On top of him . . .
I guess we’ll see. Maybe I should actually let him sleep.
He sighs, but he’s smiling. “I was trained to stay awake for a lot longer than twenty-four hours.”
“Oh, yeah?” I wander over to help him lift his T-shirt off his body. It’s covered in drywall dust and dirt from hours of cleaning up. He could probably use a shower. Something else I’d like to try out with him, but maybe later. “What else were you trained to do?”
He eases back onto the bed, the springs creaking under his weight, to give me a good look at my work. It’s healing nicely. “All kinds of things,” he murmurs through a giant yawn.
I duck back into the bathroom to clean the smeared makeup off my face and brush my teeth, then decide that I really do need to hop into the shower to wash the day’s grime from my skin, with or without him. Ideally, with him.
“Hey, did you want to . . .” My voice drifts off. Sebastian is stretched out on his back, his arm beneath his head, snoring softly.
After my shower, I tiptoe to the other side and ease onto the bed in my towel, expecting him to wake up with the dip of the mattress. I mean, he was a Navy SEAL. Don’t they sleep light?
He doesn’t so much as twitch; he’s out cold, his normally taut jaw relaxed, his features almost boyish. So I simply lie there and watch him sleep for more than an hour as I fail at drifting off myself, until I hear the front door creak open and Dakota’s welcoming hum.
I duck out to the living room and let Sebastian rest.
TWENTY-EIGHT
SEBASTIAN
I wake with a start, my body jerking enough to shake the bed.
A soft moan beside me instantly brings me back to reality. I laid down in Ivy’s bed. It was close to four in the afternoon. I was going to just grab an hour, at most.
I glance at the window. It’s dark out now, the streetlight casting a dim light into the bedroom.
It’s . . . Holy shit. I’ve been asleep for almost eleven hours? I can’t remember the last time I slept this long without drugging myself with Ambien. And to not even stir when Ivy came around . . . No one’s ever been able to step into a room without my waking up before.
“You’re alive,” Ivy mumbles, tucked under the covers, her eyes still closed, her jet-black hair fanning across the pillow. “You missed dinner. I thought you might have died in your sleep.”
I can’t help but smile. “And you willingly crawled into bed with a corpse?”
“Corpses are quiet, and I was tired.”
“Did you even try to wake me?”
“Of course I did . . .” The words drag out in that tired, half-asleep way. “Then I stripped you down and took nude pictures of you with me, then with Dakota and with the bearded lady. Going to ask Fez to post them all over the Internet in the morning. You and Gerti are going to be famous.”
I frown. She seems coherent but she’s not making any sense. “Gerti?”
“The bearded lady from the circus. Dakota’s dinner guest tonight.”
“You’re kidding, right?” She says it all so deadpan, I’m beginning to wonder.
She sighs. “Not about the beard.”
I smile. But check my belt buckle all the same. “You’re cute when you’re half-asleep.”
“Half-asleep and naked,” she points out.
Just the thought of Ivy naked stirs my blood. Yesterday at the house, having to stop partway through was torture for me. By the looks she cast my way all afternoon, I left her just as frustrated. And then I fell asleep the moment we got here.
I reach under the bedsheet to find nothing but her warm flesh beneath. She rolls onto her back, letting the sheet fall away.
To entice me, I’m sure.
It works.
Ivy peers up at me through hazy, satisfied eyes. “I still can’t believe you slept that long. You must have been a shitty SEAL.”
“The worst.” I place a kiss on her forehead, and another one on the tip of her nose. “I’m going to duck out now.”