none of the irritation and hurt I’ve seen her fight all day evident. “You’re here.”
“Yeah, I’m here.” I wonder if she notices how his laugh catches a little in his throat. “You’re here, too.”
The seconds stretch into a minute as they stare at each other, taking in the face so like their own, but so completely different.
“You look . . .” Rhyson tilts his head, studying his sister with sober eyes. “You’re beautiful, Bris.”
Tears flood her eyes, one sneaking over her cheek. She swipes it away quickly.
“Stop.” She smiles self-consciously. “I look the same.”
Rhyson shakes his head, brushing her tousled hair back with one hand. “My little sister grew up.”
“Little sister?” She quirks one dark brow, some of the spark I saw today returning to her eyes. “We’re twins, doofus.”
“I was born first,” he counters, his crooked smile telling me he’s enjoying this.
“And that one minute more in the world gives you so much of an edge?” she fires back.
“Whether you want to admit it or not, you’re my little sister.” The look he gives her already apologizes before his words do. “I’m sorry we missed the last five years.”
“Me, too,” she says, the smile dying from her eyes.
“And for missing today. I wish I could say tomorrow would be much different. I have to be in the studio a lot, but you can come with me.”
“Okay. That sounds fun.” She stretches, yawns, and tosses the blanket off, standing to her feet. “We can talk about it in the morning. I’m off to bed.”
“Me, too.” Rhyson stands, talking through a yawn. “Marlon, it’s so late, you should just crash here tonight.”
Bristol’s eyes shift over his shoulder, widening like she just realized that I was still here. She offers me a smile more reserved than the ones we exchanged while we talked all night. When we made each other laugh.
“Thanks again, Grip, for keeping me company today.”
“No problem.” I take the spot and the blanket on the couch she just vacated, not looking up to meet her eyes. “Any time.”
I feel her eyes on me. After all we discussed today, all we shared, my tone probably seems impersonal. She may not know it now, but she’ll realize soon, that’s for her own good. She’s something rare— smart, classy, gorgeous, funny, opinionated, and under it all, where she tries to hide it, kind. And burrowed beneath all of that, vulnerable. She isn’t the kind of girl you mess over.
I repeat that warning to myself for the next hour as I stare into the darkness of Grady’s living room. No, she isn’t the kind of girl you mess over. A guy needs to be very sure he wants her, and just her, before he makes a move.
Yeah. A guy would have to be very sure.
7
BRISTOL
“HMMMMM.”
I moan as soon as the warm bite of syrup-soaked waffle hits my tongue. “Don’t tell me you’re a short-order cook, too, when you’re not deejaying or sweeping floors or writing songs.”
Grip laughs, not looking up from the waffle maker on the kitchen
counter. Powder sprinkles his face, right above the corner of his mouth, sugary white against the caramel of his skin. I want to lick it away. That realization has me choking on my waffle.
“You okay?” Rhyson pounds my back like I’m a little girl.
“Yeah.” Eyes still watering, I sip my orange juice. “Just went down the wrong way.”
Grip brings another stack of waffles to the table.
“Send these down the right way,” he says.
Our eyes catch and hold across the table. Sunlight floods Grady’s well-appointed kitchen, and you’d never know Grip slept on the couch and hasn’t showered. Damn, the man looks good in this light. He’d probably look good in no light. A thin layer of stubble coats his chiseled jaw, and I wouldn’t mind rubbing up against it, feeling the scrape as he leaves a mark on me.
My vagina needs a serious pep talk.
“So what’s the plan for today?” Grip slices into his stack of waffles.
“Well, I’m in the studio pretty much all day again.” He glances at me while he chews. “Sorry about that. It’s bad timing but unavoidable.”
“It’s fine.” I pause with my orange juice halfway to my mouth. “You did say I could tag along, right?”
“Won’t you be bored?” Rhyson spears a waffle square. “I mean, if you want to come, you can.”
“And the alternative would be . . .what?” I ask. “Sitting here in Grady’s empty house all day?”
I could make the uncomfortable expression on his face go away, but I won’t.