by Dale Mayer
He shook his head. Emotion choked him.
“Can’t talk?” she teased.
He shook his head again.
“Good,” she said. “Then show me how much you love me.”
His gaze already black-lit with deep dark passion. In a dangerously sexy voice, he growled against her ear, “I live to please.”
He cupped her breast, his fingers rolling the nipple a slight bit too hard, sensitizing them instantly. He shifted to his knees and reached for the body lotion on the side table. She shivered. He poured a generous amount into his hands and slowly stroked down her shoulders and arms, chest and ribs, and her hips, avoiding her injury. Then he went to work rubbing the cream into her soft skin. She stretched like a cat under his ministrations, loving his touch, loving having him here with her.
“That feels good.”
“You’ve been overdoing it,” he said quietly. “This will help the sore muscles.”
“Good. I swear all of me is sore.”
He stroked down through the curls at the juncture of her thighs. She gasped. He poured more cream on his hands and started in on her legs. His strokes both powerful and tantalizing, he danced toward her inner thighs then back to the front of her legs. Gentle brushes along the back of her knee were followed by casual fingers gently teasing her belly.
She groaned. “You’re such a tease.”
A kiss landed on her belly button, a slight tongue lick and gone again. She shifted restlessly.
Then he deepened his strokes, gently massaging the sore muscles and tired bones going from her toes and back up to her shoulder. When he came to the edge of the bandage, he bent down to kiss the edges where the tape pulled at her skin. “I’m so sorry you got hurt.”
He dropped a kiss on the bandage. “I’m so sorry you were scared.”
He dropped a kiss above her breast. “I’m not sorry you’re here with me.”
He came down on top of her, his body gliding over hers in a slick movement.
He clasped her head at the back of her neck, his fingers gently massaging the tense muscle along her neck. “And I do love you.”
And this time when he kissed her, there was no holding back. No being concerned that she was hurt or tired and needing rest.
He ravaged her lips and thrust his tongue deep into her mouth as his hands held her head fast.
Heat poured through her. Her nerves, already sensitized by the massage, were dancing to attention.
She twisted lazily beneath him, her hands stroking his back, sliding down to his hips where her nails scraped the skin of his cheeks.
He pulled back slightly, his hips pressing into hers. She spread her thighs, making room for him, but he held himself up and slightly away. She dug her nails in. He growled and plunged in to the hilt.
She cried out, her back arching.
He stilled.
“Did I hurt you?”
She shook her head. “Never, but damn…if you don’t move, I might just hurt you.”
With a dark low laugh, he grabbed her hips to hold her still as he withdrew then reentered, and he did it again. Always withdrawing to the point where he was going to fall out then back in just before reaching that point.
“Stop playing with me,” she cried. She tried to wiggle free, but his hands held her fast.
He plunged again. And again. And again.
She lay beneath him, her hips desperate to move, but she couldn’t do anything with the way he held her in place.
Shuddering, her body coated with a thin film of sweat, she could only acquiesce as he took her to the edge.
“Please,” she whispered. “Damn it, Morgan, now!”
He lifted her leg over his arm and shifted his position and plunged once, twice…she cried out in joy as millions of tiny explosions set off inside. He hammered again and again, not giving her a chance to relax, riding her through her release until he groaned above her, his response setting her off once again.
By the time he collapsed on the pillow beside her, she was already succumbing to the lure of sleep in the aftermath of the rosy heat and loving satisfaction.
*
Morgan watched her ride the wave of sleep, marveling at how quickly and how completely she surrendered. To him. To sleep. To life.
He’d watched her work before, fascinated at her ability to focus on the design at hand. To knock everything else in her life back out of her mind. To completely exclude everything in life but the masterpiece she was creating.
And she was the same in bed. She focused on her pleasure. His pleasure. She was there one hundred percent with him all the way – every damn time.
And he was sure she had no idea how special she was.
But he knew.
And he’d make sure she understood every damn day.
Pulling her tight into his arms, he closed his eyes and joined her in sleep.
Chapter 9
Waking up to a cold, empty bed sucked. Especially after last night. Still, for all the emptiness beside her, there was a warm ring around her heart. Morgan had never said he’d loved her before. She’d known he did, but she’d always found men reticent in their declaration of how they felt. Morgan was worse than most. And she’d been the opposite. But since he’d come back, she hadn’t said it to him. She lay there and realized that she hadn’t, even after last night.
Frowning, she had to consider that. She did love him. She had no doubts in her mind.
But she had refrained from telling him. Why?
Was she punishing him?
Or still protecting herself from more hurt? Not that it would do any good. She already had the emotions. So not verbalizing the words wasn’t going to make the hurt any less. No, she was likely still punishing him. As in he wanted to hear the words but she hadn’t forgiven him for running off. Which made her a piece of shit. Because she had forgiven him. She just wasn’t sure that he wouldn’t do it again.
So by withholding the words, she was possibly contributing to him leaving again. So not what she wanted.
She threw back the covers and wondered if he’d been up long enough to have made coffee. Her muscles were loose and easier to move after last night’s massage, but there was a deep ache inside. She glanced down at the bandage, wishing she could rip the damn thing off. But she needed to protect the wound and keep it clean so for the moment, it had to stay. Her bags from last night were on the floor. She smiled. At least she had clean clothes.
Getting dressed was easier but seemed to take longer. Then again, it might be the extra primping she was doing. She wanted to look her best this morning.
No reason. Just because she loved him.
Downstairs, there was no sign of him. But there was a half-empty pot of coffee. She poured a large mug, dosed it with cream, and carried it out to the back yard. It was empty. He had to be in the garage, but it was quiet. Still, she walked over and tried the door. It was locked.
Worried, she wandered over to the front yard, only to find that it was empty, too. She retraced her steps back to the house and called out to him.
“Morgan? Where are you?”
No answer.
She ran upstairs and grabbed her phone she’d left on the charger. She checked for messages. Crap. He’d texted her over an hour ago saying he’d gone to the police station.
Relieved, she walked back downstairs and sat out on the front deck chairs and looked around. He had found himself a lovely home. The front looked out onto a cul-de-sac and the back yard backed out to crown land. He could walk forever in that direction and likely did a lot of hiking and biking out there. As far as she could see, there were fields and forests. No one lived in that area at all.
Lovely.
Was it someplace she could live?
She thought she might. There was a shop here for Morgan and it was how he made his money. If she could go back to working from home, she wasn’t against it.
It was also a family neighborhood and appeared to have lots of kids close by. More thoughts for down
the road. She loved kids. As in, would really love to have kids. Three would be nice.
What would Morgan think of that idea?
They’d spent so much of their time in bed, she hadn’t gotten to know him all that well. Maybe she’d intuitively known that they wouldn’t be together for long.
Or maybe she’d been afraid he’d walk so she’d kept her own barriers up. She had no idea.
She texted him that she was up and sitting outside enjoying the morning.
He responded by telling her to go back inside and lock the door.
She glared down at the phone.
Except he was right, what he said sent chills down her arms, leaving goose bumps behind. She got up and walked back inside to refill her coffee and check her email.
Everything was normal. Her horoscope said it was going to be a rough day and maybe she should consider going back to bed and staying there.
She gave a startled laugh. “Like I need more doomsayers.”
But it made her pause. If even all the stars and planets were warning her about today, then what the hell was she supposed to do to fix this?
The truck roaring up the street toward the house at the end was so obviously Morgan’s truck, it made her smile. Damn, he was fast. And worried. But he needn’t be. She was fine.
And she told him so as soon as he walked in. “I’m fine.”
He raced over, picked her up in his arms, and kissed her hard. “You’re more than just fine,” he said when he let her come up for air. “I’m so sorry for having to leave you this morning. I was going to wake you up then figured that was hardly fair.”
She shook her head, her hand reaching up to stroke his cheek. “Not to worry. I needed my sleep and honestly, I feel fine.”
“Good.”
He stepped back. “If you left any coffee, I’ll grab one.” He disappeared out of the room. She waited a long moment for him to return. When he didn’t, she called out, “What did the cops have to say?”
He popped his head back into the room, “Nothing much. They just wanted to go over the facts of the case.”
She nodded. “And you told him about the money, the keys, and everything else now?”
He nodded. “It was the best solution.”
“What did he say about the money?”
“He agreed to let me keep it in case Borg came for it. Of course I was speaking hypothetically as I certainly didn’t take the money in. However, Borg is well-known to the police. Only they have nothing on him, and he’s very careful to not leave any evidence.”
“He certainly didn’t with us.”
“Exactly.” He was quiet for a long moment as he drank his coffee, but studying him, she could see his mind worrying on the problem.
“So what’s bothering you?”
He turned that deep gaze in her direction. “They want to set up a sting.”
She frowned. “What kind of sting?”
“Contact Borg, have him come to collect the money and nab him then.”
“But what good would that do? He’d have the money, but there’d still be no evidence of him having gotten it any illegal way. That makes no sense.”
“Well, it does in another way. Before I went to the police, I stopped and asked Dean about the tattoo. He wasn’t happy to hear that there are photographs of his ass either.”
*
She bolted to her feet. “He has a dragon tattoo? One we have pictures of?”
He nodded. He hadn’t been looking forward to telling her this part.
“Which one?”
“The last one.” He hoped it was. He hadn’t taken a good look at it. Dean was still supremely angry about it. Another of those moments when life turned to the left while he was planning on going right.
“Well, who was his artist?” Jazz cried.
This was the part that was going to be hard. “He doesn’t know.”
She stared at him numbly. Then sat down hard, “What?” She shook her head. “How is that possible?”
“He said he was at a local party, got really drunk, and when he woke up in the morning in his own bed, he had a sore butt and a fresh tattoo.”
Morgan ran a hand through his hair. He couldn’t imagine it, and he’d been to more than his fair share of blind drunk parties and several where he’d woken up completely unaware of what had happened the night before, sometimes not even knowing where he was. Thankfully, those days were long behind him. And he’d been lucky. He’d never woken up with a body piercing or tattoo he never asked for.
Dean had been pretty upset about it and asked those he’d seen at the party. Only no one claimed to have done it or seen who’d done it. He also got a poor reception to his questions – the place had been full of artists and people that wore lots of ink to begin with. Several people thought the tattoo was great and others thought it was an amateur job. So he hated that not only did he get a tattoo, but he didn’t even get a good one.
Jazz stared at him, open-mouthed. “How is that possible?”
Morgan waited for her to ask the right question. “I have no idea.”
“Wait. A party here? In town? With lots of tattoos? Where?”
That was the right question. But she was going to hate the answer. He took a deep breath, knowing she was going to lose it, and answered honestly, “At Roxy’s house.”
Chapter 10
“That’s not possible.” But she couldn’t work up any strength in her voice. Roxy loved parties. It was Jazz who didn’t. Jazz spent enough time with people at the shop, she didn’t want to spend her non-working hours with them, too.
Roxy was different that way. She loved to socialize and hated being alone.
The party could have been at her place. It also brought this damn problem back full circle to her shop. “Roxy wouldn’t have done that to him.”
“No, she probably didn’t do it.” Morgan knew the next fact was going to be hard. “Dean said you were there, too.”
“I was?” She frowned at him. “I went to one party over the last six months. It was Perl’s birthday. But I don’t remember seeing Dean.” She tried to think back. “Then again, there were a lot of people there.”
“You might want to consider the good thing here,” Morgan said quietly. “Dean is alive, and that means the other one could possibly be alive, too.”
“Only Billy was killed?”
In a way, that made a hell of a lot of sense. Billy had been part of the problem here. So if someone had taken him out, they had provocation. “It would be really nice to think that sending out the images of the tattoos was a diversion,” she suggested. “Someone is throwing the cops off the trail. Trying to keep the focus away from themselves.”
Morgan shrugged. “I have no idea. But Dean is going to the cops now and fessing up. He’s hoping to get a complete pass on his involvement, but there’s no way to know how that will turn out.”
“At least he’s getting a clean start.” Jazz loved the sound of that. “Sounds like this will work out well for him.”
“It will if he has something to offer. He should be able to give them a lot more information than they had before. Hopefully enough to find Billy’s murderer.”
“Yeah.” Jazz leaned her head back, her mind consumed with the thought of what Dean had gone through. He certainly wasn’t the first to wake up with a tattoo on his body. Maybe the ass dragon was a bit much, but… “Does he remember anything about that night?”
“Not a whole lot.”
“Did he have sex with anyone?” At his sharp look, she shrugged. “I’m still wondering if a lover did this. If so, it was likely the same lover that Billy had.”
“And might be responsible for his murder, you mean?”
“It’s hard to not consider.”
Morgan pulled out his phone. “I’ll ask him.”
“I thought he was at the police station?”
“It’s almost eleven. He should be done.”
She hated what Dean had done, but a part of her was more worrie
d what he’d do with his fresh start if he’d lost everyone in his life already. It would be hard to be alone. He’d feel like shit. In a complete about face, she blurted, “Invite him to lunch.”
“Ah, what?” Morgan, his phone in his hands, lifted his gaze to stare at her. “Remember that holding a gun to our heads part?”
“He was against a wall and trying to find a way out.” She leaned forward. “He was a victim too. I’m afraid of what he’ll do once he’s cleared the air with the cops. He might have no one left to turn to.”
“You’re too damn generous,” he bit off.
“No, it’s fallout. You two were friends, right?”
He nodded.
“Good friends?”
He gave a sharp nod.
“Until you left?”
His gaze narrowed.
“And then he turned to Billy.”
He closed his eyes, his shoulders slumping.
“Making him an easy target for your brother, who was likely already waiting in the wings.”
“Shit.”
*
How could she do that so easily? She could make him see another point of view, another side to an issue that he hadn’t considered. He had planned to never let Dean back into his house, never mind his life. Some things were just unforgivable.
Like pulling a gun and waving it at Jazz. She might be ready to forgive that – he sure as hell wasn’t.
“He never hurt us,” she said quietly. “And he never took the money.”
“He might have hurt us and he did take the money,” Morgan countered. “Just because he gave it back doesn’t make his actions forgivable.”
“Neither does anything he did make him unforgivable.”
He rolled his eyes. “Remember, you can’t save the world.”
“No, but maybe we can save a few of Billy’s victims.”
Shit. As an answer, it was hard to argue with.
“Fine. I’ll invite him over for coffee.” He glared at her. “Not lunch.”