Scythe & Sparrow: Chapter 10
Scythe & Sparrow: The Ruinous Love Trilogy
Rose
Fionnâs sitting in the armchair, a bag of disgusting-looking dehydrated vegetable chips in his lap, his crochet project tucked at his side, his legs crossed at the ankles on the ottoman as a new reality-dating show plays on his TV. His shorts come just above the knee but theyâve ridden higher with the way heâs sitting. Since when have I been attracted to a guyâs legs? Since now, I guess. His are all tanned and muscly with just the right amount of hair thatâs bleached from all his time running in the sun. I want to touch them. But of course, I donât. I also want to tell him that itâs so fucking sexy that heâs sitting here with his yarn not even hiding the fact that heâs as into Surviving Love as I am. Why is that sexy? I have no fucking idea. But here we are.
âVal and Mitchell better win this thing, or Iâm going to be pissed,â he says as his favorite couple appears on the screen.
I tamp down a grin, pretending to focus on my own crochet project, which I guess will be a sex swing after all because why not? Sandra called the other day to let me know that her husband was making me a frame, even though itâs probably not going to see much use since Iâm on the driest dry spell ever. âI think Dani and Renegade are going to win.â
Fionn snorts. âRenegade. What kind of a fucking douchebag name is that?â
âA made-up one.â
âMy point exactly. He deserves to lose for the name alone.â
âHate it all you want, Doc. Heâs still going to win.â
Fionn gives me a piercing glare and I grin. God, I love that expression on him, when his eyes go lethal, their blue darkening to a deeper hue. Thereâs a hunter in there somewhere. I just know it. I can imagine him letting that beast out to play. Chasing me. Catching me. Holding me down and tearing my clothes andâ
A notification comes through on Fionnâs phone, a sound I donât recognize. He whips it from the side table and frowns at the screen. A look of shock passes over his face and he darts to his feet, scattering his dried veggies across the floor.
âFucking Barbara,â he hisses.
I grab a crutch and hop up onto my good foot. âYeah, fucking Barbara. Letâs fuck her up,â I say, whipping my knife from the sheath at my back. âWhoâs Barbara?â
âThe raccoon.â
I blink at him as Fionn pockets his phone and strides to the table to grab his truck keys. âAww, I donât want to fuck her up. She sounds cute.â
âTrust me, sheâs not so cute when sheâs gotten into the medication cabinet. Or the break room. Or basically anywhere.â Fionn marches to the door and throws it open, then turns to give me a questioning look over his shoulder. âWell? Are you coming or what?â
He smiles, and itâs so bright, so beautiful, maybe even just a little bit unhinged, that I feel like Iâm lit from the inside. I sheathe my knife and grab my other crutch and hobble toward him. His grin grows even more magnetic, a feat that doesnât seem possible. I pass him to step onto the landing, and before I can attempt the stairs, he sweeps me up with a strong arm across my waist and doesnât set me down until weâre next to the truck.
âShe might look cute,â he says as he helps me up into the vehicle, âbut donât let her deceive you. Sheâll tear your face off to get what she wants.â
I force a mischievous grin as he settles my injured leg into the footwell, trying not to think about what it might be like for him to toss me around when he lifts me so effortlessly, or what his hands might feel like gripped so tightly to my hips that he leaves fingerprints on my skin. âAre you talking about me, or the raccoon?â
Fionn huffs. âBoth, probably. So I guess youâll be evenly matched.â
He tosses my crutches onto the back seat and jogs around to the driverâs side, throwing the truck into reverse the moment itâs started so he can peel out of the driveway with a squeal of tires.
âSo, how did you come to name a raccoon Barbara, anyway?â I ask as we turn onto Main Street.
âKind of randomly, to be honest. It just seemed to suit her.â
âAny idea how the hell sheâs getting into the clinic?â
âWitchcraft is my guess,â Fionn says as we watch a pair of state troopers drive in the opposite direction. We turn off Main Street and onto Stanley Drive, the side street where the clinic is located. I twist in my seat and watch as the troopers continue on their path. âThey must be opening the search for Eric at Humboldt Lake. From what I heard, thatâs his favorite fishing spot.â
I swallow. âWhereâd you hear that, exactly?â
âOne of the search volunteers. He came to my clinic yesterday.â Though Iâm not looking at him, I can feel Fionnâs eyes bore into the side of my face. âWhy? Whatâs wrong?â
âThe shopkeeper at Shireton. He saw me and Eric talking when Eric bought bullets and I bought my knife. He knew Eric wasnât about to go fishing.â
âGerald. Yeah, I know him.â Fionnâs hand is a sudden warmth over mine, and I search his face when he breaks his gaze from the road to glance at me. âIf Gerald was going to say something, he would have done it by now. Of anyone who could have drawn a connection between you and Eric, heâs probably the least likely to bring that to the cops. He plays by the rules, but it doesnât mean he has any fondness at all for law enforcement. Itâll be okay.â
I sit back in my seat. I know enough about the area now to know that Humboldt Lake is about twenty miles out of Hartford, in the opposite direction of Weyburn. That puts it at least a good forty or fifty miles from Ericâs watery tomb at the bottom of the Platte River.
By the time we park at Fionnâs clinic, the burst of adrenaline from seeing the police vehicles has subsided. Maybe itâs a false sense of security, but knowing the authorities are focusing their attention so far off course, I feel a measure of relief. I canât say Fionn feels the same. Not with the way his brows knit together, or the momentary pause he takes when he exits the vehicle to look back toward Main Street as though the cruisers might appear. When he comes to my side to help me down, the smile he gives me is a faint echo of the one from his doorstep only a few minutes ago.
âDonât worry,â he says. âAs long as no one else realizes he was intending to hunt and not fish, heâs going to be hard to find. And even if they do, who knows where he might have gone.â
âIâm not worried.â I probably should be. Iâm sure thatâs what Fionn is thinking too. But something about it feels right, no matter what happens next or what consequences I might have to face. Sometimes, I think right might not be good. And wrong might not be bad. Even before I joined Silveria Circus, Iâd started to question what kind of people drew those lines around our lives, and whose benefit those boundaries are really for. Because the more women I meet like me, the more I believe the rules were never made with us in mind.
With a single, decisive nod, Fionn passes me my crutches before grabbing a backpack from the rear seat. When we get to the entrance of the clinic, he brings up the app on his phone, disarming the security system before he checks each of the internal cameras. âI donât see her,â he says as he pulls the keys from his pocket and unlocks the door.
âIs there a back entrance?â I ask, and he nods. âIâll take the keys and go in that way. We can corner her. Or, if weâre lucky, sheâs already gone.â
Fionn levels me with a flat look as he drops the keys onto my waiting palm and then slides the backpack from his shoulder to rummage through its interior. He passes me a pair of gardening gloves. âTrust me. Sheâs not gone. Sheâs lying in wait to ambush us.â
âOkay,â I say as I shift my shoulders back. âWhereâs the comms device?â
Fionnâs eyes narrow as he hands me a beach towel.
âWalkie-talkie? Riot gear? Lasers? Surely you brought lasers, right? Youâre not expecting we can take down an assassin raccoon with nothing more than a towel, are you?â
Fionn pulls on his own gloves and sighs. âJust ⦠be careful.â
âCopy that.â
I grin at Fionnâs exaggerated eye roll and pocket the keys before I pull the gloves on. With the towel tossed over my shoulder, I make my way to the back of the clinic, making note of any potential entry points where Barbara might be gaining access into the building. A vent near the peak of the roof catches my eye, and though the grill looks like itâs in place, Iâd be willing to bet money that sheâs figured out a way to get past it.
âYou might be tricky,â I say to myself as I unlock the door, âbut youâre not circus-level tricky, Barbara.â
I step inside the air-conditioned building, shutting the door behind me with a quiet snick. The storage room Iâve entered is silent and dark. To my right, there are shelves with boxes of office supplies and latex gloves, masks and paper towels. To my left is an unlit hallway that must lead toward the exam rooms.
âMarco,â I call out as I flip on the storage room light. I lean my crutches against a wall and shift some boxes on a shelf, half expecting the raccoon to jump on my face. âMarco.â My phone buzzes in my pocket, and I pull off a glove and check the device.
I grin at the screen and pocket the device before taking up my crutches and starting toward the corridor.
And then I hear it. A rustling in the distance.
I dart as fast as I can to the mouth of the darkened corridor and lock eyes with the raccoon.
Barbara stands upright on her hind legs. Neither of us moves. She looks at me as though weighing her odds for coming out of a fight on top. And then, with her beady black eyes pinned to mine and her front paws folded against her chest, she walks on her back legs into the room at the end of the hall.
âOh my God. Thatâs both creepy and adorable. Barbara, get back here.â I chase after the sound of her chattering call, losing my momentum when the towel slips from my shoulder and tangles around my crutches. Thereâs a momentary clattering of tiny nails on stainless steel, but all has gone eerily quiet by the time I regain my balance and make it to the darkened threshold. When I hit the light switch and look around the staff break room, Barbara is nowhere to be seen. âWhat the hell â¦? Doc ⦠Doc â¦â
Fionnâs rushing footfalls draw to a halt just behind me. âNo, Rose,â he says, his voice desperate. âSheâs drawn to sound.â
I pivot to face him and roll my eyes. âDoc, you make her sound like a fucking velociraptorââ
âDuck!â
I turn just in time to see an angry ball of fur launching toward me from a shelf just above eye level. My crutches fall. My hands fly to my head. I dodge and spin on my good foot to watch as Barbara connects with Fionnâs face.
I toss the towel over them both.
âWhy?â the mound of squirming towel laments.
âSorry, Doc. So sorry,â I say, though it doesnât sound super sincere when I canât help but laugh. I grab what I hope is Barbaraâs scruff as she growls her protests and Fionn releases a string of Irish-accented expletives. As soon as Iâve got her pulled off his face, he stumbles backward, his hair disheveled and his neck red with bloodied, crisscrossed scratches.
âWhat the fuck.â
âIt worked,â I reply with a shrug as Barbara continues to squirm in my grip. âYouâre welcome.â
âIâm going to have to get rabies shots.â
I turn Barbara toward me and she screeches and squirms, trying to take a swipe at my face. âI mean, she doesnât look rabid. But I donât know shit about raccoons.â
âWell, Iâm not going to take my chances and end up barking at my shadow, thanks,â he says as he levels me with a stern look. When Barbara growls, Fionnâs glare softens into worry. Even though he looks like he wants to hold on to his irritation, he canât seem to. âLet me take her for you.â
âNah, Iâve got a good grip on her. I donât have faith this hostage transfer would go well. Sheâs spicy,â I say as she punctuates my words with frustrated barks. âJust pass me a crutch and stuff one of those trail mix bags into my pocket.â I nod toward a basket filled with very Fionn-esque healthy snacks. âIâll let her out the back while you get your battle wounds cleaned up.â
Fionnâs brows knit, a crease notched between them. âAre you sure?â
âItâs the least I can do. Thanks for taking a raccoon to the face for me.â
Fionn canât help but snicker as he slides his gloves off and drops them on the counter. He takes the package of trail mix and hooks a finger into my pocket. Fionn Kane does not flirt with me. Or at least, he tries his best not to. But his eyes donât leave mine as he slides the treat into my pocket and says, âIt wasnât really by choice. But Iâd take a raccoon to the face for you any day, Rose Evans.â
Blush rises in my cheeks as I smile. And I know he likes it. I can tell by the way his gaze drops to my lips and lingers there. I consider calling him out on it, throwing a question or two out into the open to see what happens next as he bends to retrieve one of my crutches. But before I have the chance, there are three loud knocks at the front door of the clinic.
Fionn pats down his shorts, and that moment of unexpected playfulness vanishes from his eyes as they dart in the direction of the front of the building. âShit. I left my phone at the front desk. I have no idea who that is.â
âIâve got Barbara, donât worry about it. Go ahead, Iâll be totally fine.â
He gives me a doubtful frown and three more knocks rap at the door. With an exchange of reluctant nods, we part ways, him toward the front of the clinic and me toward the rear with a single crutch and an irate trash panda. When I get to the back door, I wait until itâs closed behind me before I lean the crutch against it, using my free hand to fish the trail mix from my pocket. I open it with my teeth and scatter the contents on the concrete walkway before setting Barbara down, using the towel as a flimsy barrier between us to keep her from backtracking and chomping on my legs. She looks like she considers it too, at least until I shoo her away in the direction of the food. With a final glare in my direction, she starts picking up peanuts and raisins with her dexterous little paws.
âSo cute yet so murdery,â I say, stuffing the gloves in my back pocket. âI think weâre kindred spirits, Barbara.â
She growls.
âRight. Enjoy your snack. Iâm totally going to tell Dr. McSpicy youâre getting in through the vent for giving me that ungrateful attitude.â She looks up at me with her beady little eyes. âOkay, fine. I wonât. But you need to check those manners next time.â
I leave the crusty raccoon to her meal, grabbing my crutch before I reenter the clinic. Iâm halfway down the hallway before a single text from Fionn stops me short.
I dart into what must be Fionnâs office as the light for the corridor flicks on and a familiar voice booms from the direction of the waiting room.
âApologies, Dr. Kane. I know the clinic is closed and all, but I saw your truck out front and the lights on, so I thought Iâd take my chances. Itâs just that my eye is a little sore, and I was wondering if you wouldnât mind just taking a quick look. Save me all the trouble of driving out to Weyburn.â
âOf course, Mr. Cranwell,â Fionn says, but his voice is pinched, his tone clipped. âWeâll take Exam Room Two.â
I linger in the shadows, staying out of sight in Fionnâs office as he leads Matt to the exam room across the hall. My hand passes behind my back. I slowly pull my blade free of its sheath.
âSo, tell me about what happened,â Fionn says. Paper rustles as Matt gets up on the exam bed.
âLong story, Dr. Kane. Not an entirely interesting one either. Got some cocktail sticks lodged in there.â
âYouâre sure that doesnât make for an interesting tale?â
Matt huffs a laugh, and the fine hairs at the back of my neck raise. âMaybe for another day.â
Fionn hums a thoughtful note, and then thereâs silence, I imagine as heâs pulling off the eye patch and examining the healing wound. âHow long has it been since the injury?â he asks, despite knowing the answer.
âAbout three weeks.â
âAnd youâre still having pain?â
âYes.â
My hand tightens around my blade. That one simple word is delivered like a lie. I could give him real fucking pain. Take the other eye and make him beg for mercy. Realistically, would I probably puke everywhere if I did? Yes. But it would be worth it.
âHowâs the farm?â Fionn asks, pulling me out of thoughts of murder and chaos. âWife and kids?â
âSame old, same old,â Matt replies, and thereâs a hidden thread of darkness in the jovial tone of his words, as though heâs telling himself a clever joke. âHow about yourself, anything new and exciting in the world of Dr. Fionn Kane?â
Fionnâs reply is delivered with clinical detachment when he says, âNothing much to report.â
Matt chuckles. My guts churn at the sound. I donât know whether to burst out of the shadows and slash Mattâs fuck-ugly throat or chase after Barbara to hide out in her trash panda den. âThatâs not entirely true, is it? I understand youâve got visitor staying with you. Someone not from around here. A woman with a broken leg.â
âWord certainly does get around among small towns, doesnât it.â
âHowâd she run into such a spell of trouble to wind up at your house?â
âMr. Cranwell,â Fionn says on a sigh. âYou know Iâm not at liberty to discuss a patient with you.â
âIâm not asking about her condition. Iâm asking about how she got there.â
âConsidering sheâs not here to answer for herself, Iâm not about to detail her circumstances to someone sheâs never met.â Thereâs a pause. I imagine Fionn giving him a stern look. I can picture with perfect clarity the way his eyes can turn as sharp as the cutting edge of a polished gem, so beautiful but still able to draw blood. âIt wouldnât be very professional of me, would it?â
âYouâre right, youâre right,â Matt concedes, though his submission is not convincing. âIâm just looking out for you. Making sure youâre all right.â
âWhy wouldnât I be?â
âYou just never know who you might be dealing with, thatâs all. Outsiders can cause trouble.â
âNo more so than âinsiders.â Isnât that right?â I know Fionn well enough to know that Iâve never heard him sound like this. The words are simple, direct. Theyâre delivered with coolness, an eerie sense of calm. But beneath them is an undercurrent. A lethality. A warning to stay away. Or else.
I might not be able to see their faces, but the tension between the two men feels ready to ignite. A curtain of unease descends, thick enough that Iâm sure I could cut it with the blade clutched in my hand.
âYour postoperative recovery seems to be going well. There are no signs of infection or swelling,â Fionn finally says. His voice is still cool, but itâs lost the deadly bite in the tone. âIâll prescribe some tramadol for you.â
âNo need, Dr. Kane,â Matt says. âIâd better stay alert. You know, busy time of year and all. Iâve got to stay vigilant. On my toes.â
Fionn says nothing. I imagine the deferential nod he probably gives Matt, the way he watches and considers and gives only what he needs to in a tense situation. Heâll be careful, calm. But heâll be roiling under that detached exterior. I know thereâs another side to him, buried beneath what he lets me see. And this time I can feel it, lingering in the air like musk.
I shift farther into the shadows when I hear footsteps, coming face-to-face with a photo of Fionn and two other men who have similar features. Dark hair. High cheekbones. Shining smiles. Blue eyes, each shade unique, the color of Fionnâs the lightest of them all. They link arms over one anotherâs shoulders. Theyâre his brothers in Boston, Rowan and Lachlan, whom heâs spoken of only briefly. I step closer to the photo as a set of curt goodbyes reaches me from the entrance. Even in a moment frozen in time, I can see the love and happiness that radiates from each of them. And Fionn has come all this way, chosen to separate himself from his brothers and his home, just for a chance to heal a broken heart. Maybe a chance to hide the side of himself he doesnât want anyone to see.
What if Iâm tearing his sanctuary apart?
The front door of the clinic closes and a moment later, Fionn returns. I realize before I exit his office that I recognize him by the cadence of his steps alone. He stops in front of me, and I try to smile. But guilt is starting to chew a little hole in my heart.
âAre you okay?â he asks, his brow furrowed, his eyes pinned to mine.
âYeah. Are you?â
I donât know what I expect him to say. But I know for sure that the last thing I expect is for him to wrap me in an embrace. His arms are tense around me. Protective and sheltering. Iâm so surprised that it takes a moment for me to return the gesture. As soon as I do, his heart jumps a beat beneath my ear. A little of the tension in Fionn subsides, as though he didnât realize how much he needed this too. Something about that aches in my chest. Maybe I tighten my grip around him just a little. Press my face to his chest a little harder. Close my eyes as I take in his scent, sage and citrus warmed by the sun. Thereâs maybe a hint of raccoon too, but I let that slide with a faint smile.
We stay like that for a long while. When we separate, Fionn checks the front door of the clinic, making sure Matt is long gone before he beckons me to follow. He lifts me into the truck like he always does. He seems nervous to drop me off at home, where Iâll be alone, but after at least five or six reassurances that Iâll be okay, he leaves for the hospital to get his first rabies shot.
It isnât until later that evening, when Iâm lying in bed and staring into the dark, that I realize something.
He never answered my question.
I donât know if heâs really okay.