: Chapter 31
Things We Left Behind
The Fuck Fest Is Over
Lucian
Well? What did you find out?â I demanded, coming to my feet when Nash strolled into his office.
âChrist, Luce,â he said, flicking on the lights. âItâs 7:00 a.m. on a Thursday. At least let me have a cup of coffee before scaring the shit out of me with the lurking villain routine.â
âSomeone is threatening one of the people youâre supposed to protect and serve, and you want a good nightâs sleep?â
Iâd barely slept. Weâd spent the night at my place, and while Sloane had curled comfortably into my side and passed out within seconds, Iâd run through each and every probability and possible outcome. When I settled on the most obvious answer, Iâd slipped out of bed, triple checked the alarm, and tried to sweat out my anger at the gym with Shania Twain in my ears.
I was still sweating and still furious.
She was acting as though it was just some practical joke played in poor taste. Clearly her ability to take dangerous situations seriously had not improved since she was a teenager.
Bad things happened. Good people got hurt. She knew this first-Âfucking-Âhand. Yet I seemed to be the only one taking this seriously.
Nash sighed as he shrugged out of his coat. âI wonât waste my breath giving you the usual âpolice businessâ speech since you never listen, and if some asshole was threatening Lina, I wouldnât be in the mood to mind my own business either.â
I ignored the comparison. Sloane and I were fucking. That was the entire extent of our relationship. âTell me what youâve done so far.â
Nash shoved a mug under the coffee maker and stabbed irritably at the buttons. âThey were feeder rats. You buy them frozen at pet shops to feed to snakes. So far no leads on where they were purchased. Bannerjee will be knocking on doors in the neighborhood today to see if anyone saw anything suspicious. You want coffee?â he asked, looking me up and down.
I had enough adrenaline in my system. I didnât need a hit of caffeine. âI want answers.â
The corner of my friendâs mouth lifted.
âIf you feel like doing something, talk Sloane into one of those video doorbells. Maybe a couple of those cameras. Itâll deter anyone from trying something like this again.â
âSheâs getting an entire security system, and Iâm not about to waste time discussing it with her. What else do you have?â
Amusement flared in his eyes as he took his time settling in behind his desk.
âThe way it looks, thereâs two theories. One, our little librarian pissed off someone who feels like letting her know about it. First the note, now this. Theyâre warnings. Vague ones. Itâs not exactly like someone forced her into the trunk of a car or took a shot at her.â
I knew Nash well enough to understand he wasnât insinuating that there was no actual threat. He knew better than any of us what kinds of darkness could fester beneath the surface.
âAnd your other theory?â I asked.
Nash leveled me with a cool gaze. âYou two start spending time together, and suddenly someone has a problem with Sloane. Could be a coincidence. Could be related.â
It was the same conclusion Iâd drawn around the 5:00 a.m. mark.
âYou make enemies faster than friends. Somebody could have been paying attention and seen you two together. An ex-Âlover, an old business partner, a crime boss youâre going head-Âto-Âhead with. And judging from your expression, youâve already thought of that.â
It was possible that Iâd gotten careless and put Sloane in Anthony Hugoâs sights.
I sat perfectly still, ignoring my mind screaming that I needed to get up and take action. At one time, Iâd gone still to remain invisible. Now I did it because stillness reveals nothing to enemies.
Iâd underestimated Hugo. While Iâd been playing games with his tracking device and tails, Iâd played right into the manâs hands, serving up the perfect incentive for him to use against me.
âYouâre doing that stone-Âfaced thing,â Nash observed.
âWhat stone-Âfaced thing?â I snapped.
âThe thing where you look like youâre constipated and really pissed off about it. You go all stone-Âfaced when youâre having feelings you donât want to have.â
âIâm not having feelings,â I insisted a little too loudly.
He put down his coffee mug. âLook, man. For what itâs worth, I donât see Anthony Hugo driving up here and dumping a bunch of rat corpses on Sloaneâs doorstep. He doesnât go for subtle.â
âWe both know heâs got an army of criminals eager to do his bidding.â
âWe donât know that Hugo has anything to do with this. It could have just as easily been Marjorie Ronsanto, who gives the library shit on a weekly basis. Or some idiot hormonal teenager who didnât want to pay his late fees.â
âOr it could be Anthony Fucking Hugo. Iâd expect you of all people to take this seriously.â
No one seemed to be properly upset about this. When Iâd gotten out of bed, Sloane had rolled over, buried her face in my pillow, and asked me to bring her back a doughnut. Now Nash was placating me like I was an overly concerned citizen.
âLook, Luce, I get it. You care and youâre worried. Weâll keep her safe. Between you, me, and the rest of the department, no oneâs gonna get near her.â
I shook my head. âIâm going back to the city,â I decided.
If I was what had drawn Anthony Hugoâs attention to Sloane, then Iâd be the one to draw it away.
âYou sure about that?â my friend asked.
âYou donât need me here interfering in your investigation,â I said flatly.
âAs if thatâs ever stopped you before.â
âMaybe Iâm choosing to listen to reason this time.â
His eyes narrowed. âOr maybe youâre turning into a pile of chickenshit in my office.â
âWeâre not in a relationship. Weâre fucking.â Even saying it out loud had my muscles tightening.
âI love you like a brother, so hear me when I say donât fuck with Sloane,â Nash warned.
âShe knows the score,â I said.
He shook his head. âYouâre an idiot.â
âWhy do people keep telling me that?â
âBecause even IâÂan emotionally stunted Morgan manâÂcan see that youâve got feelings for her. You always have. And now that youâre close to finding something real with her, youâre gonna hightail it back to the city and pretend youâre not scared shitless that sheâs in danger. If Lina were in trouble, thereâs nothing that would stop me from standing between her and that trouble.â
âIf Lina were in trouble, sheâd kick it in the balls and sharpen her nails in its eye sockets.â
âSloaneâs not like Lina. She gets riled and she goes off half-Âcocked,â he reminded me unnecessarily.
âThatâs not my problem.â Hot acid was eating its way up my esophagus.
âIt was once. I went through Ogdenâs old case files after dinner the other night. Sloane was the unnamed minor Ansel Rollins attacked, wasnât she? Thatâs how she broke her wrist.â
âShe didnât fucking break it. He did,â I said, getting to my feet. âAnd if you want details, youâll have to ask someone else, because I wasnât fucking there. I was in jail.â
âGot sprung the very next morning though, didnât you?â he pressed. âInteresting coincidence, donât you think? That sheâs championing the cause of the wrongfully imprisoned.â
âKeep her safe,â I said coolly and headed for the door.
âI meant what I said,â Nash called after me. âDonât fuck around with her.â
âI wonât,â I muttered under my breath as I stormed out of the police station, already dialing my phone.
âWhereâs my doughnut?â Sloane pouted.
She was wearing my T-Âshirt, pouring coffee in my kitchen, and looking adorably disheveled. Something clenched awkwardly in my chest. A wave of possession knocked me off balance. I wanted this. Her. And I couldnât have it. Not when being close to me made her a target.
âI didnât bring you one,â I said flatly.
âMean. What did Nash say? Did anyone report a rat heist?â
I took the mug out of her hand. âYou should go.â
âWhy? Whatâs wrong? Your face is all weird. Oh God. Did something happen to Meow Meow?â
There was only one button of Sloaneâs I knew how to push to make her walk away. âThereâs nothing wrong with your cat. I just donât want you here.â
âThatâs not what you said last night,â she said smugly.
âYou can keep the shirt,â I said, scanning her from head to toe, careful to keep my expression impassive.
âOh no, Lucifer. Iâm not going anywhere until you tell me why mere hours ago, you were begging me to make you come, and now youâre Mr. Freeze.â
âI remembered all the reasons I donât like you.â
She snorted. âNice try. You never forgot them in the first place.â
âI spoke to Nash. He dug into my fatherâs arrest record and connected some dots.â
She remained silent.
âYou jumped willingly into a dangerous situation.â
âSo did you every time your parents fought,â she pointed out.
âThatâs different. It was my responsibility. You never should have been there. I never should have told you what was happening. Itâs bad enough that he ruined your plans. He could have ended your life. And you went over there willingly.â
Sloane crossed her arms over her chest. âBecause you loved her. Because you wanted to keep her safe. And because I couldnât stand another minute of you being locked up for a crime he committed.â She spoke softly, firmly.
âHe broke your wrist in three places. You had to have surgery. All your plans, your dreams, everything gone because you couldnât listen to me and do the right thing.â
Snap.
My freedom wasnât worth that. My life wasnât worth that.
Snap.
âLucian,â she said carefully.
âWhat?â I realized I was yelling. I didnât raise my voice like him. I didnât have to. âWhat?â I repeated quietly.
âIâm sorry for not listening to you when you asked me not to call the police. I had no idea that would happen. But Iâm not sorry for what I did to get you out.â
I turned my back on her so I wouldnât be tempted to shake some sense into her, decades-Âold panic and anger rearing their ugly heads.
âI still feel sick about what happened that night, what I saw, what you must have lived with for so long,â she continued. âI know how lucky I am that things didnât end differently. Iâve wasted a lot of time over the past several years thinking about the what-Âifs. What if Iâd gotten there too late? What if he hurt my dad? What if heâd gotten away with it? But I have never once regretted the way things worked out. He went to jail, and you got out. Justice was served.â
I turned to face her even though I didnât want to look at her. âThereâs no such thing as justice,â I spat.
âThat sounds like a conversation neither one of us has time for.â
âYou have someone actively threatening you. Not only did you not think to mention it to me, youâre also not taking it seriously. Itâs fucking selfish again.â
She gasped and the fight in her eyes flared to life. âSelfish? You think me putting your father in jail so everyone would know who the real monster was is selfish?â
âYou deciding you know whatâs best for everyone is selfish. You refusing to take the bare minimum of safety precautions once again is selfish. You putting yourself in danger is selfish.â
She took a step toward me and laid her palms on my chest. âYouâre really starting to piss me off, and I donât like to be pissed off on Thursdays because itâs Lunch Swap Thursday, and I like Lunch Swap Thursdays. So Iâm going to say this. Iâm sorry for my part in all of it. Iâm sorry for not doing what you needed me to do or not being what you needed me to be. Iâm sorry for making it seem like Iâm not taking these threats seriously, because I am. Iâm freaking the fuck out that someone decided to throw a pile of dead rats on my front porch! Now can we talk about whatever this is like adults, or are you going to double down on shoving your head up your ass?â
She was yelling by the end of her tirade. Her chin jutted out as she glared up at me. I wanted to kiss her. To lock her in a bedroom and keep her safe. I wanted to shake her until her teeth rattled and she saw reason. That she never should have gotten involved. That once again, being close to me had brought her up against danger.
But this time, I could do something about it.
âI need to get back to the city, and you need to go home,â I announced. âThis little fuck fest is over.â
âDoubling down, I see,â she quipped. âFine.â
She gripped the hem of the T-Âshirt she wore and dragged it over her head. Sloane Walton was naked in my kitchen. I wasnât sure how many fantasies of mine had started that way, but it was at least a thousand.
âKeep the shirt,â I insisted.
âIâd rather walk home naked,â she snapped.
Weâd spent too much time doing this. Fighting then finding our way back to each other only to blow up again. We were like magnets drawn together in one moment before we were reversed, repelling each other the next. But this time, it needed to be permanent. This time, I needed to blow it up forever.
I followed her to the coat rack. She snatched her parka off the hook and slid her arms into the sleeves in quick, jerky movements.
âPoor broody boy with his big cock and all that emotional baggage.â
She hopped on one foot and yanked a snow boot over the other.
âYou can at least get dressed,â I said dryly.
âThanks, but Iâd rather burn it all than look at it again and think of you.â
She was playing with fire. I was angry and she was pushing buttons like a toddler in an elevator. She was either oblivious to my anger or brashly confident in her nonexistent abilities to protect herself.
âI spent enough of my life with a woman who had no sense of self-Âpreservation. Iâm not doing it again. Not when I have a choice in the matter this time.â
She stopped midhop and glared up at me. Fury snapped off her like sparks from a bonfire.
âDonât you ever compare me to your mother. And while youâre at it, have fun spending the rest of your life alone because youâre too fucking stubborn to learn to do better.â
âAs long as I donât have to deal with you on a daily basis, I look forward to it. I pity your future husband.â
Sloaneâs laugh was sharp and humorless. âI wouldnât waste any time thinking about me or my future husband if I were you. Because Iâm going to forget you ever existed.â
âGood luck with that.â
But she didnât hear me because sheâd already slammed the front door behind her.
I whipped it open and stepped outside. âA security company will be coming by this afternoon to install cameras at your place,â I called as she stormed toward her house.
âIf they have anything to do with you, then theyâre not getting anywhere near my property.â
âDonât be a stubborn idiot.â
âYou already have the monopoly on that!â
She made it to her driveway and had just started for her front porch when she thought better of it and marched toward the garage door.
âIf you see anything that feels off to you, call Nash. Immediately.â
âSell your damn house, assface!â
Emry: Does this suit make me look like I should have laid off the cookies a few decades ago?