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It only took a moment before he blew out a stream of air through his nose, cursing under his breath.

Bingo.

“You don’t even know what you want,” he accused, in a clear last-ditch effort to get me to leave him alone.

“A storm,” I replied, pulling the idea from nothing. “Dark, rolling clouds. Lightning. Sky.”

“Damn,” he frowned. “Not even something simple?”

“Do I seem like a simple girl to you?”

He chuckled, his gaze dropping to where I was still holding on to his wrist. “Nah. You seem difficult as fuck.”

“But you’re gonna do the tattoo?” I asked, giving him the full-blown puppy-dog eyes I’d never met a man who could resist.

A deep sigh lifted and dropped his broad chest, and he shook his head – not in answer, in resignation.

“Come on back.”

* * *

“You haven’t been drinking,have you?”

I lifted an eyebrow at him as he gestured to the place in his inking room where he wanted me to take a seat.

“No.”

“Did you eat before you arrived?”

“Should I have?” I asked, thinking about the big ass honeybun I’d ventured out for to serve as breakfast, and had subsequently served as an all-day meal.

He looked up from a wall of different colored inks he’d been choosing from to tell me, “Yes, probably a good idea. You might be here a while.”

Oh.

Good thing I had nowhere else to be.

“How long did the rose take?” he asked, as I shifted my attention to my other surroundings – his private space was much more refined than the general area of the shop. There was the ink wall, a stainless-steel sink and a bunch of storage, a gallery wall of ink I assumed he’d done, and an unfinished mural of a woman’s face.

I blinked, realizing I hadn’t answered the question. “I can’t remember.”

Not exactly a lie, but… not quite the whole story, either. I had very specific flashes of that day – the day I “got” my rose, supposedly something to be proud of. None of the details would come through clearly for me though.

“Why no drinking?” I asked, trying to shift the subject.

“Uh… lack of judgment is part of it,” he told me, sounding half distracted as he dug through one of the storage drawers. “But mostly, because it thins your blood, makes it harder to get the ink to take, yada-yah.”

I watched as he stopped what he was doing to stretch his long, muscled limbs – an act that made me remember what “Pri” said about him before she’d gone to find him for me.

“Am I fucking up your flow or something? You were about to call it a day?”

A grin played on his lips as he kept gathering his tools and supplies in what I assumed to be a sterilized tray. “Nah, sweetheart. Every artist on staff has to put in a certain amount of hours for drop-ins. You got lucky.”

“Stop calling me sweetheart.”

He glanced up from transferring his supplies to the cart by the table. “What would you prefer?”

“My name.”

Source: www.allfreenovel.com
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