“And here I’d been looking forward to pitting your handcuffs against my whip.”
She realized her miscalculation when his eyes turned hot, raking down her body with obvious intent. His gaze climbed slowly, leaving a trail of gooseflesh behind, and she crossed her arms over her chest.
“I was kidding.”
“You sure?” He leaned back, cocky as hell again. “You’d look awfully good in my cuffs.”
Tate pushed that image right out of her head. “Be that as it may, I think you’ve been beaten enough for one night.”
Instead of putting him in his place, the words merely bounced off his ego. His eyes finished their lazy perusal, heavy-lidded as they met hers.
The walls of the bathroom suddenly seemed too close, or maybe he seemed too large. Too masculine. Too…
Hers to do what she wanted with for the night.
Irritated with herself, Tate tossed the used swab in the trash.
She could feel his gaze burning her skin, but was afraid to let her own get drawn back to his. Because the truth was she was sorely tempted. And that in itself was enough to make her wary. She didn’t do one night stands, and she sure didn’t do them with both her mother and her son just down the hall. So instead, she crossed her arms again, and after a few moments, heard him sigh.
“I appreciate the help, but I think I’ve taken up enough of your evening.” He rose to his feet, closing some of the distance between them. The step Tate took back was instinctive, and Clay chuckled before leaning toward her ear. “You can relax now. I recognize a stop sign when I see it. Body language,” he explained, when she raised a brow. “You’re closed up tighter than a fifty-five gallon drum.”
“I’m sorry,” Tate began, feeling the need to explain. “But I can’t –”
He waved her excuses away. “Probably for the best. I’ll just call a cab to take me out to Justin’s house. From the way things looked, he’s going to be spending the night at the hospital.”
Because, as she’d discovered, he was a doctor. Not a drunk. In retrospect, Tate guessed she’d misjudged both men pretty badly. But then, that was par for her particular course.
“We have a room available downstairs,” she heard herself say, and cursed her tongue for having a mind of its own. She should simply let him call his cab. “A last minute cancellation,” she continued anyway. “If you’d like, you’re welcome to it.”
He hesitated – just long enough to make her feel uncertain and foolish for having made the offer – but then a lopsided grin eased some of the tension from his face. “I’d appreciate it.”
Tate opened the bathroom door. “Come on. I’ll see if I can dig up a T-shirt big enough for you to wear, and show you where you’ll be sleeping.”
THE little boy called out to him for help. Clay could hear him crying in the background as he talked to the child’s father over the phone.
“Please don’t shoot us, Daddy.”
What kind of thing was that for a child to have to say?
And what kind of man could look into the terrified faces of his wife and son and pull the trigger?
Despite the fact that he was an expert on social deviants and their motivations, their sheer capacity for evil never ceased to disgust him.
“Carl.” Clay called the man by his first name, establishing a rapport. “Why don’t you just let Liz and Bradley walk out that door?” Remind him of their names, remind him they were people, not possessions. This was the kind of man that if he was going down, would want to take everything he owned with him.
“Because I’m not stupid. The second they’re out that door, I’m as good as dead.”
“No.” Clay gave his word. “I’ll see to it. My objective is to see that you get whatever it is that you need without anyone getting hurt. What do you need, Carl? Let me help you.” Keep it conversational, between you and Carl. If he’s talking, he’s not killing his family.
The little boy cried out again, tears giving way to sobs. “What I need,” Carl hissed through his teeth. “Is some goddamn quiet! Shut him up, Liz!”
Be quiet, Bradley, Clay silently pleaded with the child. Any threat to his father’s control at this point could have devastating consequences. Empathize, Clay reminded himself. Reassure.
“Carl, I know it must be difficult to concentrate with Bradley crying. Why don’t you send him out here? You can do that, because you’re in control.”
“Damn right I am! Liz, I told you to shut him up!”
From there it went downhill at a breakneck pace. Carl dropped the phone, and turned his gun on his family. Before Clay could even signal the sharpshooters, that little boy was dead.
His terrified voice still echoed in Clay’s head. He wondered if he’d ever again be able to sleep without hearing him… singing?
Shooting up like a marionette on a string, Clay blinked his eyes at the dark-haired child sitting on the edge of his bed. He moved a bright yellow cement mixer back and forth as he sang in a charmingly off-key voice.
“Sally the camel has tree stumps, Sally the camel has tree stumps, so ride Sally ride. Boom, boom, boom.”
For a moment, Clay thought he’d taken a high dive into shallow waters, but as dream faded into reality he found himself grinning. Max’s off base lyrics were hysterical. He eyed his surprise visitor with a great deal of humor.
“You go riding tree stumps and you’re bound to get splinters in your butt,” he advised.
Max turned around to face Clay, covering his giggle behind a small hand. “You said butt,” he pointed out with glee.
Well shit, Clay thought, scrubbing a hand through his mussed hair. What was the politically correct terminology these days? Bottom? Derriere? Hiney? “I meant to say ‘in your behind’.” He didn’t want the kid to go rat him out to his mother.
“That’s okay,” Max said diplomatically, in that completely superior manner only the very young can pull off. “I know what a butt is. I know lots of things that Mommy doesn’t like me to say. I hear ‘em from Cousin Declan and Cousin Rogan. They’re teaching me how to cuss.”
“Are they now?”
“Uh-huh.” Max pushed his cement mixer up Clay’s leg and made the accompanying noises. His black hair was tousled, his face rosy from sleep. By the gray cast to the light diminishing the shadows in the room, Clay could only guess that it was just before dawn.
Max, apparently, was an early riser.
“They said that the boys at the big school next year will think I’m a sissy if I call my butt a bum-bum and my penis a doohickey,” the little boy explained. “Mommy has funny names for things, but that’s just ‘cause she’s a girl. Girls are kind of prissy ‘bout stuff, Cousin Rogan says.”
Clay wondered if Tate had any idea what her cousins were doing to her son. But Max’s next comment pretty much answered that. “Cousin Rogan says that it’s just a secret between us boys, and that I should never cuss in front of Mommy ‘cause it wouldn’t be ‘spectful. I don’t know what that means,” he admitted philosophically, “but I think it means that it might make Mommy mad.” He gave Clay a quick once over before returning his attention to his truck. “I figured it’s okay to tell you, ‘cause you have a penis.”
In a bid to keep from cracking up, Clay bit his bottom lip, reopening his cut. Then he added to Max’s education – or maybe corruption – by uttering a curse.
Max’s eyes, so like his mama’s, went wide with fledgling admiration. “Cousin Rogan said that word would make Mommy real mad if I ever repeated it. He said it the other day when he dropped a full bottle of whiskey on his pinkie toe.”
Wiping fresh blood from his tender flesh, Clay nodded his head in commiseration. “I can understand why he did that.”
“Did you cuss when the bad man hurt you in the face?” Max wanted to know.
“How did you know a bad man hurt me?” Clay wondered, hoping to turn the conversation away from its current uneasy course. He was floundering in a sea of anatomically correct names for body parts and i
nappropriate curse words.
“I woke up last night ‘cause I had to pee, and I heard you and Mommy talking. That’s how I knew you were sleeping in this room.”
Clay had to admit to his own fledgling admiration, as well as a sincere and heartfelt concern for Tate’s sanity when this kid hit fifteen. He was already showing signs of being both clever and sneaky – cute in a precocious five year old. Terrifying in a teenager.
“So your mom doesn’t know you’re in here?” he surmised.
Max shook his head. “I’m not s’ posed to bother the guests. But you didn’t lock your door,” he said almost accusingly, just beginning to understand the benefits of reassigning blame. “So I wanted to come in and show you that I’ve been practicin’.”
“Practicing what?” Clay asked warily. Lord knows what else Tate’s cousins had taught him.
“Givin’ five.” Max huffed out an exasperated breath. “You said I needed to practice it with Mommy.”
Something in Clay’s gut twisted a little at the child’s words. “I guess I did say that, didn’t I?” Then he held his hand out and waited for Max to slap him.
“Ouch, you got me,” Clay said when the small palm smacked against his own. He waved his hand back and forth to indicate the expected display of pain, and then ruffled Max’s thick mop of hair before pushing back the covers. The beer he’d consumed last night was demanding to come out. He swung his legs over the edge of the bed, remembered rather suddenly that he was naked, and then made a grab for the shorts he’d dropped on the floor.
It was at that moment Tate unexpectedly appeared at the door, which was partially open due to the fact that Max had neglected to close it all the way.
Every bit of color draining from her face, she launched herself at Max, snatching him off the cherry four-poster before turning her maternal fury on Clay. “What the hell do you think you’re doing?”
Clay, who was now very uncomfortably aware of the fact that he was without a stitch of clothing, slowly straightened and pulled the shorts over his naked lap. This was not exactly the way he’d hoped for Tate to see him in all his glory.
He blinked, a little surprised at her sudden ferocity. “Well, I was just about to put some clothes on so that your son didn’t have to look at my bare bum-bum while I made a trip to the john. Waltzing around naked somehow just didn’t seem appropriate.” He took in her stark face and trembling limbs, knowing that there was something more than normal surprise or embarrassment at work here.
Max heard the angry timbre to his mother’s voice and misinterpreted the cause. “I’m sorry, Mommy.” He turned tearful eyes up toward her strained face. “I know I’m not s’ posed to bother the guests, but I heard you talking to Mr. Clay last night and wanted to show him how I’d been practicin’. I got him really good, too, Mommy. Please don’t be mad.”
She cradled her son against her breast, stroking his hair while he wiped his runny nose on the soft fabric of her shirt. “You’re mad at me, aren’t you Mommy?”
Clay saw that Tate was too consumed with some deep and troubling emotion to answer. She’d simply gathered Max tightly in the circle of her arms, squeezing her eyes shut to fight back tears. “Your mama’s not mad at you,” he assured the worried Max. “She probably just got scared when she woke up and didn’t find you in your bed.” A glance at Tate confirmed that was indeed part of what had happened. “Sometimes when grownups get worried they seem angry. But really they’re just happy that you’re okay.”
Max pondered that for a moment before pushing back to look at Tate. She put on the brightest of fake smiles. “Mr. Clay’s right, sweetie. Mommy isn’t mad at you. Now why don’t you run along and go see Grandma down in the kitchen. She’s making chocolate muffins this morning, and if you’re lucky she might let you lick some batter.”
The promised treat did the trick. Max scooted out of Tate’s embrace and beamed a smile at Clay. “Just wait ‘til you get up. Grandma makes the best chocolate muffins ever.” With a quick kiss for his mother, he scampered out the door.
Tate watched him go, gazing at the door for several moments after he was gone. Clay could see her throat working, and the tracks of moisture that began to run down her face in helpless currents. She mustered her composure before brushing them away. He waited her out, knowing that she was working up the courage to offer an explanation.
When she finally turned her eyes on him the pain he saw behind them forced his heart into his throat.
“When I was twelve,” she began in a harsh whisper, “I went away to my first and only sleep away camp. We lived in Georgia then, in a little town north of Atlanta. It was hot, the girls were mean, and I hated every minute of it. The only good parts were swimming in the lake and mooning over Lifeguard John.” She offered Clay a rueful smile. “The first in a series of gorgeous blonds that I seem forever obliged to become besotted with.”
Clay snagged the implication behind that comment and tucked it away for future examination.
“Anyway.” She told him about a game, a dare. “When I finally made it through the woods and wound up on the boys’ side of camp, I was about to abscond with the trophy when I heard… a noise. In the bathhouse.”
Shit.
Clay felt pretty sure he knew the tenor of what was coming, but he made no move to cut her off. It was best to just let her say it out loud so that it lost some of its power. To avoid talking about it would make it seem shameful, make Tate herself feel as if she’d done something wrong.
She drew a deep breath, trembled slightly, and hugged her arms to herself. “I saw the camp coordinator, Mr. Logan. He was in there with one of the boys. He was molesting him.”
Clay nodded in acknowledgement of what she had and hadn’t said. “I understand.”
“When I saw Max in here with you I…” she made a helpless gesture. “I guess I overreacted.”
Clay grunted his disagreement. “You acted like any responsible parent trying to protect their child from a suspicious and potentially dangerous situation. I don’t think you overreacted at all. Even if you hadn’t had such a traumatic experience as a child, I believe it would still be perfectly normal for you to have questioned what you saw.”
The breath she’d been holding came out in a rush. “I guess I’m lucky that it was you he busted in on and not some other unsuspecting guest. I’m sorry; he’s usually not up before me. And there is a latch on the door to the third floor that is supposed to keep him from opening it. I’m not comfortable allowing him to mingle about unsupervised with any of the guests, for obvious reasons. I guess Mom forgot to engage the latch when she came downstairs this morning.”
“It’s a good idea to be cautious,” Clay agreed, deciding that it took a lot of moxie for someone who’d experienced what she had as a child to run the kind of business she did. “You might want to consider having a motion sensor installed near the door to the stairwell. It would alert you to either someone trying to approach or Max attempting to leave.”
TATE smiled, relieved that he understood her reaction so well, considering she’d stormed in like some wild-eyed harridan.
“I apologize if he woke you up this morning. He’s going through this ‘girls are dumb’ phase and prefers the company of other ‘guys.’”
“We had a very… enlightening discussion,” Clay said with an amused grin. “He said it was okay for him to tell me things because I have a penis.”
“Oh my God.” He was naked. Tate had totally forgotten that critical fact.
Her eyes landed like heat seeking missiles on Clay’s crotch, and he glanced wryly at his lap. Even through the thin fabric of the boxer shorts he’d covered himself with, she had no trouble discerning the appendage in question.
She hastily jerked her gaze away and covered her eyes with her fingers.
“I should just, uh…” her voice trailed off into a strangled noise of dismay. “I’ll go now.”
Eyes still covered, she backed herself into the door. But instead of exiting, she trip
ped over her feet and accidentally closed it, landing against the wood with a muffled thud. She cracked her head, dropped her hand from her eyes, and rubbed at the goose egg that was forming.
Then to her complete mortification, Clay came off the bed in order to assist her.
He was naked as the day he was born.
Lord have mercy, he looked like a cross between a Men’s Fitness model and a porn star.
Heavy on the porn star.
“I’m okay.” Tate held out her hand to ward off his impending approach.
Unfortunately for Clay, her hand shot out at groin level. It connected solidly with soft tissue and brought him groaning to his knees.
He landed, doubled up in pain, on top of her.
“Oh my God, Clay, I’m so sorry.”
Then the gods of humiliation selected that moment for Max to lead her mother to Clay’s door. He pushed it open in a flurry of innocent excitement, and then stood stock still when it bumped into the opposing weight of Tate’s bottom, currently stuck in the air as she tried to wrench herself free of nearly two hundred pounds of wounded male.
Clay, hands cupped over his particulars, blinked at the new arrivals with the fatalistic acceptance of one who was caught in a thoroughly embarrassing situation and saw no discernible way out of it.
Then to her complete astonishment, he started to laugh.
Tate could feel her face running the entire spectrum of fiery shades from rose to scarlet, and her mother tucked her tongue in her cheek in a bid not to lose control.
She lost that particular battle when Max pointed at Clay and declared in triumph: “See, Grandma! I told you he has a penis!”
CHAPTER FIVE
Tate managed to maintain her composure as she and Max joined Clay for breakfast. Because really, it wasn’t at all appropriate to cackle like a loon in front of the guests. But when Max crawled into Clay’s lap, whispering something in his ear that had his laugh booming like happy thunder, she couldn’t quite stop the little flutter in her chest.
The Southern Comfort Series Box Set Page 33