Worth the Fall (The McKinney Brothers, #1)(46)
And the kids would be going to bed soon.
Afterward, they cleared the table and cleaned the kitchen like they’d done it a hundred times, scooting around each other, bumping elbows.
Any misgivings she’d had about him being different or her feeling off at having a man in her house blew right out the screen door. Their vibe was the same, only better. Stronger. That should’ve scared her to death, but when he leaned back against the counter and snapped her butt with a dishrag, being afraid was the last thing on her mind. She laughed and flicked soapsuds at him.
He flicked some back, then wiped at the bubbles on her nose. “I’m glad I’m here,” he said. Thoughtful brown eyes reached out to her as he trailed his hands down her arms until he linked their fingers.
“Me too,” she said, unable to lie. Because with a touch or a look, Matt dissolved all her defenses. She was heading straight into his arms when Jack came screaming through the kitchen.
“Matt, come to my room!”
Matt brought her hand to his lips and brushed a kiss across her knuckles. It was barely a touch, but it felt like a promise. Maybe of what was to come.
“Matt, come on. You gotta see some stuff.”
With Matt on his home turf, Jack was on a mission to squeeze in as much show-and-tell with him as he possibly could.
Charlie raised his arms to Matt to be picked up. He’d already learned the man would never turn him down.
“Go ahead. Go see stuff,” she told him with a grin. “I’ll finish up.”
Passing the screen door, he paused to call Annie in to join them. Abby watched her daughter slowly abandon her swing and walk to the door he held open.
“Come on, princess. You can show me the way.”
Annie started up the stairs. It was painfully obvious she wanted to be with Matt, but no way would she ask for attention like her siblings. Abby’s oldest daughter was too much like her.
Abby finished loading the dishwasher and dried her hands on a towel. The one Matt had popped her with. When he was gone, she’d picture him here. Everywhere he’d stood, everything he’d touched, would now hold a new memory for her. Did that have to be such a bad thing?
She followed the noise upstairs and stood outside the playroom, listening to the voices inside. As she peeked around the corner, she had to stifle a laugh. Gracie had Matt draped in scraps of silk and was none too gently pressing a plastic crown onto his head.
Matt added to his block tower next to Jack’s as he stiff-armed Charlie’s ramming bull impersonation.
Even dripping pink and purple silk, Matt exuded masculinity and power. She wanted these kids in bed. Now.
—
“Or this one.” Gracie moved from animal to animal, trying to make the ultimate decision on which lucky stuffed friend would watch the movie with her. She had it narrowed down to five.
“Maybe they could all come,” Matt suggested, taking in the girlie space that glittered and sparkled so much he didn’t know how they slept.
“Nope. Mommy says only one.”
Right on cue, a voice reached them from the other room. “Gracie, pick one and let’s go.”
He smiled at Abby’s mother radar as he turned away from Gracie while she deliberated, speaking earnestly to each candidate. Annie watched him from her neighboring bed.
“Hey, princess. Did you pick a friend to watch the movie?”
She didn’t answer, just held up her worn brown bunny. He’d been attacked by each kid upon arrival. All except Annie. She’d stayed on her swing, waiting for him to come to her. Not one to show her feelings, not ready to commit, she’d greeted him with a guarded half smile. Cautious and wary. So like her mother.
“Okay,” Gracie said, holding a blue and gray elephant. “I’m weady.”
Abby put in the movie and they sat on a large couch in front of a big-screen TV. Charlie snuggled in his lap and Jack pressed against his side. Annie went to the other end by her mom as Matt pulled Gracie onto his lap too, before she could insert herself between him and Abby.
The movie played, and just like at the beach, he was centered. Like everything he’d been made for was right there on that couch. With his arm around Abby, he made lazy circles on her shoulders. Their feet rested side by side on an oversize ottoman—his big, hers small. If he’d ever questioned his coming here, he didn’t now.
Sitting this close to Abby was sweet torture, a true test of patience and endurance. He looked at his watch. This movie ran eighty-seven minutes. And he was counting.
Chapter 17
Abby jumped at the sound of Matt’s footsteps behind her. She stood facing the kitchen island, opening a beer for him, and he placed both hands on the counter, locking her in. When he lowered his head so that the side of his face pressed lightly against hers, her eyes fell closed and it was all she could do to breathe. He relieved her of the silver bottle opener, took a sip of beer, then slid both away, shifting his attention to her.
He pushed her hair aside, exposing her neck, nuzzled her ear, and placed a kiss just below it.
“Are you still glad I came?”
Warm lips met her racing pulse, causing her answered yes to come out on a breathless sigh. Matt was all around her, like their last night at the beach, only this time infinitely better. His mouth was on her body and they weren’t minutes from saying goodbye. A sexual awareness she’d never experienced prompted words she’d never voiced. “Don’t stop.”