The First Taste (Slip of the Tongue #2) - Jessica Hawkins Page 0,85

be grateful for—for—” He swallows, puts his other hand around mine and brings it to his mouth, kissing my knuckles. He looks up at me but doesn’t speak, just stares, his expression hard. After a few seconds, he presses his forehead to our hands, as if in prayer. “I’m so mad.”

Seeing his struggle makes my throat thick. “I shouldn’t have told you.”

“No. I mean yes, of course you should have. I’m not mad at you; I’m mad at the situation. At him.” He says him like the word itself has wronged him.

“I’m not a victim,” I tell him. “I got out. I’m stronger than him, believe me.”

“How did this . . . why did you marry him?”

“He didn’t act that way most of our relationship. When avec started doing well and I could stand on my own, it drove a wedge between us. That’s when the name-calling started. After he met Virginia, he wanted sex with me less, but when he did and I didn’t, he took it as an insult.”

“You never thought about leaving him?”

“I still loved him. I couldn’t see the big picture. He’d been manipulating me in my business dealings and personal choices for a while without me realizing it, so it almost happened like a shift.” I take my hand back. “When I started therapy after the split, my doctor listened to it all, and she’s been helping me understand how wrong his behavior was.”

“But you’re so strong,” he says. “So independent. It doesn’t make sense.”

“I’m still human. I fell in love.” I pause as we stare at each other. “Stupid, I know.”

He looks me in the eye. “Not stupid.”

“No? Maybe not the first time. But I know better now.”

“So do I.”

I smile timidly at him. “That’s why we’re such a good pair.”

“Yes, that’s why,” he says. “Not because of amazing sex. Or our unintentionally intimate conversations. Not the fact that I care about you.”

He’s gone and done the exact opposite of what he promised, and yet, when he says it, I know I feel the same. I care. He lets the comment hang. Either he’s wishing he hadn’t said it, or he’s letting me adjust to it. I shudder with a mix of excitement and fear.

He misreads my reaction for cold and stands to swipe a towel off the rack. “Come on,” he says, holding a hand out for me.

I take it, letting him help me up. He wraps the towel around my shoulders and rubs them, warming me up. “I mean it,” he says. “I care about you. Since we started this, I’ve wanted you to be happy, but now—now, I want you to be safe, and that comes from a different place.”

I may be able to open up, but telling him how I feel doesn’t come quite as easily. I wipe the leftover bubbles off his chest like steam from a mirror to reveal the tattoos underneath. They’re such an important part of him, like a hidden appendage, but until now, to me they’ve just been ink on skin.

“What do they mean?” I ask.

He looks down at me, as if debating what to share and what to keep private. He takes my wrist and pulls my hand away from his chest.

My heart drops. After everything we’ve just gone through, it feels unfair to be shut out.

But he replaces my hand on his left shoulder, over the first tattoo I noticed, a cluster of rich, purple-blue flowers. They droop lazily onto his upper pec. “Bluebells,” he says. “For Bell. I got them when she was a baby. Shana’s favorite flower.”

They resemble upside down bells, sagging but vibrant, small individually and striking as a bunch. “They’re pretty,” I say, “and also a bit sad.”

He nods. “That was Shana.” He moves my hand down his pec to a skull and crossbones, only the bones are a wrench and a hammer crossed in an “X”. “I drew this in memory of my grandpa, a fix-it guy with a special love for cars. He lived clean for most of his life. He’s my role model, unlike my dad. My dad,” he slides my hand under his arm, over his ribcage, to a script of words I can’t see well enough to read, “is a drunk and a gambler. This says ‘the things I cannot change’.”

“That’s from the Serenity Prayer,” I say, glancing at his half-finished whisky. “Are you an . . . alcoholic?”

“No, but I could’ve been. My grandpa was. He cleaned himself up when my grandma got

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