He looked like an average guy. Well, that is, if the average guy is over six feet tall with impeccable biceps, washboard abs, and a face that could make the angels weep. More to my point, he looked like a big brother having fun with his younger brother.
It reminded me of the way Ziva and I used to be with each other. Comfortable. Easy. Effortless.
It made me sad and envious and needy all at the same time. That was the real reason I was maybe slightly too interested in Uri Bugrov. That was the real reason I couldn’t totally hate him.
And maybe, just maybe, that was the reason I just accepted this invitation into his home.
Because I wanted to see if there’s a human behind the flawless mask.
“Sit.”
I obey before I even realize what I’m doing, taking a chair facing the windows. I scowl at my submissiveness, but it’s too late to muster up some backbone, so I just sigh and sink into the seat. He wasn’t wrong—my leg does hurt.
“You have a nice house,” I remark.
He doesn’t smile like most people do when people compliment their homes. He just nods apathetically. “I do.”
“The humility is astounding.”
“One of my finer qualities.”
He’s not looking at me. He’s rummaging through a cabinet nearby. I clear my throat awkwardly as I look around in search of something to talk about. I’m not the greatest with tense silences. Or awkward silences. Or really, silences in general.
“You live alone?”
He frowns as though he finds my question offensive. “I have staff. Some of them live on the property.”
“No family?”
Maybe the guy I’ve seen him play football with is not actually his brother. Maybe he’s just a friend? A coworker? Secret lover?
Now, wouldn’t that be a plot twist?
I glance around the room and notice that the maid, Mariska, left the door to the cabinet she was cleaning open. I can see a frame peeking out, half a photo, a few stoic faces.
“Is that your family?”
Before I know it, the cabinet door is slamming shut. Uri’s blue eyes skewer me impatiently. “I don’t talk about my family. Don’t ask me about them again.”
Whoa. What the hell was that?
Then again, I remember people asking me about Ziva right after the funeral. I told them all to fuck off. Coming from Shylyssa, those words had more bite than intended. But they got me what I wanted: solitude.
“Okay,” I croak. “I won’t.”
His eyebrows arch like he’s going to say something else. Then Mariska walks back into the living room with a hefty-looking first aid kit.
He takes it from her. “Thank you, Mariska. Take the evening off, please.”
She gives him a self-conscious smile and backs out of the room. And all I can think is, No, Mariska, don’t leave me alone with him!
Though I haven’t yet decided if it’s because I can’t trust him…
Or because I can’t trust myself.
I glance down at the cut on my thigh. It’s mostly stopped bleeding, but it does look like a pretty gnarly tear. Uri sits down on the carved, glass-topped coffee table in front of me and opens up the first-aid kit.
“Put your leg on my lap.”
“Excuse me?” I nearly choke on my own tongue while he regards me with a raised eyebrow.
“Your leg,” he says with emphasized slowness, like I’m stupid. “On my lap. Unless you’d like me to try bandaging you up from a distance.”
I gulp. “Um, right. Yeah. Okay…”
Gingerly, I raise my leg and place it over his knee so that my foot dangles onto the coffee table behind him. The heat of his body soaks into my skin. He examines the wound for a prolonged few seconds before he takes a double handful of the fabric of my too-thin tights…
… and rips it apart like the Incredible Hulk.
“What do you think you’re doing?” I balk as my leggings peel apart uselessly like wilted flower petals.
“I need to see the wound properly and the fabric is getting in my way. Plus, it’s already destroyed, so I haven’t done anything to you that you didn’t do to yourself. Now, stop fussing and let me take care of this before it gets infected.”
My jaw snaps shut but the heat spreading through me is no joke. I could really use a cold shower right about now.
For more reasons than one.
His fingers graze against my inner thigh and I draw in a breath. When he raises his eyes to mine, I find myself unable to look away.
Aaand cue the blushing. I’m disappointed in myself for not lasting that long. But I suppose it was a losing battle from the start.