Designer Genes - The Boyfriend Cut

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Designer Genes - The Boyfriend Cut Page 30

by Brooks, Harley


  "You were thrilled to receive an old junker?"

  I straddled his lap and locked my hands behind his neck. "Not just any old junker. My Grandma Adams's first car and also Mom's. When I was little and we'd go to my grandparents' farm in Pennsylvania, I'd sneak out to the barn where Grandpa stored the car. The doors were rusted shut and the window was broken out, so I had to crawl inside to sit behind the steering wheel. I'd pretend I was driving to get an ice cream cone before heading to faraway places."

  "Like where?"

  My thumb swept over the shell of Jordan's ear and he drew his knees up to snug me against him. Inky circles slowly consumed the olive green irises of his eyes and his breaths sounded heavy.

  "Any place besides where you live sounds exotic to a ten-year-old."

  "We can go anywhere you want, you know."

  "Well my 'trust fund' has barely seven thousand dollars, which will more than likely get eaten up in rent if I stay all four years at Cornell. I'll have to work my butt off at the clinic on weekends I go home, or find me a part time job that will work with my school schedule if I want to eat."

  Jordan's expression clouded. "The Program starts paying you monthly once you're eighteen." He groaned when I shifted off his lap and sat next to him.

  Automatically, I folded my knees to my chest, but tipped my head against his shoulder. "I want to pay my own way as much as I can. I don't have a choice but to let The Program foot the bill for college, otherwise, there's no way I could attend someplace like Cornell. But I don't want to rely on them anymore than I have to. I won't sell my soul to pay back the debt."

  Jordan slid his arm around my waist. "Even if I am the debt?"

  I left my head on his shoulder, but turned my face to his. "You'd never take my soul."

  His thumb glided over my cheek. "You're right, I wouldn't. I'd much rather have your heart."

  I pressed my hand to his chest. "It's already there, next to yours."

  "I'll take good care of it, I promise." He kissed my nose. "And you, if you let me."

  "I told you, I don't want your money."

  Jordan lowered me onto the sand, moving his body over mine. "I'm not talking about money. I'm talking about Marli Davis, the person. You're strong, stubborn, and I get that you want your independence. All I want to do is stand next to you, not in front of you. But you've got to understand that I have this overwhelming need to protect you." He gently stroked his fingers through my hair. "If something happened to you that I could have prevented, I'd never forgive myself. I'm not good at staying in the shadows, Marli, although I'll try to not be controlling.

  I rose enough to steal a kiss off his mouth; a risky move resulting with his hand smoothing up my thigh and his finger drawing a lazy line under the hem of my shorts.

  "I like it sometimes when you're my superhero, but I want to share 'the cape' once in a while, okay?" I pulled his hand away and laced my fingers through his. "And take things slow."

  He shook my hand in a businesslike manner. "Hi, I'm Jordan Mason." He winked. "Slow enough?"

  I pulled his head so his lips rested on mine. "Faster."

  26

  THINGS THAT GO "BUMP" IN THE NIGHT

  Thunder rolled through the heavens stirring me awake. We'd experienced almost a month's worth of perfect weather, but things changed over the past few days. Swells rolled larger and the water turned murky from the higher tides. Air usually feeling light and smelling of summer, became muggy, the salty smell earthy from the blowing dust and dirt.

  The scent of rain filtered into the breeze growing stronger as the storm approached. The usual nighttime lullaby sounding of soft waves sizzling over warm sand, transformed into something almost frightening when the angry surf pounded against the shore. I winced with a flash of lightning and braced for the crack of thunder.

  Jordan whispered sleepily through my hair. "Marli, what is it?"

  "Thunderstorms scare me."

  He climbed off the bed and pulled the glass panels shut. "Good thing we fastened the rain covers on the boats. Looks like a bad one heading our way."

  He slipped under the covers, breaking his own rule, and drew me close. Lightning flashed again and he cupped one hand over my ear, the other one gently rubbing my back as the next wave of thunder rocked.

  Tonight I was grateful I agreed when Jordan asked to stay. Ever since our talk on the beach the first day, he respected my wishes and left my room at midnight, unless I made the suggestion he linger longer—meaning all night. I liked sleeping in his arms, although Jordan insisted on sleeping on top of the quilted coverlet with me under, keeping a fabric shield between our bodies.

  I snuggled against his bare chest, feeling his arms wrap tighter in response. A simultaneous flash and ground shattering rumble made me jump, bumping his chin.

  "Ouch, girl. You're going to knock my teeth out."

  "Sorry for being such a baby."

  Jordan turned on the light next to the bed and propped my pillow behind him. "Don't apologize for being afraid of something." He placed a tender kiss on my lips and gave me a rough hug. "Try to sleep. You're safe tucked in these arms."

  We spent the next morning cleaning up broken tree limbs and scattered palm fronds. Jesse re-attached a couple of loose shutters and Meg swept up glass from a shattered window in the laundry room. Eva rode in the sport boat with Jordan to check the yacht for damages and reposition the anchor. I found a stray cushion in the bushes at the edge of the front lawn. Jesse met me on the porch, turning a tipped rocker over for me.

  "Mars, are you sleeping with Jordan?"

  His question halted me. "Define sleeping with Jordan?" I replied, annoyed at the insinuation and defensive of his prying into my private business.

  Jesse's hands slapped the side of the house, pinning me between his arms. "You know exactly what I mean. He goes into your room every night and sneaks out at the break of dawn. What the hell is going on?" he demanded.

  I ducked under his arm and opened the screen door. "I'm not having this conversation with you."

  He remained on my heels as I traipsed upstairs to my room, grabbing my elbow and whirling me to face him. "Marli, I'm not just anyone. I know how close to the edge you'll go. I've been there, remember?" When I tried to shake my arm free, his grip grew stronger.

  "I haven't forgotten that night, Jesse, but it's in the past. What I do with Jordan is none of your business."

  I yanked my arm hard, upsetting my balance and I stumbled backward onto the bed. Jesse landed on top of me and my body tensed under his weight. My heart raced, but not the way it used to when Jesse was this close. I tried to push him off, but he held my wrists against the mattress.

  "The hell it's not!" he snarled. "The thought of anyone crossing a line with you, even my own brother, makes me insane."

  "Get off me!" I tried to wiggle out from underneath him, but he was too strong. "Jordan doesn't cross any line I don't invite him to, but again, not your concern." I sighed when he wouldn't budge. "What do you want from me?"

  "The truth. Are you having sex with Jordan?"

  Jordan raced into the room. "No, she's not! Now get the hell off her!" He grabbed the back of Jesse's shirt and shoved him into the wall, knocking a picture off and sending shattered glass across the floor.

  Jesse punched Jordan in the stomach and I screamed, leaping off the bed and throwing myself between them. A piercing pain in the arch of my foot pulled another scream from my lungs. Jordan grabbed me just as Jesse's fist hit his jaw and consequently the side of my head, sending us both crashing to the floor.

  "Jesse stop! Jordan! Marli!" The shrill of Eva's voice bounced off all four walls, bringing immediate silence. "What on earth is wrong with you!" Suddenly, she dropped to the floor and lifted my leg. "Marli! Lord have mercy, you're bleeding!" She slapped away Jordan's hands. "Don't touch her!"

  Jesse sank to floor, "Shit! Marli I'm so sorry!"

  "You two should be ashamed, acting like a couple of immature jackasses." Eva pushed my hair
away from my face. "Marli, where else are you hurt?"

  "My head," I cried. "I think I-I got a punch meant for Jordan."

  "No!" Jesse wailed.

  I tried to reassure him that I was okay, but it was too late. He ran down the hall to his room, slamming the door hard enough to shake the entire house.

  Jordan crawled to me, taking my cut foot in his hand. Blood dripped from his lip where Jesse's fist made contact.

  "Let me see your foot."

  "Ouch!" I screeched when he pulled a chunk of glass out.

  "You need stitches."

  "No!" I cried. Eva cradled me, smoothing my hair to soothe me.

  "I'll get the medical bag. I can do it." Jordan's voice sounded flat and void of emotion. "Mom, do we have any whiskey or vodka?"

  "I think we have both downstairs in the liquor cabinet, but there's alcohol in the bathroom you can use for sterilization."

  Jordan paused in the doorway. "It's not for sterilizing. I don't have anything to numb Marli's foot. I need to get her drunk so she doesn't notice the pain."

  The rest of the day I heaved remnants of alcohol, which I'd never drank before. Jordan sat on my bed, a pillow in his lap where my head rested. His mother applied cold compresses to my face and Jordan's jaw, in between emptying soiled basins. I tried to lift my head, but the room turned sideways and Jordan forced me back into the pillow. If I didn't puke, I giggled obnoxiously. I tried talking, but my speech slurred and drool came out of my mouth easier than words.

  Eva placed a cold rag across the back of my neck. "How much vodka did you put in her orange juice? I'm afraid her hangover is going to hurt far worse than her foot or head." She wiped my numb mouth, then looked at Jordan. "Let me see your lip, son."

  "Mom, don't. My lip's fine and my jaw's sore, but nothing's dislocated. Just let me sit here and hold Marli. Damn, what was Jesse thinking?"

  "What were you thinking, Jordan?" Eva scolded in return. "Both of you share the blame here. And I expect that hole in the wall fixed before we close up the house, mister."

  "Sorry about the wall, Mom, but when I walked in on Jesse holding Marli down on the bed, I lost it. He had no right treating her like that." I felt his hand flex on my arm, fighting against the resurfacing anger.

  "True, but I don't believe he'd ever physically harm Marli. He loves her too, Jordan. Keep that in mind. Might not hurt for you to take a moment and put yourself in his place. Maybe you'd have a bit more compassion. Remember, he is your brother—your twin." Eva's cool hand brushed my cheek. "All I know is that your father is going to have both of your hides for this."

  "Jordan, who's your dad?" I attempted to enunciate, but the grin on Eva's face told me it didn't sound the same as it did inside my head.

  "Not now, Marli. Be quiet. You need to sleep off the booze," Jordan replied in a sullen tone.

  "Be quiet, be quiet. Later, later, alligator. In a while, crocodile. Oooh! Jordan can we make out? You haven't kissed me for hours. I think I forgot how." I tried to make a smacking sound, but I couldn't feel my lips pucker.

  Jordan laughed and his mother fought to hide her amusement, but her small shoulders shook too hard to be discreet.

  "Oh my, you have your hands full." She set an empty basin on the table next to the bed. "She hasn't thrown up in a while, so hopefully her stomach is empty, but just in case. How's her foot?"

  "It's a clean slice and not deep enough to cause any damage. Strange thing, it parallels an old scar." Jordan's fingers lightly stroked the side of my face and I closed my eyes. "I guess we both have secrets."

  I fought to stay awake, a battle I slowly lost. My eyelids closed, but I held on to my conscious state enough to listen to the continuing conversation.

  "Jordan, are you sure? If things don't work out between the two of you, can you trust her? Our lives could depend on her discretion."

  "She handled Jesse's stabbing okay, and I have no intention of letting her out of my life unless she asks to leave. I want to marry her, Mom, but I'm not sure she's ready." Jordan kissed my shoulder and even in my sleepy state, I hugged his waist tighter in response. "She's so young. I don't want to take any of her life away."

  "Son, you're not exactly old. Marli may be young in years, but she's what Meg calls an 'old soul,' and the way she looks at you, I don't think she'll turn you down whether you ask her today or ten years from now. As far as telling her our secret, you may not have a choice," Eva cautioned.

  "Why? What's going on?"

  "Your father's on his way. I don't know how to handle this situation. He's always been better with you boys. Kate was my challenge."

  The bed moved and a soft kiss pressed my cheek. "Sweet dreams, Marli. Hope you feel better tomorrow. Good night, son. If you need anything, find me. Otherwise, I'll see you two at breakfast."

  Darkness cloaked the room when I finally became coherent. I sat up, holding my throbbing head. I looked around to see if I'd been part of an unreal nightmare. The hole in the wall next to the door glared at me and the stabbing pain on the bottom of my foot told me otherwise.

  Jordan left, which made my heart ache and somehow, I now wore my boxers and tank top. Not sure I wanted to know the answer to that mystery. My tongue felt covered in fur and my throat, painfully scratchy. I decided to venture to the kitchen for a drink and hopefully some type of pain reliever to dull my assorted aches.

  Gingerly, I made my way to the bathroom, closing the door to keep from disturbing anyone. The light nearly blinded me and I gasped when I saw my reflection in the mirror. Eyes blackened by smeared mascara competed with a tangled hair nest. I scrubbed my face, brushed my teeth, and dragged a comb through my matted locks. A small bruise colored my left cheekbone and my eye appeared slightly swollen compared to the other.

  The medicine cabinet yielded nothing for pain, but I remembered my purse on the entry table downstairs had some aspirin tucked inside. All I had to do was get downstairs gracefully and quietly.

  The pain in my foot rocketed to my teeth by the time I descended the last stair. Fumbling in the dark, I finally located my bottle of pills and pondered on how many I could take before death would come for me, a welcome choice at the moment. I clenched a couple of the tiny capsules in my fist and hopped to the kitchen for water.

  The brilliant light in the refrigerator made me blink a couple of times to focus before reaching for a cold bottle of water.

  "You must be the reason for all the commotion around here."

  The voice, smooth like Jordan's but deeper, scared me near death. I screamed, tossing the water bottle to the floor. It rolled toward the table, leading my eyes to the silhouette of someone sitting in the dark against the silver glow of the moonlit window.

  "Well that should bring everyone running." He stood; his shadowy figure large and ominous as he retrieved my bottle from the floor. Whoever he was made a correct assumption. Jordan clambered down the stairs and ran into the kitchen, scooping me into his arms.

  "Marli! Why are you down here? Is it your foot? Your head?

  I remained speechless, trembling, and pointed in the darkness toward the intruder.

  "Sorry, son. I didn't mean to frighten her."

  The stranger handed the bottle of water to me, his face now faintly illuminated by the light from the refrigerator. His features were familiar. I'd seen him somewhere before, but in the shadows I wasn't sure. Tall, like Jordan, having the same chiseled facial features, and from what I could see, matching caramel colored hair, but eyes darker, more like Jesse's.

  Jordan's hushed voice heightened with surprise. "Dad! When did you get in? I didn't hear your chopper."

  "I came by water. Luckily, I was at the penthouse when your mother called, so Mike brought me in his private boat. My sudden absence will have everyone scrambling in the morning, but your mother said it was urgent and I answer to her first."

  He eyed Jordan standing in the middle of the kitchen holding me in his arms. "Tell me son, do you always run around half naked when there's a pretty lady
in the house? No wonder your brother's gone half crazy."

  I hadn't noticed until that second that Jordan only wore black, form-fitting boxers. His arms under my thighs suddenly felt intimate, and a burning flush traveled the length of my body. I turned my face into his shoulder and he hugged me close to his body—his gorgeous, sexy, underwear-only-clad body.

  "Marli scared the hell out of me when she screamed. I thought she'd injured herself and all I cared about was finding her." Jordan carefully placed me on a stool. "Let me see your foot, babe. How's the pain?"

  "It throbs. I came down for some aspirin and your father startled me." I touched the side of Jordan's cheek. "I'm sorry I've caused all this trouble. Maybe I should go home so you and Jesse can work through this without me here complicating things."

  His father took my foot his hands and pulled the bandage back. I winced when he turned my foot toward the light from the refrigerator. "The sutures look good, Jordan. You did a fine job. They should heal quickly if she'll stay off her foot and keep it elevated." He shot me a sideways glance, but I still couldn't figure out his identity with the shadows hiding of his face.

  Jordan placed his hand on his dad's shoulder. "It's easy when you've been taught by the best. I only wished you hadn't given up medicine. I would have liked to work beside you in an operating room."

  His father grinned, exposing dimples like Jordan's. "My son flatters me. But you, young lady, are going nowhere. My sons will have to learn to sort through this with you here. No one is sending you home, understand? You're our guest and I'm hoping much more than that, someday.

  "I guess now is as good a time as any to decide if you want to be a part of this insanity we call a family." He stood and faced Jordan. "Turn on the light, son. It's time Miss Davis met the source of her near-fatal heart attack and the reason why we've kept her in the dark for so long. No pun intended, Marli."

  Jordan touched a panel on the wall, flooding the kitchen in fluorescent light. I did indeed know the man standing before me. His prominent, well-respected persona plastered billboards and numerous media transmissions. He commanded the respect of anyone in his presence, and in my late brother Daniel's eyes, he was a hero.

 

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