Vote Then Read: Volume III

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Vote Then Read: Volume III Page 270

by Aleatha Romig


  “You look . . .” He stepped close, something she’d noticed he tended to do frequently. At first, she’d thought he wanted to intimidate her with his size. And maybe that had a little bit of truth to it because each time he approached and entered her space, Lizzie couldn’t stifle the sound of her breathing quickening, nor the way her face instantly tipped up to meet his. Always, his full lips lifted in a sexy grin, like he knew exactly what effect he had on her.

  Now was no different.

  Her heart picked up pace when his chest came within inches of hers. His baseball cap was tugged down low, and all she could see were shadows and the hard cut of his jawline and the sharp ridge of his nose.

  “I look like what?” Breathless. She sounded so very breathless.

  “Like you need to be charmed.”

  She wasn’t prepared for his sneak attack. Thick arms wrapped around her backside, hauling her off the walkway and up into the air over his right shoulder.

  With quick hands, she made a grab for her camera and clutched the strap with tight fingers. Don’t let go, don’t let go, don’t let go.

  Her squeak mingled with the chirping birds and the soft swaying of the tree branches, though her demanding, “Put me down!” went ignored by the tattooed god who carried her.

  Instead, the jerk only strolled down the raised planks as though he had all the time in the world.

  His voice reverberated through her chest and stomach when he asked, “How’s the world look down there?”

  She stared at his ass. “Full.”

  Chuckling, he reached up to pat her butt. “Same here, princess, same here. Tell me, you think this would make for an excellent selfie? What do you think the caption would be?”

  “New Orleans Police Officer Mistaken for Louisiana Tarzan.”

  “Hmm, a possibility.” Her stomach bounced against his shoulder as he readjusted her weight. “I was thinking something more romantic, something along the lines of . . . When a Man Sweeps a Woman Off Her Feet.”

  “Too literal.” Would it be odd if she palmed his butt, just to see if it was as firm as it looked? “Maybe, Man Tempts Woman with a Dip in the Bayou?”

  “Now who’s being literal? I’m exposing you to a different world out here, princess. Expanding your experiences. What’s one thing you’ve always wanted to try?”

  “Doggy-style.”

  He stumbled.

  She almost wouldn’t have believed it had she not been tossed like a sheep over his shoulder, but, thanks to her position, she had a prime vantage point to watch it all go down. Literally. The toe of his right tennis shoe hitting an uneven bend in the wooden plank; his attempt to save his balance, but her weight was too heavy, too lopsided on his body, and . . .

  There was nothing she could do.

  Nothing but shout, “Save the camera!”

  And then down they tumbled, a tangle of limbs and four-letter words.

  Gage landed first, a grunt bursting from his lips, somehow managing to twist their bodies so he took the brunt of the fall. Lizzie met the water stomach-first with a cliché splash! Splash!

  His toned stomach acted like a buoy, stopping her fall.

  Not that it helped much.

  Her face kissed the green water, her nose, eyes, and mouth submerging beneath, just as her legs struck something hard. A Cypress root—she hoped.

  Rich, masculine laughter greeted her when she jolted upward. The bayou was a foot deep, maybe two, but the fall had succeeded in dampening all of Gage’s clothes. His gray shirt was plastered to his chest, molding over his powerful frame and tantalizing her with shadows of all the inked artwork beneath the fabric. Droplets of water clung to his arms, his neck, to the rugged stubble on his face.

  He looked like something out of a commercial for body soap.

  Meanwhile, she had a sneaking suspicion that she could currently pass for the Swamp Monster.

  “I think I may have swallowed some of the water,” Lizzie muttered, planting her hands on his hard stomach to leverage herself up onto her knees.

  He laughed only harder, chin tipping back, eyes squeezed shut under the brim of his LSU hat.

  “You can stop laughing now.”

  Wrong thing to say.

  He gripped her arms, drawing her over his lap with a tug and a pull. Lizzie was average in height, average in weight, but he managed to make her feel as light as a feather. Stop liking it so much.

  Impossible.

  “You’ve got something . . .” He lifted a hand and brushed her wet hair back from her face. “It looks like a caterpillar.”

  Oh, God, would the humiliation never end?

  “Please take it—”

  He pulled back, and there, pinched between his index finger and his thumb, was her false eyelash.

  It was official.

  Her humiliation was complete.

  Lizzie dropped her head to his wet shoulder. His clean scent had been masked with the smell of swamp, but considering that she smelled just as funky, well, it seemed a little ridiculous to issue a complaint. Instead, she asked, “Did my camera make it?”

  With an arm around her waist like a band, he leaned them backward and his chin shifted across her head. “You’re lucky as all hell. It’s on the walkway, along with your backpack and everything we had in it.”

  “It’s called karma. I let you have some of my coffee, and therefore my belongings were saved. Coffee unites the fallen.”

  His chest expanded with a quiet chuckle, and Lizzie felt the brush of his chest against hers. No bra. She was small enough upstairs to go without one most days, and no matter the fact that they were sitting in dirty swamp water, her nipples were hard. Hard enough that if he glanced down, he’d see twin peaks poking at her shirt.

  And that, officially, would be the end of her.

  This is what happens when you ditched your padded bras.

  A few years back, those add-two-cup sizes types of bras had been her best friend. Seriously, greatest investment ever—until an ex had mentioned that her chest was false advertisement. 34C in the streets and a 34A in the sheets.

  “You good?”

  Lizzie’s head snapped up at the sound of his voice. “Yup! Yup, so good. All set. I’m going to get up now. Maybe pretend that none of this happened and—”

  She screeched.

  Loudly.

  Shrilly.

  And clung to Gage’s body like a stripper on her first day on the job.

  His arms locked around her back, drawing her so close to his chest she felt the tempo of his heart against her breastbone. “What? What is it?”

  Her eyes slammed shut. “Something . . . slithered against my leg. It felt scaly.”

  A small pause. Then, “Like a gator?”

  “I don’t know.” Her throat worked with a hard, nervous swallow. “Maybe.”

  With one arm still wrapped around her, Gage dove his other valiantly into the water.

  Like a hero.

  Her hero.

  Thank God for the nation’s first responders.

  “Princess?”

  Another hard swallow. Her fingers dug into the muscular balls of his shoulders. “Yes?”

  “I found your gator.”

  Her gaze tracked from his chest to his arm to his hand, and in it . . . a stick.

  A wet stick, but a stick nonetheless.

  Anxious laughter climbed her throat. “I think we’re done for the day.”

  That big hand of his spread, fingers clutching her soaked shirt. “Pretty sure we’ve yet to take a photo documenting today’s date. Don’t let me down.”

  “Now?” she said. “You want to take that photo now when we look like something out of a Brother’s Grimm fairytale?”

  Without warning, he boosted her onto the raised pathway, setting her on her rear as he straightened and stretched. “Livestream,” he announced, “we’re totally doing this as a livestream.”

  Absolutely, one-hundred percent no.

  She told him just that, emphaticall
y.

  “You need to live a little, Lizzie.” Shaking his hands dry, Gage dropped to his haunches and unzipped her backpack. His purple LSU hat was the only part of him that wasn’t soaked and tinged green like Apple Jack’s cereal. A hat, which he twisted to the back. And then he flashed her a brilliant smile.

  Dammit, he was too good-looking to reject.

  Lizzie dragged her feet onto the planks.

  Squish. Squish. Squish.

  “I’m pretty sure you told me to expand my experiences twenty minutes ago, before I went head over heels into the bayou . . . that you promised not to toss me into.”

  He lifted her cell phone from the backpack with a little wave and an exuberant hooah, reminding her immediately of her friend Anna’s husband, Luke, who’d been a lifer in the army before a career-ending injury. “Let’s do this.”

  Lizzie snagged the phone from him. “I hate you. Just so you know.”

  He only grinned, a sexy smirk that warmed her in all the wrong places—or the right ones, depending on how she looked at the situation.

  Then he opened his arms, inviting her against his damp chest and even damper shorts.

  She wanted to say no.

  She wanted to turn away before she did something crazy, like actually jump into his arms and wrap her legs around his waist.

  She wanted to do all of those things.

  But she didn’t.

  Like a true professional, she closed the gap between them and gave a pursed, tight-lipped smile. Do not show him how off-balance you are right now. And then she swiped open the first social media app she saw, and hovered her thumb over the GO LIVE button.

  What did it matter if the world saw her at her lowest? She wasn’t alone. Gage was with her, and though the world didn’t know his full name—she’d wanted to protect his privacy as much as possible—her subscribers were already in love with the tatted-up man who looked like a rugged movie star come to life.

  A single, innocent kiss had proven that Lizzie’s followers wanted a bad boy they could see on the regular. A bad boy she’d promised them would never be redeemed, because it was wholly impossible.

  But Gage Harvey wasn’t all that bad, and he didn’t seem like a sleaze-ball.

  He’d demanded a night in her bed, and had yet to bring it up since that day at Inked on Bourbon.

  This was all for show, nothing more than an illusion of redemption for them both—him as the reformed bad boy and she as the woman who had risen above feeling scorned.

  You can do this.

  You can do this.

  You can do—

  And then it all went to hell, because the moment she gathered courage and tapped GO LIVE on her phone, Gage rasped, “Princess, is it just me or are your nipples hard?”

  Yeah.

  Today officially needed an END button.

  9

  “Another butterfly tattoo up front.”

  It was déjà vu all over again.

  Gage pushed away his lunch and stared up at his twin. Twenty years ago, they’d been each other’s mirror image: same dark hair cropped close to their skulls; same jeans and T-shirt combo that might as well have had “hand me down” scrawled on the tags. Their faces were clean-shaven, and even their father’d had a problem distinguishing them.

  Then Ben Harvey had died on the job, and Owen went on a bender.

  He’d racked up two arrests within three months, thanks to a bad habit of brawling at a local motorcycle club. No one had bailed Owen out. Own your shit, was the lifelong motto their father had instilled in his two sons. Owen had fucked up, and that was on him.

  For years, Gage and Owen had stayed on the straight and narrow. For years, they’d focused on the future—the two of them working side by side for the NOPD, just like their dad, and the two generations before Ben.

  Protecting the city was in their blood.

  Nowadays, it was just in Gage’s.

  At least Owen had ditched the bad attitude a few years ago. Now the bastard was just moody as hell and constantly on Gage’s case about working for Inked on a full-time basis.

  “I’m not taking this one,” he muttered. “Last time I was in, I reached my butterfly quota.”

  “From what I’ve seen online, that one worked out in your favor.”

  Owen was talking about Lizzie. Lizzie, who Gage couldn’t shove from his thoughts no matter how hard he tried. Their trip to the Barataria Preserve four days ago had been a shit-show. At the same time, it’d been the sort of day Gage couldn’t remember having with anyone else.

  Ridiculous.

  Funny.

  Erotic.

  He hadn’t meant to land them in the bayou, but he’d felt no guilt whatsoever once she fell into his lap, squirming and wet and straddling the line of ticked-off and amused.

  “Are you dating her?”

  Gage thrust a hand through his hair, hating that age-old question. “Nah, it’s not like that.”

  Owen folded his arms across his chest, looking like a New Orleanian lumberjack: ripped jeans; flannelled shirt, despite the fact that it was balls-swelteringly hot outside; a beard that could rival one of those Hemsworth brothers’. “What’s it like then?”

  “Jesus. Do you see me digging around and asking you about what’s-her-name?”

  Black eyes cooled. “We’re not talking about Savannah, dude. She’s not up for discussion.”

  Gage clasped his hands behind his neck. “Exactly. You don’t want to talk about Savannah. I don’t want to talk about Lizzie, especially when there’s nothing to discuss. I’m helping her out with something.”

  The moody vibe left Owen’s expression and was replaced with something worse: concern. “When she came in the other day, I couldn’t help but think she reminded me of—”

  “Don’t.”

  The word was ripped from Gage’s heart—or whatever was left of it. He wasn’t going to . . . He shook his head, trying to dislodge the memories. No matter that fourteen years had passed, the wound still burned whenever he thought of it. Her. The lowest moment in his life when the person who’d pledged to have his back for the rest of their lives but had walked away instead.

  Just like that.

  Gage stared down at his hands, curling and unfurling his fists so that he could do something more than just wonder for how many more years he’d think of her and feel gutted. Love had fled the scene early on, because a person didn’t get fucked over like Gage had and still cling to ridiculous hopes.

  But the cut of the blade? The realization that you couldn’t count on anyone but yourself, not even your own flesh and blood? Yeah, he’d learned that lesson real quick.

  He was fortunate that the guys in his unit were all good men who came to work ready to put their lives on the line.

  That sort of behavior limited the chance for betrayal.

  Everyone wanted to go home. Everyone wanted to return to their families.

  Even if all Gage had nowadays was Owen, and he and Owen hadn’t been tight—not like they used to be—since the time of their father’s passing.

  One pregnancy.

  Two sons.

  Two separate life courses.

  Gage was pretty sure that there was a shitty country song out there with that exact verse.

  Hell, it was telling that he’d rather tat up a twenty-something with a butterfly than remain a prisoner to his own thoughts.

  Casting one glance at his half-eaten lunch, Gage drew in a deep breath and stood. He was doing this, working himself to exhaustion, for his brother. His best friend, whatever that meant nowadays.

  Owen clapped a hand to Gage’s shoulder, halting his trajectory to the door. “C’mon, man, don’t close up on me like that.”

  Pot meet kettle. Gage shrugged off his brother’s hand. “I’m not holding anything back. Lizzie and I aren’t anything. Like I said, I’m helping her out with something. That’s it.” Black clashed with black as their gazes met. “Don’t bring up Michelle again. That shit belongs exactly where I left it�
�in the past.”

  His twin gave a small shake of his head. “I’m worried about you, Gage. If you’re not out in the field, you’re here. And if you’re not here, then you’re—”

  Yeah, he didn’t need for Owen to finish that sentence. He knew exactly where he spent his extra time, and Owen was wrong. They’d been over this before, more times than he could count. “I’m doing good,” he said in a low voice, “I’m doing what I can to make a difference.”

  “I know. I get that, but . . .” Owen scrubbed a hand over his bearded jaw. “It doesn’t matter what I say, does it? You’re going to keep on going, aren’t you? Working here, working for the NOPD, running the—”

  A knock at the door cut off Owen as Jordan, the parlor’s other tattoo artist, poked his head in. “Y’all good? I can grab the lady waiting at the front, if you want.”

  Owen’s shoulders rose and then fell. “Yeah, just take her. Gage has got to be somewhere.”

  With a two-fingered salute, Jordan disappeared, and the sound of his heavy boots echoing against the tiled floor faded into silence.

  Leaving Gage and his twin alone.

  Hell, it wasn’t supposed to be this awkward.

  It hadn’t always been this awkward.

  “You should have just let me take the patron,” Gage muttered, shoving his fingers into the pockets of his jeans. “I give you shit over the butterflies because I know it gets under your skin, but I would never leave you hanging. You know that.”

  “Yeah, I know.” There was a long pause before Owen added, “Let’s be real, man, your butterflies are getting sloppy. Kindergarten-level shit.”

  And just like that, they were good again.

  On the surface, at least.

  For right now, it was enough.

  10

  “Hold on, do my tits look okay?”

  Too late.

  Lizzie’s camera clicked-clicked as the shutter went off, capturing the woman posed in lingerie on the antique sofa. Well, the faux antique sofa. The internet was a gem for discovering good but cheap finds, and since Lizzie’s compact studio was on the first floor of the building, it made deliveries even easier.

 

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