IÂ keep Kennedy in bed for the next three days.
Unfortunately, itâs not as hot as it sounds, because sheâs bruised and sore and her pain pills knock her out cold. But I take care of herâI fluff her pillows, cook her food. Okay, Harrison does the actual cooking, but I bring her the food.
I also help her batheâand thatâs a fresh kind of hell.
Because with two cracked ribs, sex is off the table. I canât even eat her out, because I know making her come will give her just as much pain as pleasure. She tells me itâll be worth it, but I stick to my guns.
Until day five, when the sexy vixen takes matters into her own hands. Literally.
We were in bed, in the still darkness of night, and Kennedy proceeded to describe, in full, filthy detail, all the things she wanted me to do to her. Things she couldnât wait to do to me. Then she begged me to show herâto take my cock in hand and make myself come.
On her.
And I folded like a pornographic deck of cards.
On my knees, hovering over her, I panted and groaned, imagining that it was her hand stroking me hard. But her hand was busy between her own legs, rubbing her clit, driving her glistening fingers in and out, in time with my own fist. I painted her tits that night, and she impressively demonstrated that she was healed enough to handle an orgasm.
So of course I spend the better part of day six with my mouth attached to her pretty cuntâto make up for lost time.
But by day seven, sheâs antsy. Sick of television and too wired to work. I call the troops to my place for dinner. Harrison watches the McQuaid Monsters over at Jake and Chelseaâs so they can come. Stanton arrives with Sofia, and the baby bump that could apply for its own zip code now. Brian and Vicki show up too. I introduce them to the rest of the squad, and we all eat pizza at the dining room table.
After dinner, we hang out in the living roomâthe guys watch the game while the girls talk baby announcements and bridal showers.
âItâs going to be a brunch,â Sofia tells Kennedy, about the bridal shower sheâs throwing for Chelsea. âNot too big, because Jake and Chelsea are antisocial.â
âHa!â Chelsea grins. âLetâs see how social you and Stanton are after this little delight is born. Then multiply that by six.â
âYou really should come,â Sofia tells Kennedy and Vicki. âItâs going to be funâ mimosas and naughty bingo. Since they already have all their household stuff, everyoneâs bringing lingerie for the wishing well.â
Jakeâs eyes light up. âYes, you two should definitely come. The more the merrierâfor me.â
âWhen is it?â Kennedy asks Sofia, pulling up her calendar on her phone.
âThe twenty-third.â
Kennedy clicks her tongue. âI wonât be able to make itâIâll be in Vegas on the twenty-third.â
Spiders of unease scurry up my arms and across my back.
âWhat are you talking about?â I ask.
Kennedy meets my eyes across the room, and as casually as if sheâs giving the weather forecast, she says, âThe trial starts in two weeks. Theyâre handling the pretrial motions without me, but Iâll have to fly out in a few days.â
I put my beer on the coffee table and give her my undivided attention. âBut . . . youâre not trying the case anymore.â
She frowns. âOf course I am. Why wouldnât I?â
I gesture to her arm, her swollen eye. âYouâre hurt.â
âNo, Iâm healing. By the time the trial starts Iâll be back to normal, except for the cast.â
My heart beats against my chestâwanting to bust out and shake her.
I get to my feet. Because I argue better on my feet, and I have a feeling this is about to spiral into one hell of an argument. âKennedy . . . thatâs . . . fucking crazy. Did the concussion knock you stupid?â
âExcuse me?â
âHe tried to kill you.â
She stands up slowly, her spine rigid and shoulders back. âBut he didnât. And itâs my case.â
âTheyâll assign another prosecutor.â
âNoâthey wonât. Because I wonât let them. Moriotti is trying to scare me away, and Iâm not going to let him. He doesnât get to take this from me.â
My fingers press against my temples, and my voice rises. âHoly shit, Kennedyâheâs not a schoolyard bullyâheâs a goddamn psychopath, with the means and motive to put a bullet in you. And youâre going to walk into his territory to give him the opportunity? Why donât you just draw a bullâs-eye on your forehead!â
I must sound as panicked as I feel, because her posture softens. Her voice fills with calming sympathy. âItâll be okay.â
She reaches out to stroke my forehead, but I jerk it away.
âYou donât know that! Fucked-up things happen all the time!â I point to Sofia. âShe was in a plane crash, did you know that? With her whole familyâand it was just dumb luck that they didnât die.â I gesture to Chelsea. âAnd Chelseaâs brother, he and his wife were just driving home and they were killed, Kennedy. They had six kids who needed them, and they died.â
I rub the back of my neck, scrub my hand over my face, trying not to totally lose it. âAnd I was just a kid; a dumb kid who got his leg ripped off for no reason at all. Bad things happen even when youâre carefulâeven when you donât deserve them.â
âThis is my job, Brent.â
âItâs a job you donât need! You have more money in your trust fund right now than youâll ever make as a prosecutor.â
âThat doesnât matterââ
My voice drops lower. âI get thatâI do. You took this job because you needed a purpose. A reason to get out of bed every day.â I grip her shoulders, bend my knees and look into her eyes. âBut you have me now. We can be each otherâs reasons.â
She gazes at me like Iâm breaking her heart. Noâlike her heart is breaking for me.
Thereâs a difference.
âYou are my reason. And all I want in the whole world is to be yours.â Kennedy puts her hand right on top of my heart. âBut I have to see this through.â
Goddamn it!
Something in me fucking snaps, because sheâs not listening. Sheâs too damn stubborn. Too fucking fearless. And if I canât change her mindâit could get her killed.
âIf you go, weâre done,â I say coldly.
âBrentââ Jake warns, but I throw up my hand.
Kennedy flinches. Then she searches my face, hunting for a sign that Iâm bluffing. âYou donât mean that.â
âYes, I fucking do. Iâm not going to sit here and drive myself crazy worrying about you. Iâm not going to spend the rest of my life mourning you after you get yourself killed. You do this, weâre fucking done.â
A small faraway voice that sounds suspiciously like Waldo whispers that this is wrong. Manipulative. But I tell him to go screw himself, âcause Iâm doing this to keep her safe.
âIâve made promises to people, Brent.â
Her expression is weighted with hurt. Maybe even a little fear. Like I havenât just dented her armor, but wedged a crowbar in there and cracked it wide open, exposing all her most vulnerable parts.
But Iâm not going to feel bad about that.
âThen break them. Promises are broken every damn dayâitâs the way of the world.â
âThere are witnesses who have risked their lives to testify against Moriotti. Whoâve gone into Witness Protection and given up everything, because I held their hand and told them it was the right thing to do. Because I swore I would put him away. And now . . . you just want me to turn my back because things are getting a little uncomfortable?â
My face feels hard, frozenâan ice sculpture image of myself. âYes. I want you to turn your back and run the other way.â
She shakes her head softly. âI canât . . . I canât believe youâre making me choose.â
âWell, I am. And if that makes me an asshole, I donât give a shit.â My fingers squeeze her upper arms. âIâm asking you to choose, and I am begging you . . . to pick me.â
The entire room goes quiet. I donât think anyone even fucking breathes.
Then Kennedy cups my jaw in both her hands. And her voice is hushedâthe way youâd talk at a funeral. âI love you, Brent. I really love you, and I know you love me. But I wonât be the woman you love anymore if I donât do this. And if we can justââ
I donât hear another word after that. Because Iâm already walking out the door, slamming it behind me, leaving the frame splintered.
I wander the city for an hourâor threeâbecause Iâm afraid of what Iâll say to her if I go back too soon. But when I finally do make it back, I donât have to worry about that.
The house is dark. Empty.
Sheâs gone.