Double Dare (A Neighbor from Hell Book 6)
Page 15
She glanced up from her phone just in time to see Darrin grab Aidan by his shirt and yank him up and over the back of his chair without breaking his stride. It took her sex-deprived mind a few seconds to shake the image of Darrin’s large bicep flexing and the memories of how his muscles used to flex when he-
“Stop manhandling me, you violent son of a bitch!” Aidan snapped, thankfully pulling her thoughts away from just how good it used to feel when Darrin would settle between her legs and-
“Let’s go have ourselves a little talk, shall we?” Darrin announced, making her shake her head in disgust.
What the hell was wrong with her? she wondered with a groan as she returned her attention back to her phone. After a month without sex, you’d think that she’d be able to stop thinking about it so much, but all it took most days was hearing his name and-
Wait.
Did he just say…
“Damn it!” she snapped, getting out of her seat to go after them only to groan in defeat when she spotted them entering the men’s room, the one place that he knew she wouldn’t follow.
Panic soared through her as she looked around, searching for someone, anyone, to stop Darrin from making this worse. She spotted Arik and Garrett sitting next to their father and quickly dismissed them since there was no way that she was going to be able to get the boys to go save their brother before Darrin killed him without cluing Dr. Bradford into the fact that she was hiding something from him. Her attention moved to Reese, who was too busy glaring at his mother as she grabbed Kenzie and dragged her towards the ladies room where Danny’s girlfriend Jodi was heading.
She shifted her attention to Danny and quickly moved on, not wanting to drag the oldest Bradford brother into this. She spotted Duncan charming an elderly woman as he helped her with her portable oxygen tank and moved on. Sighing, she shifted her attention to the only Bradford brother left.
Lucifer.
Whimpering pathetically, because she already knew the jerk wouldn’t help her, she walked over to where he was leaning against the wall and-
“Not interested,” he said, not bothering to look up from his phone as she approached him.
“Good talking to you, Lucifer,” she said dryly as she turned around and headed back to her chair in defeat, praying that Aidan didn’t ruin everything before she could fix this.
*-*-*-*
“I’m telling!” Aidan snarled as he moved to step around him, but Darrin was done playing games.
“You can go cry and bitch as soon as you tell me what I want to know,” he said, shoving his brother back against the marbled bathroom wall.
Eyes narrowing, Aidan tried to stare him down. “I don’t know what you’re talking about,” the bastard said, trying to play stupid.
Sighing, because he really didn’t have time for this shit, he decided to speed things up a bit.
“Ow! Let me go, you son of a bitch!” Aidan snarled as Darrin grabbed him and put him in a headlock.
“Now, where were we?” he asked conversationally as he stood there, holding his brother in a headlock as half a dozen men stopped mid-pee to gawk at them.
“I’m not telling you anything, you vicious bastard!”
“Really?” Darrin asked as he glanced around the large bathroom, ignoring the men staring at them as he looked for the one thing guaranteed to make his brother talk.
When he found it, he couldn’t help but smile.
“Why don’t we take this conversation somewhere private?” he suggested, heading for the handicap bathroom stall, dragging his brother right along with him.
“What? Wait! No, don’t do this!” Aidan snapped, struggling to break free, but unfortunately for him, Darrin had perfected this move when they were kids.
“Tell me what I want to know,” he said distractedly as he pushed the bathroom door open. No, this would never do, he mused with a shake of his head as he dragged his brother over to the next stall.
“Darrin!”
“You have something that you want to tell me?” he asked, shoving the next door open with his foot only to shake his head with a sigh and move on down the line of stalls.
“Don’t do this, Darrin! I’m serious!” Aidan begged, doubling his efforts to escape.
“Tell me what I want to know,” Darrin said, shoving the next door open and-
“Well, look what we have here,” he murmured thoughtfully as he finally found a stall worthy of a public bathroom.
Tightening his hold around his brother, he raised his foot to step inside the stall that was going to leave him with nightmares when his brother yelled, “Fine! I’ll tell you what you want to know!”
He paused mid-step. “Are you sure?”
“Yes!”
With a satisfied nod, he stepped away from the stall, more than happy to get away from the rancid odor and released his brother. With a glare, Aidan moved away from him, but he didn’t try running. He knew better than that after all.
“What do you want to know?” Aidan bit out acidly as he crossed his arms over his chest and leaned back against the wall.
“Let’s start with the basics, shall we?” he suggested, not at all surprised when Aidan’s phone started ringing a few seconds later.
“Shit,” Aidan sighed, pulling his phone out. “I’ve gotta take this.”
Darrin gestured for his brother to answer it, knowing that it might be a patient or another doctor trying to reach him urgently, but something told him that wasn’t the case.
“Is that my wife?” Darrin asked when Aidan groaned.
Aidan started to shake his head when he abruptly stilled and looked up at him. “Your wife?”
“Mmmhmm,” Darrin murmured, plucking the cellphone out of his brother’s fingers. “Didn’t Marybeth tell you?”
“No, she didn’t…,” Aidan began to say only give his head a hard shake and repeat, “Your wife?”
“Going on three weeks,” he said as he sent Marybeth’s call to voicemail and shifted his attention back to his stunned brother. “Which brings me to my first question,” he said, narrowing his eyes on his brother, “you’re not in love with my wife, are you?”
The horrified expression on Aidan’s face said it all. “Are you out of your fucking mind?” his brother asked just in case there were any lingering doubts in his mind added, “She’s like a sister to me!”
“Good, good,” he murmured, pleased that he wouldn’t have to beat the shit out of his brother, which allowed him to ask his next question, “Are you treating her for the endometriosis?”
Ramming his fingers through his short black hair, Aidan sighed heavily. “You know that I can’t answer that.”
Since he’d expected that answer, he moved on. “How about a few hypothetical questions then?” he suggested so that he wouldn’t have to put his brother in an uncomfortable position that could jeopardize his medical license.
Eyes narrowing as he reached over and took his cellphone back, Aidan asked, “What kind of questions?”
“About endometriosis and fertility,” Darrin said, shrugging it off like it was no big deal when all he wanted to do was to beg his brother to tell him that there was a cure and Marybeth was going to be okay and they’d be able to have children one day, but somehow he managed to stay in control.
Sighing heavily, Aidan placed his phone back in his pocket and leaned back against the wall. “Ask away,” he said with a careless gesture.
“Is it possible for a woman with endometriosis stage four to have children,” he asked, trying to word it just right.
The pitying look that crossed Aidan’s features told him everything that he needed to know.
“W-what about a surrogate mother?” he asked, forcing himself to look away as he struggled not to lose it.
“That would be the ideal situation for someone with endometriosis,” Aidan explained softly as Darrin turned around, giving him his back as he closed his eyes and took a steadying breath as relief surged through him, because they still had a chance.<
br />
“A woman with endometriosis could have her eggs fertilized and placed in a surrogate, but the cost would be steep,” Aidan explained, regret heavily lacing his words, destroying him.
“How steep?” he forced himself to ask.
“For an untried surrogate?” Aidan said, sighing softly before he answered his own question. “Twenty-five grand at the very least and that doesn’t cover traveling, health insurance and all the extra costs that aren’t covered in the contract. A tried surrogate, which is what I would suggest, would start around thirty-five grand. When everything was said and done, you’d probably be looking at forty-five thousand, minimum. Even then there are no guarantees, Darrin.”
Jaw clenched shut tightly, Darrin nodded even as his breaths came a little faster and he couldn’t quite get enough air. His brother might as well have told him that he’d need a million dollars, because forty-five grand on his salary would take him years to save.
“You could always adopt,” Aidan said softly. “It takes a few years, but at least you’d have a child.”
He nodded jerkily as he tried to turn around, needing to get away, to get some space and fresh air, when his legs started to give out on him.
“Oh, God,” he gasped as his knees hit the floor.
“I’m sorry, Darrin,” Aidan said, instantly by his side.
Numbly, he shook his head. He didn’t want apologies, what he wanted was for his brother to lie to him and promise him that there was still a chance for them.
“I’m sorry,” Aidan said one last time, destroying every last shred of hope that he’d ever had that he’d one day have a child of his own. “I don’t know what happened between you and Marybeth, but I do know that she never wanted this for you.”
He shook his head, chuckling weakly as he admitted to himself, “All I’ve ever wanted was her.”
Chapter 23
“They’ve overbooked the hotel,” Darrin announced as he reached down and picked up her bag, speaking to her for the first time in three weeks and making her even more curious about what had happened in that bathroom.
When he’d finally emerged from the bathroom an hour after he’d dragged Aidan off, he’d looked exhausted and sick. Aidan hadn’t looked much better. Darrin hadn’t said a single word to anyone since then. He’d simply waited until it was time for them to board the plane, sat down next to her and for the next four hours he’d stared out the window while she’d tried to figure out what was wrong.
Several times she’d found herself reaching over to take his hand in hers, needing to comfort him, but for the first time since they were kids, she had absolutely no idea how to act around him anymore. They’d had arguments before, but never like this. They’d never gone a day before one of them caved and apologized, but this time they’d gone three weeks without a word.
She’d hated every last minute of it.
She hated that he’d forced her hand in this, hated that he’d done something so foolish as to trap himself with a woman who couldn’t give him what he needed, hated the fact that he would never be a father thanks to her, hated the fact that she felt like she’d taken something so precious away from him, but most of all, she hated the fact that she couldn’t wrap her arms around him and tell him how sorry she was that she’d done this to him.
“I found a hotel with a few extra rooms,” he explained with his jaw clenched tightly, not looking particularly happy or comfortable with this conversation.
She briefly considered asking Kenzie if she could share her room, but common sense swiftly kicked in and had her grabbing her backpack. If there was one thing that she was sure of, it was that Darrin’s baby sister hated absolutely everything about her. Always had, and there was no doubt that she always would. Marybeth had absolutely no idea why the youngest Bradford hated her and after a few years and several failed attempts to try to work it out, she hadn’t cared enough to try to find out.
“The hotel’s only a few minutes down the road,” Darrin promised as they walked towards the front doors, filling the awkward silence, the first that she’d ever experienced with him.
Having absolutely no idea what to say, and knowing that this wasn’t the time or place to say the things that she wanted to say, she settled on nodding and simply followed him as they made their way towards the row of taxis waiting by the curb.
A few minutes later she was sitting in the back seat of a taxi that smelled like peppermint and body odor, waiting for Darrin to join her. When Darrin opted to sit in the front seat instead, she wanted to cry. For the past six years she’d been preparing herself for the day that she could no longer allow herself to hold him and lose herself in his arms, but she’d foolishly believed that they could always go back to the way things used to be.
She’d never allowed herself to truly believe that they were risking their friendship. She’d always believed that nothing and no one would ever be able to come between them, but she’d been wrong. She’d hurt him and now it seemed that they were both paying for it.
By the time the taxi pulled up in front of a Marriott Hotel she’d had enough. Before the car was thrown in park, she was climbing out of the car and heading for the front doors, not really caring if he grabbed her bag for her or not. All she cared about was getting a room and staying there until everything stopped hurting.
Of course there was a line, she thought with a bitter laugh as she reached up with a shaky hand and wiped away the tears threatening to spill over before she lost it. Praying that they hurried up so that she could get out of here before she really lost it, she stared at the dark blue rug leading to the front desk and tried not to think about how much she’d missed him. Just when she thought that she had everything under control, she felt him move up behind her. Her breath caught in her chest as she waited to hear his voice, to feel his touch, but it never came.
Oh, God, she thought struggling to bite back a sob. She’d lost him, lost her best friend, the one person that she loved more than anything and there was nothing that she could do to fix it. She couldn’t give him what he wanted, what he deserved and she couldn’t take away the pain that she’d caused him.
She couldn’t fix this.
“Go have a seat,” he whispered softly in her ear and as much as she wanted to tell him that she was fine, she couldn’t. She just couldn’t…
Nodding numbly, she tightened her grip around her backpack as she walked towards the waiting area and sat down. She kept her head lowered and her eyes squeezed shut, praying that she was able to make it to her room before she really lost it.
The funny thing was, even though she was upset that she’d probably lost Darrin, she was more upset over what Darrin had lost. He deserved children, deserved a family of his own and if he stayed with her, he would never have those things and she just couldn’t let that happen.
“I managed to get a room on the second floor,” Darrin said quietly as he reached down and grabbed her backpack. “Why don’t we go upstairs and settle in before joining everyone for lunch?” he suggested, sounding unsure of himself, a first for him.
Nodding, she stood up and followed him to the bank of elevators. For several minutes she stood there, telling herself that she was doing the right thing. It needed to be done and one day, he’d realize that.
“I think we should talk,” he said a few minutes later when they were standing outside their room.
“There’s nothing to talk about,” she said, because there was nothing that he could say at this point that would change her mind.
They’d made a mistake and it was time to fix it before it was too late. He’d probably hate her for the rest of his life once she did this, but then again, he’d probably hate her no matter what she did at this point.
He didn’t say anything as he opened their hotel door and waited for her to walk inside before he followed her with their bags. Needing something to do, she walked into the room and picked up the room service menu. She felt him the moment that he joined her, but he didn’t say anything.
<
br /> Swallowing hard, she opened her mouth and set him free, “I want a divorce.”
“I see,” he murmured thoughtfully as her grip tightened around the menu.
“Good,” she whispered. “Garrett could probably have the papers drawn up and-Ooomph!” she ended on a grunt when she suddenly found herself on the bed, lying across Darrin’s lap.
“Now, where were we?” the smug bastard asked as he settled her across his lap and used his large arms to keep her there.
“Let me go, Darrin!” she snapped as she tried to escape, but the big jerk wouldn’t let her up.
“Not until we get a few things cleared up,” he said, shifting on the bed with a sigh as he made himself more comfortable while she lay there, groaning when the move jostled her a bit.
“First thing,” he said, placing his hand on her ass, “we are not getting a divorce.”
She opened her mouth to argue, but he cut her off before she could correct him. “I’m done playing games, sweetheart,” he said, absently massaging her bottom.
“We’re not staying married,” she said, reaching back to-
“Ow!” he snapped, yanking his hand away from her bottom, “stop pinching me!”
“Are you going to let me go?” she demanded, giving up on trying to wiggle her way to freedom since she already knew that it was pointless.
“No,” he said, emphasizing his refusal by returning his hand to her ass and giving her cheek a rebellious squeeze that dared her to do something about it.
Rolling her eyes as she shook her head in disgust, she reached back and-
“You dirty rotten son of a bitch!” she snapped when he grabbed her by her wrist and restrained her arm gently behind her back.
“Since we’re staying married,” he said, continuing to massage her bottom and making her bite her lip as she struggled not to lick her lips, “you can feel free to openly worship me in public now.”