Page 47 of Ruined by My Ex’s Dad (Silver Fox Obsession #2)
"Will wait," he said, voice dropping to that register that bypassed my brain and went straight to my core. "Right now, I have more pressing needs."
He laid me on our bed with careful reverence that belied the hunger in his eyes. "You're carrying my child," he said, the words emerging like a prayer and a claim simultaneously. His hands moved to the hem of my sweater—his sweater—sliding it upward with deliberate slowness.
"Yes," I breathed, lifting my arms to help him, sudden shyness warring with desire as his gaze raked over my newly exposed skin.
"Your body is already changing," he observed, palms skimming over my ribs to cup my breasts, now fuller, more sensitive than before.
His thumbs brushed across my nipples, drawing a gasp from me at the almost painful pleasure.
"Too sensitive?" he asked, watching my reactions with that laser focus that missed nothing.
"No," I managed, arching into his touch despite the intensity. "Just... different. Everything feels... more."
Something like satisfaction crossed his features—primitive male pride at the changes his seed had wrought in me. He lowered his head, replacing fingers with his mouth, tongue circling one nipple with exquisite gentleness before drawing it between his lips.
I cried out, unprepared for the jolt of pleasure that shot straight to my core. My hands clutched at his shoulders, his hair, unsure whether to pull him closer or push him away from the almost overwhelming sensation.
"Lucas," I gasped, "please. I need?—"
"Tell me," he urged, moving to give the other breast the same attention. "Tell me what you need, Savannah."
"You. Inside me. Now." The words emerged without artifice, without the careful calculation I might once have employed. Pregnancy had stripped me of pretense, of the ability to be anything but nakedly honest in my desires.
He raised his head, eyes darkened to midnight. "Demanding," he observed, a slight smile curving his mouth. "I like it."
With efficient movements, he stripped away the rest of my clothing, then his own, until we were skin to skin, his body covering mine with careful weight. One hand slid between my thighs, finding me embarrassingly wet, ready for him without preliminaries.
"So responsive," he murmured, stroking through slick heat in a way that made my hips buck involuntarily. "Is this another change? Another gift our child has given us?"
I nodded, beyond words as his fingers worked magic, circling my clit with the precise pressure that never failed to make me see stars. My body, already hypersensitive from hormonal shifts, responded with shameless eagerness, pleasure building faster, more intensely than usual.
When he finally entered me, it was with exquisite control—a slow, deliberate penetration that gave me time to adjust to the sensation, now somehow both familiar and entirely new. I moaned as he filled me completely, my legs wrapping around his waist to take him deeper still.
" I love that you are all mine," he growled against my neck, beginning to move with measured thrusts. "All of you. Both of you."
The possessiveness in his voice, the reverent way his hands mapped my body—as if memorizing changes, cataloging responses—sent me spiraling toward climax with embarrassing speed. I fought it, wanting to prolong this connection, this perfect physical manifestation of what we'd created together.
"Don't hold back," he commanded, reading my resistance with that uncanny perception. "Let me feel you, Savannah. Let me watch you come apart."
His words, combined with a particularly deep thrust that hit precisely the right spot, pushed me over the edge. I shattered, inner muscles clenching around him as pleasure crashed through me in waves that seemed endless.
Through the haze of my own release, I felt him lose his legendary control, his rhythm faltering as he followed me into ecstasy, my name a prayer on his lips as he emptied himself inside me.
Afterward, he held me with unprecedented tenderness, one hand splayed protectively over my stomach, his heartbeat steady against my back. The gesture was simultaneously possessive and reverent—marking territory yet honoring sanctuary.
"I meant what I said," he murmured against my hair. "About finding solutions. About supporting your independence. About us creating our own patterns, not repeating the ones we inherited."
I turned in his arms, needing to see his face for this conversation. "I know. And I believe you." I traced the strong line of his jaw, the fullness of his lower lip. "But a child changes everything, Lucas. We can't pretend it won't."
"I don't want to pretend," he said simply.
"I want to adapt. Together." His hand returned to my stomach.
"This baby isn't a trap or a complication.
It's an opportunity. To build something different from what either of us had growing up.
To create the family we both deserved but never fully felt we received. "
The truth in his words, the vulnerability in his expression—these weren't calculated strategies or controlling tactics but genuine emotion, rare and precious from a man who had spent decades guarding his heart.
"We'll make mistakes," I said, needing him to understand my fears weren't completely banished. "We'll face challenges we can't anticipate. We'll have moments where we question everything."
"Yes," he agreed without hesitation. "And we'll navigate them as we've navigated every other obstacle—with honesty, with respect, with the understanding that what we're building matters more than individual victories or control."
As I drifted toward sleep in his arms, our child safely nestled between us, I realized something profound had shifted.
Not just in our relationship, not just in our future plans, but in me.
The fear hadn't disappeared completely—perhaps it never would—but it had been joined by something stronger, something that felt dangerously like certainty.
That Lucas and I could build something beautiful from of our respective childhoods. That we could create a family that healed rather than perpetuated old wounds. That we could love this child with all the devotion, all the presence, all the unconditional acceptance we'd both been denied.
And if doubt still whispered in quiet moments, if panic still lurked in the shadows of consciousness—well, that was part of the journey too. The acknowledgment that the most worthwhile things in life were rarely the easiest.
That growth required risk.
That love, in all its forms, demanded vulnerability.
That family, real family, was worth every moment of terror along the way.