Tempt Me

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by Melissa Schroeder




  Tempt Me

  Melissa Schroeder

  Tempt Me, Semper Fi Marines, Book Two

  © 2014 by Melissa Schroeder Published by Harmless Publishing

  DIGITAL ISBN: 9781939734143

  Edited by Victoria Kennedy and Noel Varner, Cover by Brandy Walker

  All Rights Are Reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

  First digital publication: May 2014

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used factiously and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, business establishments, events or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Dedication

  To Les. We made it through six months of retirement and I haven’t stabbed you. I call that a success.

  Love,

  Melissa

  Chapter One

  The heavy smell of antiseptic hit Zoe Jones before she was fully awake. She scrunched up her nose trying to avoid the stench. She had always hated how it turned her stomach each and every time. She tried to swallow but found her throat dry.

  The beeping of the machines was the second thing that she noticed. Drawing in a deep breath—then immediately regretting it—she opened her eyes and found her sister’s pretty husband sitting in the chair beside her hospital bed. The lights were dim, but she could see a little sun trying to peek through the slats on the blinds.

  “Oh, there you are,” Gee said. “Feeling any better?”

  She tried to shrug, but a spike of pain radiated from her shoulder. “Holy crap.”

  “Yeah, I wouldn’t do that if I were you,” Gee said.

  “Thanks, Santini. I can see why my sister loves your bedside manner.”

  “It’s not my bedside manner she’s interested in.” He wiggled his eyebrows. It was so foolish of him, just like he always was, but she knew he did it to make her feel better. And he succeeded. There was one thing her sister said about Santini men and that was they knew all kinds of ways to keep a woman happy.

  Zoe smiled and then winced when her mouth hurt. Damn, she was broken. She couldn’t even smile or shrug.

  “Have the cops been back by?”

  He shook his head. “Your sister made sure they understood that they needed to leave you alone.”

  Of course Kianna did. She was always taking care of Zoe, making sure she didn’t screw her life completely up. And no one, not even the Savannah PD, would take on her sister. She was scary when she went into protection mode.

  “I owe her.”

  Gee made a face and even with that goofy look he was pretty. Blindingly pretty. But, then, all the Santinis were.

  “Well, before you say that, you might want to rethink how much you really owe her.”

  His mysterious tone sent a wave of uncertainty threading through her. “What’s that supposed to mean?”

  Before he could answer, she heard a voice in the hallway.

  “I don’t care what you say, I am family. I am her mother, in a sense, and you will let me in to ICU.”

  Joey Santini’s voice echoed down the hall. Hell, they probably heard her all the way out to the Savannah Riverfront shops.

  “Oh, no,” Zoe whispered. She narrowed her eyes as she looked at her brother-in-law. “I am going to kill you.”

  “Listen, wasn’t my idea. Kianna called Mom. Then Mom got it in her head that she needed to be here. And Dad couldn’t stop her from coming down.”

  “Your father. The former Marine? He couldn’t stop her?”

  The argument Joey was having with whoever was in charge continued in the hallway and seemed to increase in volume with each passing millisecond. Gee shrugged. “Dad said he’s been on suicide missions that were easier than saying no to Joey Santini.”

  “That’s because the man is smart,” Joey said from the doorway.

  Zoe looked over at the woman and found Joey smiling at her. Papa was right behind her standing in the doorway. Her blonde hair had a few gray strands here and there, but it was hard to see them. She might have had a few lines on her face, but it held a vitality that had nothing to do with age and everything to do with the woman. From the moment Zoe met her a year earlier, the older woman had impressed her. She was so small, but she had all the men in the family at her beck and call.

  “Mom,” Gee said, rising, and hugging and kissing his mother. The boys always showed her such love and admiration. It made Zoe miss her mother even more.

  Joey returned the affection, then handed Gee over to his father. She focused on Zoe. “Oh, baby, look at you.”

  She sounded genuinely pained as she rushed to Zoe’s side. And for the first time since she’d woken up in the hospital broken and battered from the car wreck, she felt her eyes burn with tears. Joey didn’t hesitate. She sat on the bed with Zoe and took her uninjured hand into hers.

  “Everything is going to be okay. Don’t worry.”

  Zoe was trying very hard not to cry and Joey must have picked up on it. “Boys, why don’t you go on out of here and find me a cup of good coffee?”

  “They have some down at the cafeteria,” Gee said.

  She rolled her eyes and winked at Zoe before turning around. “I do not want cafeteria coffee. Bring me good coffee. It’s Savannah, there has to be a good coffeehouse somewhere.”

  Gee opened his mouth, but Papa had dealt with Joey for years and showed it by shaking his head. He came over and gave Joey a kiss on the cheek. Then, he leaned down and surprised Zoe by kissing her forehead.

  “Just agree with her and your life will be easier,” he whispered.

  She wanted to smile, but remembered her split lip. Instead, she just nodded.

  “Let’s go, boy,” Papa said to Gee. He had to be the only person other than Joey who would refer to the massive airman as boy.

  When they were finally alone, Joey patted Zoe’s hand. “Now, they say you’ll be out of ICU this afternoon. You really don’t need to be here now that you’re awake. And, you should be out of the hospital in a few days.”

  Joey rose from the bed and adjusted the blinds to let a little light into the room. Zoe winced from the light.

  “That’s good.”

  Joey nodded. “Then, of course, the doctor said you can travel back with us to Virginia.”

  For a moment or two, Zoe wasn’t sure she heard the older woman right. “Wait, what?”

  “You’ll come up with me and I will help you heal.”

  Zoe opened her mouth, then closed it again. She really didn’t know what to say to that. She knew Gee’s mother was a force of nature that no one would even think about fighting, but Zoe couldn’t get her brain to function. Maybe the accident knocked her silly.

  “What?”

  “You’ll come up to our house. I have a studio where you can work and we can spend time together.”

  That sounded divine—almost too good to be true. It tempted her, but she couldn’t give in. She needed her space, and she knew she wasn’t going to be good company for a while.

  “I thought about maybe going up and see Retta or down to Valdosta with Gee and Kee.”

  Joey shook her head. “No. You’ll come up with me. First of all, Gee and Kee have too much to handle right now. Retta…she has work. And, I am sure if you ask my boys, no one can take care of you like Joey Santini.”

  “But…just like that, you’re going to take care of me?” Zoe asked, still trying to come to terms with the reality in which she now lived.

  “Yes. You need to be babied.”

  That stung. Sure, she had messed her life up…again. But it didn’t mean that she needed to be treated with kid gloves. “I
don’t need to be babied.”

  “Oh, Zoe, sweetie, you need to be taken care of. Getting messed up in the middle of an investigation like that and then attacked through no fault of your own, you deserve a break.”

  The memories she had avoided came seeping back from the dark recesses of her mind and the tears welled up again.

  Without a word, Joey came back to the bed and took her hand, sitting on the mattress again. “You’re going to be okay. You need to heal.”

  As the tears she had fought so hard to hold back streamed down her face, the only thing she could do was nod.

  “Good.” Joey leaned forward and kissed her forehead in much the same way as Papa had. “And, besides, Vicente has promised to tell you horrible things about Gianni so you have things to taunt him with.”

  That made her laugh, and this time, her split lip didn’t hurt so much.

  “There you go.” Joey grabbed a tissue and handed it to Zoe.

  Zoe wiped away the tears. “So, you came down here with the idea that you were taking me home?”

  Joey smiled and nodded. She was such a tiny woman but there was no mistaking the strength beneath that surface. She had raised four boys and supported her Marine husband for all those years.

  “I want to be you when I grow up.”

  Joey laughed and patted her hand again. “No, honey, you should want to be you, because you’re pretty damned special. Now, let’s talk art. What have you been working on?”

  And just like that, she lay in the hospital bed and talked about her sculptures and paintings with the realization that she didn’t have to be alone for a while. And for once, the thought didn’t bother her as much as it once did.

  * * * *

  Jesse Johnson turned on his windshield wipers as the first drops of rain hit the car. It figured he dragged his ass out to the boonies for dinner and he was going to have to deal with a storm on the way home.

  “Why are you eating with the Santinis?” Jack asked over the phone.

  “They invited me over and I’m not stupid. Joey Santini makes a fabulous lasagna.” A home cooked meal was hard to come by these days. He was a damn good cook, but working long hours at the Pentagon didn’t afford him a lot of time in the kitchen. Also, being single kind of defeated the purpose of a big meal.

  “So, you’re saying that she lured you there with the promise of food.”

  Jesse turned on their street and came to a stop in front of their house. “Yes.”

  “That seems reasonable.” Jack grunted and said nothing else.

  They had all been a little worried about Jack since he returned from a mission over a year earlier—he always seemed out of sorts and uncomfortable around people. Then there were the phone calls. Ones like this where he didn’t say much at all.

  Jesse clicked off the speaker and held the phone up to his ear. “What’s up?”

  His silence continued for a few moments. “Nothing. Was thinking about heading out your way for a visit.”

  “But?”

  He huffed into the phone. “Well, I have unresolved issues.”

  What the hell did that mean? “What kind of issues?”

  “That damned dog. I swear to God if it comes in my garden one more time and eats my tomatoes, I’m going to shave its butt.”

  “Wait, what?”

  “That dog. My neighbor’s dog. He gets in my yard all the time.”

  “And you can’t come visit because of that?” Jesse asked. This was a bit worrisome. The fact that his brother was weirding out over his tomatoes was, well, weird. He knew Jack had made some changes in his routine to accommodate the PTSD he had been dealing with the last few years. The fact that he was becoming obsessed about the plants bothered Jesse.

  “I have no one else to watch my garden and there’s a good chance she would let everything die.”

  “She? The dog?”

  Jack’s sigh was filled with irritation. “No. Dr. Richmond.”

  “And who is that?”

  “Good God, Jesse, aren’t you paying attention? I’m talking about my next-door neighbor, the vet. Her dog gets in my garden.”

  Again he had to wonder just what the hell they were talking about. “That’s not a euphemism, is it?”

  “For what?” Then it apparently dawned on Jack what he meant. He made a disgusted sound. “You need help.”

  Jesse pulled the phone away from his ear and looked at it, then brought it back. “I need help?”

  “All you ever do is talk about sex.”

  “I do not.”

  “Maybe you should because Lord knows you don’t get any.”

  Irritated, he got out of the car and slammed the door. He made his way up the walk to the Santinis’ house and onto the covered porch before the rain started to come down harder. “How did this all suddenly become an argument about my sex life?”

  He rang the doorbell and turned away from the door as he waited for a response from his brother.

  “Well, I guess we could call it an argument if you actually had a sex life, but since you don’t, it’s just sort of conversation about your lack of one.”

  “I have a sex life, thank you very much. I don’t need your help in getting laid.”

  “Well, that’s good to hear,” a throaty, female voice, with enough Georgia in it to to make him melt a little bit, said from behind him. He turned and found Zoe Jones, sister-in-law to Gee, standing in the open doorway grinning at him.

  Fuck.

  “Who’s that?” Jack asked over the phone.

  “None of your damned business,” Jesse said. “Go shave some dog’s butt.”

  He clicked off the phone and shoved it into his jeans’ pocket.

  “Shave dogs’ butts?” she asked.

  For a second, he had trouble responding. She was a pretty woman, almost too pretty. She didn’t have a stitch of makeup on, but her cocoa colored flesh shone with something no amount of makeup could emulate. Her golden eyes sparkled with delight, as she smiled at him.

  “Jack, my brother, is having an issue with a neighbor’s dog.”

  She laughed and opened the screen door. “Come on in.”

  It was then he noticed the bruising beneath her eye was almost gone, but she still had a cast on her arm. He’d been told about the car wreck and that she had been spending time with the Santinis while she recovered for the last couple of weeks. He didn’t know much more than that.

  As he walked into the foyer, the smells of Italy hit him. Tomato, pasta, cheese…and, not to mention, fresh baked bread. He sighed.

  “I know,” she said “I think Joey is trying to fatten me up.”

  She cocked her head to indicate that he should follow her down the hall. He did and tried to keep his mind on dinner. It was hard to do with her in front of him. She wasn’t that tall, and the tips of her braids stopped just short of her ass. Her very shapely ass, which the jeans she wore accentuated perfectly.

  “She cooks all day like that. By the time I make it back to Georgia, they’ll have to roll me down the streets of Savannah.”

  They stepped into the kitchen and it was just as he remembered—not old fashioned, even though he knew the home was considered historical. They had redone the entire kitchen, probably to Joey’s specifications. He’d been there quite a bit in the last year. When his sister married into this family, Joey had adopted them all—including his father to an extent. She turned and smiled at them both.

  “First of all, don’t make it sound like I’m being mean to you. Didn’t I make you some layered dessert?” she asked, wiping her hands on her apron. “And second of all, what took so long?”

  Zoe shrugged, but he didn’t miss the gleam in her eye. He knew something bad was coming from her.

  “Jesse was talking to his brother on the phone about a dog’s butt and Jesse’s lack of a sex life.”

  Chapter Two

  Zoe had to fight the snicker tickling her throat. Seeing Perfect Jesse Johnson put on the spot was just too much fun. The man never s
eemed to have a hair out of place and his jeans didn’t even have a wrinkle in them. From what Joey described, the man had driven over an hour and yet he still looked fresh as a daisy, as her mother used to say.

  “Zoe, quit messing with Jesse,” Joey ordered. She walked over in that way of hers and gave the Marine a huge hug. “It’s so good to see you. How are you doing?” She released him and returned to making the salad.

  “Okay. Been on a few TDYs.”

  Temporary Duty. Now that she had a brother-in-law in the military, Zoe picked up on the acronyms a bit more. TDYs were military business trips. Or that’s the way she thought of them.

  “I thought I heard a male voice coming to save me from the female treachery I live with now,” Papa said coming into the kitchen. He clapped Jesse on the back with the same kind of affection he had for his own sons. “Glad you could make it. Joey was getting worried about you.”

  He walked over to the fridge and pulled out a couple of beers. “Want one?”

  Jesse nodded and accepted the bottle.

  “Now, why don’t we get out of here?”

  They left Zoe and Joey in the kitchen, just like men always did.

  “He doesn’t mess with my kitchen. I told you that.”

  She turned and looked at Joey. “Reading minds again?”

  Joey laughed. “Well, I know some people will say it looks like I am old fashioned, but my kitchen is my kitchen. That man can’t cook. Last time I let him bake, he burned the brownies and ruined a fifty dollar pan.”

  Zoe laughed thinking of just how much trouble Papa must have been in after that incident. “I thought all Italians could cook.”

  “Oh, he can do the basics, but he gets in here when he’s bored and starts messing with my pots. And worse, he tries to hide it.” She sprinkled some cheese on the salad. “Jesse Johnson is a fine looking young man.”

  And, there it was. She knew when Joey had said Jesse was coming for dinner that she was trying to fix them up. But, she had expected her to at least pretend she wasn’t trying to do it.

  “Wow. Just wow.”

  “What does that mean?” she asked, her eyes widened.

 

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