Read While We Waited Page 16


  “Eww,” Lark says and then fakes some hurling.

  I laugh and open the door for them.

  We step into the tattoo shop, and Lark runs straight into the new tattoo artist. He catches her by the shoulders and steadies her, and silently asks with his eyes if she’s okay. His brows arch and she nods. He lets her go and she adjusts her clothes. Her face is bright red.

  Finny’s eyes meet mine and she grins.

  The new artist’s name is Ryan Shepherd, and I met him two weeks ago when they had a “welcome to the Reed Brothers” party. Ryan is an artist from NYU, and he went to school with Logan. He’s really good at what he does, which is putting permanent art on people’s bodies. He’s also profoundly deaf. Finny and all her sisters can sign, so they can talk freely with him, but me…not so much. I’m set up to take a class starting next week. It’s hell being the only one in a family who can’t speak the language.

  Paul Reed walks out of the back of the shop, along with his wife Friday. “Look who’s here,” Friday says. She looks at us and then at Lark. “What can we do for you?”

  Lark plays with a loose string on her long gloves. “I want to get a tattoo,” Lark says. She looks down at her feet instead of at them.

  “Did you have something in mind?” Friday asks.

  Lark leans over, cups her hand around her mouth and speaks in Friday’s ear. And damn if the curiosity isn’t killing me.

  Friday’s eyes skitter briefly toward Lark’s gloves and then she winces. “Oh, I’m afraid I can’t do that. That kind of application is an art all by itself.” She looks at Ryan. “Ryan can, though.” She waves her hands around until he looks at her. “Lark wants to consult with you about a tattoo,” she says, talking and signing to him at the same time.

  He signs something back.

  “Why you?” she repeats. “Because you’re fucking awesome at what she wants.”

  His eyes rake down Lark’s body from head to toe, and I see sweat sheen her forehead.

  “Maybe we should come back another time,” I murmur to Finny.

  Finny glares at me. “Do you know how much courage it’s taking for her to do this?” she hisses at me. “Shut it.” She draws a hand across her throat like she’s cutting her neck. I’m pretty sure she meant that for me.

  Ryan signs something.

  “How the fuck am I supposed to know?” Friday tells him. She points to Lark. “Ask her.”

  He throws up his hands.

  Friday picks his hands up and holds them in front of him like she’s getting him ready. “Talk to her. She might even talk back.”

  He signs something really quickly.

  Friday rolls her eyes. “Yes, she can sign, dumbass.”

  He signs something at Lark and she smiles softly at him. He mouths it at the same time, and I’m guessing he asks if she signs too.

  She holds her finger about an inch from her thumb and nods hesitantly.

  He motions her toward the back of the shop and she follows him, her head bowed and her steps tentative. He pulls a dark curtain around them, and my protective instinct goes into overdrive.

  “Should we go with her?” I ask nobody in particular. I start in that direction, but Finny grabs my elbow.

  “Let them be,” she says.

  “Why exactly are we here?” I ask.

  “Moral support,” Finny says.

  Paul pulls up a chair and straddles it backward. “Who did that tattoo on your leg?” he asks me.

  I look down at the back of my calf. I have an old-fashioned cross there. I got it when I was twenty. “Just some guy in a tattoo shop,” I reply.

  He snorts. “Just some guy in a tattoo shop, huh?”

  I nod.

  “You should let me hook you up,” Paul offers. “Anything you want. My last appointment just cancelled.”

  Friday raises her hand. “I’m free too.” She looks at Finny. “I could fit you in.”

  She grins. “Hell yeah.” She goes with Friday to the other side of the shop, and they start to talk about designs with their heads together.

  “So, I have an idea,” I tell Paul.

  He grins at me. “You don’t say.”

  He and I sit down together while he sketches something up.

  “That’s it,” I say, when he has it right. Friday has to come and approve it, but I make her promise not to tell Finny what it is. And Finny won’t tell me what hers is. We sit on opposite sides of the room, and Friday works on Finny while Paul works on me.

  “Do you think Lark is okay?” I ask, looking toward the back of the shop. “Shouldn’t we go check on her?”

  Paul grins. “She’s fine.”

  “I think he likes her a little too much. Did you see the way he was looking at her?”

  Paul chortles. “You don’t have to worry about that one.”

  “Why? Is he gay?” I ask. Now I’m confused.

  Friday laughs from the other side of the shop. “God, no. He’s straight. But…” She lets her voice trail off.

  “But what?” I ask. I wince as Paul hits a particularly sensitive spot.

  “He only dates deaf girls,” Friday tells me.

  Well, that’s not what I expected to hear. “Why?”

  “He was born into a deaf family. Deaf parents. Deaf grandparents. He only dates deaf girls.”

  “Oh.” Why doesn’t that make me feel better? “Are you sure she’s okay?”

  “Oh, for heaven’s sake,” Friday cries out. She sets her machine to the side and stalks to the back of the shop on those super-high heels she wears. She jiggles the curtain to let them know she’s there. Ryan pulls it to the side and invites her in. She’s only gone for a minute or two but when she comes back, she’s blinking back tears. She clears her throat. “She’s fine.”

  “You promise?” Finny asks. She grabs on to Friday’s forearm and makes her look at her.

  “I promise,” she says. Her voice is raw and abraded.

  “Okay.” Finny releases a sigh and Friday gets back to work.

  Everyone is quiet until Lark comes out of the back of the shop. “That’s all we can do today,” she says. She has her gloves pulled up to her elbows but I can see clear plastic wrap extending from the sleeve on one arm.

  Ryan follows her out and squeezes Lark’s shoulder. She smiles back at him.

  “So, what’s Ryan like?” Finny whispers.

  Lark looks at him again. “Don’t talk about him like he’s not here,” she says, and she signs while she talks. Her cheeks flush. “And he’s very nice.”

  He grins at her, but doesn’t sign anything.

  Finny looks at me and holds a finger to her lips. Apparently I’m not supposed to make a comment about how the two of them are looking at one another.

  “What are you guys getting?” Lark asks.

  She comes over to look at mine. Mine isn’t quite finished. Paul still has to shade it in.

  “Oh…” she breathes.

  Then she goes to look at Finny’s and does the same thing.

  “You guys are so meant for one another,” she says on a giggle. “You even got them in the same places on your bodies.”

  Finny gets done first, so she comes to let me see her new ink. She had it put on her upper shoulder, right where I like to kiss her the most.

  “It’s you and me and Benji,” she says. “You guys are my heartbeat. Even more important to me than my music, and I’ve had a love affair with music for a very long time.”

  She leans over to look at the spot Paul is working on. “Can I see yours?”

  Paul sits back so he can show her. It’s not quiet done yet, but it’s close enough.

  “Wow,” she says. She kisses me, and I know she loves it as much as I do.

  “It’s always going to be me and you and Benji.”

  “Unless maybe it’ll be me and you and Benji and…one more…” She lets her voice trail off.

  My heart starts to thud. “Are you…?”

  She holds up her hands to stop me. “Oh, Go
d, no. It was just an idea…” She waits with a wince on her face.

  “A really awesome idea,” I tell her.

  “Friday left room for another name,” she says. She grins at me and kisses me again.

  I would like nothing more than to marry her and have more kids with her, particularly now that I have the means to support her.

  “I can’t run a machine with you two kissing over it,” Paul grouses.

  Finny sticks out her tongue at Paul and goes to talk with Friday.

  Lark’s stomach growls loudly. “I’m hungry.” She lays a hand on her belly.

  Paul chuckles. “You better get some food, because he can’t leave yet.”

  Lark looks at Ryan. “You want some lunch?” she asks, signing while she talks.

  He shrugs and gets to his feet as if to say, Why not?

  They leave together, and Finny and I look at one another and grin.

  “He doesn’t date hearing girls,” Paul says again. “It’s his rule.”

  Finny laughs. “I had rules too. I think we broke all of them when Tag and I got together.”

  “Don’t get your hopes up,” Paul says.

  But he’s grinning, too. And Friday…well, she looks like she’s plotting.

  “Stay out of it, Friday,” Paul growls.

  She turns her back to him and ignores him, which I think is normal for her. Paul pretends to complain, but inside I think he’s grinning too.

  And so am I.

  More from Tammy Falkner

  Tall, Tatted, and Tempting

  Smart, Sexy, and Secretive

  Calmly, Carefully, Completely

  Just Jelly Beans and Jealousy

  Finally Finding Faith

  Reagan’s Revenge and Ending Emily’s Engagement

  Maybe Matt’s Miracle

  Proving Paul’s Promise

  Only One

  Beautiful Bride

  Zip, Zero, Zilch

  Christmas with the Reeds

  Good Girl Gone

  While We Waited

 


 

  Tammy Falkner, While We Waited

 


 

 
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