Against All Odds (Shifters)(9)
“You don’t need the hair dye. Your hair will be amazing as a chestnut brown.”
She shook her head. “I don’t want it to be a chestnut brown. Cherry brown, and you can do it. I heard peroxide is hard on your nostrils, so you might want to get a mask to cover yourself with.”
Turning back she headed for the house.
“You want it today?”
“I’ve not got anything else to do.”
Heather left him alone and walked back to the house. Dana was waiting on the steps leading up to the front door.
“I shouldn’t have yelled at you yesterday,” she said.
Dana looked up. “You’re being very brave. I talked to Mom and Dad about our fight. They took your side and opened my mind up. I really do need to listen to you, and I’m sorry for not doing it.”
“You’re forgiven. Am I forgiven for yelling at you?” Heather took a seat next to her friend.
“Yeah. It’s just I want to find that one man so much. You’ve got your mate, and you act like you don’t care. I keep forgetting you’re human and that we’re not actually sisters.”
Leaning her head on Dana’s shoulder, Heather let out a sigh. “Answer me honestly. Do you have a problem with me trying with Ben?”
“No, I don’t. To be honest with you, honey, I wished he was my mate. There was no connection between us, but I wanted to have a mate. The one guy who’s supposed to complement me.” Dana shrugged. “Ben’s not my mate. He’s your mate not mine. I’m happy for you, and I refuse to settle for any man but mine. Sorry.”
“No, I’ve sent him to town to get me a new hair dye. He’s going to do my hair for me.”
“That should be interesting.”
They were silent for a long time.
“You’ll find your mate, Dana, or he’ll find you. When you do, you’ll set the world afire with passion,” Heather said.
“You’re too much of a romantic at heart.”
“I love you, and I want what’s best for you.”
****
Ben couldn’t believe how many different types and styles of hair dye there actually were. He lifted the bottle close to his face and took a sniff. For ten bottles he did this until he found the right scent that matched Heather’s hair. This was a huge step for both of them. He didn’t anticipate her being open with him immediately. Time, that was all he had with her, and he intended to use it wisely.
He had a home on the outskirts of the city, and he wanted to take her there. She’d be close enough to be with Dana and the rest of the Ashtons. Her comfort around him was what he was searching for.
On the way back he found Felix and John chopping logs and talking.
“Did you get the dye?” Felix asked.
“Yeah, I got it. I don’t think she needs it, but my opinion doesn’t count.” Ben held up the box.
“Kathleen is making her lasagne for tonight. She’s doing a salad to go with, but she’s made a chocolate fudge cake if you’re still hungry,” John said.
“Thank you.” He walked up the steps and then turned. “I also want to say thank you for giving me this chance with Heather. I know it was a risk, and you didn’t have to do it. I’m grateful for the time I get to spend with her.”
“Treat her right and I’ll never have a problem. I know Dana and Felix will maim, torture, and kill you, if you hurt her.” John looked up, smiling. “Treat her right.”
“I will.” He headed in the house in time to see Heather walking down the stairs. Ben was so taken with her as a person that he no longer saw the scars. It had only been a day, but already he felt closer to her than anyone else in his life.
“Did you get the right one?” she asked.
Lifting the box, he handed it to her.
She gazed over the writing and smiled. “You did. Congratulations. We’re going to do this in the sitting room. Kathleen’s cooking in the kitchen, and I don’t want her to be too bothered by the smell.”
“I’m going to watch you do this,” Dana said, presenting a mask.
He pulled his mask out of his pocket.
“Are you ready for this, tiger?” Dana asked.
Heather had already left them to get set up in the sitting room. “I’m ready.” He’d get to touch her without fear of her flinching away. Even touching her hair with the dye on was better than not touching her at all.
“Good, she’s excited about this. Her body is starting to respond to yours. Treat her right.”
Dana slapped him on the back as she passed.
Removing his jacket, Ben rolled up his sleeves and entered the room. Heather sat on a chair. She’d put the chair on a towel, and another towel was wrapped around her shoulders.
“I’m protecting the carpet in case you spill.”
“I’ll try not to.”
She handed him back the box. Dana was sat eating popcorn and watching them both.
“Do you have your mask, Dana?” Heather asked.
“I sure do. While he looks at the back of the box, I’m eating. I don’t know why you use that stuff. Your hair is gorgeous without the colour,” Dana said.
“Do you have a picture of her with her natural hair colour?” Ben was curious to see what she looked like before all the dyes.
“Here it is,” Dana said, showing him a picture of Dana and Heather together. They were younger, much younger. It looked like they were in their early to mid-teens.
Heather’s happiness glowed from within. Her hair was bound on top of her head. The chestnut colour looked natural flowing down her back.
“Why do you dye it?” he asked, handing the picture back to Dana.
“I like it. It feels right to always be changing it.”
“Her parents hate it. This is her rebellion against them.”
His woman glared at Dana while she smiled back.
“Then I see why. Let’s be rebellious together.”
Ben went to work on her hair. All the time he was listening to the women talk.
“When do you have to go back home?” Heather asked.
“Not yet. We’ve got a few more weeks, maybe even a couple of months before we have to worry. Everyone sends you love and wishes. They want to see you but know they have to wait until you’re ready.”
“That’s sweet.”
He stroked her hair for many minutes, loving the silky feel of it running through his fingers.
“Are you okay?” Heather asked.
“I’m fine. Your hair is nice and soft.”
“He’s got a hair fetish, Heather. You should run away before he becomes all stalkerish on you.”
Heather chuckled. “It’s nice.”
“And he’s nothing like Mark,” Dana said.
“Who’s Mark?” Ben asked, applying the dye to her roots.
Silence met his answer.
“He’s the ex that we do not talk about,” Heather said.
Dana shrugged. “If you want any dirt on that guy then you’re going to have to get it out of her.”
Ben listened and worked on her hair. The mask he wore was barely covering the burning scent.
“I’ve got to go. He’s not doing anything amusing,” Dana said, leaving them alone.
“Sorry about Dana. She can be a little talkative sometimes.”
“Don’t worry about it. I’m sure you’re more comfortable talking with her than you are with me.”
Her silence was answer enough. He wasn’t going to take offence. Ben knew he had a long way to go to earn back her trust.
“I’m sorry. I should be more open with you.”
“No. I’m not going to pressure you. You’ll tell me everything you need me to know in your own good time.”
Ben moved around to her front and knelt down. Her green eyes were wide as she looked at him. He touched her hand not even trying to risk touching anywhere else.
“You’ll come to trust me. I need to earn back that trust, Heather.”
“What if you can never earn it back?” she asked, dropping her gaze.
“Then I’ll spend the rest of my life trying.”
She frowned. “Why? Why would you waste your time?”
“When I’m with you it’s not a waste of time. I like being with you.”
“You could have any woman in the world, Ben.”
“And yet, the only person I want to be with is the woman I’ve hurt deeply. I want to be with you, Heather. No one else. Where you go, I’ll go.”
Tears filled her eyes.
He couldn’t bear to see her cry, and he went back to finishing her hair. Whatever she wanted him to do, he’d do it gladly.
Chapter Seven
Over the next couple of weeks Heather grew closer to Ben. They didn’t touch each other besides the odd caress of hands. He reached out several times to touch her, and she’d flinched away. She was hoping that with time she’d be far more accepting of him than she was right now.
Every day she felt drawn to him until she’d started to seek him out when he wasn’t at breakfast. She would sit watching him cut logs, or do some job around the cabin. Heather had watched him paint the whole east side of the fence. She’d carried the can for him to work. Dana was getting pissed with being cooped up all the time.
It was only a matter of time before the Ashtons needed to leave. They were not fit for life as recluses. She wasn’t sleeping through the night, and many times she found herself lain in bed thinking about the future. Her life had never been uncertain. She’d phoned her parents to let them know she was fine. They’d spoken the necessary lines but nothing else. There were times she wished she could shock them into feeling something for her.