The eyes boldly meeting his were evergreen dark with the
shadows of what he strongly suspected was hurt.
She wouldn’t shrivel up and cry like a little girl. Sheridan had too much pride for that, but
when you added in the defensive way that she held her leg to her chest… There was no doubt she was smarting from his
‘innocent’ question.
Jon fucking hated it.
In a rare moment of weakness, he’d let himself be bullied
into pursuing the ‘obvious’ source of this leak. The two people in the world that had jointly
comprised his other half for the past quarter of a century were determined that
Sheridan was at fault, and they’d practically demanded her head on a platter.
And you came over
here to give it to ‘em.
God help him, he had.
Despite the fact that, deep down in his bones, he’d known it wasn’t
true. From the first minute Richie
suggested it, he couldn’t fathom that kind of betrayal from this woman. No, he hadn’t known her all that long, but
there were certain ways in which she was so much like him. His best qualities – including integrity –
were mirrored in her.
With her gently thrown gauntlet, “Now… is that enough?”
echoing in his ears, Jon pushed all the bullshit aside. He was going to make this decision the same way
he always made all of the important judgment calls – he trusted his gut.
“It’s enough, Kitten.”
Relief didn’t flood her features. Righteous indignation didn’t bubble out with
a hearty slap to his face. Her
expression and posture didn’t change at all, as a matter of fact. Evergreen eyes were still shadowed. Guarded.
As though she were waiting for another undeserved accusation to be
hurled her way.
It didn’t make a tinker’s damn what anybody else
thought. That reaction was enough to
tell him his gut was right on the money.
Again.
And that he was an insensitive jackass. Again.
He would make it right, but he wasn’t going to grovel.
Sneaking his hand across the short expanse of cushion
that separated them, he curled his fingers around her ankle and walked them up
the inside of her baggy pant leg until he found bare skin. She stiffened against the touch, but it
didn’t deter his thumb from softly petting the side of her calf. “You think you could help me figure out how
this happened?”
Cosmetically dark, sooty lashes blinked once. Sheridan remained quietly reserved when
answering the question with a question of her own. “Are you staying for dinner?”
Dinner. Shit.
“I can’t. I’m
supposed to be picking up dinner for the kids,” Jon apologized with genuine
regret, continuing his gentle ministrations on her calf until the set of her
shoulders softened the tiniest bit.
“I’ll call you tonight after the younger kids are in bed. Okay?”
“Sure.” She eased
her leg away and let it slide to the floor, glancing at him from the corner of
her eye as she gracefully rose to her feet.
“I’ll probably order something in myself, and then do my gift wrapping.”
Jon watched her fiddle with the elegantly printed tubes
of paper on the dining table. She
pointlessly tried to straighten them when they were already aligned with
military precision.
He hated like hell that he couldn’t stay. That he didn’t have time to spend with her
until ‘they’ were back to the same place they’d been before he walked into her
apartment this evening. From his
perspective, that place was bordering on the verge of something special, and he
hoped this… stupidity hadn’t screwed
that up.
“Kitten? Are we
okay?”
Lifting her face, she smiled absently when he sidled up
beside her, capturing her hands and slowly pivoting her. The hairy black socks she wore slipped easily
on the wood floor until she faced him, distant eyes gradually coming into
focus.
“Jon, can I ask you a question?”
“Of course.” He
made a move to brush over the arch of her cheek with his knuckles, but she drew
back. Just enough to let him know she
was still stung. He let the rejected
hand fall to his side without comment.
“When you speak to Richie, or Dorothea, again… and they
insist that it has to be my fault, because there’s no one else… Are we going to revisit this scene?”
“No.” Jon spoke in
a clear and definitive voice, without hesitation. The hand that still held hers wrapped itself
a little tighter. “You said you didn’t,
and that’s the end of it.”
“You’re sure?
Because I don’t want to be bounced up and down like a yo-yo in our
relationship, worrying that you’re going to change your mind and turn on me
again. If you need to leave, please do
it now.”
He didn’t want to leave at all, not until he could fix
this and she knew, without question, that he was on her side. But that wasn’t a luxury he had tonight. It was one of the few times in his life he
wished he didn’t have to take care of his children.
Dammit, I don’t
have time to make this right.
Jon scrabbled for a way to put a quick, temporary
Band-Aid on the situation. Even though
they were limited on time, he didn’t want to leave her still feeling hurt and uncertain about them.
Because, if there was anything good to come out of this
mess, it was his renewed certainty that he wanted a long-term relationship with
Sheridan. She hadn’t burst into tears,
she hadn’t thrown a screaming fit and called him everything but a white man... and she hadn’t been responsible for the leak. He knew that without a doubt.
If he only had that black velvet box from Piaget in his
pocket, this would be so much easier.
Glancing at the dining table’s surface, he struck upon an idea that
might suffice until Christmas.
“You told me this weekend that you were mine. Did you mean it?”
Her answer was slow to come, but it was firm and sure
when it did. “Yes. Do you regret making me?”
Maintaining a firm grip on her hand, so she wouldn’t
withdraw it, Jon bent at the waist and leaned toward the table to snag the
black Sharpie that was lying there. He
stuck the capped end between his teeth, leaving it to dangle there while he
pushed the black velour sleeve up to the middle of her forearm. When the inside of her wrist had been
exposed, he bit down on the marker cap and pulled the writing end free.
“What are you doing?”
Flicking his eyes up to her face, Jon saw that it was crinkled with
confusion. She squirmed in a feeble
effort to reclaim her wrist.
He spat the cap in the direction of the rolls of wrapping
paper, bringing the felt tip to hover over the delicate veins that shone blue
under the translucency of her skin. “Marking
you as mine.”
Taking more time and care than he usually did, he
deliberately scrawled his signature – not his autograph – across her
wrist. It was awkward since he didn’t
normally write so small, but he wanted it to fit in the width of her arm. With an extra loopy ‘H’ in ‘John’ and a
matching ‘G’ loop in ‘Bongiovi’, he succeeded and gingerly dotted each ‘I’ so
as not to stab her.
He slowly lifted her wrist, bending his head over it. Shaping his mouth into a small oval, Jon blew
a gentle puff of air across the ink-darkened flesh. He
watched her carefully from beneath hooded lids, and slow, second puff further
ensured that the marking wouldn’t smudge.
She was staring at him and breathing through slightly
parted lips. Heated green eyes were free
of any shadows. The only thing lurking
in the lightened shade of moss was an expression he’d gotten quite adept at
interpreting – the first stirrings of arousal.
We’re still good.
Relieved at the confirmation, Jon pressed his lips over
the poor man’s tattoo until he felt her pulse throbbing an uneven rhythem
against them. Only then did he move to
stand upright. It could easily be
covered by a wide bracelet or watch band, if she wanted, but it wasn’t going
anywhere for a while.
Maintaining eye-contact, he needlessly murmured, “That’s
permanent marker.”
“Permanent marker isn’t permanent on skin,” she returned
on a near-whisper.
With a gentle tug on the wrist that now bore his name, he
settled it into the small of his back.
It left her arm curved around his waist and Jon completed the circle by
hooking his wrists behind her – careful to point the marker away from her shirt.
“It’ll do for now.
You’re mine, Sheridan. That’s your
proof, whenever you need it. I protect
what is mine, and I won’t tolerate your name in the same sentence as this shit
again.” He was as sincere as he knew how
to be, and he hoped she got that.
Questioningly, he lifted his brow.
“Do you understand me? Do you
believe me?”
Her free hand snaked up his chest until it could
comfortably cradle his jaw. Jon turned
his face into the palm, pressing another kiss there as she said simply,
“Yes.”
Thirty minutes later, after bidding Jon good-bye with
their only proper kiss today, Sheridan was still sitting on the sofa, staring
at her phone. Not a single gift had been
wrapped. Not a single thing had even
been taken from the bags in the closet.
Everything she needed to do sat untouched while she wrestled with her
conscience, undecided as to what to do.
There was no question of what she wanted to do, but was it ethical?
Did she have the right? And would
it matter in the long run? Had the
(irreparable) damage already been done?
You’re neck deep in
this now. Ethical or not, you know you have to.
Now own the decision and do it.
Snatch the iPhone up and seeking out the recently added
contact information, she tapped the button before she could change her
mind. She took a deep breath, tucking
her legs under her while she waited for the call to go through.
“Hello?”
Sheridan put on a bright smile, as though the caller
could see it and greeted her with all the sunshine she could pipe into her
voice. “Hi, Bridget! It’s Sheridan. I hate to impose upon you again, especially
so soon after the first time, but I have a really big favor to ask. Huge, in fact…”