Chapter 7
“Fuck it,” he said, dropping his bag on the floor and pulling his cellphone out of his back pocket. For another minute, he stood there, debating making the call that had the power to make his life a living hell.
In the end, exhaustion and the stabbing pain shooting through his shoulder and his hand, the part of his hand that he could still feel anyway, made the decision for him.
Hoping that his uncle was too distracted by the coffee truck to answer his phone, he called his Uncle Jared and waited, praying that voicemail would pick up.
Much like last night, when he prayed that Tink would stop wiggling enticingly beneath him and put him out of his misery by falling asleep, his prayers went unanswered.
“Are you stopping to get donuts?” his uncle demanded after the third ring, sounding hopeful.
“No, I-”
“Why not, you cheap bastard?” Uncle Jared demanded, cutting him off and making him shake his head in disgust.
“Because I’m not coming in today,” Danny snapped before his uncle could break out into a thirty-minute rant about how all his nephews were nothing more than insensitive cheap bastards.
There was a heavy pause before his uncle asked, “Are you sick?”
“No,” Danny said, biting back a curse as he closed his useless hand in a fist, determined to get through this phone conversation without losing his temper.
Another pause.
“If you’re not sick, then why aren’t you coming in to work?” his uncle demanded, clearly suspicious and most likely pulling out his personal cellphone at that very moment to send a group text to everyone in the family, putting them on alert.
“Because I spent the night with a woman and I’m exhausted,” Danny said, playing with the truth in order to save himself from an army of Bradfords descending on him to make sure that he wasn’t at death’s door.
There was another heavy pause before his uncle cleared his throat. “You spent the night with a woman?” he asked, trying to hide his relief, but he did a piss poor job and left Danny feeling guilty about lying to his uncle.
“Yeah,” Danny said, dropping his head back and sighing, wishing that he didn’t have to resort to doing this, but he was too fucking exhausted and needed some sleep and he wouldn’t get that if his uncle thought even for a second that something was wrong.
“Oh, well, ummmm, alright then. Just, umm, don’t make a habit out of this,” his uncle said, stumbling over his words and sounding relieved instead of pissed, which only confirmed his suspicions that his family was still terrified that something bad was going to happen to him.
“I won’t,” Danny promised because if there was one thing that he knew for certain, it was that he would never have the chance to hold a woman like Tinkerbelle in his arms again.
“This is not fucking happening,” Danny said, grabbing the pillow off his head and threw it against the wall as the pounding on his apartment door continued. He looked at his alarm clock and released a series of curses that he’d learned during his time in the Marines.
Only an hour had passed since he’d called his uncle.
He’d thought he’d have more time before he was forced to deal with one of his well-meaning relatives.
Apparently, he’d underestimated their level of concern as well as his ability to bullshit his uncle.
That belief was confirmed less than thirty seconds later when the pounding suddenly stopped.
He didn’t bother rolling out of bed. There was no point.
“You lying bastard,” Uncle Jared muttered, sighing heavily as he stepped into the room and leaned back against the wall, his worried gaze moving over him, pausing on his shoulder and hand before his uncle shot him a questioning look.
Danny returned his sigh as he threw his arm across his eyes. “What gave me away?”
“The fact that you’re a recluse,” the annoyingly familiar voice announced, forcing Danny to move his arm and open his eyes in time to see his brother walk into the room.
His gaze shifted from Aidan’s face, noting the poorly concealed concern to the black backpack thrown over his shoulder and muttered a curse.
“I don’t need your help, Aidan,” he snapped, wishing that he’d just sucked it up like all those other times and went to work so that he could avoid bullshit like this.
“You want to tell me what happened to that shoulder and to your hand?” Aidan asked, sitting on the bed next to him as he placed his bag on the floor by his feet.
“Not really, no,” Danny said, grinding his teeth against the sharp pain as his brother reached over and gently traced his fingertips around the grotesque hive marring his shoulder and part of his upper arm.
After a minute of probing, Aidan sighed heavily and reached for his bag. “Zoe’s cooking?”
He looked up in time to catch his uncle’s wince. Somewhat horrified that his brother was able to identify the source of the hive with just a look, he nodded mutely.
With a grumbled curse and a sigh, Aidan opened his bag and pulled out a small vial holding a shimmering gold liquid and a hypodermic needle.
“Her cooking usually isn’t dangerous unless it’s been exposed to air for more than two hours.
Then,” Aidan shrugged, gesturing towards Danny’s shoulder with a tilt of his chin, “this happens.”
“What exactly is ‘this’?” Danny asked, looking down at the hive-like thing covering his shoulder.
“It’s a cross between a bacterial infection and an allergic reaction,” Aidan absently explained as he carefully measured out the medication. “We’ve tried to hit this from both sides, but we’ve found that it takes a combination of antihistamines, penicillin and several vaccinations to kill it.”
He felt his brows arch as he asked, “Vaccinations?”
Aidan shook his head sadly as he cleaned a patch of skin with an alcohol wipe just above the hive. “Trust me, you don’t want to know.”
No, he really didn’t.
“The good news is,” Aidan said, pausing as he injected the medicine into Danny’s shoulder, “that you should be immune to Zoe’s cooking now.”
“I wouldn’t chance it, though,” Uncle Jared said, sounding thoughtful.
“Neither would I,” Aidan murmured as he pulled the needle free. “But if it accidentally comes in contact with your skin again, your body should be able to fight the infection on its own the next time.”
Danny opened his mouth to…to…he couldn’t remember what he’d meant to say when a loud yawn broke free and his eyelids suddenly felt like they weighed a hundred pounds.
“Did anyone else come in contact with the substance?” Aidan asked as Danny struggled against the wave of exhaustion pulling him down.
“Tink…Tinkerbelle…” Danny managed to get out before everything slipped away, leaving him to dream about beautiful green eyes that would no doubt haunt him for the rest of his life.
“Who the hell is Tinkerbelle?” Aidan asked with a frown as he checked Danny’s pulse.
“My guess would be the cute little neighbor living across the hallway that he’s been tormenting for the past two months,” Jared said with a satisfied sigh and a grin as he pushed away from the wall.
Aidan shook his head with a good-natured laugh as he stood and pulled the covers up, tucking his older brother in and reminding Jared of all those times he’d seen Danny look after his younger brothers and sister.
Before Danny ran off to join the Marines, he’d been a great big brother, kind and loyal, but he’d also been an arrogant little bastard.
He loved Danny, had always had a soft spot for the kid, but he’d never been blind to the kid’s faults.
Things had always come easily to Danny, too easily, girls, grades, friends…
life, and it had led him to believe that it would always be that way.
Danny never had to work at anything when he was a kid, never had to try.
Things came too easily to him until that fateful night when he’d raided his father’s fridge and drank himself into oblivion.
Watching Danny’s downfall had been difficult, but even then, he’d known that it was for the best. The kid had always had a game plan for his life, college, med school, a partnership at his father’s practice, and eventually the perfect family.
Every time Danny had talked about the future, his parents had nodded approvingly while the rest of the family had simply accepted it as Danny’s due, everyone but him.
Jared never said anything, but he’d never been able to picture Danny as a doctor.
His younger brother, Aidan? Absolutely, but never Danny.
Danny needed something more in life, something challenging, something that allowed him to grow up and figure his shit out.
The Marines had given that to Danny and more.
When he’d discovered that Danny ran off and joined the Marines, he’d been scared shitless right along with the rest of his family.
They hadn’t been able to drive to Alabama fast enough, terrified that something was going to happen to the kid before they managed to kick his ass for scaring the shit out of them.
Once they’d made their way onto the base, they’d been prepared to drag him home and smack some sense into him, but everything changed when they’d spotted Danny, covered in mud, his hair shorn off, and that cocky expression on his face finally gone as his CO got in his face and tore him a new one.
They’d stood near a row of Humvees, waiting for Danny to talk back, to mouth off, to walk away and give up as the officer screamed in his face, but to their surprise, Danny took it.
When the officer ordered him to drop to the ground and give him a hundred pushups, he did it without hesitation.
By the time Danny got back in line, looking alone and suddenly terrified, they were turning around and walking away.
Ethan had remained for another minute, watching as his eldest son was shoved back to the ground and forced to knock out another hundred pushups.
Walking away from him was probably one of the hardest things that they’d ever done, but it had been exactly what Danny needed.
The Marines had made a man out of Danny.
They’d shown him the real world and taught him the value of work, dedication, and what it meant to be a good man.
“Is this the woman that Trevor and Jason think he’s going to marry?” his nephew asked, throwing his brother a questioning look.
“Only one way to find out,” Jared said, already heading for the door, more than a little curious about his future niece.