Secret Page 48
But damn, he had a sexy voice. Quinn felt drunk on the sound, like he was playing her body instead of the strings.
His fingers eventually went still, and he dropped a kiss against her temple.
She shifted in his lap, turning, rising up to kiss him.
For an instant, she almost panicked and drew back, thinking of the night she’d spent with Nick, when she’d kissed him and made an absolute fool of herself.
But Tyler was kissing her back, setting the guitar against the wall, using both hands to catch her waist and slide under the tank top. She was suddenly straddling him, and even though she’d gone all the way with boys before, this felt like more, like she’d been playing Little League all her life, and all of a sudden she’d been dropped in the middle of a Major League game. It was exhilarating and terrifying at the same time.
He grabbed her h*ps and pulled her against him, and Quinn gave a little gasp.
Then his mouth was on her neck and his hand was under her shirt. When his fingers discovered that she wasn’t wearing a bra, he made a low sound in his throat. His thumb stroked over her breast again, and Quinn felt the touch all the way through her body.
“God, you’re good at this,” she gasped.
He laughed, and she felt the sound roll through his body. His hands pulled free of her shirt to stroke up the lengths of her arms. “Are you still cold?”
She shook her head.
He brushed blond hair out of her eyes, tracing a finger down the side of her face. It was the first time she’d ever known him to be gentle. “You know I didn’t invite you here for this,” he said softly.
“Careful,” she whispered back. “I might start to think you’re nice.” She reached down and grabbed his beer, then took a long sip.
She watched his eyes follow her movement, and she had a pretty good idea what he was thinking when she put the bottle to her lips.
Then his eyes narrowed, just a fraction. “How old are you?”
he said.
She shifted against him, leaning closer, beginning to stroke a hand against his neck. “Does it matter?”
He caught her hand. “Yes.”
Quinn froze and looked at him. “Eighteen,” she said. “Too young for you?”
He visibly relaxed. “For a second I was worried you were going to tell me you were sixteen or something.”
A month ago, she had been sixteen. “Yeah, that would’ve been crazy.” She laughed and took another long sip of beer.
Tyler watched this, then snatched the bottle out of her hands.
He took a long drink and finished it off. “Jesus,” he muttered.
“You are sixteen.”
“Seventeen,” she whispered.
He closed his eyes and banged his head back against the chair. Several times.
“Trying to get the blood flow back to the head that matters?”
she said.
“Trying to figure out if I’m committing a felony.”
“You’re not. How old are you?”
“Twenty-one.”
“Four years. We could have been in high school together.”
That seemed to settle him. “So you’re a senior?”
“Junior. And what, you’re a junior in college? It’s totally like the same thing.”
That made him smile.
“Is this more of your freaky honor code?” she said. “Murdering an innocent family is okay, but a slight gap in age—”
“They’re not innocent,” Tyler snapped.
“Quick, bang your other head against the chair. Too much thinking is going on.”
Tyler sighed. He put his hands on her waist, almost a caress.
But then he tightened his grip as if he was going to set her on her feet.
“Wait,” Quinn said, putting her hands over his. “Don’t stop it. Please.”
“Why?”
A genuine question. So she gave him a genuine answer. “Because I like you,” she said.
His thumbs stroked over her abdomen. “I like you, too.”
“Maybe we should go back to Little League,” she said.
“What?”
“Or at least the minors.”
His eyebrows went up. “Are you telling me to slow down?”
“Not for my benefit. For yours, old man.”
Now he definitely looked like he was going to put her on her feet. So she rotated in his hands to sit against him again. She pressed her face into his neck. “Sing me another song?”
He hesitated just long enough that she thought he’d refuse.
But then he picked up the guitar, set it across her lap, and started to play.
CHAPTER 16
While he slept, Nick forgot about the lunch table argument with his brothers. Or rather, his brother. Maybe it was Quinn’s drama, maybe it was the peace and quiet of Adam’s apartment, but creepy didn’t come crashing back into his brain until Gabriel opened the bathroom door the next morning, while Nick was brushing his teeth.
Every muscle in his body tensed. He wanted to shove Gabriel back out and slam the door in his face.
Instead, he spit toothpaste into the sink and wiped his mouth without looking at him.
“What is up with you?” said Gabriel.
“Nothing is up with me. ” Nick moved to edge past him.
Gabriel caught him around the neck and roughed up his hair.
“I know how to make you talk, Nicky.”
The motion was good-natured, the kind of thing that would usually make him laugh.