Play It Safe(17)
No. I was not.
But I had to pretend to be.
“Just a weird night,” I murmured, trying to decide if it was rude if I said I’d come back and left him to it.
I hadn’t been a guest in someone’s house. Not ever.
What was protocol?
As for me, if someone barged in on me brushing my teeth, I would expect them to slink away.
He kept brushing, eyes on me and kept to his side of the sink. He didn’t seem to have a problem with it and his behavior seemed to be inviting me in.
Maybe it was rude.
Darn.
I moved in and went to the sink.
I put the stuff down on the side of the basin, keeping my body to my side as far from his as I could. I lifted my hands and gathered my hair, twisted it then sunk the clip in to hold it back. I felt it flopping all around the clip but it was away from my face so I could wash it.
I carefully shifted to the front of the sink (thus closer to Gray), bent over the basin and turned it on.
“Jesus, honest to God, I’ve never seen that much hair,” a still with foam in his mouth Gray noted and my neck twisted, my eyes lifting to his face.
“Sorry?”
“You got a lot of hair, darlin’,” he said through the foam.
“Well…yeah.”
He grinned through the foam and my heart skipped a beat because bare-chested, toothpaste foamed, grinning with dimple Gray would make any woman’s heart skip a beat.
I turned back to the water.
Then I made short work of washing my face.
This, I did not want to do.
I did not wear a lot of makeup but at least it was something, a mask, a guard. I needed those.
No one but Casey ever saw the real me.
And now, so would Gray.
I turned off the water, reached for the towel and wiped my face bent over the sink.
“Shift, honey, gotta spit,” Gray muttered and I did my best not to jump out of his way while getting out of his way and succeeded.
He bent at the waist, spit, rinsed, grabbed another towel and wiped.
Okay, good. This was done. It was done. He’d leave.
He opened the medicine cabinet and came out with floss.
Well, it couldn’t be said I didn’t notice that he had great teeth. Still, I had to admit that I kind of wished tonight he didn’t choose to keep up all the good work he’d clearly been doing since he could wield a toothbrush.
He cut off a string, put it back and stepped aside.
I got down to the business of my teeth.
Gray stepped into the sink to rinse again before I finished and I felt relief.
Now he would go.
He didn’t go.
He leaned into the basin and crossed his arms on his amazing chest.
I kept brushing and looked up at him.
Then I forced myself to keep brushing as my heart skipped another beat and this was because he was grinning while looking at me.
And he kept grinning while looking at me as I kept brushing.
This went on awhile.
I pulled the brush out of my mouth and said through foam, “What?”
“Never, in my life, in this bathroom have I shared a sink with a woman. Now, I’m doin’ it and I don’t even know her last name.”
“I don’t know your last name,” I pointed out through foam.
“Cody.”
I stared at him. Then, still through foam, I asked, “Your name is Gray Cody?”
“Grayson Cody,” he corrected.
Jeez. That was like the wild west rancher cowboy name to beat all wild west rancher cowboy names. That kicked the name “John Wayne” right up the backside. It beat the heck out of “Roy Rogers”. Totally slaughtered even “Wyatt Earp” who wasn’t a wild west rancher cowboy, he was a bad boy lawman famously known for his participation in a gunfight so clearly more badass than your most badass wild west rancher cowboy and still Gray’s name kicked Earp’s name’s ass.
It was the best wild west rancher cowboy name in history.
“Pay a mint to know what’s goin’ on in your head right now,” he muttered, still grinning, still looking at me, still with his fabulous arms crossed on his wide, beautiful chest.
“You have the best wild west rancher cowboy name in history,” I told him.
He burst out laughing.
My heart stopped.
Then I bent over the sink, spit, rinsed, rinsed my toothbrush, wiped and grabbed my stuff.
Then I got the heck out of there, muttering, “’Night, Gray.”
And I did it fast.
And I did it because I had to get smart fast.
Because I could handle his beauty. I could handle his smile. I could handle his dimple. I could handle that he looked out for me. I could even handle the gentle, tenderness of his voice and look earlier.
But I could not handle his laughter.
Definitely not me giving it to him.
It was the most beautiful thing about him in a long line of beautiful things. It was deep, it was rich, it was warm, it was engaging and it was the kind of thing you wanted to hear every day, a hundred times a day for the rest of your life. So much so, you’d work at it, you’d tie yourself in knots, you’d live and breathe to make it happen, giving him humor so he’d give that beauty to you.
So I had to get smart.
Fast.
Chapter Seven
Preserves