Danny Bradford, who was still pressing the sweetest kisses against the back of her neck, knew who he was sharing a bed with. Which meant…
Okay, she had absolutely no idea what that meant because she couldn’t exactly think straight with that battering-ram digging into her back and those warm lips pressing against her neck, sending delicious tremors down her spine. She’d never been in a situation like this one, where a man seemed more than happy to have her in his arms. Usually, when a man pulled her in his arms and kissed her, his expression turned horrified when he realized that kissing her was like kissing his sister.
Not really a flattering comparison, but one that she was used to, nonetheless.
“Ummm, what exactly happened last night?” Jodi found herself asking, proud that she sounded unaffected by his touch, at least, in her mind, she did.
“My asshole brother gave you medicine,” Danny said, accompanying the words with another press of his lips.
“Oh,” Jodi mumbled, struggling to remember what happened last night. With a frown, she looked down at her arm and sagged with relief. The hives, or whatever they were, were gone. Left in its place were pink streaks covering almost every inch of exposed skin, but she was surprisingly okay with that. A sudden thought had her trying to sit up, but the arm locked around her waist kept her in place. “I gotta get to my apartment and put the food away!” she explained, reaching down to grab his arm and push it away even as common sense kicked in and she realized that whatever had been left out was probably ruined by now.
Another kiss. “It’s all gone, Tinkerbelle.”
“That’s not my name,” Jodi said absently with a frown, wondering how all that food could have disappeared in one night. “Did you throw it away?” she asked, hating the idea of wasting all that food.
“No,” Danny said with another kiss, making her wonder if he was even aware of what he was doing. “My brother and uncle consoled themselves with all that food after you kicked their asses,” he said, chuckling and she would swear to her dying day that she could actually feel him smiling against her skin.
“I kicked their asses?” Jodi asked, sure that she’d misheard him about both counts because there was no way humanly possible for two men to eat all that food she’d cooked in one night.
“Yes, you did,” he murmured, adjusting his hold on her as he shifted behind her to bring her body back against his.
She opened her mouth, not exactly sure what to say to get herself out of this situation, when Danny cut her off with another one of those kisses that she was secretly starting to like and a murmured, “Go back to sleep, Tinkerbelle. You were up most of the night.”
It wasn’t until he’d said that, that she realized just how tired she was. She hadn’t slept well in months, not since Jerry had knocked her world off its axis. Moving in across from him certainly hadn’t helped, Jodi thought with a snort as her eyelids drooped heavily.
She should be climbing out of the bed and putting some space between her and those confusing kisses of his, but she just couldn’t seem to find the energy or the willpower to ask him to let her go, not when it felt so good to be in his arms. She’d blame it on the medicine, Jodi decided as she stopped fighting and gave in.
“You look like shit.”
“Thanks,” Danny said, plopping down on the bed next to his brother as he lazily rubbed his hair dry with a towel.
“Did you get any sleep after we left?” Aidan asked, reaching over and ran his fingers over the pink streak left behind on Danny’s shoulder. “This should be gone within a few days.”
“You mean after you and that bastard ran off like the cowards that you are, but only after you ate everything in sight?” Danny asked, tossing the towel at his brother’s face.
“Yes,” Aidan said with an unconcerned shrug as he stood and walked over to the closet. “Were you able to sleep?” he asked, throwing him an assessing glance before he turned his attention to Danny’s limited wardrobe.
“Yeah,” Danny said, not mentioning that he couldn’t remember ever sleeping so well before.
Before his career had been fucked up by a sniper, he’d managed to spend the night holding a woman a few times. Although he’d enjoyed the feeling of falling asleep with a warm, soft feminine body pressed up against him, it had never felt as good as it had last night with Tinkerbelle lying in his arms.
Holding her had been…
Unbelievable.
Waking up to find her gone had left him reeling. He’d never expected to feel that way, especially not about a woman he barely knew, but the moment that he’d woken up to find himself alone, he’d felt…
Lost.
He’d felt like a part of him was missing, which was fucking ridiculous. He didn’t know this woman, had never spent any real time with her, not to mention the fact that he’d spent the last two months tormenting her in the usual Bradford fashion. So why he felt like a part of him was missing was beyond him. Maybe he should just agree to go out with one of the women that Aidan had stashed in the other room and was trying to spring on him to clear his head, Danny thought.
Maybe a night away from his apartment with a beautiful woman that wasn’t expecting anything more than a good meal and a good time was just what he needed. He looked down at the pillow that he’d shared with Tinkerbelle and nodded. Maybe it was time to move on and let go of the past and he couldn’t do that by hiding in his apartment, thinking about a woman that hated him.
“Who says thank you with meatloaf?” Jodi mumbled with disgust as she looked down at the plate overflowing with meatloaf, mashed potatoes, cranberry sauce, corn, homemade honey butter, and a thick slice of chocolate cake with fudge frosting on a smaller plate in her other hand.
“Someone too broke to buy a decent thank you gift, that’s who,” she answered her own question with a sad shake of her head.
Deciding to get this over with, Jodi opened her door and walked out into the hallway, wishing that she could be anywhere else, doing anything else, but she didn’t have much of a choice in the matter. Danny had taken care of her not once but twice and she had yet to thank him properly. As embarrassed as she was about the whole situation, and God was she embarrassed, she couldn’t pretend that it never happened. Her parents hadn’t raised her that way.