Liam has tossed my way, but I fear I sound too strained to

  sound more than baffled.

  “It’s not basketball season,” she points out, looking less than pleased.

  “Since when does that stop a basketball fan from killing us with

  basketball talk?” I ask, and that earns me a deadpan look, which has me

  quickly shifting gears, trying to make blind amends. “I’m fine. Sorry if I

  caused some kind of trouble.”

  She frowns and glowers accusingly at Liam, and all signs of her early

  admiration of his overwhelmingly hotness from earlier are gone. “She

  doesn’t seem fine.” Her gaze shifts to me.

  “You shouted. It scared the heck out of us.”

  Shouted? Oh, good grief. Way to not bring attention to yourself, Amy.

  “I took a decongestant,” I say, trying to be truly convincing this time. “They

  make me sleepy and give me nightmares.”

  Her lips purse, but her expression quickly softens. “Well, that makes

  sense. Yes. I can see how that might happen to someone sensitive to

  medications, but boy oh boy they must have worked you over. We’ve only

  been in the air fifteen minutes and you were awake when we took off. You

  were knocked out hard and fast.”

  Which isn’t like me. Not on a normal day. Certainly not on a day I feel

  threatened. “I’m really sorry I scared you,” I offer, attempting a smile that

  I’m pretty sure never makes it to my lips. “I promise to stay awake the rest

  of the flight.”

  “You don’t have to promise that,” she says, and grins. “But maybe

  warn us before you go to sleep. We’ll have dinner served in five minutes.”

  She rushes away and Liam doesn’t give me time to savor her departure.

  “Decongestants?” Liam asks softly, drawing my gaze back to his.

  “My ears pop when I fly.” The lie comes easily. I’m back to the me I

  hate. “And unless you want to confess to drugging me, that’s my story and

  I’m sticking with it.”

  He studies me a bit too carefully for my own good, and something in

  his eyes has me warm all over and wishing he’d touch me again. “What are

  you afraid of, Amy?”

  You, I want to say. You scare me because you make me want to trust

  you. I laugh, and it sounds strained even to my own ears. “Godzilla,” I say,

  confessing the fictional monster I’d feared in childhood, until life had

  shown me real monsters existed.

  If I’d expected his laughter, he doesn’t give it to me. “Godzilla?” he

  prods, angling his body to block out anyone passing by us, his back to them,

  his body almost caging mine. The impact of this man’s full attention is

  overwhelming. My breath turns shallow, and to my utter disbelief, my

  nipples are tight and achy. I do not respond to men like this. I just…don’t.

  “Everyone has a proverbial monster under the bed,” I manage, and

  thankfully my voice sounds far more steady than I feel. “Godzilla is mine,” I

  continue. “And hey—at least there weren’t any hippos crossing the road in

  this nightmare. I’ve had that one a time or two, as well.

  Actually, I don’t think the hippos felt like nightmares. Just strange

  dreams.” Shut up, Amy. Shut up. Why are you telling him anything more

  than you have to? You never, ever tell more than you have to.

  “I won’t try to analyze what the hippos mean,” he comments, and

  the slight curve to his lips on the words fades away as he adds, “but your

  monster under the bed sounds more like a skeleton in the closet to me.”

  “Fear and a secret are two different things,” I remind him, pointing

  out the difference in the two phrases.

  “Often they come together. A secret that leads to fear in one way,

  shape, or form.”

  Suddenly, my joke feels like an open window to my soul that I

  desperately want to slam shut. Tension coils in my muscles and I quickly

  pull my guard into place, turning the tables.

  “Sounds like a man who speaks from experience.”

  “Yes, well,” he says, a cynical tinge to his voice, “experience isn’t all

  it’s cracked up to be, now is it?”

  I search his eyes and look for the meaning behind his words, but I

  find nothing. He is unreadable, as guarded as I am on my best day, and I

  sense that I’ve now glimpsed a little piece of his soul. “What makes you

  have nightmares, Liam?”

  “Nothing.” His answer is short and fast, his tone as unreadable as his

  face remains.

  “Everyone has something that scares them.”

  “I own my fear. It doesn’t own me.”

  A sound of disbelief slips from my throat. “You make it sound so easy

  to control fear.” I regret the words that admit my fear the instant I speak

  them. It’s a mistake I never make, but I’ve made it with him. Liam truly is

  dangerous.

  His gaze lowers to my mouth, lingering there and sending a tingling

  sensation down my neck and over my breasts, before slowly lifting. “Maybe

  you haven’t had the right teacher, Amy.”

  What did that even mean, and why did it create an acute throb

  between my legs? I’m spiraling out of control and my defenses bristle. “I

  didn’t say I needed a teacher.”

  “You didn’t say you didn’t, either.”

  “Dinner is served,” the flight attendant announces, and neither of us

  looks at her.

  “I don’t,” I say, and now I’m the one who isn’t sure if I’m trying to

  convince him or me.

  My heart is racing. Why is my heart racing?

  His lips quirk. “If you say so.”

  “Dinner is served,” the flight attendant repeats, sounding a little

  anxious.

  “I do say so,” I assure him, cutting my gaze and lowering my tray to

  have my chicken dinner immediately placed on top of it.

  The flight attendant leaves us alone and I don’t look at Liam. I have

  this sense that if I do, he’ll see more of me than I see myself. As it is, I’m

  letting him see things I shouldn’t have. This banter between us has to stop.

  It will stop. No more. I’m done playing friendly seatmate. There is a reason I

  stay away from men like Liam, men with experience and confidence. Men

  who make a girl who already can’t remember her name forget her name.

  They do see too much. And they make everyone else see too little.

  I snatch a roll from my plate that I don’t want and tear it apart, then

  set it back down
.

  Teacher. What does that even mean? And why am I making myself

  crazy wondering, anyway? It doesn’t matter. He’ll be out of my life in a few

  short, or not so short, hours. And true to that assessment, the next few

  minutes feel like an eternity. I tell myself the silence is good. We are

  slipping into a typical passenger-to-passenger travel arrangement. We

  don’t have to talk. It’s better this way. Talking means giving away facts I

  need to suppress. It’s logical. It’s right, and yet, I am so ultra-aware of Liam

  beside me that I can barely taste the few bites of food I force down. Any

  woman—heck, any human being—would be. There’s nothing more to it.

  He’s gorgeously carved, like a fine work of art. That’s all it is. Isn’t it?

  “You didn’t tell me why you’re going to Denver.”

  The question surprises me and my fork freezes in the rice I’d been

  pushing around. In sixty seconds flat, I go from relieved that he has broken

  the silence to panicked at the idea of sharing my new lies. I’m not ready. I

  don’t ever want to be ready.

  I cut him a sideways look and my pulse leaps when I find him

  watching me. I’m rattled at how easily he draws a reaction from me, and

  I’m almost snappy as I counter with, “Why are you headed to Denver?” And

  darn it, there is a tiny quaver to my voice I hope he doesn’t hear.

  “So that’s how it is, is it?”

  My brow furrows and I set my fork down. “What does that mean?”

  “You give what you get,” he replies, and there is no mistaking the

  challenge etching his words.

  No, I think. That’s not how it is. That’s not ever how it has been. Not

  in my world.

  “Wouldn’t life be better if that’s how it truly was?” Another quaver

  ripples in the depths of my question. I really need to stop talking.

  This time he sets his fork down, turning to face me more fully. “You

  do know that for a ‘give what you get’ philosophy to work, that someone

  still has to give first, right?” And there is something as intimately

  inappropriate to the way he looks at me, and how he says the words, as

  there has been when he’s touched me.

  “And you want that to be me,” I state, intentionally leaving off the

  question mark. I try to leave out the breathless quality of my voice, too, and

  I fail. I don’t like that I fail. It’s another sign I have no control over myself.

  Worse. I think I might like it if this virtual stranger had control over me,

  which tells me how emotionally on edge I really am.

  “I’m in discussions to be part of a downtown Denver building

  project,” he surprises me by saying. Giving before he “gets”.

  “What kind of building project?”

  He just looks at me. So much for being done with friendly banter, I

  think as I cave to his silent demand I “give” a part of me. “I was laid off and

  my old boss got me a new job in Denver.

  And before you ask, it’s nothing exciting. It’s administrative.”

  He tilts his head slightly. “So you’ll be staying in Denver.”

  “For a while,” I say, and the satisfaction I see in his eyes surprises and

  pleases me far more than it should. I ask the obvious question, telling

  myself it’s simply because it’s expected.

  “How long will you be in Denver?”

  “It all depends on whether I take on the project.” The flight attendant

  proves she has brilliant timing again by picking right then to take away our

  plates, leaving me with an incomplete answer I want completely. By the

  time we’ve been offered coffee and dessert that we both decline, I have no

  idea if he would have said more, or how to get things back on topic without

  seeming too interested. And I am too interested. He’s a risk. He could be a

  mere stranger or he could be an enemy. Worse. I’m too risky for anyone to

  befriend. I put them at risk, and with that blistering thought, I know there is

  nothing more to ask him. Nothing more to say but “have a nice life”. I

  cannot ever be close to anyone. No one. Ever.

  I snuggle under a blanket the flight attendant has left me, and

  surprising me, Liam reaches into the seat pocket in front of mine and

  removes what looks like a sketchpad, which I hadn’t noticed until now. He

  pauses halfway between my seat and his own, glancing at me, and he is

  close, his mouth within leaning distance. It’s a great mouth, sensual and

  full, and I wonder what it would feel like on mine.

  “If you want to sleep,” he says, “I promise to keep Godzilla at bay for

  you.”

  He couldn’t have said anything more perfect and I know right then

  what it is about Liam that makes him so irresistible. Men have been scarce

  in my life, namely because of my fear of getting close to anyone. The few

  times I’ve broken that rule have not turned out well, and I admit that in a

  few lonely, weak moments, I’ve indulged in my share of Cinderella fantasies

  where my Prince Charming swoops in and makes life better. Liam is good

  looking, confident—he radiates control in a way my fantasy Prince

  Charming would. But more so, I believe Liam would fight Godzilla if he had

  to. Maybe not for me, but for someone he cares about.

  “I’ll hold you to that,” I finally say, unable to find even a thread of jest

  to lace the words.

  I watch his eyes flicker, the color diluting to a soft blue then

  darkening again, and I am not sure how to read the meaning when he is

  otherwise guarded, as much a mystery as who I am running from. “Good,”

  he replies simply before he leans back fully into his seat.

  I let my head drop to the cushion, and for a few minutes I indulge in a

  fantasy about Liam to keep the monsters of my past at bay. But as the hum

  of the engine starts working me over again, flickering images of the past

  begin to slip inside my head, and I start to unravel. I’m not going to be able

  to sit here without getting lost in my own head and going crazy. A flash of

  flames has me jerking to a sitting position and my hands go to my face, my

  elbows to my knees.

  I can feel the heaviness of Liam’s attention. He’s looking at me but I

  don’t want to look at him. If I do, I will talk to him. I will ask him questions.

  He will ask me questions.

  “Amy?”

  His voice slides through me, and somehow it manages to be

  soothing, warm comfort and sensual fire at the same time. Not for the first

  time, I’m baffled by the way a man I barely know manages to be silk on my

  raw nerves, but I’m not going to overanalyze it. I have to hold myself

  together until I’m someplace safe enough to cave to a little temporary

  weakness, and he feels like the answer. He’s what will get me through this

  flight. I sit back to look at him, and though I’m perfectly aware that he is a

  heavy dose of delicious man, my heart still races as I blink his dark good

  looks and his piercing blue eyes into view.

  He sets his pencil down on his tray and abandons his work for me,

  giving me a concerned assessment. “Everything okay?” he asks, and I think

  of him as a gentle lion in that moment, only it is me who is purring under

  hi
s powerful male attention.

  “Fine,” I reply, because “fine” is nothing but a word. There is no

  agreement on my end, no lie. I tilt my head back. Liam closes his tray and

  does the same, sticking his pad beside his seat.

  With both our heads on our cushions, for several seconds we stare at

  each other and for moments I am lost in the deep blue pools of his eyes.

  “You do know,” he says slowly, “that as a man I’ve been taught that a

  woman never means ‘fine’ when she says ‘fine’, right?”

  I might have smiled another day, but not this one. “I guess we all

  have our own ways of defining fine.”

  He studies me a moment, then another, and I have the impression

  he’s trying to understand me. I want to tell him “good luck”. I don’t even

  understand me. “You don’t want to sleep.”

  Somehow I don’t openly react to the surprising change of subject and

  too accurate of an observation. Dodge and weave, I tell myself. Dodge and

  weave. “I don’t like to sleep in public places.”

  “Talk to me, Amy,” he murmurs softly.

  “Talk to you?” I ask. I want to talk to him. That’s the problem.

  “You need to fill the empty space in your head, and right now, talking

  is your only method of doing that.”

  I try to joke away his suggestion. “And you’d rather talk to a stranger

  than have her fall asleep and get you in trouble with the flight attendant

  again?”

  “We aren’t strangers anymore, and I find the idea of occupying your

  time increasingly appealing.” His eyes light. “So use me, baby.”

  The air crackles between us and there is no denying the growing

  attraction I have for this man. “Fine, then. I’d love to hear about the project

  you’re traveling to Denver to discuss.”

  “There isn’t a lot to tell yet. It’s a typical property development deal.

  A group of deep pockets get together and aspire for greatness that equates

  to dollar signs in their eyes. In this case, it’s a plan to create the world’s

  largest event center, complete with concert facilities, a shopping mall, and

  an office complex.”

  He sounds blasé when I’m excited just hearing about the project, and

  I find I’m more curious about Liam than ever—enough to be nosy. “Are you

  one of those deep pockets?”

  “There are too many egos fighting in one room for me on this one.