There he is.
 
 Towering. Barefoot. Panic-stricken.
 
 I stop in the doorway, blink once, and let out a stunned, involuntary bark of laughter.
 
 He’s holding Rosie in the air like she’s Simba from The Lion King, except she’s wailing, he’s sweating, and there’s poop everywhere.
 
 I mean everywhere.
 
 “I looked away for two seconds,” he says, wild-eyed. “She exploded. It’s on the walls, Lena. The walls.”
 
 There’s a distinct brown smear trailing from the changing table down the leg of his jeans and onto the floor.
 
 I lose it.
 
 I try not to, I really do, but the laugh that rips from my throat is involuntary and slightly unhinged.
 
 “Don’t laugh,” he says, holding Rosie further away like that’ll stop the damage.
 
 I hold up my hands. “Okay, okay, I’ll take her. I’ll shower her in the main bathroom. You go shower too and…burn your clothes.”
 
 To his credit, he looks like a man on the brink.
 
 He passes her over like she’s radioactive, and I cradle her gingerly, trying not to gag. Her onesie is a war crime. My hand squelches, and I black out briefly.
 
 “Right,” I say, steeling myself. “To the bathroom we go.”
 
 I take Rosie into the main bathroom and set her down on a towel while I strip off her disaster of a onesie. She giggles and immediately tries to crawl toward the toilet.
 
 “Nope,” I tell her, hauling her back and grabbing a washcloth. “Not today, Satan.”
 
 I get the water running and test it until it’s warm, then plop her carefully into the tub.
 
 There’s poop in her curls. Her actual curls.
 
 I rinse, scrub, pray, and repeat.
 
 By the time Wes walks in again, freshly scrubbed and wearing clean black jeans and nothing else, I am sweating and soaked.
 
 He tosses his ruined t-shirt into a garbage bag.
 
 I glance up from where I’m crouched next to the tub.
 
 And yeah. I gape. Because, well, it’s impossible not to, and he’s not wearing a shirt.
 
 Wes is a lot. Broad shoulders. Defined chest. A tattoo I didn’t know existed peeking from under his collarbone.
 
 And abs. Lots of them.
 
 My eyes linger too long. I know they do because when I drag them away, it takes the emotional strength of a thousand therapists.
 
 It’s only my third week here. I’m not allowed to have thoughts like that.
 
 He quirks an eyebrow. “You good?”
 
 I clear my throat. “Peachy. She’s all clean.”
 
 “You’re a warrior. She should have come with a manual.”