His eyes widen a little at my mention of being in bed, and then we both do the only thing we can do in the situation—stare awkwardly at my rumpled hot-pink sheets and comforter.
“Do you, um—” I clear my suddenly clogged throat. “Do you want to sit down?”
He makes a face, then moves in a negative motion but seconds later does the opposite and plops down at the end of my bed. All the way in the corner, like he’s afraid I’m going to bite him—or jump him.
It’s such an un-Jaxon-like move that for a second, I just kind of stare at him. And then decide, screw it. I’m not going to spend the next hour feeling awkward. I’m just not. So I flop down on the bed next to him and ask, “What did one bone say to the other bone?”
He eyes me warily, but his shoulders relax—and so does the rest of him. “I don’t think I want to know.”
I ignore him. “We have to stop meeting at this joint.”
He groans. “That was…”
“Fabulous?” I tease.
He shakes his head. “Really, really awful.” But he’s smirking, and finally I can see something in the depths of his eyes—something real, instead of that terrible blankness.
Determined to keep it that way, I tell him, “It’s kind of a specialty of mine.”
“Bad jokes?”
“Terrible jokes. I inherited the talent from my mother.”
He lifts a brow. “So terrible jokes run in the DNA?”
“Oh, it’s totally a gene,” I agree. “Right next to the ones for curly hair and long eyelashes.” I bat my eyes at him to make a point, much the way Macy did to me a little while ago.
“Are you sure you didn’t get it from both sides?” he asks, face totally innocent.
I narrow my eyes at him. “What’s that supposed to mean?”
“Nothing.” He holds his hands up in mock surrender. “Just that your jokes are really terrible.”
“Hey! You said you liked my octopus joke.”
“I didn’t want to hurt your feelings.” He reaches for my leg, drapes my foot and ankle over his lap. “It seemed rude to kick you when you were down and out.”
“Hey! I may be down, but I’m not out.” I try to pull my foot back, but Jaxon holds me in place, his long, elegant fingers instinctively finding the spots that hurt the most and massaging them.
I moan a little because the massage feels really good. And so does having his hands on me. “How are you so good at that?” I ask when I can finally speak again.
He shrugs, shoots me a little smirk. “Maybe I inherited it.”
It’s the first time he’s mentioned any family except his one cryptic comment about his brother yesterday, and I jump on it. “Did you?”
He stops for a second—his hand, his breath, everything—and just looks at me with those eyes I try so hard to find emotion in. And then he says, “No.”
His fingers start back on their massage like they never even stopped.
It frustrates me, but not enough to push when he has No Trespassing signs posted all over himself in huge black letters. Which says a lot more about him than he could possibly imagine.
We spend the next couple of minutes in silence as he massages my foot until the ache is almost completely gone. Only then, when his fingers finally still for good, does he say, “My eyes.”
My gaze darts to his. “What do you mean?”
“That’s what I got from my mother. My eyes.”
“Oh.” I lean forward until I can once again see the silver flecks against the darkness of his irises. “They’re beautiful eyes.” Especially when he’s looking at me the way he is now—a little bemused, a little intrigued, a lot surprised. “Did you inherit anything else from your mother?” I ask softly.
“I hope not.” His words are low, unguarded, and it’s the first time he’s ever been so open with me.
I search for something to say that won’t break the mood, but it’s too late. The second he registers what he said, Jaxon’s entire face closes up.
“I need to go,” he tells me, setting my foot gently on the bed before getting to his feet.
“Please don’t.” It’s barely more than a whisper, but the sentiment comes from deep inside me. I feel like I’m seeing the real Jaxon for the first time up close and personal, and I don’t want to lose that.
He pauses, and for a moment, I think he might actually listen to me. But then he’s reaching inside the pocket of his designer jacket and pulling out a rolled-up piece of paper that’s been fastened with a black satin ribbon.