Play It Safe(130)
“You wouldn’t mind, I’d like to have my woman.”
“Sure, hoss,” Hoot Booker muttered, letting me go and the second he did, Gray leaned in, grabbed my hand and pulled me to him.
Then he slid his arm around my shoulders, tucking me to his side, his eyes still on my father.
Then he lifted his hand. “Grayson Cody.”
God.
God, but I loved Grayson Cody.
Hoot lifted his, took Gray’s and gripped.
“Hoot Booker.”
“Ivey tells me you’re her Daddy,” Gray remarked, letting Hoot’s hand go.
“Reckon so, she’s got my hair, or, at least, hope it’s so,” Hoot replied.
Some tension left my body because that was sweet.
I heard movement and muttering around us and knew the officers were rounding up Buddy but, like Gray, I was done with him. He ceased to exist. So I ignored this.
Gray looked side to side then back at Hoot. “You got a car?”
“In town,” Hoot answered.
“Stayin’ at the hotel?” Gray went on.
“Yeah, paid for by that douchebag. Think that ride’s ended though,” Hoot noted and I swallowed a giggle but that didn’t mean I didn’t smile.
When I looked up at Gray I saw the dimple was out.
Then he said, “Right, how ‘bout this? We go in, have a cup of coffee, warm up. Then I gotta go get my Gran from the nursing home. I’m thinkin’ you can guess I don’t want Ivey too far from me so I want her with me. That said, my woman’s never had a family so I can guess, you’re here, she’ll not want to be too far from you.”
He had that right.
Gray continued, “So, you follow in Ivey’s Lexus, we get Gran, Ivey can ride with you on the way back and you two can get to know each other. Work for you?”
Hoot stared at him a beat not hiding his surprise. Then he looked to my car. Then back at Gray.
“You’re lettin’ me alone in a Lexus?” he asked softly.
“You gonna steal it?” Gray asked back.
“No,” Hoot answered instantly.
“Then yeah,” Gray replied and Hoot’s brows shot together even as he moved his big body uncomfortably.
“Hoss, maybe you don’t know, I –” he started.
“I know,” Gray cut him off firmly and my body twitched.
“You know?” I asked him, my head tipped back and he looked down at me.
“Lash,” he answered.
“Right,” I whispered, not sure how I felt about this.
“Told you, dollface, he told me everything about you. You didn’t know this because you’d had enough, he didn’t want to give you more. I saw his play and made the same one.”
Well, knowing my father was in prison for murder one would not have been joyful news, especially back then even if I was living happy limbo.
I supposed I could be pissed. Then again, the men in my life loved me and wanted to protect me so I decided not to be.
And anyway, it was Christmas. I had a father to get to know, a grandmother to pick up from the nursing home and cookies to bake.
I had other priorities.
“Whatever,” I muttered and Gray grinned down at me then he looked to Hoot.
“So, you wanna come in for coffee?”
Hoot stared hard at Gray then he looked at me then he looked at Gray.
Then he smiled a huge, wild-ass smile and stated, “Fuck yeah.”
Gray jerked up his chin then led me to the side of the porch. He disengaged from me to lift me up onto it even though I could, and had (often), jumped up on my own. He climbed up after me and led me to the house.
I glanced and saw the Audi and cruisers gone.
Gone.
Then I drew in a breath.
Then my man guided me and my newfound Dad into our house where we had coffee while Gray called the nursing home and explained the delay and I chatted with Hoot Booker and got to know my Dad.
Then we went to get Gran.
Then we brought her home.
Then I finished my cookies.
Then Gray, Grandma Miriam and Hoot Booker ate a bunch of them.
Then Norrie came over.
Then Gray and Hoot went into town so Hoot could check out of the hotel and get his car.
Then in a beautiful house on a big, beautiful patch of land, Grandma Miriam in her chair wrapped with her shawl, Norrie in the armchair, her hand wrapped around a mug of hot cocoa, my father sitting in another chair, his hand wrapped around a beer, and me curled into my man, I found myself surrounded by family.
The wait was over and I found Gray was right.
Good things come to those who wait.
But he’d left out one word.
Because those things were really good things.
* * * * *
Ten twenty-two at night, Christmas Day…
Gray and I were in bed, front-to-front, arms around each other, whispering in the dark about our day.
It had been a great day. So great it was hard to pick which part was the best.
But I was thinking it was the fact that Gray and I unintentionally settled on the same theme for each other for Christmas.
First, he unwrapped my gift which was a scarf. The minute he saw it, his eyes came to me. They were warm and soft with memories and when I tipped my head to the side and bit my lip, he looked at my mouth and burst out laughing. Then, right in front of everyone, he hooked me with a hand at the back of my neck and laid a hard, closed-mouthed kiss on me.