: Chapter 2
Things We Left Behind
Keep the Coat and Leave Me Alone
Lucian
By the time I pulled into the driveway of the house I hated, fat flakes had been falling for nearly an hour. I exhaled slowly and slumped against the heated leather of my Range Roverâs driverâs seat. Shania Twain crooned softly from the speakers. The windshield wipers groaned across the glass swiping away the snow.
It looked as though Iâd be spending the night here, I told myself, as if that hadnât been the plan all along.
As if I didnât have an overnight bag on the back seat.
As if I didnât have this cloying need to stay close. Just in case.
I punched the button on the remote for the garage and watched the door silently rise before me in the headlights. The services and meal had eaten up the remaining daylight hours. Friends and loved ones had lingered over Simonâs favorite dishes and drinks, reminiscing while Iâd avoided Sloane. I didnât trust myself to keep her at the necessary distance when she was wounded like this, so Iâd relied on physical distance.
I dismissed all thoughts of the blond pixie from my mind and focused on other more important, less annoying things. Tonight, Karen Walton and a few of her local friends were safely ensconced in suites at a spa just outside DC where they would enjoy a day of pampering tomorrow.
It was the least I could do for the neighbors who had given me everything.
The caller ID on my dashboard screen lit up.
Special Agent Idler.
âYes?â I answered, pinching the bridge of my nose.
âI thought youâd be interested to know that no one has seen or heard from Felix Metzer since September,â she said without preamble. The FBI agent had even less enthusiasm than I did for wasting time with unnecessary small talk.
âThatâs inconvenient.â Inconvenient and not entirely unexpected.
âLetâs skip to the part where you assure me you had nothing to do with his disappearance,â she said pointedly.
âIâd think my cooperation in this investigation should at least buy me the benefit of the doubt.â
âWe both know you have the means to disappear just about anyone who annoys you.â
I glanced again at the fanciful house next door. There were exceptions.
I heard the snick of a lighter and an indrawn breath and wished I hadnât already smoked my only cigarette of the day. I blamed Sloane. My self-Âcontrol wavered around her.
âLook, I know you probably didnât dismember Metzer and feed him to your school of highly trained piranhas or whatever the hell aquatic life you rich guys invest in. Iâm just pissed. Our useless crime boss son gave us the name, we did the legwork, but itâs yet another lead that didnât pan out.â
The longer my team worked with Idlerâs, the less annoying I found her. I admired her single-Âminded quest for justice, even though I preferred vengeance.
âMaybe he went underground,â I suggested.
âIâve got a bad feeling about it,â Idler said. âSomeone is cleaning up their mess. Iâm gonna be pissed if this keeps me from personally slamming a cell door in Anthony Hugoâs face. The only two people alive who can corroborate that Anthony commissioned a list of people for his minions to assassinate are his idiot criminal son and his idiot criminal sonâs ex-Âgirlfriend. Neither is going to win any points in front of a jury.â
âIâll get more,â I assured her. I wasnât about to let a man like Anthony Hugo walk away unscathed from hurting the people I loved.
âUntil Metzer or his body show up, weâre looking at another dead end.â
âMy team is working on untangling Hugoâs financials. Weâll find what you need,â I promised. Hugo was good, but I was better and more tenacious.
âYouâre awfully calm for a civilian who could become part of the mess that needs cleaning,â she pointed out.
âIf Hugo comes for me, he wonât find an easy target,â I promised grimly.
âYeah, well, donât do anything stupid. At least not before you get me something I can use to nail the bastard with.â
My team had already gotten her several small somethings. But the FBI wanted an airtight case with charges that ensured life in prison. I would see to it they had it.
âIâll do my best. As long as you donât contemplate making any deals that impact those I care about.â My gaze flicked next door again. The house was still dark.
âHugo is the big fish. There will be no deals,â Idler promised.
I let myself into the mudroom, the perfect organizational space for the family that didnât live here. The furniture, the finishes, even the layout of the house had changed. But even new paint, carpet, and cabinetry werenât enough to vanquish the memories.
I still hated it here.
It made no financial sense to hang on to this godforsaken place, this reminder of a past better forgotten. Yet here I was. Once again spending the night as if I could somehow weaken the hold it had on me if I just spent enough time here.
It was smarter all around to sell the place and be done with it.
It was why Iâd come back last summer. But one look at those green eyesâÂnot a soft, mossy green. No, Sloane Waltonâs eyes blazed with emerald flames. One look and my best-Âlaid plans disintegrated.
But it was time. Time to free myself from the house, the memories. From the weakness those years symbolized. Iâd risen above. Iâd made something of myself. And even if I was still a monster under the trappings of wealth and power, I had done some good. Wasnât that enough?
I would never be good enough. Not with this blood in my veins, on my hands.
Iâd made the decision to move on in the thick heat of last August. The summer swelter had made me think Iâd gotten over the painful hope of spring. Yet here I was, six months later, and the ties that had anchored me to this place felt even more restricting. I blamed Sloane for why I counted down the days until spring.
Until the trees bloomed.
I hated to think the reason for my life in DC was tied to something so pathetically fragile. That I was something so pathetically fragile. Yet every spring when those fragrant pink blooms exploded into being, my chest loosened. My breath relaxed. And my oldest enemy stirred.
Hope. Some of us didnât get the luxury of hope. Some of us werenât worthy of it.
Soon, I promised myself. Once I knew the Waltons were taken care of, Iâd sever ties with this place. Iâd give myself one last spring here and then Iâd never come back.
I flipped on the lights in the kitchen, a clean space of grays and whites, and stared at the stainless steel silhouette of the refrigerator.
I wasnât hungry. The thought of food made me feel vaguely nauseated. I wanted another cigarette. A drink. But I was nothing if not disciplined. I made choices that made me stronger, smarter. I prioritized the long game over short-Âterm fixes. Which meant ignoring my baser instincts.
I opened the freezer and grabbed a container at random. I pried off the lid of some chicken dijonnaise and threw it in the microwave to defrost. As the timer counted down, I bowed my head and let the tight leash Iâd kept on my grief loosen.
I wanted to fight. To rage. To destroy.
A good man had been taken. Another one, an evil one, had escaped without suffering his full punishment. And I could do nothing about either. With all the wealth and favors Iâd amassed, I was once again powerless.
My hands fisted on the counter until my knuckles went white and a memory surfaced.
âPlace is looking better,â Simon had told me when he wandered in through the open garage door.
Iâd been covered in sweat and dust, sledgehammering my way through drywall and ghosts.
âIs it?â my twentysomething self asked. It looked like an explosion had hit the kitchen.
âSometimes in order to build things back up, you gotta tear them down to the studs. Want some help?â
Just like that, the man whoâd saved my life picked up a hammer and helped me raze the ugliest parts of my past.
The doorbell rang, and my head came up. The anger retreated dutifully back into its box. I debated ignoring whoever it was. But the bell rang several more times in rapid succession.
Irritated, I yanked open the door, and my heart stuttered. It always did when I saw her unexpectedly. Part of me, some small, weak splinter buried down deep, saw her and wanted to draw nearer. Like she was a campfire beckoning with a promise of warmth and goodness in the dark night.
But I knew better. Sloane didnât offer warmth. She promised third-Âdegree burns.
She was still wearing the black dress and glittery belt sheâd worn to the funeral, but instead of the heels that brought her higher on my chest, she had donned snow boots. And my coat.
She pushed past me carrying a paper bag.
âWhat are you doing?â I demanded as she ventured down the hall. âYouâre supposed to be at your sisterâs.â
âKeeping tabs on me, Lucifer? I didnât feel like company tonight,â she called over her shoulder.
âThen what are you doing here?â I asked, following her toward the back of the house. I hated her here. It made my skin crawl, my stomach churn. But some sick, stupid part of me craved her proximity.
âYou donât count as company,â she said, tossing my coat on the counter. I wondered if it smelled like her or if, by wearing it, she now smelled like me.
Sloane opened a cabinet, then closed it and opened the next. She rose on tiptoe. The hem of her dress inched higher on her thighs, and I realized sheâd also removed her tights. I wondered for one brief, moronic second if sheâd taken off anything else before I forced myself to drag my attention away from her skin.
I didnât know exactly when it had happened. When the kid next door had turned into the woman I couldnât evict from my brain.
Sloane found a plate and dumped the contents of the greasy brown bag onto it with a flourish.
âThere. Weâre even,â she announced. The tiny fake diamond stud in her nose twinkled. If she were mine, it would have been a real stone.
âWhat is this?â
âDinner. You made your little point with your breakfast burrito. So hereâs post-Âfuneral dinner. I donât owe you anything.â
There were no âthank yousâ or âyouâre welcomesâ between us. We wouldnât have meant them. What did exist was a compulsion to balance the scales, to never be in debt to the other.
I glanced down at the plate. âWhat is it?â
âSeriously? How rich do you have to get to not recognize a burger and fries? I didnât know what you liked, so I got what I like,â she said, snatching a fry off the plate and polishing it off in two neat bites.
She looked tired and wired at the same time.
âHowâs Karen?â I asked.
âMom is holding up. Sheâs spending the night with a few friends at a spa. Theyâre having facials tonight and the works tomorrow. It sounds like a safe space to let her feel sad andâ¦â Sloane closed her eyes for a moment.
It was more words and fewer insults than I was used to from her.
âRelieved?â I guessed.
Those green eyes fluttered open and bored into me. âMaybe.â
âHe was suffering. Itâs natural to be glad that part of it is over.â
She hopped up on the counter, planting herself next to my fast-Âfood dinner. âStill seems wrong,â she said.
I reached around her and snagged a French fry from the plate. It was just an excuse to get closer to her. To test myself.
âWhy are you here, Sloane?â
Even as I conspired to get closer, I was still pushing her away. The dynamic was taxing on a good day. On a day like today, it was fucking exhausting.
She took another fry and pointed it at me. âBecause I want to know why my mom greeted you like you were a long-Âlost Walton today. What does she think she owes you? What were you talking about?â
I wasnât about to begin that conversation. If Sloane had any hint of what Iâd done, sheâd never leave me in peace again. âLook, itâs late. Iâm tired. You should go.â
âItâs 5:30 in the evening, you grumpy pain in the ass.â
âI donât want you here.â The truth snapped out of me in a desperate rush.
She sat up straighter on the counter but made no move to leave. Sheâd always been too comfortable with my temper. That was part of the problem. Either she overestimated her invincibility or she underestimated what raged beneath my surface. I wasnât going to let her stick around long enough to find out which.
She cocked her head, sending that long swing of blond hair over her shoulder. Sheâd changed up the tone, going from a faded raspberry to a silvery shimmer at the tips. âYou know what I kept thinking about today during the services?â
She as well as her mother and sister had spoken in front of the crowd, eloquently, emotionally. But it was the single tear that slid down Sloaneâs cheek, the ones she dashed away with my handkerchief, that had sliced me open and left me raw.
âA dozen new ways to piss me off, starting with invading my privacy?â
âHow happy Dad would have been if weâd ever pretended to get along.â
It was my turn to close my eyes. She landed the strike with expert precision. Guilt was a sharp weapon.
Simon would have loved nothing more than to see his daughter and his âprojectâ at least friendly toward each other again.
âI guess thereâs no reason to start now,â she continued. Her eyes were locked on mine. There was nothing friendly in her gaze. Only a pain and grief that mirrored my own. But we werenât going to mourn together.
âI guess not,â I agreed.
She heaved a sigh, then hopped off the counter. âCool. Iâll show myself out.â
âTake the coat,â I said, holding it out to her. âItâs cold.â
She shook her head. âIf I take it, Iâd have to bring it back, and Iâd rather not come back here.â Her gaze flicked around the space, and I knew she too had ghosts here.
âTake the fucking coat, Sloane.â My voice was hoarse. I pushed it into her arms, not giving her the choice.
For a second, we were connected by cashmere.
âAre you here for me?â she asked suddenly.
âWhat?â
âYou heard me. Are you here for me?â
âI came to pay my respects. Your father was a good man, and your mother has always been nothing but kind to me.â
âWhy did you come back this summer?â
âBecause my oldest friends were behaving like children.â
âAnd I didnât factor into those decisions?â she pressed.
âYou never do.â
She nodded briskly. There was no hint of emotion on her lovely face. âGood.â She took the coat from me and slid her arms through the too-Âlong sleeves. âWhen are you going to sell this place?â she asked, fluffing that silvery blond hair out of the collar.
âSpring,â I said.
âGood,â she said again. âItâll be nice having decent neighbors for a change,â she said.
Then Sloane Walton walked out of my house without looking back.
I ate the cold burger and fries instead of the chicken, then washed the plate and returned it to the cabinet. The counters and floors were next as I wiped away any trace my unwanted visitor may have left behind.
I was tired. That hadnât been a lie. I wanted nothing more than to take a hot shower and go to bed with a book. But I wouldnât sleep. Not until she did. Besides, there was work to be done. I headed upstairs to my old bedroom, a space I now used primarily as an office.
I sat down at the desk under the large bay window that overlooked the backyard and offered a view of Sloaneâs. My phone signaled a text.
Karen: Weâre having a wonderful time. Just what the soul needed today. Thank you again for being so thoughtful and generous! P.S. My friend has a daughter she wants you to meet.
She included a winking smiley face and a selfie of her and her friends in matching robes, all with green goop on their faces. Their eyes were red and swollen, but the smiles looked genuine. Some people could withstand the worst without it damaging their souls. The Waltons were those people. I, on the other hand, had been born damaged.
Me: Youâre welcome. No daughters.
I scrolled through the rest of my text messages until I found the thread I was looking for.
Simon: If I could have chosen a son in this lifetime, it would have been you. Take care of my girls.
It was the last text Iâd ever receive from the man Iâd admired. The man who had so foolishly believed I could be saved. I dropped the phone, my fingers flexing, and once again I wished Iâd saved the dayâs cigarette for now. Instead, I pressed the heels of my hands to my eyes, willing away the burn I felt there.
I tamped it down, picked up the phone again, and scrolled through my contacts. She shouldnât be alone, I rationalized.
Me: Sloane isnât at her sisterâs. Sheâs home alone.
Naomi: Thanks for the heads-Âup. I had a feeling she was going to try to wrangle some sneaky alone time. Lina and I will handle it.
Duty performed, I booted up my laptop and opened the first of eight reports that required my attention. Iâd barely made it through the financials on the first when my phone vibrated on the desk. This time, it was a call.
Emry Sadik.
Deciding to wallow in my misery instead of discussing it, I let it go to voicemail.
A text arrived moments later.
Emry: Iâll just keep calling. You might as well save us both the time and answer.
I had barely finished rolling my eyes when the next call came through.
âYes?â I answered dryly.
âOh good. Youâre not completely spiraling into self-Âdestruction.â Dr. Emry Sadik was a psychologist, elite performance coach, andâÂworst of allâÂan accidental friend. The man knew most of my deepest, darkest secrets. Iâd given up trying to disabuse him of the belief that I was worth saving.
âDid you call for a specific reason or just to annoy me?â I asked.
I heard the unmistakable crack and clink of his predinner pistachios shells as they hit the bowl. I could picture him at the table in his study, a basketball game on mute, the dayâs crossword in front of him. Emry was a man who believed in routine and efficiencyâ¦and being there for his friends even when they didnât want him.
âHow did it go today?â
âFine. Depressing. Sad.â
Crack. Clink.
âHow are you feeling?â
âInfuriated,â I answered. âA man like that could be doing more good. He should have had more time. His family still needs him.â I still needed him.
âNothing rocks our foundations like an unexpected death,â Emry empathized. He would know. His wife had passed away after a car accident four years ago. âIf the world was a fair and just place, would your father have had more time?â
Crack. Clink.
In a fair and just world, Ansel Rollins would have lived out his full sentence, and the day of his release, he would have suffered a painful and traumatic death. Instead, heâd managed to escape his punishment due to a stroke that had quietly ended his life in his sleep. The unfairness of it had the rage rattling that locked box inside me.
âYou havenât been my therapist for fifteen years. I donât have to talk about him with you anymore.â
âAs one of the few people on this planet who you tolerate, Iâm only pointing out that two father figures dying within six months of each other is a lot for any human.â
âI believe weâve established that Iâm not human,â I reminded him.
Emry chuckled, undisturbed. âYouâre more human than you think, my friend.â
I scoffed. âNo need to be insulting.â
Crack. Clink.
âHow did it go with Simonâs daughter?â
âWhich one?â I hedged deliberately.
Emry snorted. âDonât make me come up there in a snowstorm.â
I closed my eyes so I wouldnât feel compelled to look toward Sloaneâs house. âIt wasâ¦fine.â
âYou managed to be civil at the funeral?â
âIâm almost always civil,â I snapped wearily.
Emry chuckled. âWhat I wouldnât give to meet the infamous Sloane Walton.â
âYouâd need more than one session if you wanted to get to the bottom of whatâs wrong with her,â I told him.
âI find it fascinating how sheâs lodged herself so securely under your skin when youâre an expert at surgically removing annoyances from your life.â
Crack. Clink.
âHow did Sadieâs piano recital go?â I asked, changing the subject to one my friend couldnât possibly ignore: his grandchildren.
âIn my humble opinion, she outperformed all the other five-Âyear-Âolds with her stirring rendition of âIâm a Little Teapot.ââ
âOf course she was the best,â I agreed.
âIâll send you the video as soon as I learn how to text ten minutes of shaky footage.â
âI canât wait,â I lied. âHave you gotten up the nerve to ask out your neighbor yet, or are you still lurking behind your curtains?â
My friend had developed a crush on the stylish divorcée across the street and, by his own account, had only managed to grunt and nod in her general direction.
âThe right opportunity hasnât presented itself yet,â he said. âI would also like to point out the irony of you encouraging me to start dating again.â
âMarriage is right for some people. People like you who canât stop burning casseroles and need a nice woman to force you to stop dressing like a 1980s sitcom star.â
Headlights next door skimmed the fence that divided my backyard from Sloaneâs. I got to my feet and went to the window on the other wall that overlooked the front of her house. It looked as though Sloane was getting company whether she wanted it or not.
Emry chuckled. âLeave my cardigans out of this. Are we still on for dinner next week? I think Iâve finally figured out an opening that will tame your infuriating knight.â
Emry and I had graduated from therapy sessions to a friendship that required dinner and chess matches every two weeks. He was good. But I was always better.
âI doubt that. But Iâll be there. Now if youâll excuse me, I have work to do.â
âNo rest for the wicked, eh?â
None.
âGoodbye, Emry.â
âGood night, Lucian.â
I immediately pushed the conversation out of my head and had opened another report when the doorbell rang.
âWhy wonât people leave me the fuck alone?â I muttered as I opened my security app and found both Morgan brothers, shoulders hunched against the cold, at my front door.
On a growl, I slammed my laptop shut.
âWhat?â I demanded when I opened the door a minute later.
They tromped in, stomping snow from their boots on the entryway tile. I would clean up the puddles later, I told myself. Waylon, Knoxâs basset hound, marched inside, headbutted me in the knees, then trotted into the living room.
Knox held up a six-Âpack of beer. Nash hefted a bottle of bourbon and a bag of chips. The furry white head of his dog, Piper, poked out above the zipper of his coat.
âGirls are next door,â Knox said as if that explained everything and headed for the kitchen. âTold you heâd still be in a suit,â he called out to his brother.
I ran a hand down my tie, noting that theyâd both changed into the standard Knockemout winter uniform of jeans, thermal, and flannel.
âFigured weâd stick around to keep an eye on them to prevent another last time,â Nash said, putting Piper down on the floor and following his brother. The dog was wearing a red sweater with white snowflakes. She cast an anxious look at me and then trotted down the hall after Nash.
I closed the door and resisted the urge to knock my head against it. I didnât want company. And I didnât want to be drawn into whatever drunken escapades Sloane and her friends got themselves into. âLast timeâ had involved Naomi and Sloane getting heroically drunk and âhelpingâ Lina catch a bail jumper with their wits. Well, with Naomiâs wits and Sloaneâs spectacular tits.
I was still furious Iâd missed that.
âI have work to do,â I said.
âThen weâll just watch a movie with explosions quietly while you run your evil empire,â Nash said cheerfully.
They helped themselves to paper towels and glasses, then wandered into the living room, more comfortable here than I had ever been.
The room was staged with a family in mind. There was a deep sectional couch and an upholstered ottoman facing a large flat-Âscreen TV. The white bookshelves that lined one wall had plenty of space for books, games, and photos.
There hadnât been any family photos here when I was growing up. At least none past my midteens when everything had gone to hell.
âYour security cameras get any good angles on Sloaneâs place?â Knox asked.
âI donât know,â I hedged. âWhy?â
âWouldnât put it past them to sneak out to build an army of snowmen in the middle of the highway,â Nash explained.
âIâll see what I can do.â
I headed back upstairs and grabbed my laptop, but not before peering out the window into the gloomy winter night. Sloaneâs bedroom lights were off. Iâd spent too many nights wondering why sheâd kept the room sheâd grown up in instead of moving into her parentsâ room. I hated how many questions I had about the woman I didnât want to care about.
On a testy sigh, I cued up the security feed that I staunchly refused to open. The one that angled toward Sloaneâs front door and driveway. It was a point of pride that I never looked at it, even when I felt homesick for a home that had never been mine.
Hearing the brotherly banter in the living room, I reluctantly changed into sweats and a T-Âshirt, then shoved my feet into the sherpa-Âlined house slippers Karen had given me two Christmases ago. I clomped back downstairs where I found my friends and their dogs lounging comfortably on the sectional.
âHeâs human,â Nash observed when I walked in.
âOnly on the outside,â I assured him.
He had taken two bullets this summer when his name had landed on that list of obstacles for Anthony Hugoâs crime syndicate in the DC area. After a few hairy months, Nash had managed to pull himself out of a downward spiral with the help of the stunning, monogamy-Âaverse Lina.
While heâd convinced her to let him put a ring on her finger, I was still attempting to convince her to work full-Âtime for me. She was smart, devious, and better at managing people than she gave herself credit for. Iâd win eventually. I always did.
I dropped down on the couch and opened the laptop to the camera footage. âHere,â I said, angling it toward the brothers.
âPerfect,â Knox said.
âWhat are we watching?â I asked.
âNarrowed it down to Shawshank or Boondock Saints. Your choice,â Nash said.
âBoondock,â I answered automatically.
Knox cued it up while Nash poured the bourbon. He distributed the glasses and held his aloft. âTo Simon. The man all men should aspire to be.â
âTo Simon,â I echoed, keenly aware of a fresh stab of grief.
âThink Sloane will be okay?â Nash asked.
I crossed my arms and pretended I didnât get that nagging little rush whenever someone mentioned her name in my presence.
Knox shook his head. âItâs a tough loss. She held up today after Luce here force-Âfed her a burrito.â
Nashâs eyebrows rose as he cut a look in my direction.
âNot a euphemism. It was a literal burrito,â I explained.
âSloane would break his euphemistic burrito in half,â Knox predicted with a smirk. It disappeared quickly. âNaomi thinks sheâs gonna have a rough time and try to hide it.â
âAnd Naomi is usually right,â Nash pointed out.
âLet me know if thereâs anything she needs,â I said, automatically distancing myself from the responsibility of looking after her.
Knox smirked. âLike a burrito?â
I glared at him. âLike moral or financial support that can be provided from a distance. My burrito wants nothing to do with Sloane Walton.â
âYeah. Keep telling your burrito that,â Nash said, picking up his phone. He winced. âGreat. Lina just texted. The girls are making margaritas.â
Knox put down his bourbon. âFuck.â