Page 1 of Holding Her Hand




  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  For Gina, the original blue fairy

  Copyright © 2015 by Tammy Falkner

  Ryan

  Lark

  Ryan

  Lark

  Lark

  Ryan

  Lark

  Ryan

  Lark

  Ryan

  Lark

  Ryan

  Lark

  Ryan

  Lark

  Ryan

  Lark

  Ryan

  Lark

  Ryan

  Lark

  Ryan

  More from Tammy Falkner

  Holding Her Hand

  by Tammy Falkner

  Night Shift Publishing

  For Gina, the original blue fairy

  Copyright © 2015 by Tammy Falkner

  Holding Her Hand

  E-Edition

  Night Shift Publishing

  Cover design by Tammy Falkner

  ISBN-13: 978-1-63455-032-1

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system without the written permission of the author, except where permitted by law.

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Ryan

  Some days are just shit, and there’s nothing anyone can do about it.

  I look down at my phone. My recent ex-girlfriend Samantha—as recently as two weeks ago, in fact—has texted me yet again with a list of vile places she’d love for me to shove certain parts of my anatomy. I see a new one come in and raise my brows. That one actually sounds interesting. But it would be more fun for me than for her.

  My phone vibrates again. Fuck you, the newest text says.

  Yeah, she already did that. Then she fucked my best friend and I had to break things off with her.

  She’s still angry.

  Our on-again/off-again relationship has to be over. It just does.

  I shove my phone into my pocket, despite the fact that it’s still vibrating like crazy. The lights at the back of the tattoo shop flash, letting me know the front door opened. There’s a bell over the door for people who can hear, but the Reeds, the people who own the shop where I work as a tattoo artist, installed flashing lights for me.

  My phone vibrates again and I pull it out with a sigh.

  Jeff’s dick doesn’t hook to the left like yours does.

  Well, she would know.

  Jeff used to be my best friend. Now he’s that guy who slept with my girlfriend.

  His hooks to the right, I text back. Know how I know? Because the other girl he screwed last night told me.

  I shake my head and toss my phone onto the counter.

  What’s bad about this whole situation is that she’s going to get hurt, and it makes me angry that she’s being used the way she is.

  I pull the curtain and walk out into the shop area. My mind is on Samantha, though, so I’m not paying attention. A whiff of subtle, mouthwatering lilac perfume hits me—right before a woman does. She looks up, startled when I catch her by the shoulders to steady her.

  Damn, she’s pretty. She has long dark hair that tumbles in a curly, wild mess over her shoulders. And she has brown eyes that look like they might hold a world of hurt. Or fear. I’m not sure which. Maybe both.

  I lift my brows to ask her without words if she’s okay. She nods, and takes in a deep breath. She’s standing so close to me that I can feel her boobs lift ever so slightly with each breath. I look down at her. Hell, she has an awesome rack. I can’t help but notice. Her face flushes when she catches me ogling, and her cheeks grow rosy. I bite my lips together to keep from grinning. Busted.

  Paul and Friday, the owners of the tattoo shop, walk out of the back room and Friday is still hooking her garter belt to the top of her stockings. Then she looks up and grins. Somebody just got lucky in the back room. Paul palms her ass and she points a finger at him in warning.

  “Look who’s here!” Friday signs dramatically while she talks. I love that all the Reeds can sign, and that they do it whenever I’m in the room. Being a deaf guy in a hearing world is a challenge, but they make it so much better here. They sign English, which means they sign in the same word order a hearing person would speak, rather than American Sign Language, my first language. But it’s better than trying to read lips, which—despite the way it’s depicted on TV—is nearly impossible. “What can we do for you?” Friday asks them.

  That’s when I notice that two customers had come into the shop. The one who bumped into me looks down at her feet and says something I can’t make out. Then she whispers into Friday’s ear, and Friday scowls a little.

  Friday motions for me to look at her. I guess I was still watching the girl. Whoops.

  “Lark wants to consult with you about a tattoo,” she says, both in my language and hers.

  “Why me?” I ask in sign language.

  “Why you?” she repeats. “Because you’re fucking awesome at what she wants, Ryan.”

  Sweat sheens on the forehead of the girl they called Lark, and she says something to Friday. Has she changed her mind about a tattoo? She looks like she’s thinking of leaving.

  For some reason, I want to keep her here. “What does she want?” I ask Friday.

  “How the fuck am I supposed to know?” she asks me. She points at Lark. “Ask her!” Friday shoots me a death glare. I’d be quivering in my boots if I had never been the victim of her temper before. I have been here for two weeks already, and she let me know who’s in charge on Day One. I had made a mental note to myself right then and there: Never piss off Friday Reed.

  I throw up my hands, though. How the fuck am I supposed to talk to Lark? I don’t speak. And she probably doesn’t sign.

  Friday grabs my hands and holds them at a ready position in front of me. Then she points to Lark. “Talk to her. She might even talk back.”

  “You can sign?” I ask her in sign language.

  “Yes, she can sign, dumbass,” Friday tosses in. I have a sudden urge to give her a noogie, but she’d go for my balls if I did.

  “You can sign?” I ask Lark again.

  She holds her finger and thumb an inch apart and nods hesitantly.

  Great. She can probably fingerspell. Finding out what she wants will be like pulling water from a rock. But I motion for her to follow me toward the back of the shop and I pull the dark curtain around us. I motion for her to sit down in a chair. She perches her bottom on the edge of the seat and folds her fingers in her lap. That’s when I realize that she’s wearing elbow-length gloves with the fingers cut out. What does she have to hide?

  “You’re here for a tattoo?” I ask her. I make sure to move my mouth with my words, so she has a chance of understanding me.

  She nods. “I have some scars I’d like to cover up.”

  “What kind of scars?”

  She runs her hands up and down her gloved arms, like she’s soothing herself. “On my arms. I have scars from grease burns.”

  I reach for the top edge of her glove, but she pulls back. Her pulse starts to beat solidly in her neck. I can see it jumping. “May I see?” I ask. I wait for her to give me permission to look. I look at bodies all day, and I touch every single one, but I’ve never touched anyone who first didn’t want me to touch her.

  She shakes her head. “Just tell me if you can cover scars, first, okay?” she signs. Her signs are a little slow, but accurate, and I can tell she
’s translating in her head.

  “I won’t know until I see them.” Some scars can be covered. It depends on the extent of the damage. “Scars that are puckered and bumpy are more difficult, and require more sittings for the tattoos so the ink can be applied heavily.”

  “The ones on my arms aren’t too bad. Just spatters from the grease, really.”

  I reach for her glove again and she closes her eyes, but she doesn’t pull away. I roll the glove down ever so slightly, taking care to go slow.

  She sits stiff as a board and she takes in a breath as I roll the glove past her elbow. When I get halfway down her forearm, her eyes fly open and she stops me, grabbing frantically for my hand, and I know immediately that I have gone too far. I sit back and raise my hands like I’m surrendering to the cops. She forces her body to relax.

  The scars she has on her arms aren’t too bad. “What happened?” I ask her.

  She looks down at her arms and traces a finger around one of the circular patches of skin. “It was my parents’ anniversary and I wanted to make them a funnel cake, so I heated up some oil in a big pot on the stove. They were still asleep, and I had it all set up. But suddenly the grease started popping. It burned my arms and made these marks.”

  I nod.

  Her burns are more like discolored spots. They’re not puckered or terribly scarred, and they should be easy to cover over. “I can do it.”

  The curtain starts to shimmy, and I recognize Friday’s way of knocking. She jerks on the curtain until she gets my attention. I pull the curtain back to let her in, and she closes it behind her.

  “Just wanted to be sure you’re okay,” she says. She looks at Lark and then at me. And I see that Lark’s face is wet because a tear has rolled down her cheek. “What the fuck did you do to her?” Friday asks, gesturing wildly.

  I hold up my hands in surrender mode.

  “Stop,” Lark says. “He didn’t do anything. He was very nice. It’s just not easy to talk about.” She sniffles. “The burns on my legs and stomach are much worse, but I can cover those easily with clothes.”

  “You have more?” I ask her. I point to her stomach.

  She stands up and lifts the edge of her shirt. Friday covers her mouth and I suppose she’s hiding a gasp. But Lark must hear it because she drops her shirt really quickly.

  “I’m so sorry,” Friday says.

  “The fire spread to the curtains over the kitchen window, and then to the rest of the house. I ran upstairs to wake my parents, but by the time I got there, the fire was too far out of control. My clothes had caught on fire, and my dad put the flames out. Then he lowered me from a second-story window and went back for my mother. I never saw them again.”

  Now it’s Friday who is blinking back tears.

  Lark doesn’t look like she wants sympathy. She wants a tattoo. I motion for Friday to leave us, and she does. I didn’t think she’d go away that easily.

  “The ones on your arms, I can cover those easily. Your stomach would be harder. It would take more applications and heavier ink.”

  She nods. I think she likes that I didn’t make a big deal over her parents dying or her burns. She seems relieved.

  She points to the two largest burns on her left arm. “I was thinking we could cover these two big ones with some seagulls, and maybe a beach scene.” She quirks her brow at me.

  I nod. “We could. I could do those today, and then go back and draw the rest of it for you for next time. What do you think?”

  She smiles at me, and damn if my heart doesn’t skip a beat. I point to her folded glove, which is now resting just over her wrist. “Can you take that off?”

  She shakes her head. “No.”

  I narrow my eyes at her. “Why not?” I already saw her burns. How much worse can it get?

  “No,” she says again, slapping her first two fingers together against the pad of her thumb in the sign for “no.”

  “Okay. Let me doodle up some birds for you.” I get her a bottle of water and go to the light table on the other side of the curtain.

  Friday bumps my hip with hers so I’ll look at her.

  “Is she okay?” she asks me.

  I nod. “She’s fine.”

  “Can you help her?”

  “Yes.”

  I bend over so I can draw, but Friday walks around the table so she can get in my face. “Be nice to her, Ryan,” she says.

  I throw up my hands. “I’m always nice.”

  She snorts. I can tell because her nose flexes and her throat twitches. She stares at me for a minute. “She’s not your type, is she?”

  “She’s not deaf, if that’s what you mean.”

  Friday nods. “She’s not your type, her hearing status notwithstanding.”

  “What’s that supposed to mean?”

  “You have a tendency to pick crazy chicks.”

  “God, Friday, do you have a filter at all?” And I don’t pick crazy chicks.

  She grins. “Nope. Never needed a filter.”

  I bend down to get back to work and she lays a hand on my arm. “Give her a kick-ass tattoo, okay?” she says.

  I nod. I already have ideas for it. But I need to get to know a little more abut her before I know exactly what to put on her.

  She’s not my type because she can hear. So Friday doesn’t have to worry about me trying to get in her pants. Although her pants are pretty fucking awesome.

  I finish my drawing and go back into the curtained area where she’s waiting.

  “Ready?” I ask.

  She nods and smiles at me, and I swear it steals my breath for a second, because there’s a lot hiding behind that smile and I want to find out all about it.

  Lark

  Ryan shows me the drawing. He watches my face closely as he lays it on my lap and turns it toward me. He has drawn two perfect seagulls. But they’re not seagulls at all. One is decidedly masculine and one is very feminine. On their legs, they wear wedding rings. One has a glistening diamond and the other is a plain gold band.

  “My parents,” I whisper, and I reach out to run my finger over his creation. I look up and he’s staring at my mouth, concentrating hard. “Do you read lips?” I ask him.

  He shakes his head and signs “no.”

  “Sorry,” I reply, rubbing my A-shaped fist over my heart. “You made the seagulls my parents.” My eyes sting with unshed tears and I blink them back. He reaches over, plucks a tissue from a nearby tissue box, and presses it into my hand.

  “Didn’t mean to make you cry,” he signs, wincing slightly.

  “It’s okay,” I tell him. I smile through my tears. “Can you do them today? Do you have time?”

  He nods and starts to set up his equipment. I take a minute to stare at his backside as he bends to take bottles of ink out of the cupboard. He’s very handsome. He’s not massively huge like the Reeds. He’s as tall as they are, about six-three, I’d guess. But he’s thin and wiry. The sleeve of his t-shirt stretches over his upper arm and I can see thick muscles flexing beneath his tattoos. He has broad shoulders and a narrow waist. His jeans are tucked into a pair of boots. He has very short, feathery dark hair and a series of earrings, a brow piercing, and a ring through his lip.

  He sucks it into his mouth and then he winces again. “I can’t talk and tattoo at the same time,” he warns me.

  I nod. I’m guessing his hands will be busy. “Where do you want me?” I ask.

  His cheeks color ever so slightly.

  Oh crap. I said that wrong. “I mean…where should I sit?”

  He grins and directs me to a chair, and he sits down next to me. “First tattoo, right?” he asks.

  I nod. “I’m a virgin.” I fingerspell “virgin” because I have no idea what the sign is for that.

  His eyebrows shoot up.

  “I mean—” I rush to take that back, but I can’t find the right words in my head to sign. But then I just drop my face in my hands and whimper out a helpless little noise. I so messed that up.
r />   He pulls my hands down and I find him grinning at me. A bark that is probably a laugh bursts from his throat. “First tattoo?” he asks again.

  “Yes, first tattoo,” I reply. I suck in a deep breath.

  He shows me the sign for “virgin,” making a V at his temple and dragging it down the side of his face to his chin.

  “First tattoo,” I say again. And I bite back an embarrassed smile.

  He’s still grinning as he lays the design transfer on my arm and applies it. He sits back, lifts my arm in different angles, and lays it back down. “Ready?” he asks.

  I nod at him and smile. He smiles back, and there’s still a bit of devilry in his eyes that has been there ever since my I’m-a-virgin comment. A grin tugs at the corners of his lips. I take a deep breath and close my eyes.

  I’ve heard varying stories about tattoos and am not sure what to expect. But when he applies the machine to my skin, it doesn’t hurt at all. It stings a little, but it’s nothing I can’t handle. He runs the machine, stopping to swipe over my skin every few strokes. Suddenly the motions stop, and I open my eyes to find him watching me.

  His eyes are hazel, like all the colors of fall wrapped up in two perfect globes, with flecks of brown, green, rust, and orange. I get caught in his gaze, and I can’t look away.

  He jostles my arm, and I jerk my gaze from the depths of his eyes and look at his mouth. “You okay?” he mouths at me with no sound.

  I hold my fingers out in a five and place my thumb against my chest in the sign for “fine.”

  He nods, bends his head again, and goes back to work.

  I close my eyes and I don’t open them again until he’s done. The quiet peace is somehow nostalgic, and I let my thoughts ramble to my family’s trip to the beach on the days before the fire.

  My father had held my hand as we watched a street vendor drop dough into a vat of hot oil. It bubbled and boiled, and finally the vendor scooped out a perfectly fried doughy treat, which he sprinkled with cinnamon and sugar and topped with syrup.

  “I bet we could make that at home,” Dad had said. It looked easy enough.

  Only it wasn’t easy. It was really difficult. The oil had popped and sizzled, and I didn’t expect that to happen, so I’d used a little water to cool it down, but that caused it to explode and burn my skin. Then the fire started, and I couldn’t put it out…