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The Bad Boys of Summer Anthology(209)

By:Selena Laurence


“So,” I say, feeling timid but pressing ahead anyway, “once you’ve got a satisfied customer, does that mean you move on to the next challenge?” I try to make it sound playful, but I have a feeling I’m failing miserably.

He leans up on one elbow and looks down at me. “Is that what’s got you so serious this morning? Are you still worried I’m going to get bored and move on?”

I swallow and don’t answer him, just watching his brilliant green eyes as they search mine.

Finally, he leans down and kisses me softly on the lips. “Mel, you are infinitely interesting to me. I can’t imagine a day when I could ever or would ever be bored by you. You’re the smartest, sexiest, most interesting woman I’ve ever known. I only worry that you’ll wake up one day and realize I’m overbearing and depressing and no fun at all. Then you’ll up and run off with some younger guy who has friends instead of employees and sleeps at normal times and isn’t always locked up in a little room writing lyrics about his pretentious, pathetic life.”

I can’t help but laugh, but I make sure to stroke my palm along his cheek as I do. “Is that seriously how you see yourself? My God, Joss, are you looking around you at all? You’re beautiful and talented and respected by everyone who knows you. And that includes me. You’re quiet and serious, yeah, and I love that about you. Happy-go-lucky guys are Tammy’s thing, not mine.”

He lays his head against my neck for a moment, just breathing me in like he often does. I think, no matter what happens between us. I will never forget Joss Jamison breathing in the scent of me as if it’s the oxygen he needs to survive.

“So why the worry then? If you’re happy with me and I’m happy with you, what’s putting that crease in your beautiful face?”

“It was nothing. A momentary doubt. Forget about it.”

“No, I won’t. I’ll do whatever you need to help you feel secure about me, about us. But I need to know what the doubts are before I can fix them.”

“You don’t have to fix everything for me, Joss.”

“I want to. Please let me.”

I sigh. “Well, we haven’t talked, you know, about what happens after the tour. And it’s probably way too soon to discuss it anyway, so I know I’m being stupid. And I’m really not needy. We can just take this—”

“Sshh.” He places his finger over my lips to stop my babbling. “Sweet Mel, it’s okay. And I’m sorry. I’ve been a dick. I feel so close to you I forget you can’t read my mind. You need to call me on that shit. I’m an only child, and I don’t always know how to play well with others.”

I give him a little laugh and a smile.

He sits up against the headboard, pulling me up with him. I rest my head on his shoulder and he does his favorite thing with my hair, running the ends through his fingers, while he talks.

“So this is what I’ve been thinking about for after the tour. We’ll get back to Portland and we’ll go straight to my condo, where I’ll finally get to make love to you in my very own bed that I paid a fucking fortune for along with the bazillion thread count sheets that the decorator swore I needed to have. Then when we simply can’t orgasm one more time, we’ll sleep.

“In the morning, I’ll make you breakfast, and while I go to the studio, you’ll work on the photo book from the tour. And if I have my way, we’ll knock off early and I’ll take you to my favorite little Italian restaurant down the street where I can spoil you with tiramisu and espresso after dinner. Then we’ll go home and make love again until we fall asleep.”

“Then what?” I ask when he suddenly stops talking.

“Rinse and repeat as much as possible.”

I lean back and look up at him. “Joss. I sort of meant bigger picture than that. I mean, that sounds like a lovely day, but what about the week after that? Or the month? What about six months from now?”

He looks genuinely confused. “Well, more of the same. Plus whatever else you’d like—vacations, shopping, another tour with the band—anything you want.”

I try to tamp down my frustration. “Okay, I don’t think you’re getting this. What I’m trying to say is, what will happen to our relationship when we get back? Will we be together? Will I be your girlfriend or whatever?”

“Of course!” he cries out. “What the hell did you think all that was about? You think I’m going to be talking about you living with me if we’re not together? Mel, what are we doing here?”

It’s all I can do to keep from laughing at this point, both from sheer relief and the fact that I’ve just discovered Joss Jamison, sex symbol deluxe, is, underneath it all, another clueless man.

“Joss,” I say with an indulgent tone in my voice. “You’ve never once said we’re a thing or I’m your girlfriend or whatever. And you’ve sure as hell never said a word about us living together. How was I supposed to know that’s what you were thinking? And by the way, don’t you need to ask me to do that? I mean, you can’t just assume I want to live with you.”

He lets his head fall back against the headboard with a clunk. Then he scrubs his hand across his face. “Are we having our first fight?” he asks.

“No.”

“Okay, but I’ve screwed up? Let me see if I’ve got it straight. Mistake number one is that I’ve never said you’re my girlfriend? The fact that you spend every night in my bed, every day in my company, and have even been known to borrow my toothbrush—which, by the way, Mel, is gross—didn’t communicate clearly enough that you’re my girlfriend?”

Well, when he puts it that way.

“Then,” he continues, “my second mistake is that I assumed you’d be living with me when we got back? Of course, I assumed it because you are my girlfriend, whether you acknowledge it or not. I guess in my mind we’re living together now, so why would that change when we got back? But I know I don’t understand all the romantic bullshit that goes along with this stuff. So you want me to ask you?”

I blink at him. He sighs.

“Mel DiLorenzo, would you be so kind as to continue living with me when we get back to Portland?”

My heart jumps inside my chest. Never in my wildest dreams would I have imagined this outcome when I blundered into this conversation. But I hear the voice of my sister inside my head still. Joss never sticks around.

“You know, isn’t it a little soon for that? I mean we’ve only been doing whatever this is—”

“Living together,” he mumbles.

“For a couple of weeks. Shouldn’t we get to know each other better?”

“I’ve known you since you were ten, Mel,” he responds.

“That doesn’t really count, Joss. I mean, living together is a big deal, and I haven’t even decided where I’m going to go after this assignment, and if I move in with you, what about my cat? I can’t leave poor Mesopotamia at my parents’ house—”

Joss growls and pulls me down flat on the bed underneath him. “Mel?”

“Yeah?” I squeak out.

“I did what you wanted. You’re my girlfriend, and I asked you to live with me. Shut up and just go with it.”

“Okay.”

He stops midway to kissing me. “Really? Okay?”

“Yes,” I say. “Of course.”

“Damn right of course.” He buries his face in my neck, nipping and licking, sending heat to my core almost instantaneously.

“Will you do this when we live together?” I ask breathlessly.

“Every single day, baby. Every single day.”

“I think I’m going to like living with you.”

“You already do live with me, Mel,” he corrects.





Chapter Twenty-Nine

Joss



I haven’t said it out loud yet, but I’m in love. Mel DiLorenzo is everything I imagined she would be and more. I feel like my entire world has had a paradigm shift and she’s the cause. It’s a fucking superhuman feeling, and for hours, sometimes whole days, I can hide inside of Mel and forget about Walsh and Tammy. Then I’ll see them together—her still so subdued and him taking charge in this new way, protecting her, both of them staying far away from Mel and me—and it’ll come rushing back, like a snake ready to strike, hissing out the word along with the venom. Betrayal. I keep hoping that if I simply focus on Mel and our future together long enough, the betrayal will fade from my mind and from the air around us.

Deep down though, I don’t think it works that way. I’m deluding myself that there can be a good outcome for all of us now. In light of this fear, I’ve taken the most selfish view possible, hoping against hope every day that if something has to be broken it’ll be something other than Mel and me. This doesn’t help appease my conscience, needless to say.

Now we’re on the road to New York City, and I’m sitting on the bus with a guitar, playing around with a new song. Mike comes into the main cabin looking like he just woke up, which, considering it’s only one thirty in the afternoon, isn’t too bad. Hell, it’s pretty good I’m awake right now too.