“They’re great,” he said. “All in. Even Alexandra.”
“Your father would be proud. Logan, too.”
Those shocking blue eyes flashed, and remembrance of that night flooded the space between them. The night they both lost something, and everything changed.
He angled his thumbs to stroke her pulse in tight, erotic circles. Unadulterated lust slammed through her. The power he had over her still . . . it electrified her to the core. Just one look stripped her bare and stunned her with want.
An attention-grabbing cough sliced through the loaded silence.
“Hi, I’m Mel.” Her friend thrust out her hand.
Beck released Darcy’s hands, shook Mel’s, and had already redirected his burning focus back to Darcy before he spoke his name. “Beck Rivera.”
Okay, this has been awesome. “We should go,” Darcy said.
“After you’ve rested that ankle and we’ve had a drink,” Mel chimed in. “A couple of G and Ts, please. Heavy on the G.”
“Sure, coming right up.” Beck wrapped Darcy in an all-encompassing look that left her feeling she’d been touched in an intimate way—and enjoyed it far too much. “Leave your boot off in case the ankle swells. I’ll check back on it later.”
He lifted a wooden flap at the end of the bar and went back to work.
“Okay, spill the juicy deets,” Mel intoned. “Now.”
“Well, my ankle really hurts when I put any weight—”
Mel cut her off with an exaggerated eye roll. “When and where did you do Wolverine?” She gestured violently to Beck just in case there was some confusion about which bearded sex god was under discussion.
“We were kids.”
Mel gave her the don’t-even look, which she had honed to eviscerating sharpness in the years since they had first met at Harvard.
“Popped your cherry?”
Darcy sighed heavily, caught between annoyance it was so obvious and relief her friend knew her well enough to guess. “Popped it, then popped a cap in my heart.”
“Ooh, you so ghetto, girl.”
Funny, that. Maybe if she had been, things might have been different between the Gold Coast princesa and the dangerous, furious boy who had lit her soul on fire. Before he doused it with an ice cold vat of adios.
Mel’s eyes widened in a way Darcy was sure she would not appreciate in three, two, one . . .
“He’s the one you cried your eyes out over all freshman year. The guy your father hated because he was a gangbanger.”
Ex-gangbanger, saved by the Dempsey fostering machine when his biological father died during a drug deal gone bad. Not that she had learned those details from Beck, who shared nothing. Jack had filled her in, trying to scare her away from him.
“How do you remember this stuff?”
Mel tapped her temple. “Mind like a steel trap. Other body parts as well, which I hope to be demonstrating before the night is through.” She waggled her eyebrows and directed a sexy pout in Gage’s direction. “So we have firefighting, bartending brothers—”
“Foster brothers, taken in by Sean and Mary Dempsey. They couldn’t have children of their own so they were big on spreading the love to kids who needed it, five boys and a girl. Sean was a big-time fire chief who died on the job just over seven years ago. The oldest son, Logan, died in the same fire.”
“Holy shit.”
“A couple of them—” She nodded at Luke behind the bar. Intimidating Wyatt was nowhere to be seen. “—did a stint in the Marines first.”
Mel’s twisted expression depicted a battle between sympathy for the city’s fallen and imminent collapse into a puddle of lust. “Hot ex-marine Chirish firefighters. Jesus, my panties are going to melt.”
The lust option. Excellent choice, madam.
“Not Irish, just raised that way. And your panties melted about five minutes ago, you dirty bird.”
Mel grinned. “True to the last drop. What’s the skinny on my man, Thor?”
There was something about him, something different that teased the cold edges of Darcy’s mind and refused to come in to the open. “That’s Gage and from here, he fills out his shirt and jeans reeeeal nice. What else do you need to know?”
“Too fucking right,” Mel said, laughing that girlish tinkle, step one of her slide into flirt mode.
“That shit’s wasted on me, you know.”
She giggled inanely. “Just warming the pipes. And I think from the look the cherry popper is giving you, things will be getting nice and warm in Darcyland very soon.”
Lifting her eyes to Beck took effort, as did meeting the unerringly scorching look he was laying on her. So much for benevolent gods. He had to go and grow hotter over the years. Strong arms corded with sculpted muscles stretched his tee sleeves to the limits, walking temptation in a six-foot-two package. Virile, warrior-like, and a beard to boot! Hot damn, she loved a good smattering of facial hair.
Concern lined Mel’s brow. “What happened, exactly? I know you met in high school, but all I can really recall is the ugly crying before the inevitable graduation to ‘guys suck.’ ”
“If they’re any good, they will,” they said in unison, drumming the bar with a quick one-two. Ba-boom.
Darcy’s laughter gave way to a sigh. “He was a friend of my brother’s. They used to train together at a boxing gym.”
That look came over Mel again, the one where her brain might disintegrate to lust-mush any second.
“Yes, Melanie, he was a boxer. Control yourself.” Admittedly, it had been verra, verra sexy.
“And?”
“For a year”—and two months, one week, three days— “he didn’t breathe a word to me. He’d come over to play video games with Jack and I’d try to get him to open up, but it was like talking to a brick wall. An unbelievably sexy brick wall. I thought he hated me. He’d get this crimp between his eyebrows every time he looked at me like he’d smelled rotten eggs. Or was trying to solve a really difficult math problem.”
“Kind of like how he’s looking at you now?”
No need to lift her gaze to verify that his eyes were still trained on her. Her skin sizzled with his penetrating heat.
A patchwork of sensual images grabbed hold. Their first kiss during a winter festival at Lincoln Park Zoo, her hot chocolate cooling while his lips kept her warm. A yearlong diet of sexy smooches and teenage exploration, stopping short of home base because Beck refused to take full advantage.
“I begged him to do the deed, but he said I was too young. Finally, when I turned eighteen, he—” She stopped as memories of Beck’s blunt prizefighter hands on her body, seeking out erotic flash points and bringing her to blistering release, assaulted her senses.
“Did you good?”
“So good,” she said, lowering her voice though the bar’s noisy hum provided adequate cover. “I was gaga about him and I thought it was mutual until he sent me packing.”
Darcy still remembered his final words to her all those years ago, spoken in that graveled voice, dripping with sex and menace. Only a month after he had made her a full-fledged woman and claimed every part of her.
Forget you ever met me, Darcy.
And she had, after a year—or five. She stowed the boy in her brain’s basement and went on to a new life, one she chose for herself instead of following the gated path her father had insisted she travel. Underneath this designer sweater and perfectly cut skirt was the project she had been working on for years. A well-traveled, well-adjusted, reinvented woman.
“You’re not a kid anymore,” Mel said. Despite only seeing each other a few times a year, her friend could always intuit when Darcy was about to send out invites to the pity party. “You should go for it.”
“Go for what?”
“School the cherry popper. Make him beg. Milk. Him. Dry.”