Bounty(84)
No girl without a man could have a friend with Deke’s chest (and stomach…and ass, it should be added).
I mean, really.
It was torture.
We growled along in his behemoth, these thoughts in mind, me deciding that, once all was clear with Bianca’s lunatic, I was going to hang with Lacey during her tour.
I was also going to get laid.
This thought made saliva fill my mouth like I was about to get sick, thinking of having any man, taking any man inside me who was not Deke.
So with this reaction, I decided not to focus on whatever the future needed to be.
Instead, I was going to focus on the next minute, the next after that, and just deal.
Deke turned into my lane with a murmured, “Good, baby?”
“Good, Deke,” I whispered.
He reached out a hand and squeezed my thigh before he turned it, palm up.
I didn’t know what that meant but instinctively I took one hand from my mug and placed it in his.
That was what it meant. His fingers curled warm around mine and he pulled both to his thigh and rested them against the hard muscle there while he drove us up my lane.
I closed my eyes.
God.
He was just so fucking Deke.
“Callahan,” he said.
I opened my eyes.
And there he was, Joe Callahan, standing at the side of a black SUV, shoulders rested against it, wearing jeans, a black tee and motorcycle boots.
I had not been in his presence often, a few times, but every time I was, I’d noted this was Cal’s uniform.
I’d also noted he was smokin’ hot in the sense that he could totally move to these mountains and fit right in.
Deke stopped and let me go to put the truck in park and cut the ignition.
For some reason, I waited until he’d done this, watching his profile rather than opening my door.
He felt my gaze, looked at me, his face softened and he gave me one nod before he unbuckled his seatbelt and turned to his door.
I unbuckled too and turned to mine.
Once I got out and shut it, I looked to Cal to see he’d pushed away from the SUV and was heading our way.
But he got a look at me not through the windshield and his tall body came to an abrupt stop.
Then his handsome face got scary.
I just barely made it to the hood of Deke’s truck when Deke was at my side, and before I knew it, he had a hand curled around my neck. His wrist was at the back, his fingers around the side pulling me close to him so I had no choice but to move toward Cal with my side brushing Deke’s and do it lifting a hand and hooking my thumb in his back belt loop.
It was a strange hold that communicated protection and, oddly (though I might be reading it wrong, that wrong being hopefully) possession.
Cal took us in as we made our way to him and Deke stopped us a few feet away.
“You’re Callahan,” Deke stated and Cal tore his angry gaze from my throat and gave it to Deke.
“You’re Hightower,” he returned.
“Yup.”
Cal looked him up and down, clearly after having seen my face, he hadn’t taken in the fullness of all that was Deke (just to say, I didn’t look much at myself when I was in Deke’s bathroom—I saw it was not pretty in such a way that I wasn’t quite ready to go there just yet with any type of close inspection).
He did take Deke in right then and I knew his eyesight wasn’t failing when I saw the pissed-off tense line of his body relax a smidge.
Cal turned his attention to me. “You doin’ okay, Jus?”
“Got a lot of good folks looking after me, Cal,” I replied.
He nodded, glancing at Deke before looking at me.
He then looked back to Deke. “You wanna let her go, man, so I can give her a hug?”
This was Cal’s wife’s doing. I knew this because he put in Dad’s security in Dad and Dana’s house prior to finding that wife and back then, although not rude or an asshole, he was about as huggable as Charles Manson.
When he did Lacey’s house in the Hollywood hills, well after he’d settled into life with his new wife, he was an entirely different man. Still slightly taciturn, the rest was a shock. He was far more mellow and he liberally demonstrated he had a wicked sense of humor. He talked on the phone frequently with his woman and the family he collected when he got her (she was a widowed mom) and the one the two of them were making (something they enjoyed doing because as far as I knew, they had five kids, two hers before Cal, five hers and Cal’s with Cal’s seed making three of those).
It was a beautiful thing to see, how the love of an unmistakably good woman (though I’d never met her, still, the miracle she wrought was proof of that in my eyes) could change a man. Make him so visibly happy, even folks who barely knew him saw the blessings he’d received because he wore them almost like badges of honor.