He went to his stool and she followed him down the bar as he did.
He no sooner had his ass on it then she asked, “Off duty?”
“Yeah, honey.”
“Beer, bourbon or both?”
“Beer.”
She nodded and got him a beer.
He took a swig and she didn’t move away.
“You okay?” she asked and he saw her eyes on him when he dropped his arm.
“Been better.”
“Was it someone you knew who killed themselves?”
“Yeah.”
“Wanna talk about it?”
“Later.”
She nodded and said softly, “All right, babe,” she let it go and tilted her head to the side, “had dinner?”
“Baby, it’s nine thirty.”
“So? Frank’s kitchen’s still open. I could send Darryl down with your order.”
“I’d order a burger and he’d come back with a reuben.”
“Yeah but either burger or reuben, from Frank’s, you got no complaint.”
This was true.
“Get him to get me a reuben.”
She grinned and asked, “That mean you want a burger?”
Colt nodded, Feb laughed and everyone in the bar watched the show. For once Colt didn’t mind being their object of fascination. Fact was, hearing Feb laugh at that minute, after his day, he didn’t fucking care, they could watch all they wanted.
She took off around the side of the bar, walking behind him. Colt itched to grab her but he didn’t. In J&J’s, she’d decide how what was going on between them was communicated.
Morrie came around him with a tray full of empties. “Hey dude.”
“Hey Morrie.”
“Any closer to the world bein’ safe for my baby sister again?” Morrie asked, setting down the tray and throwing the bottles in the bin.
“Sully and The Feds scored some hits today.”
“Awesome,” Morrie smiled, transferring stacked glasses to the side of the sink under the bar.
Colt studied his friend.
Morrie was like his father when it came to Colt, always had been even before Jack. Morrie’s belief in Colt went deep, to the molten center of the earth, made of something so strong, even that heat couldn’t melt it, couldn’t even bend it. Morrie knew Colt would make things right for Feb again even before things had changed between Colt and Morrie’s sister. He knew Colt would work at it until he dropped and he believed that, even if the road to safety was paved with shit, Colt would make it to the end of that road, carrying Feb along with him.
Even though they’d disagreed and fought, Colt knew there was no better friend could be had. He had no idea why God decided to place him, at birth, in hell only to lead him to salvation in kindergarten. Though he suspected if he hadn’t experienced hell, he wouldn’t have understood salvation. It might be fucked but he felt grateful to God for showing him the way.
Colt swallowed the lump he felt in his throat and asked Morrie, “How’s things with Delilah?”
“When I asked if I could skip the couch tonight when I got home, she hesitated at least thirty seconds before she said no,” Morrie answered.
“Progress.”
“Damn straight.”
Feb came up beside him, close, wedging herself between Colt and the empty stool next to him. She leaned forward, forearms on the bar, her head turned to him.
“Burger, reuben or wildcard ham and swiss, comin’ right up,” she told him.
“I hate ham,” Colt replied.
She threw her head back and laughed, loud and wild, exposing her throat, highlighting her choker, making Colt scan the bar to see they had a decent Tuesday night crowd. Maybe too decent for Feb to feel comfortable leaving Morrie and Darryl at the bar so he could take her home and fuck her brains out.
He also noticed, unusually slowly, with her choker she was wearing a fitted, white blouse, a long, straight figure-skimming jeans skirt, a pair of cowboy boots and her makeup was different, heavier but instead of looking overdone, it made her eyes smoky and unbelievably sexy.
Dolled up for Costa’s. And for Colt.
When she stopped laughing, her eyes came to his. “Frank uses that honey-baked ham, Colt, not the boiled stuff. You’ll like it.”
“I see Darryl’s potential fuck ups come with the territory.”
After his comment, her face assumed that look again, eyes soft, lids part lowered, lips tilted at the ends in that little, sexy smile, but this time he understood it. She wasn’t giving him something, holding something back. She was giving him something fucking spectacular and she was promising just how much better it would be when she stopped holding back.
“Yeah,” she said.
“I’ll cope if it’s ham,” he told her.
She lifted up and turned her back to the bar. Reaching out a hand, she curled it around his neck.
“Promise, it isn’t hard,” she whispered, let him go and went back around the bar.
He was looking up at her when she’d touched him which left him facing the room when she walked around him.
She might as well have grabbed his crotch and stuck her tongue down his throat. He even saw Lanie Gilbert pulling her cell phone out of her purse.
He didn’t care about that either.
In all his years with Melanie, much as he loved her and he did love her, he never headed home knowing she would help him leave behind his day.
A couple of days with Feb and that was a given.
Colt turned from the bar to take a pull off his beer and watch Feb wash glasses in the bar sink.
Fifteen minutes later Darryl delivered Frank’s famous fried tenderloin on a sesame seed bun and fries.
And Colt ate it without muttering a word while he watched Feb’s shoulders shaking with silent laughter.
*
Colt was right.
February Owens was the kind of woman who’d sit on your face and fucking love it. She was the kind of woman who’d suck on your cock and get off on it. She was also, he discovered, the kind of woman who’d do both at the same time, and come while doing it.
He didn’t have the chance to try her on all fours because, the second time he made her come, he wanted to watch.