Justin stood there on her porch like the whole place was holding its breath around him. Cassidy’s voice, that sly little lilt of hers, tugged one corner of his mouth upward before he could stop it. Knock instead of yell—yeah, that was fair. But she didn’t know how many times he’d sat out here on that bike, hands braced on the bars, wondering if he even had the right to come up the steps at all.
He tipped his chin toward her, eyes dragging over her face like a man committing something dangerous to memory. “Figured my voice’d carry better than my knuckles,” he muttered, half a joke, that rough-edged tone almost playful if you knew how to hear it. And with her, he was always a little more human, a little less steel.
The wink? That nearly did him in. His gaze flicked to the leather she teased him for, then back to her, slower this time. “Keeps me warm enough,” he rumbled, “but the welcome helps. Much warmer.”
He stepped inside when she beckoned, the familiar scent of her home curling around him—coffee, wood polish, and the faint sweetness that clung to Cassidy like it was made for her. Justin shed his gloves into a back pocket, eyes roaming the kitchen she moved through like she belonged in every frame of his life. Maybe she did.
“Coffee’s fine,” he said, leaning a shoulder against the doorframe, tattoos shifting with the motion. “And yeah… I could eat.” A pause, heavier than the space it took. His pair of blues would take her in a beat than necessary and she'd surely spot him if she felt the weight of it. Even then, Justin wasn't ashamed, dipping lower to her collarbone, then the shape of her legs. “You sure about me makin’ myself at home, Cass?”
Because trouble didn’t just look good to her—it looked back at her with the same hunger. And making himself at home could mean plenty she may not have been ready for.
Justin watched her cross the room, that familiar sway of confidence mixed with something softer—something she only ever showed when she wasn’t guarding the world from getting too close again. It pulled at him, subtle as a hook under the ribs. He shifted his weight, boots thudding quietly as he moved farther inside, taking in the warm glow of her lamps, the faint hum of her old fridge, the way her hair spun like gold.
Hell, he’d ridden through rainstorms, bar brawls, and cartel shootouts without blinking, but one smile from Cassidy Clayton and his pulse did something reckless. Something teenage. Something stupid.
He dragged a hand down his jaw, the rasp of scruff grounding him even as he watched her from the doorway. “Didn’t mean to interrupt your night,” he offered, though his voice betrayed the truth—he’d been hoping she’d let him. “Just… figured checkin’ in was overdue.”
The real reason—the kiss he thought about on long nights, the one that tasted like nothing regret and everything full of need—he kept tucked behind his teeth. Maybe it was respect. Maybe it was fear he’d ruin the one piece of peace she had left. But then she glanced back at him over her shoulder, and something in him damn near cracked down the middle.