Authors: Joey W. Hill
Damn it. God damn double fucking
shit on a brick
damn it.
Everyone was nicked and dinged to a
certain extent by
the natural progress of life. He’d
understood that Rachel
was badly damaged. The pain she’d
felt from years of
emotional estrangement from her
spouse, then from the
devastating loss of her son, had
resulted in a meticulously
constructed life that revolved in a
peripheral way around
people, passing inspection, but not
attracting attention. The
yoga and the physical therapy were
ways she could offer
parts of herself while continuing to
protect the wounded
center too raw for intimacy of any
kind.
He remembered how she kept the
photo album in her
wardrobe. She had lots of
acquaintances, but no real
friends. She’d found her way to the
center of the merry-go-
round of life, where she could be
dazzled by the colors and
lights, enjoy watching the pretty
ponies, but she was never
on the ride herself. Because people
saw her, most didn’t
see that she wasn’t moving with them
—just watching from
her stil point.
It made him realize that he might
know her better than
anyone, since the whole purpose of
his weekly visits to her
yoga class over the past year had
been to study her, to
analyze why he was increasingly
more attracted to her. And
she’d stil been able to fool him, keep
him on the outside al
that time.
His fist curled on his thigh, as he
again recal ed that
instant transformation, from the
quietly wounded yet strong
and outrageously sexy woman, to a
cringing, insecure and
pathetic creature, a version of herself
he sensed she’d
once been ful time. He wanted to rip
Cole to pieces, but it
was far easier to destroy a human
body than the memories
it had inflicted upon her.
That was the key, wasn’t it? How to
overpower those
memories. He’d known from the
beginning he needed to
close the deal fast, that she would
keep erecting shields
faster than he knocked them down. As
Matt had said, he’d
had to break them apart, make it
impossible for her to
resurrect them.
So sure he would be her shield until
she had the faith and
confidence in his love to stand
without them, he’d taken her
to the club. He’d broken them apart,
al right. In his
arrogance, he’d never anticipated
something like this. And
now she was defenseless against the
pain of her own soul
that she’d spent years trying to
survive.
Fucking hell.
He’d picked up his
bolt cutter and was
flipping the handle out and back
while he rocked on the
stool. Now he tossed it back down on
the workbench with a
resounding clang against the metal
frame. He didn’t care.
He was going back over there. If he
had to break down the
damn door, he’d do it. She wouldn’t
cal the police. He
knew she wouldn’t. And if Mrs.
Lowery did, Rachel wouldn’t
let them haul him off to jail. Maybe.
Of course, that was why
Matt paid Ben the big bucks. He
could bail him out.
“You missed our usual post-club
midnight dinner.
Giuseppe had some outstanding
limoncel o tonight.”
Jon turned toward the open window
to the porch and the
familiar voice, finding Matt sitting on
the sil . His boss was
stil wearing slacks and dress shirt,
but he’d lost the coat,
the col ar of the shirt open and
sleeves rol ed up. He
dropped the takeout bag on the floor
and brought both legs
inside, bracing them in a comfortable
splayed position as
he tossed Jon a cold import from the
smal cooler he also
had with him.
Even immersed in a project, Jon
usual y detected any
visitors pul ing into his drive, no
matter the hour. But he
expected his senses were a bit off
tonight. He’d cal ed
Peter after leaving her place and fil
ed him in, and had
known Peter would pass the current
status on to the others,
but stil he was surprised to see Matt.
“I’m going fucking insane. I can’t stay
here and do
nothing.”
“You aren’t doing nothing. You’re
thinking. And from what
I know of your mind, that’s the energy
equivalent of a ful
army on the march. She’s al right for
now.”
Reaching into his pocket, he
produced a smal black
revolver, and laid it on the nearest
worktable. “She keeps it
tucked between her towels in her
linen closet. From the
bluing on the muzzle, Max thinks she
probably hasn’t pul ed
it out of there since…since she used
it last.”
Jon stared at it, then at his boss and
mentor. “I saw how
she reacted to Savannah at the club,”
Matt continued. “So
when Peter told me what happened, I
had Max take
Savannah over. Rachel didn’t want to
talk, but she let
Savannah in. She let her tuck her in
and sit by her bed until
she fel asleep. My baby’s spending
the night on her couch,
keeping an eye on her through an
open door.” Matt gave
him a faint smile. “You’l owe me for
that. I don’t sleep
without her. Once Rachel was
asleep, Savannah looked
through her things, found the gun. I
could have sent Max in
to do it, but Savannah knows her way
around firearms.
Plus, a woman would have a better
idea where another
woman would keep a gun. Once she
found it, she gave it to
Max and he brought it to me.”
Jon found his voice at last. “How did
you know about it? I
hadn’t told anyone.”
Matt lifted an unapologetic shoulder,
pul ed out a bread
stick and pushed the bag toward him
with his foot. “I watch
after my people, Jon. When you
started getting invested in
Rachel Madison months ago, I knew
the signs. So when
you made your move last week, I had
her name run through
a couple of my contacts.”
“Wow.” Jon ran a hand over his tired
face, digesting that.
“Some part of me feels like I should
be pissed off. But
considering you were able to step in
where I fucked up, I
guess it would al be ego.”
Matt snorted. “Of al of us, you’re
guided the least by your
ego. It’s why you excel at diplomacy
when things get real y
heated. But you do have one, Jon.”
He lifted his beer,
quirking his brow. “Despite our
teasing, we al know you
have as big a dick as the rest of us.
And you didn’t fuck up,
by the way. You couldn’t have
anticipated what happened
tonight.”
Jon surged off the stool, moved
restlessly around the
workshop. “I should have. That’s the
way these things work,
Matt. We both know that. We’ve seen
things crop up during
a strategy session that bug us, but
because of other
priorities we don’t cover them the
way we should. Then,
sure enough, they bite us in the ass
when we least expect it.
I’ve been racing against a clock, and
the whole time I’ve
had that niggling feeling I was
missing something vital by
taking things at that speed, and sure
enough, there it was.”
He gave a short, harsh chuckle.
“There’s a reason for those
seemingly contrived coincidences we
see in the movies.
Fate doesn’t like deception or loose
ends, and has a way
of putting them right in your face.”
“So you had a setback, that’s al . You
fal back, regroup,
plan a different strategy. Do you think
she loves you?”
“She wants to. And I know I love
her.” Jon stopped at one
of his unfinished projects, a
modification to a CNC arm
that, if he figured out the right
programming, might be able
to increase their production rate at
the plant in Honduras.
He laid his hand on the cool metal,
stared at it. “It’s been
growing in me this whole year, since
I met her. As great a
life as I have, the hour or two a week
I spent in her classes
made it al ten times better. I think
I’ve memorized every
expression she has, the way she
moves, the way she
smel s…
“That first class, when she laid her
hands on my forehead
during the
nidra
—a closing ritual for yoga,” he added,
knowing Matt preferred boxing at a
gym for his workout
regimen, “I swear everything in me
just went stil . She works
me up, gets me hard and hot with a
look, but she can also
make everything in me go stil and
quiet as wel , a sense of
absolute peace, a balance. She walks
the same paths I do.
She’s the one. But I’m afraid that
waiting so long to bring
that to fruition has made me push
things too fast, and I’m
using how it was for al of you to
justify my own impatience.
And as a result, this has happened.”
“Hmm.” Matt moved to the stool near
his, bringing the
ignored takeout bag. Pul ing out two
containers of food, he
sent a pointed look at the other stool
until Jon returned to it.
Then he slid one container over to
him, tossing a set of
metal utensils next to it. At Jon’s
look, Matt grinned.
“Rosalie always tel s me to bring
them back for the next
takeout order. She knows how I hate
to eat with plastic.”
Jon shook his head. “Savannah
should worry about the
relationship you have with that
woman. I’m going to tel her
you have a culinary affair going on
with a seventy-two-year-
old Italian grandmother.”
“Savannah has no problem as long as
it keeps me from
demanding that she cook for me. Not
that I’d ever be that
brave.” Matt flashed his teeth. “My
stomach is not iron-clad.”
“And pissed-off women who commit
murder prefer
poison as the weapon of choice.” Jon
gave a half chuckle,
but then he sobered. The food smel
ed good, and knowing
Rachel was safe, that Savannah was
with her, did help.
Matt would have known that. He
knew how to bring out the
best in his people, give them the right
environment to do
their best work, or in this case, their
best thinking. As
always, Jon wondered if Matt was a
reincarnated
Machiavel i—with a kinder heart and
a Texas drawl.
“Out of al three women,” Jon said
thoughtful y, “Savannah
has the most of what Rachel has,
doesn’t she? That pain so
wel contained, it’s like a bomb. The
night you detonated it
for Savannah, you went for a
completely control ed
environment. I should have done that.
She just always
wanted to experience a place like
Surreal. But I wasn’t
expecting her ex to show up and set
off the charge like
that.”
“As you said, you can’t run from
Fate. Plus, you tend to
excel at handling the unpredictable.
You handled it the right
way, even though you don’t feel like
that now, because she
outmaneuvered you at her apartment.
Expect some shit
from Ben on that, by the way.”
“I’m sure. Remind me to pul out my
underused ego and
gloat like a damn peacock when his
heart final y takes a
fal .”
“I’d like to see that,” Matt said, his
dark eyes serious.
“Ben needs that in his life. The last
thing I’d ever accuse
Ben of is being maudlin. He’s as
practical and live-in-the-
moment as they come. But…”
When he shrugged, Jon finished it.
“He’s starting to feel
lonely, watching al of us find our
other half. It’s like he’s a
foster kid again, watching al the other
kids with parents
who love them.”
“Yeah.”
Jon knew when it happened for Ben,
he wouldn’t gloat.
None of them would. They’d do
exactly what they were
doing for Jon now. They’d give Ben
everything they had to
make sure he found that inner peace
that came when a
man found the answer to al of it in
one woman’s eyes.
Everything he was or wanted to be
became about her, for
her. She was a comfort zone, where
everything was
possible.