The Family You Make (Sunrise Cove #1)(83)
He tugged on a strand of hair that had gotten loose from her ponytail. “Never apologize to me for telling me what you want. And as for what else you might want, we could tackle those things one at a time. On your schedule.”
“But what we have right now works for us.”
He nodded. “Agreed. But more would work too.”
She sucked in a breath. “Or ruin it.”
“Oh ye of little faith.”
“Not in you,” she said. “In me. Let’s face it, I’ve ruined every relationship I’ve attempted.”
“Sounds like you haven’t attempted very many. But in any case, it takes only one. The right one.”
She opened her mouth with absolutely no idea what she planned on saying, but just then they were both texted at the exact same time.
They looked at their phones.
“I have to go,” they said in sync and then laughed a little.
Charlotte gathered up her things, and he did the same. She gave him a smile and turned to walk off, but he caught her hand, waiting until she looked at him.
“Thanks for the best dinner in recent memory,” he said.
“You hardly got to eat.”
“It wasn’t the food—which was off the charts, by the way.” And with another playful tug on her hair, he went back to work. And so did she. But this time, she was smiling.
TWO HOURS LATER, Charlotte was relieved by another on-call doctor, and she drove home on autopilot. It was just after midnight and both driveways were cleared. That was no mystery, as Mateo’s car was in his driveway.
He’d done it again. Tried to make her life easier. Better.
What he didn’t know was that just his presence did that.
It takes only the right one . . .
It couldn’t possibly be that simple, but the fact was she felt restless, lonely, on edge, and needing . . .
Gah.
She was pretty sure what she needed was in that house next to hers. And in the next moment, she was out of her car and knocking on his door before she could stop herself.
He answered in just sweat bottoms, slung low on his hips. No shirt. Bare feet. Bed-head hair. Sleepy eyes. “You okay?” he asked.
She felt dizzy just looking at him, but she managed a nod.
He shoved his fingers through his hair as if trying to wake himself up. “Let me guess. You’ve got a problem with the driveway.”
She shook her head and found her voice. “Thanks.”
He rubbed a hand over his jaw, the sound of the scruff there making her stomach twirl. “You’re not going to ask me to put the snow back?”
She grimaced. “No.”
He gave a slow smile. “Are you . . . hungry?”
“Yes.” She took a deep breath. “But not for food.”
He stilled.
She did not. She stepped across the threshold, kicked his door closed, turned, and pushed him up against it. “Mateo?” she whispered, setting her hands on his bare chest, only belatedly realizing those hands were probably frozen.
He sucked in a breath but didn’t utter a complaint. “Yeah?”
“You said anything, anytime. Did you mean it?”
“Yes.” One of his hands came up to touch her jaw as he lowered his head and brushed a kiss to her temple. Her eyes drifted closed as his mouth made its way to her ear. “Name it, Charlotte.”
“You know what I want,” she whispered.
He lifted his head. The look in his eyes as they met hers caused a rush of heat and desire. “Now?” His voice was low, giving her goose bumps over her entire body. The very best kind of goose bumps.
“Now,” she said. “Here.”
The words had barely left her mouth before he turned them, pressing her to the door now as his mouth came down on hers. Things got hazy then, in the very best of ways. Clothing became optional, pieces flying as fast as they were discarded.
“Charlotte.”
She had her back to the door, her legs wrapped around him as he leaned into her, supporting them both, poised to give her the biggest diversion she’d had in a long time. She wriggled her hips impatiently. “Don’t ask me if I’m sure,” she gasped. “I am. I’m surer of this than anything. So not to be rude or anything, but do it, Mateo. Do me. Here. Now.”
With a rough laugh, he gave her what she wanted, and then neither of them were laughing. There was no more talking either. Well, unless she counted the deliciously erotic dirty talk . . .
Chapter 23
Jane pulled up to her grandpa’s cabin and smiled. “That was fun.”
Hand on the car door handle, his face lit only by the ambient interior dashboard, her grandpa smiled back.
“Haven’t been out past midnight in a long time. Levi’s family was nice.”
“Very,” she agreed, realizing she was still smiling. They were nice. And funny. And irreverent. And . . . pretty great.
“Jane.” Her grandpa waited until she looked at him. “You’ve changed everything for me, Jane. I hope you know that.”
“What do you mean?”
“For coming to me and showing me what courage is, for reminding me that love had to be earned. For including me tonight like I’m family, like I’m important to you.” He lifted his hands. “For everything, really.” Reaching out, he put his hand over hers. “I love having you back in my life, Jane. I won’t be careless with you, not ever again. I promise you that. I hope you’ll agree to continue to see me.”
Jill Shalvis's Books
- The Family You Make (Sunrise Cove #1)
- The Forever Girl (Wildstone, #6)
- The Summer Deal (Wildstone #5)
- Almost Just Friends (Wildstone #4)
- Wrapped Up in You (Heartbreaker Bay, #8)
- The Lemon Sisters (Wildstone #3)
- Playing for Keeps (Heartbreaker Bay #7)
- Hot Winter Nights (Heartbreaker Bay #6)
- The Good Luck Sister (Wildstone #1.5)
- Accidentally on Purpose (Heartbreaker Bay #3)