âIâm busy.â I glare at Danny and Tristan in the hallway.
Unfortunately, Lucy, the traitor, has other ideas. She leaps all over the two of them, begging them to come inside. I feel slightly appeased that their custom-made designer suits are being slobbered over.
Danny pets Lucy. âYour security is rubbish. A welcoming guard dog and an unlocked front door.â
âAnd?â I shrug. âIf anyone decides to rob the place, theyâll find me here. Iâd be happy for the boxing practice.â
He strolls past me into the lounge area. Tristan follows.
âDidnât you hear Iâm busy?â I mutter.
âFuck off.â Tristan snorts. âWhat are you doing then?â
âIâm babysitting.â
He narrows his eyes on me.
âPoppyâs in the garden.â
Tristan looks out the window to see my seven-year-old niece.
âSheâs the only company I can tolerate right now,â I say wryly.
They follow me into the kitchen.
âWere you working today?â Tristanâs lips quirk. âYou can never tell with you since you dress like a fitness instructor rather than a CEO.â
I wave off his words. âWhatâs the point of being a CEO if you canât wear what you like? Anyway, I worked from home today.â
Danny eyes me. âSince when do you work from home? You look rough. Very buff but rough. Is that all youâre doing nowâpunching the shit out of a boxing bag?â
âAnd my trainer. There are worse things I could be doing for stress relief.â
âTrue.â He shrugs. âIâm glad youâre hiding here rather than out banging women like you usually do when something goes wrong.â
âIâd rather have my dick slammed in a door than pick up a woman.â There would always be women. Plenty of women. But I had no interest in another pointless night with a woman I had no connection to.
He pauses and glances at Tristan before turning his attention to me. âSo, are you going to keep us hanging? Your messages were a little cryptic. Have the police taken him in for questioning yet?â
âNo.â I open the fridge and rummage through the mountains of meat to find three beers.
âWhy not?â Danny asks.
I lean against the open fridge. âI havenât told them about Bonnieâs dad yet.â
âWhy not?â Tristan prompts.
âI donât fucking know, mate,â I snap, slamming the fridge door closed. Ignoring them, I flip the lids off the beers with an opener.
Danny leans over the kitchen counter to take a beer. âI think you do know.â He pauses, studying me. âWhen did you see her last?â
âFour days ago.â An uneasiness fills my gut. I didnât plan for us to have rough sex. Hell, I didnât even plan for her to come to my house. âItâs over. Iâve nipped it in the bud.â
âYouâve nipped it in the bud?â Danny barks, folding his arms over his chest.
âDo you hear yourself?â Tristan chips in, inspecting me through slanted eyes. Iâm not in the mood for their little tag team pep talk. âSo, what, thatâs it? Youâre not going to try to work through this?â
âI donât tolerate liars,â I say through clenched teeth.
Danny sighs. âI donât know the girl well but Iâm sure she was just scared, Jack.â
âShe lied to me for weeks. Maybe years.â I let out an angry laugh. âWho the fuck knows?â
Danny shakes his head, frowning. âPeople make mistakes. Thatâs how relationships work.â
I glare back at him. âSince when are you the morality police?â
He swears under his breath. âHasnât she been punished enough? Youâre not the only one who has lost a parent here. Bonnie might never be able to have the same relationship with her dad.â
âThatâs not my problem anymore,â I bite back. âI donât trust her. If she told me we would have worked through it.â I rub my neck, agitated. âI donât blame her for her dadâs actions, I blame her for lying to me. I disclosed everything to herâwhat Wicks said, what was happening with the barmaid, and she still lied to my face. She might never have told me if I hadnât found the ring.â
âOkay.â Tristan nods. âI get that. But you can be a little intimidating sometimes, Jack. Especially about this. She was probably scared to lose you.â
âBollocks,â I sneer, taking an angry swig of beer. âNow, are you done with the intervention? Because you two arenât very good at it.â
Danny smiles. âNo, weâre not done. People donât always react how you want them to, Jack. Sheâs not a puppet.â He shoots a look at Tristan. âRemember how volatile Charlie and I were when we first started dating? But I love her, so I didnât give up.â
âYou and Charlie didnât have to work through a murder, Walker.â
His brows lift. âYouâre not the only one having to deal with this. Donât you think she needs you too right now? This is a terrible situation for her to be in.â
My jaw tightens. âShe should have thought about that before lying to me.â
âFuckâs sake, mate, you sound like a broken record,â Tristan says. âYou saw the news article of you two, right? You were caught fighting in the street.â
âAnd? Iâm in the news all the time.â
âBonnieâs not. Sheâs not used to the media circus that surrounds you. You deliberately tried to protect her from it. Now youâre gonna feed her to the sharks?â
âIt was just a random person who saw an opportunity,â I grumble. âThe story has already died.â
Tristan frowns, cocking his head at me. âYouâve already lost one of the most important people in your life. Are you really willing to lose Bonnie as well?â
I look away. They donât get it. Sheâs not the woman I thought she was. All the times she made me believe I was the most important guy in the world to her, with those big blue eyes and that soft voice, she was keeping something massive from me.
She made me believe that we were serious. That she loved me. I confided in her. I would have told her anything. I would have given her everything.
But you donât lie this big to someone you love.
And no matter how much her tears are haunting me, my nan was right. If I canât trust Bonnie, I canât lay a foundation with her.
They exchange glances then Danny sighs and shakes his head. âYouâre a stubborn shit, Knight. You and Lucy can sit here farting. Youâll regret this sooner than you think.â
Bonnie
âAre you ready, love?â Mum wraps her arm around me.
No. Iâll never be ready for this. We stand on the steps in front of the Hackney police station in East London.
I told Dad we were going to the police today if he didnât do it. I know he thinks Iâm bluffing, that his little girl would never do this to him. My dad always said that I was the person that kept him going.
Would I still be after this?
Perhaps, Iâll be able to sleep a little easier.
At least Mum knows. Iâve never needed Mum so badly.
âWeâre doing the right thing.â She looks at me supportively. âYour father will realise that.â
My stepdad Phil doesnât think heâll do time. It would likely be a suspended prison sentence if anything.
But heâs neglecting the fact that Dadâs opposition is the Knight family, and they have connections.
I smile sadly at her. Regardless of what sentence Dad does or doesnât get, he wonât forgive me for this.
I take her hand and climb the rest of the steps to the station.