minuscule kitchen that had a carpet he had to pretend didn’t exist, it was that heinous.
But all of it, against those odds, she’d made cool.
Total cool.
Total Ryn.
The cave of her living room was sweet. Dark and warm, with furniture that looked good but was comfortable as all hell.
And her bedroom.
So small, the queen bed was shoved up against the wall.
But she had an awesome headboard made of different types of wood notched together at a slant, and it had some Christmas lights strung on it. More of her plants that were everywhere. Lighter walls, bare floors, save a sheepskin by the bed that’d be kickass to put your feet on in the morning, he knew, because it was kickass to stand on before you got into bed at night. Sloppy-on-purpose bedclothes in a narrow gray-and-white stripe with lots of pillows but only a couple toss pillows. And her nightstand was a thick wood stump, stained and veneered.
As it went, her pad was a reflection of her.
She was not girlie.
No.
Kathryn Jansen was all woman.
A woman with a particular style, she showed it, was confident in it, and she didn’t care what anyone thought about it.
And she slept with a fan on.
He ran hot in sleep and did the same.
Perfect.
Having these thoughts, his arm involuntarily and possessively curled tighter around her stomach, and she stirred in response.
A little stretch, which shoved her ass tighter into his crotch.
And then she stilled.
He smiled.
Yeah, now she was understanding why this had been a bad idea.
“You awake, baby?” he murmured.
“Bluh,” she replied.
His smile got bigger and he shoved his face deeper into her hair.
Thick. Soft.
Fuck.
“Not a morning person?” he asked.
“I like sleep.”
“Then go back to it.”
“Are you gonna leave?”
He shifted his head back an inch.
They were just starting out; he didn’t know her all that well.
But he’d been paying attention to her for months, straight-up following her for a while, and everything about her said she was a together person.
Not a lot fazed her.
In other words, suddenly, he was seeing her request he stay last night, and what she just said, in a different light.
“No, I’m not gonna leave,” he answered, then put a hand to her stomach, moving enough to give her body room, before he pressed her to her back, coming up to a forearm to look down at her. “We’re gonna have brunch.”
She wasn’t meeting his eyes. “All right.”
“Ryn,” he called.
Her gaze skittered to his.
“You okay?” he asked.
“Yeah,” she answered.
“You were kidnapped the other night,” he noted carefully.
“It really wasn’t that bad.”
“Ryn—”
“I don’t wanna be that woman,” she blurted.
He said nothing for a beat, before he asked, “What woman?”
“The needy, clinging one.”
“What do you need?”
“It’s stupid.”
“Nothing’s stupid.”
“Any and all brands of fat jokes are stupid.”
He felt his mouth quirk. “Okay. I’ll give you that.”
“Texting while driving is stupid.”
“I’ll give you that too.”
“Letting white sexual assaulters off with a slap on the wrist while incarcerating to the fullest extent of the law Black dudes who are caught with a bag of weed is the epitome of stupid.”
“Are you gonna ask me to go on a social crusade?”
Her face changed.
Big, blue, sleepy eyes going guarded, she whispered, “The last couple of days have been super sucky.”
“Baby,” he murmured.
“And okay, I haven’t told this to anybody, because there was a lot of shit going down for Evie, and I didn’t want to worry anyone…but being caught in a firefight in the Cherry Creek parking garage was all kinds of unfun.”
Shit.
He fell to his back wrapping an arm around her so he could pull her up on his chest.
When he had her where he wanted her, he deduced, “Seeing Cisco again was a trigger.”
“Our chat really wasn’t that bad. And since I’m letting it all hang out, truthfully, as whacked as this is gonna sound, he seems like an okay guy.”
“Gotta say, considering what I know about him, that is pretty whacked, babe. Because he is not an okay guy.”
“What I’m saying is, considering the fact that he kinda, sorta promised he’d never hurt me, it’s stupid that I’m feeling…vulnerable.”
“You do know that really is not at all stupid,” he stated inflexibly.
“But, Boone—”
He gave her a squeeze. “Quiet and listen to me, Kathryn.”
She shut her mouth.
“You were betrayed by a family member. Not in a little way, in a big one. No bones about it, she stole from you time and money, a lot of both, and she did it for years. And when you called her on it, she took from you something that’s more important