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Fall in Love Book Bundle: Small Town Romance Box Set

Page 23

by Grover Swank, Denise


  Maybe I was being absurd and reckless, misguided and foolish. I knew he would push me, I had no doubt. But I trusted him. I trusted that, even though Duane would definitely push, he’d also be there to catch me when I fall.

  Chapter 16

  “I never travel without my diary. One should always have something sensational to read in the train.”

  Oscar Wilde, The Importance of Being Earnest

  ~Duane~

  She wanted to give me a blow job.

  I suggested fried pie instead.

  It took some convincing, but Jess finally agreed. Yet her agreement came only after I pointed out that Daisy’s Nut House would be closing in an hour. If we were going to secure pie, the time was now.

  While she righted herself, I grabbed my clothes, took a walk upstairs, and shoved my head and neck under the cold water faucet, thinking of England and the Queen. This was a trick Cletus taught me some years ago. When faced with a stubborn boner, thinking of all those wrinkled, disapproving monarchs in their fancy clothes usually worked.

  It didn’t exactly work this time, but it worked enough. I couldn’t keep wearing my tented coveralls, so I switched back into my pants.

  I’m not sure why I turned her down. Feeling her lose her mind against my mouth and fingers, this time lying on the hood of the Mustang I was determined to give her, was going in my long-term memory storage for frequent replay.

  I should have taken her up on the offer to reciprocate, but I couldn’t. Fuck I wanted to…but I couldn’t. Not until everything was just right. Not until we had more than a few hours.

  So instead I tried to recall the names of Henry the Eighth’s six wives, and how each had met her demise.

  Both easing and increasing the torture, on the ride over Jess snuggled close to me, opting to use the center seatbelt and laying her head on my shoulder as I drove. She sighed a lot. And she smiled a lot.

  At one point she picked up my hand from where it rested on her thigh and studied my fingers, holding them close to her face and tracing my knuckles.

  “I like your hands.”

  “My hands like you.”

  She smiled again. Then sighed against my neck.

  “This feels good.”

  “What’s that?” I slowed to make the turn into Daisy’s, scanning the cars in the lot. It was fairly packed.

  “I don’t know what to call it…post-orgasmic bliss, I guess.”

  I released a short laugh and shook my head. “Don’t tell me I’ve given you your first?”

  She shrugged. Even though we’d parked and I’d turned off the engine, she made no move to relinquish her spot curled against my side.

  “No. I’m quite talented at the art of self-pleasuring.”

  At this statement, two thoughts warred for my attention: first, I was vehemently determined to get her to myself again as soon as possible, because I’d very much enjoy watching her talent in the art of self-pleasuring.

  And second, unless I’d misunderstood, her admission meant I was the first guy who’d brought her to orgasm.

  My possessive impulses were back with a sudden fierceness. I leaned slightly away so I could see her eyes.

  “Jess, have you ever—I mean, are you…?”

  A small V formed between her eyebrows as I struggled to ask my question, but then her forehead cleared when she understood.

  “Oh, no. No. I’m no virgin. First of all, my hymen broke when I was a teenager while horseback riding at my aunt’s farm in Texas—thank God, because I hear breaking through that thing the old-fashioned way is like getting stabbed in the hoo-hah. And secondly, I had sex with a guy in college. He was really nice, but it was…underwhelming in the extreme.”

  I frowned at this news, irritated someone else had touched her. But also strangely both pissed and relieved the experience had been underwhelming.

  “Just one guy?”

  She nodded, looking unperturbed, then asked, “What about you? How many girls have you been with?”

  I studied her, bracing myself for her reaction to the truth. “Just one.”

  Jessica blinked several times, like I’d startled her, and she choked out, “Just…just one?”

  I nodded, searching for any clues as to what she was thinking.

  “Just one…” she repeated, mostly to herself and pulled away from me. After several seconds her gaze darted to mine, then away again. She laughed without humor, staring at her lap, and said, “I guess you were really in love.”

  “What do you mean?” I rested my arm on the bench behind Jess’s shoulders, surprised by her words, wondering if it were possible she already knew how I thought of her.

  “With Tina. I guess you really loved her.”

  I reeled back, and said much louder than I intended, “Tina? In love with Tina? Oh, hell no.”

  Jessica examined me with a questioning frown. “Then why did you…why were you only with Tina? For five years?”

  I half rolled my eyes, and tilted my head toward the door to Daisy’s. “Let’s go inside.”

  “Are you avoiding the question?”

  “No. For the record, I was never in love with Tina and she was definitely never in love with me. I’d just like some pie if we’re going to talk about this,” I drawled, figuring it was time to return her unfailing honesty with my own.

  I was happy to see Jess’s answering smile and nod of agreement.

  On our way in I scanned the diner. The place was packed, especially for a late Sunday afternoon, I didn’t see a free table. I was about to suggest we order our pie to-go when Jess pointed to two newly vacated spots at the counter near the door.

  “We can sit there.”

  Before I could answer, she pulled me to the empty stools. The seats were pretty good, all things considered. I could see the rest of the diner from our position, but the door was to our back. Nevertheless, it was a good place to scope out any booths that might become available.

  “Do you need a menu?” she asked, reaching forward to where the laminated trifold menus were kept.

  “Nah. I know what I want.”

  “Good. Me too.” She smiled, looking at my mouth like she was planning on having it for supper.

  I cleared my throat so I wouldn’t groan. Closing my eyes, I pinched the bridge of my nose, trying to remember what we were discussing in the car. This was a mistake. Images of Jess on the hood of her Mustang filled my vision, the faith in her eyes, the raw want and trust.

  I meant it when I’d said I loved her type of wild and reckless. It was sweet, honest, and generous. She was a good woman, and I didn’t want her holding back or feeling like she needed to. Thus, I needed to settle on a place and soon. A place where we could be alone together, maybe for days, so we could do things right.

  Admittedly, my motivations weren’t entirely honorable; I needed to satisfy the relentless hard-on between my legs, especially when her honest words were playing on repeat between my ears:

  I’m trying to go slow. But, it’s not easy with you.

  I really like you.

  I’m thinking about you all the time.

  I missed you terribly.

  Being with you feels so good.

  I want to be respectful of you, of your wishes.

  “So, you were saying about Tina?” Jess prompted, interrupting the self-inflicted torture.

  I nodded, sucked in a deep breath, and opened my eyes. I found her watching me with so much trust and admiration I almost pinched myself. This was my reality, and one day she was going to walk away.

  “Tina…” I nodded, cleared my throat again.

  She waited for a beat, then prompted once more, “I asked you why you stayed with her for five years if there was no love between you. Why didn’t you move on? Date someone else?”

  What would have been the point? No one else was you.

  I shrugged, stalling, settling on one version of the truth. “Laziness and convenience, I guess. She knew what was up from the start, that I didn’t want anything ser
ious with her or anyone else. Like I’ve said, she wasn’t my girl.”

  Jess’s lips slanted downward on one side and her eyes narrowed as they moved between mine. “So you’ve never been interested in anyone?”

  “I’m interested in you.” The words slipped out, her fearless honesty encouraged my own.

  “Hmm…”

  “Hmm?”

  “Yes. Hmm.”

  “Why hmm?”

  “Hmm because I feel like you’ve cheated yourself out of five years and the possibility of something great. You could have met someone, fallen in love, been loved in return. But it’s like you gave up before you even started.”

  “I didn’t give up. I was biding my time.”

  “For what? For who? Someone you felt suited?”

  “No, not someone. For you.”

  Jess’s expressive eyes widened, then she blinked. “You’ve been biding your time? For me?”

  Maybe I had to work up to her level of brutal honesty, but eventually I got there. And now that I’d said the words, I sure as hell wasn’t taking them back.

  “That’s right. There was no point in dating other people. No one else is you.”

  Her face both fell and brightened at once, like my words made her sad and happy.

  “Oh, Duane…” She sounded heartbroken and elated. “What am I going to do with you?”

  Stay.

  I wasn’t going to say that. Asking her to stay would be taking her dreams away.

  Instead I shrugged. “You could buy me pie.”

  Jess stood from her stool and stepped between my legs, winding her arms around my neck. She pressed herself to me, giving me a tight hug and whispering into my ear, “You’re a siren who doesn’t sing.”

  I chuckled, returning her embrace, and placed a quick kiss on her neck. I couldn’t quite swallow. My head was mixed up. What I wanted, knew, and needed didn’t align.

  I wanted her to stay.

  I knew she had to go.

  I needed to remember every day was one day closer to the end, otherwise her leaving would be my destruction. Maybe I wasn’t being fair, encouraging her to lose control while I refused to cede control. But self-preservation required it.

  She gave me one more squeeze, then leaned away. Meanwhile, I battled between forced numbness and a painful desire to give in, let go of my survival instinct.

  Jess gave me another adoring smile. “I’ll go get our pie. Be right back.”

  I let her go and she rushed away, though I followed her with my eyes as she walked the length of the counter and disappeared into the kitchen. My attention affixed to the swinging galley door for a long time. I finally managed to swallow around the thick discomfort in my throat, the painful desire to give in replaced with a cold certainty that I couldn’t. It wouldn’t be fair, not to me and not to her, because then I would ask her to stay.

  “Well, looky who we have here.”

  I stiffened in my seat and turned on my stool slowly—not cursing, though I wanted to. I was in no hurry to see Repo.

  “Repo,” I said, likely sounding as irritated and bored as I was, while my eyes moved over the rest of his companions.

  There were a few younger guys I didn’t recognize, a few I did. One was Kip Sylvester’s son, Isaac, and his presence was a surprise. He was a year or so older than me and last I knew he was still in the Army. I gathered seeing him here, in the company of the Wraiths, meant he’d been discharged.

  I had a few tetchy thoughts then—like wondering what his father, the principal, and his mother, the socialite, would think of his involvement with the Wraiths—before my gaze settled on Tina, my ex, near the back of the entourage.

  I had to fight another eye roll because she was giving me one of her looks, all while rubbing up against one of the bikers.

  “Hi, Duane,” she said, flapping her eyelashes.

  “Tina,” I acknowledged, hoping my visible indifference toward her would hide my frustration at seeing her now. I’d been calling her non-stop for the last week. Beau had also been calling, trying to find a time to meet up so the three of us could discuss a plan for copying, then erasing the Iron Wraiths’ computer files.

  But she’d responded with only text messages, telling us both to come see her at the Pink Pony if we wanted to talk. I wanted to go to that strip club again like I wanted kidney stones.

  “Oh, you don’t mind? Do you, son?” Repo walked toward me, lowering his voice as he approached. “Your girl Tina has been keeping lots of our guys real happy.”

  I shrugged. “Why would I mind? She was never my girl.”

  Repo chortled, his hand coming down on my shoulder, and he shook his head. “You’re not so bad, Duane.”

  “I’m not so good, either.” I looked meaningfully at his hand still gripping my shoulder.

  Repo’s smile widened and he released me.

  He glanced at his entourage and then lifted his chin toward two booths at the back of the diner. “Pay their tab and ask them to leave, nicely.”

  Knowing Repo, he was intending to occupy the two tables even though they were currently filled. If Daisy had been here, Repo wouldn’t have been able to pull a move like this. But she wasn’t.

  The crowd of bikers strolled to the booths and I watched with mild curiosity as one of the Wraiths’ members smiled at the occupants, withdrew several bills, and said something I couldn’t hear. Almost immediately the customers shuffled out of their booths.

  “I’m glad you’re here,” Repo said as I continued to watch the scene at the back of the restaurant. The customers were now nodding politely to the bikers as they went. “It saves me a trip to your house.”

  My eyes sliced to Repo’s still smiling face and narrowed. “You need to borrow a cup of sugar, old man?”

  Repo’s eyes also narrowed. “I ain’t baking no cakes. We both know why I’m so interested in your ornery company.”

  I examined the older biker for a minute, peripherally aware of the displaced customers as they filed out of the restaurant. They didn’t look upset, but they didn’t look too happy, either.

  “You got three more days, son.” Repo’s typically friendly tone adopted a hard edge. “I’ll be expecting your answer.”

  I thought about giving him my answer right this minute via my middle finger, but movement caught my eye, distracting me. Distraction quickly turned to dread when I spotted Jessica making her way back. She was carrying a tray with four slices of pie and two cups of coffee.

  Repo must’ve noticed my redirected attention because he turned and followed my line of sight. When his eyes connected with Jessica he stood a bit straighter, his grin wavering then falling, like the vision of her was shockingly unexpected.

  Jess was smiling her big smile at me, but I saw the precise moment when her attention snagged on Repo. She blinked, her steps faltered, and the big smile fell from her face, became polite and confused. She made her final approach with hesitant steps, her eyes clearly wary.

  Maybe her reaction had something to do with the fact I was currently grinding my teeth. If my outward expression came anywhere close to the lethal impulses I’d barely restrained, I wasn’t surprised she’d decided to tread with caution.

  Obviously, I didn’t want her anywhere near the Wraiths, nor did I want the Wraiths anywhere near her. Thus, we needed to leave.

  “Am I interrupting something?” Jess glanced between Repo and me, not putting the tray down, like she hadn’t made up her mind whether or not the pie would be safe.

  “Nothing at all, Miss James,” Repo responded, giving her a tight smile and reaching for the tray. His voice was hoarser, softer than usual as he asked, “Can I help you with that?”

  He was acting like a hypnotized loony bird and I didn’t like it. So I stood and walked around the biker, stepping between them and intercepting his reaching hands by taking the tray myself.

  “I’m sorry…” Her gaze flickered to me, then back to the biker, giving him a quizzical smile. “Don’t I know you? You look
awfully familiar.”

  “Maybe, around town. But I know your momma real well.” Again, his voice was soft, respectful.

  I tossed a furious look over my shoulder at Repo, not liking the way he was staring at Jess—all soft and revering, like she was some kind of fairy princess—then turned back to her while I set the tray on the counter, blocking her view of the biker. “Hey, can you go back and grab us some takeaway containers? We’ll get this to-go.”

  Her gentle eyes studied me and I saw a question hovering near the surface. In the end though she nodded and walked back to the kitchen, tucking her long, blonde hair behind her ears as she went.

  I waited until she was back in the kitchen before turning back to Repo and lowering my voice to a harsh whisper. “Really? You know her momma ‘real well’? What the fuck is wrong with you? Why would you say that?”

  Even though we were in a busy diner, and I imagined we were making quite a scene, no one was paying us any heed. I hoped the locals assumed our heated exchange was about my piece-of-shit father. It wasn’t unusual for Winston boys and the Iron Wraiths to clash on the subject from time to time.

  Repo kept his attention fixed to the spot where Jessica had disappeared and ignored my question. “The Sheriff’s daughter, huh?”

  “That isn’t really any of your concern, old man.”

  He turned his black eyes to me and not a trace of good humor remained. He took a step toward me and lowered his voice so only I could hear.

  “That is my concern.”

  “How is Jessica James any of your concern?”

  He appeared to struggle for a moment, then finally said, “Because you’re going to be my mechanic soon—”

  “That’s not decided.”

  He continued like I hadn’t spoken, his glare narrowing. “Do you think you’ll be able to run our shop and still see that girl? Or are you thinking about double-crossing me? You think if you get tight with that family they’ll let Jethro off easy? That ain’t so, son. Because what we got on Jethro is a federal matter, not local.”

  “I don’t run your shop,” I ground out.

  The muscle at his jaw ticked and his black eyes turned as mean as I’d ever seen them. “Three days, son. Three days.”

 

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