Untitled (3 page)

Read Untitled Online

Authors: Unknown Author

BOOK: Untitled
5.65Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
      "Funny, that was what Gray was just talking about," I said, and felt a jolt to the ankle where the man in question had tapped it with his foot. I glanced at him then back up at my brother, who hadn't sat down. "Not coke. I mean, he was concerned you might think we were abandoning you by staying out while you called a halt to your evening."
      "Good God no! If anything it's the other way round. I was concerned you'd think I was abandoning you. Really. It's cool. Don't worry about it."
      Another glance from Matthias to Gray and back again told me the evening was sorted. Everyone was cool with everyone else and had he fully understood our sibling dynamic, Gray would have recognized the blessing implicit in Math's words, body language and mindset. God love him and his liberal sexuality.
      "You go enjoy yourselves," he added and silently I told him all right, all right, no need to overegg the pudding. "I'm gonna grab a cab."
      The three of us wound our way through the mob; we'd been extremely lucky to find seating, let alone an entire booth, so crowded was Gallagher's.
      The fresh air hit me like cold water in the face when we stepped outside; I gasped at the momentary lightheadedness it caused and pulled on my jacket.
      "You all right?" Gray murmured at my side. "We'll get you inside soon if you're cold."
      "I'll be all right if we keep walking."
      "Should have worn more clothes then, shouldn't you? Tart. I'm ashamed to call you my sister." It was obvious Matthias was joking but the look on Gray's face was a picture.
      "Shouldn't you be all protective of your sister, mate?" he ventured. "Instead of calling her morals into question?"
      "You know as well as I do that a discussion of Piper's morals would be a short one—"
      "All right, all right, enough of that. Sometimes," I added, turning to Gray, "I wish he was the sort of brother to stick up for me. Not often, though. Just when I wonder what it would be like for him to show a bit of respect."
      Matthias, with his hands thrust deep into his jeans pockets and shoulders hunched against the breeze, nudged me with his elbow. "I'm your big brother; it's my job to take the piss. What else could I do? Pull your pigtails?"
      "I'm wearing a jacket after all and you're still not happy?"
      "Yeah. Just keep yourself covered. Wouldn't want to scare the locals, would we? Hey, there's one!"
      A taxi with its lights on spun round, did a probably illegal one eighty and drew to a halt feet away from where Matthias stood on the curb.
      "Righto, kiddies, that's me off," he said, leaping forward to grab the taxi door before anyone else stole his ride. "Behave yourselves." He sniggered under his breath but I still heard. Once he had the door open and the cab was claimed as his, he deemed it safe to turn back to us. He and Gray did that half-slap, half-handshake thing guys do and muttered something which sounded like "Later."
      When it was my turn he gave me a full-on hug, making sure his head was against the ear on the opposite side from Gray so he could whisper, "Go easy on him." He drew back and winked. "Have a good time, you two." He climbed into the cab and I just had time to shout, "Remember to text me when you get home!" before he pulled the door shut behind him. Seconds later the cab pulled out and my brother left.
      "Text me when you get home?" Gray echoed in the quiet following Math's exit, raising his eyebrows.
      "What? I'm concerned for his safety."
      "Text me when you get home?"
      Now the coast was clear and we had no chaperon breathing down our necks (as if), I linked arms with him as we strolled along the street. "So I'm used to going out on the town with my girlfriends. It's an automatic thing we do for safety and I forgot I was talking to my brother for a moment."
      "Matthias became an honorary girl?"
      "You could say that. My brother, the honorary woman."
      He laughed quietly. "Listen, I usually go to Nocturne. Unless you'd rather go somewhere else?"
      "I haven't been there for a while, actually. The last time was with Holly and Laura, I think." I looked at Gray, frowning against the coolness of the breeze and tried to tuck a rogue strand of hair behind my ear but it didn't behave.
      As if it were planned, we stopped at the same moment; perhaps I'd sensed something in his muscle tension as we linked arms. He reached over and tucked the strand behind my ear for me, paused, looked into my eyes and lowered his hand. The last time he'd touched me in such an intimate way had been a while back.
      "I'm glad you came out tonight," he said. "And stayed out."
      Excitement swelled in the pit of my stomach, rushed up my chest and made my heart pound. "I wasn't sure if you wanted me to. All that nonsense with Matthias and so on. I thought perhaps you thought I was..." I paused, bit my lip.
      "Thought you were what?"
      "I'm not sure how to put it. Intruding on your boys' night out? Shoving myself in where I wasn't wanted? I suggested meeting Math for a drink and when he said he planned to come out with you tonight I started to say oh never mind then, but he jumped in, said you wouldn't mind."
      "I didn't. Don't, in fact." A momentary smile touched his lips.
      I clapped my hands together, wrung them to get the blood circulating again. "But I'm here now so you just have to put up with me. Come on, let's get indoors. Thank God Nocturne's close by. I hope there isn't a queue."
      "Ah, that's where my queue buster tickets come in." He reached into one of his jacket pockets and pulled out a small card, handed it to me. "I always carry spares in case I have a companion."
      "Ah ha!" Eyeing the card, I was unable to stop the smile spreading across my face. "Where did you get these?"
      "Picked them up in one of the pubs we were in earlier; there was a promotions guy handing them out. So we, dear Piper, get to waltz straight in out of the cold."
      "Gray, you're a star." Instinctively I kissed his cheek. Because I wore heels I wobbled a bit and his arm slipped around my waist to steady me. He grinned when I asked, "However can I repay you?"
"I think you know the answer to that one."
      "Yes, I do. I'm going to give you what every young man wants."
      His eyebrows shot up.
      "The opportunity to buy me a drink of course. Why, what did you think I meant?"
~ * ~
      Gray reached one of the payment booths before me. "Two, please." When I balanced my handbag on the ledge and unzipped it he told me not to worry. He'd take care of it.
      "Are you sure?" I asked and he assured me that yes, he'd pay.
      We headed upstairs to the cloakroom by which time I had my purse ready; he may have been a gentleman in paying my admittance but there was no way I was going to let him think I planned to sponge off him all night. "No, you paid us in. I insist. I'm not having you think you're only here to dish out cash. I'm not like that. Now. Jacket. Off."
      He had an amused twitch to his lips as he capitulated, removing his wallet from his jacket and slipping it into his jeans before placing his jacket on the counter. "Who am I to argue when a lady tells me to disrobe?"
      Yes, if there was any doubt, we were definitely flirting now.
      While I paid for our cloakroom tickets and handed Gray his, I took a few seconds to calm myself. We were in a nightclub; nothing was going to happen here beyond some overt flirting and getting to know each other again.
      Climbing yet more stairs was like approaching a wall of sound. Once through the final set of swing doors the pounding hit us like a right hook, a shock to the system and Gray slipped his arm round my waist again, drawing me close. He guided me through the crowds and with a raised voice right in my ear, asked, "What are you having?"
      "Depends what's available," I shouted back. Difficult to be flirtatious when I had to yell at someone; it worked better when I spoke quietly and was demure. "Let's just get to the bar first and see what's there."
      We fought our way through the melee to reach it, skirting the dance floor in the R&B room. People lined the walls, grouped together around the seating area and traversing the dance floor itself would have been impossible.
      "I'll just have a bottle of Miller," I said—shouted— when we reached our destination. It took a while for either of us to get the barman's attention but when Gray did, he insisted on paying.
      "Cheers," I said, saluting him with my bottle. "Better not drink this too fast; I'll get drunk."
      "Maybe you should have stuck to alcopops. You know what they say; never mix grape and grain."
      "Oh, you would have to mention my liking for those things, wouldn't you? It's my not-so-secret shame. I do have some class you know."
      I could have sworn he looked me up and down before suggesting, "Shall we go find a seat somewhere? It's unlikely in a place this packed, but…?"
      "Sure." The only lights came from the D.J's. platform and those behind the bar. Occasionally someone's mobile phone flashed as they took a snap of their mates' drunken antics but even those lights were dimmed by occasional puffs from the smoke machine. I barely heard myself think above the pounding of the bass line but there was something primeval in it. "Let's look over here." I turned to head in the direction in which I'd gestured and Gray's hand took hold of mine. He probably didn't want to be separated in such a crowded place.
      We found a space big enough for the pair of us in a corner of the R&B room; huge cubed cushions against one part of the wall were the only seating available and thanks to other revelers occupying the rest of this area we had to sit close together, to conserve space.
      Gray's lips moved but I didn't catch what he'd said so I indicated that he should repeat himself.
      "I said, I've always liked you, you know."
      My ear was close to his mouth so even if a random flash of light bouncing off the bar mirrors had illuminated us he wouldn't have seen the widening of my eyes in alarm. Or arousal. I hadn't expected him to come out with it like that, so matter-of-factly. I glanced at him, watched his mouth move, distracted, had to lean in again for him to repeat himself.
      "I thought you knew."
      "I had an idea," I said up close, close enough to lick the skin at the side of his neck if I so chose.
      "I didn't say anything while you were with Andrew because, well, you were with Andrew." Gray gave a halflaugh, chugged back a sizeable amount from his beer bottle.
      "And you're one of my brother's best friends."
      "Yeah, there's that too."
      "I'll always be Math's sister but Andrew's no longer on the scene." It was only a tiny white lie. A few text messages didn't count as proper communication, especially if they were all one way. I hadn't responded to any of Andrew's overtures. I'd been too angry.
      "Are you really okay with that?" His right hand curled into a gentle fist and with one extended finger he stroked my knee; I wore jeans so couldn't feel a thing through the thick fabric but the sight of him touching my clothing was enough to send a jolt of excitement through my leg. "I just wanted to make sure."
      "Make sure I know what I'm doing?" I teased. He glanced away and if the lighting had been favorable, I would have seen him blush, I reckoned. "Anyway...how do you know I didn't end up going out with Andrew simply because it hadn't gone anywhere with you?"
      "I got cold feet at the time."
      I tried to speak. Bottled it. Turned away and took another sip of Miller. There was something I wanted to ask for the good of my own ego, although I did genuinely like Gray. A combination of curiosity and pride drove me.
      "Piper?" He leaned in close and his breath ruffled a strand of my hair. When I turned to face him his lips were mere inches from mine and I couldn't take my eyes off them. He was clean shaven but with a hint of a shadow across his top lip, his chin and across his cheekbones. He looked like the type of man who needed to shave twice a day. Instinctively I reached up and ran a thumb over his bottom lip; his lips parted and I jerked back, nervous. Not of the spark between us. I think I was reluctant to get too carried away in a public place. Talking was enough. Flirting. But the touching; the hand on my knee, my thumb on his mouth, it led up to something and there was only so much sexual tension two people could cultivate before something had to
give and self-control left the building.
      "If we hadn't been in my brother's house," I began, swallowing the lump in my throat, "what do you think would have happened?"

Other books

Sarah Gabriel by Stealing Sophie
Mystery of the Whale Tattoo by Franklin W. Dixon
Christopher's Medal by Laybourn, S.A.
Deadly in High Heels by Gemma Halliday
Crowbone by Robert Low
Spiral (Spiral Series) by Edwards, Maddy
Watch Me Walk Away by Jill Prand
Love Locked Down by Candace Mumford