The knock on Toriâs door had a smile pulling at her lips. She knew it was Samantha. Her friend had messaged to say she was five minutes away. That had been about fifteen minutes ago.
âItâs unlocked.â
Even if it wasnât, Samantha had a key. The woman was probably just trying to get Tori off the couch. A place sheâd found herself way too often lately.
The door burst open and Samantha entered. She was like a ray of sunlight with her bright blond curls and beaming smile. It was one of the things Tori loved about her.
Samantha dropped onto the couch beside Tori. âCare to share why my three texts went unanswered today.â
Tori scoffed. âThree? Try ten.â
âUh-huh! You did see them.â
Of course she had. Every one of them.
Reaching beside her, Tori lifted her tea. Her now cold tea. âYes. I did. I didnât think pictures of cats wearing shark costumes required responses.â
Samantha sighed. âYou disappoint me, my friend. Those hilarious images that I scoured the Internet for and individually selected for your entertainment definitely deserved a response.â
The pictures had made Tori smile. Something she hadnât been doing a whole lot of during her empty days. She wouldnât be telling Samantha that though. The woman would send another twenty tomorrow.
âIâm more of a dog person.â Tori reached over and patted Charlie. He was always close by. Just the way she liked it.
âWell, at least you didnât try to tell me youâve been busy. We all know watching Friends reruns does not qualify as busy.â Samantha took the tea from her fingers, taking a sip before Tori could warn her. Samantha spluttering half of it back out. âWhat the heck? This is stone-cold.â
Tori tried to hide her chuckle. âI wouldnât say stone-cold. Definitely not hot though.â
It was also the third cup of tea sheâd let go cold that day. Another fun fact she wouldnât be sharing with her friend.
Samantha placed the cup on the coffee table. âThatâs it. This needs to stop right now.â
âWhat needs to stop?â Her daytime TV watching or drinking cold tea?
âAll of it,â Samantha said, basically reading Toriâs mind. âLucky for your unemployed butt, my boss needs someone to complete a job for him. He mentioned it to me, and I suggested you.â
That had Toriâs lethargic brain shooting to alert. âYour boss has a job that you suggested me for?â
âYep.â
Tori straightened, not sure she was hearing her friend properly. âSamantha, youâre a biomedical engineer. You work for some government department doing military research. Your current project is so secret, you canât even tell me what youâre doing.â
âThatâs correct.â
âWhat could your boss possibly want with an unemployed Army dropout.â
A small frown marred Samanthaâs brow. âYouâre not an Army dropout. You served your two terms, now youâre having a break.â
Yeah. But at what point did a âbreakâ just become âunemployedâ?
âWhatâs the job?â
âHe mentioned he needs someoneâa womanâto bring in a target. Some guy whoâs a threat to the military.â
âSammy, Iâm not a cop.â
âHe knows who you are. The department did crazy-thorough checks on everyone in my life when I got the job.â
Yeah, Samantha had mentioned that a few times, and Tori still didnât love it. Still, this request was completely different from anything sheâd done in the military. âWhy did you suggest me?â
âBecause youâre a woman. You know how to defend yourself. And you need a new direction. This could be it.â
She nibbled her lip. âWouldnât someone in his position have the ability to choose the best in the business for something like this?â
Samantha lifted a shoulder. âMaybe after I told him you could do it, he stopped looking. He wants someone skilled in subterfuge. Someone who knows how to tell the truth without giving away any actual information, especially personal.â
Giving away nothing personal would be easy. What would she say? That she was bored? Grieving? Had absolutely no desire to live the life that she used to live?
âAnd he knows Iâm all these things because heâs done a background check on me too?â
âTori, this project Iâm working on is massive. It will change everything. They have to do their due diligence and make sure me and the people around me are trustworthy.â
Didnât change her opinion on the matter of privacy.
âJust come talk to Hylar. This job is right up your alley. You love taking down bad guys. Itâs why you joined the Army.â She covered Toriâs hand with her own. âPlus, Iâm worried about you.â
Oh god. Tori had been waiting for this. She knew it was only a matter of time before she got âthe chatâ from her friend.
âItâs been six months since your mom passed away.â
Tori tried unsuccessfully not to flinch at Samanthaâs words. She would never get used to the reality of her mom being gone.
She swallowed. âI know how long itâs been, Sammy. Just like I know itâs been almost two years since yours passed away.â
Samantha didnât flinch at all. Sheâd always been stronger than Tori.
âIâve had more time to come to terms with it than you.â
Was it possible to come to terms with the death of a parent? Both Tori and Samantha were born into single-parent households. Neither had a father around to soften the blow.
âWhen we met in the oncology ward at the hospital, I knew weâd become best friends. Youâre the badass to my geek. So Iâm entitled to be worried about you.â
And Tori had been unbelievably grateful to have met Samantha ever since. The one good thing to come out of that place. âIâm okay, Samantha. Itâs been hard,â unbelievably hard, âbut Iâm surviving.â
âI know. And I want to help you in any way I can.â
âAnd getting me a job taking down some big bad criminal is you helping me?â
Some of Samanthaâs spunk came back. âHell yes, it is. I want to see your badass side come out again.â
Tori frowned. âWhatâs wrong with my sitting-on-the-couch-drinking-cold-tea side?â
Samantha wrinkled her nose. âLetâs not go into that right now.â She reached for the remote. âIâm glad weâve decided youâre taking the job. Maybe this will turn into something long term for you.â Samantha flicked to the Netflix main page.
âHey! I was watching that.â
âAnd now youâre not.â Her friend popped her feet onto the coffee table, the half sun tattoo on her right ankle poking out from below her pant leg.
Tori shook her head. âFine. But no science documentaries, okay?â
âBoo, youâre no fun.â
Toriâs eyes popped open. For a moment, she just lay there. Taking in the dream. The memory. Her mind working overtime to analyze everything sheâd just learned.
Samantha worked for Hylar. Thatâs how Tori had become entangled in all this. Had her friend realized who she was working for?
Tori shook her head. No. Over the last few days, memories had slipped into her consciousness. Memories of Samantha. Of their friendship. Tori may not remember everything about her friend, but she knew enough.
Samantha wouldnât have put Tori in danger. Not intentionally.
Climbing out of bed, Tori walked over to the window. She pushed back the curtain and looked up at the moon and stars.
Where are you, Samantha? Are you searching for me? Are you worried? Or are you as lost as I am?
God, she hoped her friend was safe. But she worked for Hylarâthe man Oliver called his enemy. Chances were slim.
As she watched the stars, she let the other part of her dream wash over her.
Her mother was dead.
Toriâs heart seized in pain. She couldnât remember her mom. She couldnât even tell someone what color the womanâs eyes were. But Tori still felt the weight of the loss.
A tear slipped down her cheek. If there was a time she needed a best friend or a mother, it was now.
A feeling of complete loneliness hit her like a ton of bricks. For the last week, Oliver had been friendly but distant. She was living in his house but not sleeping in his bed. She felt like an unwelcome guest. Like someone he was keeping a close eye on, rather than someone he was trying to help and protect.
Sheâd considered leaving more than once. But it was impossible. The man was always there. Watching. Listening. He hadnât said she had to stay, but she felt it all the same. He needed to know her truth as much as she did.
There was also the small part of her that didnât want to leave. That was choosing the company of a man who saw her as a threat over the loneliness of being out in the world on her own.
Another tear fell.
Oliver had probably woken at the sound of her climbing out of bed, but he wouldnât come in. Sheâd gotten up to watch the stars almost every night. The man never checked on her.
At least now she knew. Sheâd almost drugged Oliver because theyâd told her he was a threat. Sheâd thought she was completing a job for a government agency.
Oliver wasnât a threat. And they werenât the government.
Would he want her again if she told him about her latest memory? Would she earn back some of his trust?
No. Oliver had made it clear this last week that he didnât want her any longer. That their one night together had been a momentary lapse in judgment.
More tears fell. Tears for the loss of her mother. Tears for the loss of her best friend. And tears for the fact that sheâd fallen for a man who didnât feel the same way.