Authors: Aliyah Burke
my life and I was happy before you came back into it.” She
tried to pull away but he narrowed his eyes and held tighter.
“Look, James…Maverick…whatever you want to be
called. I don’t want to do this anymore. No more of your damn
drama. I don’t want any more calls from your mother. I don’t
want the drama. I can’t take it!” Her chest heaved.
“What the fuck are you talking about? My mother?” His
tone dropped below freezing.
“The late-night calls she graced me with, telling me how
happy you were that
Talli
was carrying your baby!” Her
shoulders rose and fell. “She even called me Sarah Whitehall.”
Tempest shuddered. “Apparently when dealing with you, I’m
required to take trips down memory lane.” She glared up at
him. “And I’m tired of taking those. I’m thirty-five and I feel
over sixty. Please,” her voice filled with exhaustion, “just go
away.”
Strength and a surprise jerk allowed her to escape his
touch. The second she was alone, Tempest sat down behind the
stairs, the light casting her in shadow, and cried.
_
Maverick seethed. He wanted to hurt his parents and
Talli
for what they were trying to do. His fists clenched as he
ground his back teeth in frustration.
How the hell is this going to work when it seems the whole
world is against us?
The loud noise around him penetrated the haze that had
settled around him. Maverick glanced back at the table where
his friends were. He managed a grin; they were having a
wonderful time.
Ambling his way back toward them, he retook his seat.
Hondo met his gaze. “How you doing?”
Maverick shrugged. “Apparently, my mother called her
and told her to stay away from me and that
Talli
was pregnant
with my baby and how happy I am about it.”
“Damn,” Hondo muttered. “That’s harsh.” The others
echoed the sentiment resoundingly.
In silence, Maverick drummed his fingers on the scarred
yet smooth tabletop. Whipping out his phone, he placed a call.
No one at the table said a word as he made another
immediately after.
Closing his phone with a snap, Maverick looked around
the table and said, “I’ll be back in two days, three tops.” He
smiled grimly and headed to the bar.
Maverick spoke loud enough to be heard over the orders
and music. “Dakota.”
His son looked at him dispassionately. “What?”
“Tell your mom I’ll be back in about three days. I’m
going to straighten all this out.” He swallowed as Dakota
positioned himself directly across from him.
“That woman…is it true?”
Maverick wanted to cry. His son was giving him a
chance to explain. “If she is, it isn’t mine.” He searched a
younger version of himself for acceptance.
One short nod. “Okay.” Dakota tossed the rag on his
shoulder, an action so mimicking his mother. “Do what you
have to; I’ll tell her.”
“Thank you. Thank you for trusting me.” Maverick
headed for the door, sending his teammates a two fingered
salute as he passed them.
_
Maverick climbed into the Chrysler 300 at the airport
and proceeded to head for his hometown. He’d already
acknowledged he was emotionally exhausted; and since he’d
yet to confront his parents and
Talli
, that didn’t bode well for
the rest of the trip. Hell, he wasn’t even sure if
Talli
would be
back in South Dakota yet.
I don’t know, but I’m not putting
anything past her.
As he drove through the small town, people stared at his
vehicle. He was glad for the tinted windows hiding his
identity. He didn’t wish his parents to get a heads-up he was
back home. Maverick pulled into the driveway and parked the
car. Taking a moment, he searched for strength to deal with
this without losing control.
Without.
Inside his body, he was beyond furious at the extent his
parents were willing to go to keep some control over his life.
He was going to give them a chance to tell their side, but there
was no way in hell he would believe their lies.
Climbing out, he walked to the house, went up the steps,
and knocked on the front door. The door opened a short
moment later and brought Maverick face to face with Dawn
Lonetree
.
“James,” she said with a smile. “It’s wonderful to see
you.” She hugged him and he returned the embrace, albeit
stiffly.
“
Aho
, Ina
.” He followed her into the house. “Where’s
Ate
?”
“He should be home anytime. Is that your new car? Did
you get rid of your bike?” His mother stared at him with
guileless eyes.
“No, that’s a rental. I still have my bike.” Maverick
looked around his parents’ home. It seemed a total contrast to
Tempest’s house.
Tempest. He wanted to go back to her. Hold her and
never let her go.
She sent him a soft smile. “Are you home for a while
now?”
His mother. She was a doppelganger, for all her ability
to turn from loving mother to screaming harpy in a matter of
seconds. He loved her; but at that moment, he didn’t like her or
his father at all.
“Just here to get some information. I have to be back to
work.”
“Information?” She sat down. “About what?”
Maverick opened his mouth to say something when the
door behind him swung wide to admit his father into the
house. The two men met gazes but remained silent. While his
father crossed the room to say hello to his mother, Maverick
watched him. His father was getting older and there seemed to
be a darkness surrounding him that Maverick didn’t recall
from before. It was like his face had a permanent scowl upon it;
and while his father had been a serious man, he hadn’t been
like that.
“
Aho
, Ate
,” Maverick said after his parents reunion
ended.
“James. Good to see you.” His father stuck out his hand.
Maverick shook the offered hand and wondered how he
was going to do this without losing his temper.
What excuse can they actually give that would appease me?
Nothing. So why am I trying to be nice about this?
“I need to know something from the two of you,”
Maverick began. “I want you to think very carefully about the
answer you give me.” He waited until his father sat down as
well before continuing.
“I want to know what it is you have against me being
with Tempest. Why did you call her and fill her head with lies?
Why would you try to keep me from my son and why would
you tell
Talli
to find me and tell me I was the father of her
child? I’m in no way the father of her child and we
will
be
doing a paternity test on that.”
His parents blanched.
“I want to know!” Maverick thundered. “The two of you
have been messing in my life and I want to know what your
reasons were for. Tell me!”
“Don’t yell at us,” Rodney
Lonetree
ordered.
“To hell with you and your demands,
Ate.
This is my
time. You two are un-fucking-believable! What reason do you
hate her so?”
His parents watched him carefully and Maverick knew
his plan of keeping his cool had vanished like meat on a bone
given to a pack of dogs.
Robert stood and faced him. “How do you know that
Talli
isn’t carrying your baby? You did sleep with her.”
Rolling his shoulders, Maverick ran his tongue over his
teeth. “You’re absolutely right. I did sleep with her; but one, I
wore a condom and two, and I never ejaculated in her. She
didn’t do it for me. So whoever knocked her up, I know it
wasn’t me.” He watched his father’s face fill with panic. “Good
thing we’ll be taking a paternity test, then, so we can discover
who the
real
father is.”
“What do you hope to gain from doing this, James?” his
mother asked all traces of loving mother gone and in its place
was harpy-mom.
“I will gain my family, the one I want not the one you’re
trying to cultivate for me. Tempest is my future. She and
Dakota. Now, answer my question. Why the hell would you do
something like this to us? Why would you want me to be
unhappy?”
Nineteen
“Dakota Falcon
Burnell
!” The screeched filled the house.
“You’d better get out of your room and prove to me that this is
nothing but a load of shit.” She shook her hand that contained
a handwritten note.
There was no response.
“Dakota!” Tempest banged her fist on his bedroom door.
Nothing.
She took another look at the note she held crunched in
her fingers. Maybe it would all be a hoax. Her son’s writing
leapt off the paper.
Mom,
Please don’t be mad, but I’m going to South Dakota. I’ve got a
flight so by the time you read this I’ll be there. Maverick said to tell
you that he wants you to have faith and he loves you. I know what
I’m doing. Besides, Dad will be there.
Dakota
Tempest dropped to her knees and sat in silence. Her
heart was shattered; this was the first time Dakota had called
James “Dad”. And it was for this.
“I have to go back,” she whimpered. “I have to go back
and face my past. I don’t care if Dakota has the entire damn
United States Marines with him.
I
have to protect my son from
the evil that lives in those hearts.”
Pushing up from the floor, Tempest snarled, “Damn
you, James, for bringing this shit into my life!”
She called
Mili
and explained what was going on. As she
shoved some things into a bag, she called the airline to grab the
first flight.
Hours later, Tempest was in a foul mood as she climbed
into her car rental. Her stomach clenched with fear and nausea.
Sweaty palms gripped the wheel as she drove off in the
afternoon towards a town she’d hoped never to set foot in
again.
_
Maverick paced the floor. His parents had tried to give
him excuses. He was beyond furious; but for the moment,
they’d settled into an uneasy silence.
It was all for the good and future of the tribe.
Talli
was a
good woman for him, they said. They claimed that while they
were
sure
Sarah…Tempest…was a nice enough person; they
believed he could do much better.
Maverick wanted to beat them both for their bigoted