Read Baby, It's Cold Outside Page 30


  Out of the corner of his eye, he caught a ghostly flicker. At the gable of the building, a wall-mounted neon sign read Skin Candy Ink, the S struggling to stay lit, the K in Ink extending to an arrow that pointed to a spot out of sight. Maybe someone there could provide the answers.

  Decided, he stepped between the buildings, half expecting the gap to close behind him and explode into a fantasy world like something out of Harry Potter. If someone were to approach from the shadowy bowels at the end of the tight passage, they'd both have to flatten their backs against the walls and slither by to avoid contact. Ten seconds and a hundred heartbeats later, the passage opened out into a small clearing. Like a dirty beacon, the tattoo parlor shone, its glass windows darkly tinted except for another neon sign affirming he'd reached the right place and a large banner proclaiming "We reserve the right to refuse service to any asshole."

  Better keep his asshole tendencies in check, then.

  He pushed the door open and his body thanked him for the warm blast. The gratitude did not extend to his ears, however. Classical music assaulted them where something hard edged with a booming bass would have been more welcome. The feeling of having stepped into a strange new world washed over him.

  "Be with you in a second," a muffled voice came from the back.

  Moving farther in, Beck scanned the surroundings, first looking for exits. Nothing marked, which was against code. He tripped his gaze over the walls. Every inch advertised the shop's craft: cartoon figures, superheroes, skulls, half skulls/half devils, half skulls/half Marilyns, winged hearts, arrowed hearts, hearts inset with Mom. The whole gamut.

  Another few steps brought a whole other level of artistry into view. A raven-haired woman bent over a client, a tattoo machine poised in her gloved hand. On her exposed shoulder blade, a flock of birds gathered low before taking flight at the base of her slender neck. Inked cuffs laced her toned biceps, a shocking contrast to her porcelain skin and the white tank top barely covering purple bra straps. One of them fell in dishevelment off her rounded shoulder, the kind of messiness that always stirred him up. Pretty damn sexy.

  As was the rest of her. Slim, with full hips that flared and kept her short black skirt snugly in place. The ink picked up along her left thigh, a vine of blue roses that disappeared into her biker boot. Sexy and badass.

  Beck felt a ping in his chest--perhaps more of the strange new world effect, but something was off. All firemen learned to recognize that whisper, that gut check, and shit if he wasn't feeling it now. Seeking his bearings, he scoured the walls and let his eyes rest on signs that broke up the images:

  "Love lasts forever but a tattoo lasts six months longer."

  "Tattoos hurt. No bitching, whining, or passing out."

  "A man without tattoos is invisible to the gods."

  Were the gods looking down on him now, laughing at his torment? Giving him a taste of Darcy and what might have been, only to snatch her away from him again? He'd spent his whole life defying those fuckers' plans for him. The gods could go screw themselves.

  Something glanced by his legs, and he dropped his gaze to an obese tabby cat that reminded him of another place and a time long gone. It rubbed against his jeans affectionately.

  Then it hissed.

  Beck's eyes widened in recognition. That cat had always hated him.

  No way. No. Fucking. Way.

  "I'm looking for someone who lives around here," he said, but he already knew he'd found her.

  She straightened, every muscle in her curvaceous body locking up tight. Carefully, she raised the machine from her client's arm and placed it down on a tray like it was loaded. As she turned, hints of color peeked out above the edge of her left bra cup.

  The blinding realization that had crashed over him about ten seconds ago was just now catching up to make his skin buzz. Still, it was nowhere near enough time to adjust to this new information. He had known she loved to draw, but he never imagined this. Could never have connected the neurons to even dream it. Darcy Cochrane, tatted and dressed like she belonged here. Like this was her world.

  The Earth had flipped on its axis, dragging his brain along for the crazy ride.

  "How did you find me?" she asked, cool as the other side of the pillow.

  "I have my ways, princesa."

  Long denim-clad legs swung off the chair behind her, and combat boots thumped the ground. A beast of a man towered over Darcy's shoulder, boasting raw scar tissue on the right side of his face that gave the impression he'd road tripped to hell and made a few friends there. His protective stance sent a surge of fury through Beck.

  Darcy and . . . nah-ah.

  "It's okay," she said, looking up into her protector's smoke-dark eyes. "Beck's an old friend."

  Old friend? Hell yeah, he was.

  With care and a slightly unsteady hand, she placed a wrap over her recent work, which looked like--was that a habanero pepper? Both of the guy's arms were blanketed in ink, barely room to spare for a postage stamp.

  "I'll stay while you lock up," the brute said, one eye on Darcy, the other on Beck.

  "I've got this, Brady."

  Brady crossed his arms resolutely and planted his feet.

  Seeming to arrive at a decision, Darcy pushed out a noisy breath. "Brady, Beck. Beck, Brady."

  This dude was clearly important to her, not in a romantic sense, because if he was her man there would be zero debate about leaving her solo with another guy. But he was important on some other level, a realization that did not put Beck at ease. Darcy seemed A-okay with the situation, though. Her worlds had collided and she was figuring it out--with a lot more mental agility than Beck.

  Beck stepped forward and held out his hand, half amused because the situation had the ring of a hostage handoff in Berlin circa 1985. She's safe with me, new scary friend. Brady acknowledged Beck's outstretched hand with a look but refused to take it. Alrighty, then.

  Without further pleasantries, not even a "later" for Darcy, Brady headed out into the Chiberian night in short sleeves, ink as armor. Watch out, darkness.

  Beck turned back to Darcy, his surprise momentarily giving way to blatant curiosity. "Where'd you find him?"

  "Paris. Don't take the handshake thing personally. He doesn't like to be touched." She clicked off the music with a remote control, and then with nimble fingers unhooked the needles from the tattoo machine and placed the apparatus in a box like a cube-shaped microwave. Entranced, he watched her, waiting for the wavy lines in front of his eyes to clear. On the off chance he was stuck in a crazy fever dream, he shut his lids, counted to three, and opened them again.

  Nope, still there.

  Darcy Cochrane, heiress, charity doyenne, and one of Chicago's elite, had turned into a tattooed biker chick. So, no motorcycle as far as he knew, but she had the boots and the 'tude and the fucking ink. This was a million times removed from old Darcy with her pink, fuzzy sweater that used to have him in fits. And not even on the same planet as Darcy 2.0 from last night with the designer clothes and the pearls.

  "Think I'm gonna need the non-Twitter version, Darcy."

  "Oh, but we never needed words, querido."

  Throwing his own smooth line back in his face? Nicely done, princesa.

  He leaned on the counter, making it abundantly clear he was settling in for the long haul. In the bruising silence, he raked his gaze over her from head to toe, trying to craft his own story of what her body art meant. Last night she hinted at bad blood between her and Daddy, but hell if this wasn't one head-kicking case of rebellion. Those images were etched into her skin for a reason.

  "So paint me a picture."

  Oh, he looked good. Grumpy and annoyed that he didn't have all the information, sure, but surly had always looked like sex on him. All that heart-wrenching intensity, and when it had been focused on her as he moved inside her, it was so easy to believe they were the last two people on Earth.

  Mr. Miggins, her crusty old kitty, snaked a figure eight through Darcy's legs an
d scratched out a plaintive mewl. Evidently, already feeling the tension.

  May as well start with the easy stuff. "I'm filling in for the owner who heads to Florida this time every year. Snowbird. I do this during the downtime when Grams can't bear the sight of me fussing around her. I'm staying in the apartment upstairs."

  "That covers the last three months."

  Needing to do something, anything, to escape his visual dissection, she turned the knob to the high setting on the autoclave so the tattoo iron would be sterilized in fifteen minutes, then set about tidying up her work area. Always be moving.

  "I've been in Paris for the last couple of years, working with Francois Bernet. He's a well-known tattoo artist and he's taught me a lot." Both in and out of the sack, when he wasn't being a controlling French jerk, but Beck didn't need to hear that.

  Too late. The crimp creasing his forehead said he'd read between the lines and come away with "Darcy did Paris" in more ways than one.

  After some first-rate glowering, he found his voice again. "I knew you loved art, but . . ."

  "You had no idea how much?"

  "I'm pretty sure Skin Ink 101 is not an elective at Harvard."

  She sighed. "I dropped out my sophomore year. The expectations . . . well, they got to be too much."

  "Was your engagement part of those expectations?"

  She had wanted to study art, but there was no room in her father's plans for a foolish girl's dreams. A Chicago media and real estate tycoon, Sam Cochrane had a rather feudal attitude when it came to the family's fortunes. For years he had treated his children as cogs in a plan to consolidate power without dirtying his hands with outright politicking. The front lines were of no interest to him, not when playing puppet master suited him better. The Collinses were a wealthy Connecticut family where everyone over the age of thirty was a U.S. congressman and had numbers after their names. Preston was the dynasty's most eligible bachelor.

  "I met Preston at a political fund-raiser my father encouraged me to attend. We dated for a few months and he asked me to marry him. I was only nineteen. I thought it was what I wanted, but every day closer to the wedding I became more panicked. I bailed two weeks before the big day."

  Darcy had stared down a lifetime of bruncheons and getting her hair ombred, and realized this was not how she was supposed to go out. Finding out that Preston and her father held regular powwows with agenda items covering everything from how many children she should push out in the next five years to whether a political wife actually needed a college degree had woken her up from the Matrix-like life she'd been sleepwalking through. When she asked for her father's help canceling the wedding, he told her to play ball or be cut off.

  "Let's just say I didn't want my life to be mapped out for me."

  On a grunt, Beck flipped open one of the flash books, the shop's equivalent of clip art for people who wanted a tattoo but had no imagination beyond the initial impulse.

  "Last night you ran out on me," he murmured.

  "You ran first."

  Electric eyes snapped to hers. Jaw muscles bunched. She longed to bite back the hastily spoken words. Not supposed to care, Darcy.

  "Ancient history, princesa."

  "And you can cut that princesa shit out, for a start." For a start? No, no, no. Nothing was starting here because he was right. They were ancient history and dredging up the whys and whats was about as useful as Matthew McConaughey's shirt collection.

  "Why are you here, Beck?"

  "You ran out on me," he repeated, the edge in his voice hitting the hollow between her lungs. He shut the flash book, the sound a brutal echo in the tense silence, and skirted the counter, devouring the ground with long, measured strides. She backed up into the remaining inches available until her butt met the chair.

  "And now I've found you."

  She took those words as more than mere acknowledgment that he had located her at this point in time, in this particular place. The underlying meaning, that she had been rediscovered and would be at his mercy, thrilled through her despite her best intentions not to be aroused.

  "And now you can be on your way."

  He placed a big palm on either side of her, hemming her in against the chair's armrest with his feral, male heat. So sexy, so dangerous. That damn pirate's jaw!

  "Do you think I'm stupid?" he rasped.

  "Well--"

  "Let me rephrase, because right now you might have something there. Standing this close to you makes me feel incredibly stupid." He sucked in a hissed breath. "Do you think I'm going to let you go now that we've reconnected?"

  Her heart thudded insanely fast. "I'm thinking you don't have a say in the matter, Beck Rivera."

  Shit. She needed to stop using his last name like that. Or his first name. It smacked of a lover's familiarity and a level of comfort she did not want to indulge in. Last night, the ease between them as they teased and flirted had filled aching gaps in the cold corners of her mind. Not to mention what had come after. All day, she had savored X-rated visuals of his hard body fusing to hers, that in-out rhythm as he entered her so deeply she felt him clear to her heart. Tasting him had been such a boneheaded move she wondered how she was still standing. Shouldn't her brain matter have squeezed out of her ears? Shouldn't she be collapsed somewhere in a fetal heap of regret?

  He inched closer, invading, conquering her body and soul with his quiet intensity.

  Goddamn him.

  One thick finger traced along her collarbone and down, down, down over the inky flora blooming above her tank top's neckline. He tracked the motion with his somber gaze. It was unbearably erotic.

  "Last night, you were covered up. Looked like you'd come from one of your grandmother's fancy parties."

  Her breathing came in short tugs. "The Cochrane holiday photo. Just playing the part for my father."

  "Rip it, Beck," he whispered hotly against her ear, mimicking her desperate plea from the night before. "You didn't want me to see your body. You chose to hide this shiny new version of yourself from me. Why?"

  The edge in his tone boosted her pulse precipitously, and not just the one that supplied oxygen to the troublesome muscle in her chest. Between her legs, another heart beat a chant to the one man she had loved like no other. Her labored breathing smashed her breasts against his chest, the friction turning her nipples to aching points of need.

  Those Beck blues flashed. "Why did you insist on hiding this beautiful body from me, Darcy?"

  "It seemed easier to . . ." Her mind flailed like a dying fish. ". . . to pretend."

  "That you're something you're not?"

  Perhaps she had been playing the part for more than just her father. She'd taken enough Cosmo quizzes to know that walling up her essence and falling back on the old was a classic defense mechanism. This way, she controlled the situation. She stayed in charge. No need to complicate sex with something as inconvenient as the truth.

  "People have certain expectations of me. Even you. You wanted to relive the good old times with the Gold Coast princess, and that's what you got."

  He swiped her lower lip with the thick pad of his thumb. "Think I got a whole lot more, querida. Think I haven't even begun to scratch the surface of this fascinating, new woman you've become."

  The shock of that almost undid her. She was so much more than Darcy Cochrane, the painted rebel or her father's pawn. The way Beck held her gaze captive completely unnerved her. She wanted to be seen so badly. She wanted to be seen by this man.

  Why him? Why the man who had cast her aside like day-old bread? His arrogance made her muscles seethe. Men like that were welcome in her bed, but not in her heart.

  Stark evidence of his arousal pressed against her hip, hard and thick, sending a message to her clenching sex. Soaking wet, it shot back like a Morse code throb. If she shifted a couple of inches, it would be an invitation for him to lift her skirt and thrust into her. She suppressed a groan. If she stayed still, what did that say? He could wait her out forever with th
e patience of a feline predator.

  So color her surprised when he withdrew his granite body from her personal space, the loss of it so shocking she almost whimpered.

  "Do you have a portfolio?"

  "What?"

  "An album of work, demonstrating what you can do."

  Irritation frayed her patience. Might have had something to do with the chill his body's removal left on her sensitive skin. "I know what a portfolio is, Beck. And it just walked out the door."

  "That guy?"

  "Yeah, I've inked most of his body. Even parts you can't see." She plastered on a saccharine smile, enjoying his disquiet and especially getting a kick out of how she had hauled the power back to her side of the room. Because now he was thinking about what other ink lay beneath her clothes--and whose hands she had permitted on her body. "Why do you want to see my work?"

  "Because if I'm going to let you brand me, I'd like to know it's worthy of forever."

  Her breath caught. Power shift, activate.

  "Brand you?" Forever?

  Their gazes locked. Held. Warmth unfurled in her blood.

  "Yes, Darcy. I want you to design a tattoo for me and brand it on my skin."

  The way he said that, the way he owned it, made her wetter. Word that she was in town had filtered out, guaranteeing her dance card was full through the end of the year. She didn't need new business. She didn't need this business. But hell, she needed something.

  "What did you have in mind?"

  "Something for Sean and Logan. To commemorate them."

  "That's beautiful, Beck."

  He coughed out a mirthless laugh at her compliment. "It's a typical reason to get a tattoo, isn't it? Remembering people."

  The air was charged with memory and want. Dangerously so. The past held risk, the present just as much. She needed to claw her way back to the safety of the future.

  "I'm only in town for another couple of weeks. I'm moving to Texas for a job after the holidays." It was best to get it out there, establish the parameters of the transaction. An old friend had offered her a job in his parlor, and Austin was on her never-ending bucket list of places to live.