––––––––
“Where is he?” I asked Lex. “You keep saying he’s coming soon but it’s almost two and—”
“Calm down,” he said. “You always were a twitchy thing.”
“I can’t help it,” I said, looking down and feeling momentarily either shitty or defeated, it was hard to tell. That’s the thing about Lex. Even when we were dating, he never really meant to make me feel bad, but he did.
I tapped my front teeth together in a nervous fidget.
“Am I really that bad?” I asked him when Henry went into the kitchen for another drink. “I just get excited sometimes.”
“What are you talking about?” Lex asked. “You’re the cutest thing in the world with your hand wringing, and the way you tuck your hair behind your ear. And I love how you stick your tongue out whenever you try something. Come on, Orange,” he said, as he put his arm around me. “Is something wrong?”
I tucked a red curl behind my ear and caught myself halfway through the motion, laughing a little.
Why do I always fall for men like Lex? The huge ones? Here I am a five-foot-nothing fox girl. I’ve got hips that jeans hug on, and a little belly that sometimes goes over the top of them. Why on earth do I always fall for the calendar hunk guys?
“Something wrong?” Lex repeated, surprising me a little.
I sighed. “Not really,” I said, shrugging. “I guess I just get kind of weird and existential when it’s past two and I have to work the next day.”
“Sorry you’re waiting so long, Orange.”
There it was again. Orange. That’s what he always called me. My bright, semi-wild mane that looked about the same color as a carrot was the first thing Lex noticed about me. It’s hard to keep it under control, but sometimes I can manage if there’s not much humidity and I have an hour or so to get intimate with my flat iron.
“You haven’t called me that in a while,” I said. “Between you and Henry I never know if I’m a crayon or a musical instrument.”
Lex lifted the corner of his mouth in one of his easy, half-grinning smiles. “Of course it’s been awhile since I said that. We barely talk anymore,” he said. “Figured you weren’t all that interested in—”
“Lex?” A voice – a real, big, booming one – interrupted. “You home?”
Right after the voice rang out, came a banging sound of a huge fist pounding on a door.
“Uh, Lex?” Henry asked, coming back from the kitchen. “You realize your cousin is assaulting your neighbor’s door, right?”
“Oh shit,” Lex sighed, squeezing the bridge of his nose. “Which side?”
“The white one with the spires, next door.”
“Jamie’s place,” he said. “At least she’s usually up nights. God I hope he doesn’t do anything stupid.”
In an almost comical panic, Lex rushed to the door when the pounding started again and shouted to his cousin. “Crag! Wrong house!”
I heard Jamie – one of the town’s councilmembers and just about the sexiest were-bat imaginable – open her door and remark on the hunk of man looking at her. I couldn’t quite make out what she said, even with my fox hearing, but from the way she laughed, and how Crag paused at her doorstep, I imagined it must have been at least a little naughty.
I really do need to get to know her better, I thought, she seems like fun.
“Do I have to?” Crag said. “I mean...”
“Now!” Lex shouted. “She’s joking, you moron!”
Footsteps – heavy, heavy footsteps, the kind that shake entire houses – approached.
When I finally saw him up close, I couldn’t help staring.
“Wow,” Henry said, speechless.
“Uh-huh,” I said, nodding dumbly at him. “He looks like he came straight off a paper towel package.”
As it turned out, I was right about the whole Crag’s chest being too big for a shirt thing. He did have a red and green plaid flannel shirt on, but the first three buttons weren’t fastened. A leather collar with a faded pendant hung right in the dent at the base of his neck.
He looked up and saw the two of them looking at him and his huge, brown eyes lit up. Those were incredible enough, but then I finally got a look at the intricate shapes and lines of the tattoos that framed him, and I could hardly breathe.
“Well hello there,” he said, apparently forgetting Jamie instantly and pointing that considerable charm straight at Henry and me. “Lex didn’t tell me why I was coming here. But... now that I see, I suddenly wish I’d showed up sooner.”
I cocked an eyebrow and gave Henry a sidelong glance.
“So,” he said. “Which one is mine?”
I grunted a laugh. “Yours?” I asked.
How gross can you get? How overwhelmingly, almost drippingly macho can you be? But at the same time, I couldn’t help but smile, even though it made me a little irritated at myself. Something about him was just... well, larger than life, bigger than reality.
I wondered if he was still playing a part, pretending to be something he wasn’t. Maybe it was his way of being nervous, like me with the fidgeting. At least, that’s what I told myself, because if that were true, then it was okay for me to fall for this guy.
If he was just a prick? Not so much.
“Relax, Crag,” Lex said. “You can shit-can the swagger act. This is Henry...etta, Henrietta and this is Violet.”
Crag sort of stooped his shoulders to come inside the house, and turned sideways to help himself fit.
“What’s that like?” I asked, as soon as he was standing in the living room. “I’ve always wondered. I mean, you’re so big you had to turn sideways to go through a door. What’s it like? And what kind of car do you drive? Is it hard to drive? Can you ride a bicycle?”
Bear on a bicycle. I’m a doofus. But, at the same time that I was snickering at that, I was horrified at how I couldn’t shut myself up. It was like my nerves were all firing at once.
“Uh...” Crag squinted as he regarded me. “It’s... well you get used to it, I mean. I—”
I didn’t notice Henry pulling at my arm. That was her signal for me to shut up, which she uses a lot more than I’d like to imagine.
“Viola,” she whispered out the side of her mouth. “Cool it.”
“Pleasure,” she said, sticking her hand out to the giant. “I’ve never seen anything quite like what I saw tonight.”
Crag smiled and nodded. “It’s nothing,” he said. “Just a... well, it’s just what I do.”
“Put your hand out, Violet,” she said a second later.
I did as I was told. My hand was sticking out, wobbling just a little, and as I stared at him, I thought I was going to hyperventilate. My chest got tight, and my breath hitched a little, but when he enveloped my hand in his giant paw, the four million questions I was going to blurt out just to fill the air disappeared from my brain. I opened my mouth to speak, but no words came.
My nose was filled with the scent of something like pine, and a little hint of spicy, leathery cologne. Normally, I’m not the kind of girl who gets excited about that sort of thing, but for some reason, this time it was really working on me. He had my knees shaking, my feet quaking in my ballet flats, and he’d barely even said anything to me yet.
“Nice to meet you,” Crag said.
Unbelievably, as I took another breath, it was like I was huffing morphine. Just his touch – the feeling of his hand on mine instantly calmed me down.
“I thought you were gonna carry on like that forever,” Crag said, slowly taking his hand away.
When I opened my mouth he grabbed my hand again. “Hold on just a second,” he said. “Give me a minute here. Now, if I let you go, do you promise not to talk until I answer all your questions? I’ll even try to be specific as to which one I’m answering instead of playing cute and just saying yes or no a bunch of times.”
I nodded and shifted my eyes back and forth. Henry’s shoulders were shaking almost as hard as she was fighting to keep from laughing. She was turning a little purple, and her eyes were about to bug out. I couldn’t really see Lex, but I’m sure he was enjoying this just as much as Henry.
When I thought I hadn’t nodded hard enough, I did it again. When he took longer than I was expecting to start talking again, I was just about to open my mouth. Crag raised an eyebrow.
“Sorry,” I mumbled.
“Okay,” he let his hand fall on my shoulder. “First of all. Nope, I’m not uncomfortable all the time. In fact, I kinda like the fact that I can push over trees.”
I opened my mouth and he hushed me with a finger. At that point, I heard Lex and Henry both start laughing. “I’ve never seen anyone know how to take care of her quite like this,” she said with a giggle.
“Okay, so, no I’m not uncomfortable all the time. I don’t know how to ride a bicycle, and I drive a Jetta.”
I couldn’t hold back on that one.
“Jetta?” I said, almost choking. “How... How do you fit? It’s just—”
I’m super proud to say that when I get to laughing really hard, first I in-laugh, and then I snort. It’s really great, and every time I see my parents I thank them for giving me both of the worst kinds of laugh a person can possibly have.
Crag hunched up and pantomimed turning a steering wheel with his fingers. His arms did move, he puckered his whole face like a cranky old woman, and made sure to squish his head back just enough to get at least one extra chin.
I just about died. My reasonable out-laugh took a bad turn. First, I started honking, and then I was sucking air and honking. And then, of course, came the snorting.
“It’s possible because I made it up,” Crag said, with a look of smug self-satisfaction on his face. “But now that I got you laughing I can probably answer the rest of them. I love a girl who laughs like that, by the way.”
My cheeks burned. “Stop,” I said, even though I myself could not stop laughing, not just yet. “It isn’t my fault! I have bad genes!”
“No, no,” he said. “I’m serious. In my business, you get used to lots of glad-handing people with fake grins, fake hair and fake laughs. When a person laughs both when they exhale and inhale, you know they’re the real deal.”
As stupid as it sounds, I relaxed my shoulders a little. I took a deep breath through my nose and put my hand on the back of his to steady myself.
His skin was warm. So warm that it was a little bit like touching a person after they just finished a round on the bench press. “Do you... trim your arm hair?” I asked him as my hand ran along his muscled forearm. “You don’t have very much for a bear.”
That was the first time I saw his deep brown eyes sparkle. “All the time,” he said, never taking those burning eyes off me. “Clippers once a day. And you thought it was rough shaving your legs, huh?”
Bashfully, I whispered, “I don’t do that as often as I should,” in Crag’s ear.
He froze completely, like went absolutely rigid. He opened his mouth really wide, and let out one, single, bellowing “HA!”
I’ve never heard anything like it. The one body-shaking laugh was followed by more, louder somehow, until the giant man with his hand on my shoulder was red in the face and doubled over. I just stood there, grinning, and looking back and forth like I’d just shot someone. When he finally came back to reality, Crag wiped the back of his hand across his face.
“I really hope you’re the one he wanted me to meet,” he said. “I don’t think I could handle not having someone like you in my life.”
“Someone like me in your life?” I asked. “What’s that supposed to mean?”
Crag looked at me like I was crazy. “Just saying,” he said. “I don’t know the last time someone made me laugh like that. Anyway, as soon as your friend and my cousin took off, I wanted to—”
“They left?” I interrupted.
He smiled again and nodded. “Uh-huh. They took off to the back of the apartment a little bit ago. Just the two of us,” he said. “I’m just a big, dumb brute of a bear, and you’re a cute little fox, and we’re standing around in someone else’s living room.”
Those deep brown eyes charmed me. I was just helplessly lost, adrift without a hope of getting away. Then I felt his heavy, warm hands on my neck. Burning hot, just the gentle brushing of his fingertips against my skin started a fire in my core.
A second later, those hands slid down just a little.
“Hey!” I said, swatting at him. He kept them right where they were, just underneath my shoulders. “What do you think you’re doing? You haven’t even taken me on a date yet. We can’t do something like this before the first date,” I said.
“I don’t see why not,” Crag said. He flashed a grin. Once again, those eyes just trapped me. “I can tell you want me, and you can probably tell how much I want you. So, what’s wrong with giving in sometimes?”
I stifled a laugh. God I always laugh at the wrong times. “I just, I mean, getting all hot and heavy on the first date is tricky enough. But before it? That’s like a whole new world of—”
I didn’t have time to finish whatever silly joke I was going to make before Crag bent down and his lips enveloped mine. He brushed them along my trembling mouth and along my jaw. The two hands on my shoulders moved to the small of my back.
He pulled me tight, cradling my neck with one of his hands and holding me helpless with the other one. When he went back to my lips, he sucked the bottom one with such gentleness that it surprised me. The hand holding my neck extended until his thumb was on my chin, pulling my mouth open just a little.
“Oh,” I gasped. “Oh my, I don’t know if I’ve ever...”
“Shut up and kiss me,” Crag said. Then he did the work for me. “I saw you in the crowd tonight, and I couldn’t take my eyes off you. Almost got me plastered in that last match. Didn’t you notice?”
He leaned low, sucking a kiss on my neck and then behind my ear.
I had thought that maybe he was looking at me, but I didn’t want to admit it. That was a level of crazy I wasn’t ready to try and handle.
“I... oh wow, that’s incredible,” I breathed as he slid his rough thumb along my jaw, tickling me just a little. “I never do stuff like this. I mean never.”
For a second, Crag pushed my head back with his thumb and stared straight into my eyes. “For something you never do, you’re certainly enjoying it,” he said. “But me either. You just... you’re doing things to me.”
Then he kissed me.
Oh God did he kiss me.
It was deep and hard and relentless from the very first second. His tongue explored mine, slid around the deepest parts of me. He seemed to pull the breath out of my lungs. When he finally left me, I almost hurt with how much I wanted him back.
“I don’t have much time,” he said. “Only got two days. Bus leaves early Sunday morning. Don’t make me miss this. Don’t make me leave without ever knowing what it feels like to see someone, know it feels right and then actually do something about it. I don’t want to regret you.”
I stared at him for a second. For a long, long second, I just watched his face, watched him breath. His chest flexed with every single breath.
And I’ll be damned if deep down inside, I didn’t feel exactly the same way. It wasn’t love – not by a long shot – but I knew exactly what he meant by not wanting to live with the regret. I’d had too many. Too many chances came and went without my jumping on them just because I was nervous or scared or whatever it was that I told myself.
I was nodding.
“I drove,” I said. I still couldn’t believe it was me saying the words, but I heard them coming out of my very own mouth. “But I have to work tomorrow. Millie put me on the schedule for ten, so that means I need to get up by eight or so to get ready, and then—”
Crag kissed me again. It was another hot, deep, intense kiss that filled my whole soul. “Then we have about five hours to make a memory neither of us will ever forget,” he said when he pulled away.
“Oh my God do we ever,” I whispered. “Where have you been all my life?”
“What about your friend?” Crag asked, grinning at what I’d just said. “Will she care?”
Friend, I thought. Henry... oh no, what am I doing? How can I be letting this guy get me all worked up like this? What happened to all that strength and letting-him-chase-you stuff that Henry and I talked about?
I put my hands up, laying them flat on his gorgeous, knee-shakingly perfect chest.
“I can’t do this,” I said.
Crag reached for me like he was going to kiss me again and stopped half-way. “Huh? I didn’t mean to—”
I took a deep breath. “I can’t believe I’m doing this because I’ll be damned if you’re not exactly what I started this morning wanting. But... I just can’t. Not like this.”
Memories of The One Who Got Away hit me like a truck in the chest. I had done so well for the last year to forget. Well, more like The One Who Broke My Heart.
Reid Blaze was a dick. The worst kind of dick.
The kind you can’t say no to, the kind you can’t get over.
He’s the guy who made me swear off bears. It lasted for, oh, until right this second.
“If I did something wrong, I’m sorry,” Crag said.
“It isn’t,” I trailed off, looking at the floor and wishing I hadn’t had that flash of guilt that kept me from letting me go absolutely nuts for once in my life. For a twitchy fox girl, I’m so goddamn reserved sometimes that it gets me all boiling hot inside... but there’s nowhere for the steam to go.
I took a deep breath, looked right into Crag’s big, brown eyes.
“I’m sorry,” I said. “I just... something popped into my head and it’s gonna take a while for it to go away.”
All the while, of course, I was thinking about what Henry and I talked about during the time it took to drink those beers. “Why not let one of them chase you for once? Why are you always the one doing the hunting? Foxes are supposed to be hunted Violet, not the other way around.”
“Look,” he said, grabbing my shoulder. “Really, I didn’t mean to do anything you didn’t want.”
His grabbing my shoulder made me feel more “caught” than “hunted” and it freaked me out a little. I twisted away, but he held on just long enough that I thought it wasn’t going to work.
“Thank you,” I said, not knowing what I was thanking him for. “I... I’m really sorry I did this. I didn’t mean to string you along or make you feel bad or anything else. I’m sure you’re a really great guy and I really like you and hope maybe we can have a nice dinner sometime and get to know each other, and—”
“Tomorrow,” he said. Those eyes were burning right through me. “We’ve got another fight tomorrow about an hour away. I’m not letting you get away from me.”
“What?”
“Tomorrow. You said you wanted a date, and I’m not going to let this chance get away without at least trying to catch you.”
Catch. He said catch. My heart skipped a beat.
“What do you mean, catch?” I asked, hoping he was going to tell me what I wanted to hear.
“You said you liked me, that I was a good guy, and all that stuff?” He gave me a crooked grin that made me wish he had me pinned up against the wall again. “Nod if you’re listening.”
I nodded.
He made another move and I thought – no, I wanted – him to grab me again and make me do whatever he wanted. God that’s so not who I am, but I’m not going to pretend it isn’t what I wanted to be.
“Okay, good. Well, you said all that stuff, and I think it too. I don’t exactly have the easiest life, and I know it’s not something most people want to share, but Violet?”
His eyes had my stomach all swirly and ridiculous. “Yeah?” I breathed.
“I don’t care what anybody says. Not even you. The first time I saw you, I knew it was you and me. I felt that twinge, that little tug inside my chest.” He stepped back a little, and took a breath. His eyes never left me. “I’m not letting you get away. I’ll chase you to the ends of the earth if I have to. I’m gonna hunt you down and make you mine, little fox.”
My mouth hung open so wide he probably could’ve stuck a beer bottle in it. “Tomorrow?” I squeaked.
“Tomorrow,” he said again. “I’ll let you know where.”
Just then, Henry and Lex came back out from the back. From the look of things, they’d been unpacking boxes, because both of them had a liquor bottle in each hand.
“Everything okay?” Henry asked, setting hers on the bar top.
“We have a date tomorrow,” I said, my mouth moving and my voice sounding like a robot’s beeps and boops, echoed inside my head. “He told me so.”
“Uh... that’s... nice? Very good, girly. Are you drunk?” Henry had a little bit of a nervous twist to her laugh. “Should we be going?”
Crag shrugged, but never took his eyes off me. “See you tomorrow?” he asked, as Henry pulled me toward the door. “I’ll get in touch.”
By the time Henry and I got to the car, my mouth had unfrozen and my brain was dripping out of it in a torrent.
“What happened?” she asked.
I babbled for a second, saying some nonsense about how hot he was and how he was so nice and how he was this and that.
“No, Violet, you’ve done gone nuts. What happened? A date? I thought you were on the prowl for... I dunno, a one-night stand or something, so I set you up with him. You’re going on a date with a pit fighter?”
“I,” I trailed off, shaking my head. “It just kind of happened, it... it felt right to say yes.”
“But, why?” she asked.
I squinted and shook my head. “I... I think I was going to go home with him. Or I mean I was going to take him to my apartment, like tonight I mean.”
“Why didn’t you? That was the whole point.” Henry was a lot more irritated than I thought made any sense. “Now you’re going on a date. With... a pit fighter.”
I shook my head. “I thought of... of him. We were about to leave, and Crag asked me if you would be upset. For some reason, that made a click go off in my brain and I started thinking about Reid.”
“Oh no,” Henry groaned. “How does he keep coming back to haunt you? You’ve been rid of that lice bag for over a year.”
“He didn’t have lice,” I said absently. Henry clicked her tongue against her teeth. “But... I couldn’t get him out of my head. I couldn’t make myself stop thinking about all that horrible stuff he said to me about how I was nervous and awful and how my stomach stuck out and my legs were—”
“Okay, that’s enough,” Henry said. “Sorry for snapping. I’m not mad at you, I’m mad that that arch-asshole managed to come back from the past and ruin a fun night for you.”
I snorted a laugh. “Yeah, I guess,” I said. “It’s better this way though. I gotta work tomorrow. But then I have two days off, so...”
“Oh you naughty fox, you!” Henry said, finally laughing.
Mission accomplished, I thought. Letting the tension ease just a little was all I needed. I took a deep breath and then let it out nice and slow.
“I also thought about what we talked about,” I added.
“What? About you chasing the boys all the time?” Henry asked, pulling into my parking lot.
“To answer what you asked earlier,” I said, grinning, “yeah, I’m going on a date with a pit fighter. A pit fighting bear who’s chasing me.”