Reflected in You: Chapter 16
Reflected in You (Crossfire, Book 2)
As soon as Detective Michna finished his sentence, my dad cut the questioning off. âWeâre done here,â he said grimly. âIf you have any further questions, you can make an appointment for my daughter to come in with counsel.â
âHow about you, Mr. Cross?â Michnaâs gaze moved to Gideon. âWould you mind telling us where you were yesterday?â
Gideon moved from his position behind the couch. âWhy donât we talk while I show you out?â
I stared at him, but he still wouldnât look at me.
What else didnât he want me to know? How much was he hiding from me?
Irelandâs fingers threaded with mine. Cary sat on one side of me and Ireland on the other, while the man I loved stood several feet away and hadnât glanced at me in almost half an hour. I felt like a cold rock had settled in my gut.
The detectives took down my phone numbers, then left with Gideon. I watched the three of them walk out, saw my dad eyeing Gideon with a hard speculative look.
âMaybe he was buying you an engagement ring,â Ireland whispered. âAnd he doesnât want to blow the surprise.â
I squeezed her hand for being sweet and thinking so highly of her brother. I hoped he never let her down or disillusioned her. The way I was now disillusioned. Gideon and I were nothingâwe had nothing togetherâif he couldnât be honest with me.
Why hadnât he told me about Nathan?
Releasing Cary and Ireland, I stood and went into the kitchen. My dad followed me.
âWant to fill me in with whatâs going on?â he asked.
âI have no idea. This is all news to me.â
He leaned his hip into the counter and studied me. âWhatâs the history with you and Nathan Barker? You heard his name and looked like you were going to pass out.â
I started rinsing off the dishes and loading the dishwasher. âHe was a bully, Dad. Thatâs all. He didnât like that his dad remarried, and he especially didnât like that his new stepmom already had a kid.â
âWhy would Gideon have anything to do with him?â
âThatâs a really good question.â As I gripped the edge of the sink, I bowed my head and closed my eyes. That was what had driven the wedge between me and GideonâNathan. I knew it.
âEva?â My dadâs hands settled on my shoulders and kneaded into the hard, aching muscles. âAre you okay?â
âI-Iâm tired. I havenât been sleeping well.â I shut off the water and left the rest of the dishes where they were. I went to the cupboard where we kept our vitamins and over-the-counter medicines and took out two nighttime painkillers. I wanted a deep, dreamless sleep. I needed it, so I could wake up in a condition to figure out what I needed to do.
I looked at my dad. âCan you take care of Ireland until Gideon gets back?â
âOf course.â He kissed my forehead. âWeâll talk in the morning.â
Ireland found me before I could find her. âAre you okay?â she asked, stepping into the kitchen.
âIâm going to lie down, if you donât mind. I know thatâs rude.â
âNo, itâs okay.â
âReally, Iâm sorry.â I pulled her close for a hug. âWeâll do this again. Maybe a girlsâ day? Hit the spa or go shopping?â
âSure. Call me?â
âI will.â I let her go and passed through the living room to get to the hallway.
The front door opened and Gideon walked in. Our gazes met and held. I could read nothing in his. I looked away, went to my room, and locked the door.
* * *
I was up at nine the next morning, feeling groggy and grumpy but no longer overwhelmingly tired. I knew I needed to call Stanton and my mom, but I needed caffeine first.
I washed my face, brushed my teeth, and shuffled out to the living room. I was almost to the kitchenâthe source of the luscious smell of coffeeâwhen the doorbell rang. My heart skipped a beat. I couldnât help the instinctive reaction I had to thoughts of Gideon, who was one of the three people on the list to get past the front desk.
But when I opened the door, it was my mother. I hoped I didnât look too disappointed, but I donât think she noticed anyway. She swept right past me in a seafoam green dress that looked painted on, and she pulled it off as very few women could, somehow making the outfit sexy and elegant and age-appropriate. Of course, she looked young enough to be my sister.
She raked a glance over my comfortable SDSU sweatpants and camisole before saying, âEva. My God. You have no ideaââ
âNathanâs dead.â I shut the door and glanced nervously down the hallway at the guest bedroom, praying that my dad was still functioning on West Coast time and sleeping.
âOh.â She turned around and faced me, and I got my first good look at her. Her mouth was thinned with worry, her blue eyes haunted. âHave the police come by already? They only just left us.â
âThey were here last night.â I headed into the kitchen and straight to the coffeemaker.
âWhy didnât you call us? We should have been with you. You shouldâve had a lawyer with you, at the very least.â
âIt was a real quick visit, Mom. Want some?â I held up the carafe.
âNo, thank you. You shouldnât drink so much of that stuff. Itâs not good for you.â
I put the carafe back and opened the fridge.
âDear God, Eva,â my mother muttered, watching me. âDo you realize how many calories are in half-and-half?â
I set a bottle of water in front of her and moved back to lighten my coffee. âThey were here for about thirty minutes and then left. They didnât get anything out of me beyond Nathan being my former stepbrother and that I havenât seen him in eight years.â
âThank God you didnât say more.â She twisted open her water.
I grabbed my mug. âLetâs move to my sitting room.â
âWhat? Why? You never sit in there.â
She was right, but using it would help prevent a surprise run-in between my parents.
âBut you like it,â I pointed out. We entered through my bedroom and I shut the door behind us, breathing a sigh of relief.
âI do like it,â my mother said, turning to take it all in.
Of course she liked it; sheâd decorated it. I liked it, too, but didnât really have a use for it. Iâd thought about turning it into an adjoining bedroom for Gideon, but everything could be changing now. Heâd pulled away from me, hidden Nathan and a dinner with Corinne from me. I wanted an explanation, and depending on what that was, we were going to either recommit to moving forward or take the painful steps to move away from each other.
My mom settled gracefully on the chaise, her gaze coming to rest on me. âYouâll have to be very careful with the police, Eva. If they want to talk to you again, let Richard know so he can have his lawyers present.â
âWhy? I donât understand why I should worry about what I say or donât say. I havenât done anything wrong. I didnât even know he was in town.â I watched her gaze skitter away from mine, and my tone firmed. âWhatâs going on, Mom?â
She took a drink before speaking. âNathan showed up in Richardâs office last week. He wanted two and a half million dollars.â
There was a sudden roaring in my ears. âWhat?â
âHe wanted money,â she said stiffly. âA lot of it.â
âWhy the hell would he think heâd get any?â
âHe hasâhadâphotos, Eva.â Her lower lip began to quiver. âAnd video. Of you.â
âOh my God.â I set my coffee aside with shaking hands and bent over, putting my head between my knees. âOh God, Iâm going to be sick.â
And Gideon had seen Nathanâheâd confessed as much when he answered the detectivesâ questions. If heâd seen the pictures . . . been disgusted by them . . . it would explain why he cut me off. Why heâd been so tormented when he came to my bed. He might still want me, but he might not be able to live with the images now filling his head.
It has to be this way, heâd said.
A horrible sound escaped me. I couldnât even begin to imagine what Nathan might have captured. I didnât want to.
No wonder Gideon couldnât stand to look at me. When heâd made love to me the last time, it had been in utter darkness, where he could hear me and smell me and feel meâbut not see me.
I stifled a scream of pain by biting my forearm.
âBaby, no!â My mother sank to her knees in front of me, urging me gently off the chair and onto the floor where she could rock me. âShh. Itâs over. Heâs dead.â
I curled into her lap, sobbing, realizing it truly was overâIâd lost Gideon. He would hate himself for turning away from me, but I understood why he might not be able to stop himself. If looking at me now reminded him of his own brutal past, how could he stand it? How could I?
My motherâs hand stroked over my hair. I felt her crying, too. âShh,â she hushed me, her voice shaking. âShh, baby. Iâve got you. Iâll take care of you.â
Eventually there were no more tears left to cry. I was empty, but with that emptiness came new clarity. I couldnât change what had happened, but I could do what was necessary to make sure that no one I loved suffered for it.
I sat up and wiped at my eyes.
âYou shouldnât do that,â my mother scolded. âRubbing at your eyes like that will give you wrinkles.â
For some reason, I found her concern for my future crowâs-feet hysterical. I tried to hold it in, but a snorted laugh broke free.
âEva Lauren!â
I thought her indignation was funny, too. I laughed some more, and once I started, I couldnât stop. I laughed until my sides hurt and I fell over.
âOh, stop it!â She shoved at my shoulder. âItâs not funny.â
I laughed until I managed to squeeze out a few more tears.
âEva, really!â But she was starting to smile.
I laughed until I wasnât laughing so much as sobbing again, dry and silent. I heard my mother giggling, and that somehow blended perfectly with my racking pain. I couldnât explain it, but as horrible and hopeless as I felt, my motherâs presenceâcomplete with all her little quirks and admonitions that drove me insaneâwas just what I needed.
With my hands on my cramping stomach, I took a deep cleansing breath. âDid he arrange it?â I asked softly.
Her smiled faded. âWho? Richard? Arrange what? The money? Oh . . .â
I waited.
âNo!â she protested. âHe wouldnât. His mind doesnât work that way.â
âOkay. I just had to know.â I couldnât see Stanton ordering a hit, either. But Gideon . . .
I knew from his nightmares that his desire for vengeance was colored by violence. And Iâd seen him fight Brett. The memory was seared in my mind. Gideon was capable, and with his historyâ
I took a deep breath, then blew it out. âHow much do the police know?â
âEverything.â Her eyes were soft and wet with guilt. âThe seal on Nathanâs records was broken when he died.â
âAnd how did he die?â
âThey didnât say.â
âI suppose itâs not important. We have a motive.â I ran my hand through my hair. âIt probably doesnât matter that we didnât personally have the opportunity. Your time is accounted for, isnât it? And Stantonâs?â
âYes. And yours, too?â
âYes.â But I didnât know about Gideonâs. Not that it mattered. No one would expect men like Gideon and Stanton to get their hands dirty cleaning up a mess like Nathan.
We had more than one motiveâthe blackmail and revenge for what heâd done to meâand means, and means gave us the opportunity.
* * *
I brushed my hair again and splashed water on my face, all the while thinking of how I was going to get my mom out of my apartment undetected. When I found her digging through the closet in my bedroomâconcerned as always about my style and appearanceâI knew what to do.
âRemember that skirt I picked up at Macyâs?â I asked her. âThe green one?â
âOh, yes. Very pretty.â
âI havenât been able to wear it, because I canât think of anything I have to go with it. Can you help me find something?â
âEva,â she said, exasperated. âYou shouldâve established a personal style by nowâand it shouldnât be sweats!â
âHelp me out, Mom. Iâll be right back.â I took my coffee mug with me to have a purpose for leaving her. âDonât go anywhere.â
âWhere would I go?â she replied, her voice muffled because sheâd stepped deeper into my walk-in closet.
I did a quick check of the living room and kitchen. My dad was nowhere to be seen and his bedroom door was closed, as was Caryâs. I hurried back into my room.
âHowâs this?â she asked, holding up a champagne-hued silk blouse. The combination was gorgeous and classy.
âI love it! You rock! Thank you. But Iâm sure you have to go now, right? I donât want to hold you up.â
My mom frowned at me. âIâm not in a hurry.â
âWhat about Stanton? This has got to be weighing on his mind. And itâs a Saturdayâhe always reserves his weekends for you. He needs to have the time with you.â
And God, did I feel awful for his stress. Stanton had spent a great deal of his time and money on issues pertaining to me and Nathan over the four years heâd been married to my mother. It was too much to ask of anyone, but heâd come through for us. For the rest of my life, I would owe him for loving my mother so much.
âThis is weighing on your mind, too,â she argued. âI want to be here for you, Eva. I want to support you.â
My throat tightened, understanding that she was trying to make amends for what had happened to me because she was unable to forgive herself. âItâs okay,â I said hoarsely. âIâll be okay. And honestly, Iâd feel terrible keeping you away from Stanton after all heâs done for us. Youâre his reward, his little piece of heaven at the end of an endless workweek.â
Her lips curved in an enchanting smile. âWhat a lovely thing to say.â
Yes, Iâd thought so, too, the times Gideon had said similar things to me.
It seemed impossible that only a week before, weâd been at the beach house, madly in love and taking firm, sure steps forward in our relationship.
But now that relationship was broken, and now I knew why. I was angry and hurt that Gideon had kept something as monumental as Nathan being in New York hidden from me. I was furious that he hadnât talked to me about what he was thinking and feeling. But I understood, too. He was a man whoâd avoided talking about anything personal for years and years, and we hadnât been together long enough for that lifetime habit to change. I couldnât blame him for being who he was, just as I couldnât blame him for deciding that he couldnât live with what I was.
With a sigh, I went to my mom and hugged her. âHaving you here . . . itâs what I needed, Mama. Crying and laughing and just sitting with you. Nothing could be more perfect than that. Thank you.â
âReally?â She hugged me tightly, feeling so small and delicate in my arms, even though we were the same size and her heels made her taller. âI thought you were going crazy.â
I pulled back and smiled. âI think I did for a little bit, but you brought me back. And Stanton is a good man. Iâm grateful for all heâs done for us. Please tell him I said so.â
Linking my arm with hers, I grabbed her clutch from my bed and led her to the front door. She hugged me again, her hands stroking up and down my back. âCall me tonight and tomorrow. I want to make sure youâre doing okay.â
âAll right.â
She studied me. âAnd letâs plan on a spa day next week. If the doctor doesnât approve of Cary going, weâll have the technicians come here. I think we could all use a little pampering and polish right now.â
âThatâs a really nice way of saying I look like shit.â We were both rough around the edges, although she hid it much better than I did. Nathan was still hanging over us like a dark cloud, still capable of ruining lives and destroying our peace. But weâd pretend that we were better off than we were. That was just the way we did things. âBut youâre rightâitâll be good for us and itâll make Cary feel a whole lot better, even if he can only get a mani and pedi.â
âIâll make the arrangements. I canât wait!â My mother flashed her signature megawatt smileâ
âwhich is what my dad was hit with when I opened the front door. He stood on the threshold with Caryâs keys in his hand, having been caught just about to slide one into the lock. He was dressed in running shorts and athletic shoes, his sweat-soaked shirt tossed carelessly over his shoulder. Still breathing a little quickly and glistening with sweat over tanned skin and rippling muscles, Victor Reyes was one hot hunk of a man.
And he was staring at my mom in a way that was totally indecent.
Tearing my gaze away from my seriously smokinâ dad to look at my glamorous mother, I was shocked to see her looking at my father the same way he was looking at her.
Of all the times to realize my parents were in love with each other. Well, Iâd suspected my dad was heartbroken over my mom, but I thought sheâd been embarrassed about him, as if he were a big mistake and error in judgment in her past.
âMonica.â My dadâs voice was lower and deeper than Iâd ever heard it, and more obviously flavored with an accent.
âVictor.â My mom was breathless. âWhat are you doing here?â
One of his brows rose. âVisiting our daughter.â
âAnd now Mom has to go,â I prodded, torn between the novelty of seeing my parents together and a loyalty to Stanton, who was exactly what my mother needed. âIâll call you later, Mom.â
My dad didnât move for a moment, his gaze sliding down the length of my mom from head to toe, then gliding back up again. Then he took a deep breath and stepped aside.
My mom stepped out into the hallway and turned toward the elevator, and then at the last minute she turned back. She placed her palm over my dadâs heart and lifted onto her tiptoes, kissing one of his cheeks and then the other.
âGood-bye,â she breathed.
I watched her walk unsteadily to the elevator and push the button, her back to us. My dad didnât look away until the car doors closed behind her.
He exhaled in a rush and came into my apartment.
I shut the door. âHow is it that I didnât know you two are crazy in love with each other?â
The look in his eyes was painful to witness. The raw agony was like an open wound. âBecause it doesnât mean anything.â
âI donât believe that. Love means everything.â
âIt doesnât conquer all like they say.â He snorted. âCan you see your mother being a copâs wife?â
I winced.
âRight,â he said dryly, wiping his forehead with his shirt. âSometimes love isnât enough. And if itâs not enough, what good is it?â
The bitterness I heard in his words was something I knew very well myself. I passed him and went into the kitchen.
My dad followed me. âAre you in love with Gideon Cross?â
âIsnât it obvious?â
âIs he in love with you?â
Because I just didnât have the energy, I dumped my mug in the sink and pulled out new ones for me and my dad. âI donât know. I know he wants me, and sometimes he needs me. I think heâd do anything he could for me if I asked, because Iâve gotten under his skin a bit.â
But he couldnât tell me that he loved me. He wouldnât tell me about his past. And he couldnât, apparently, live with the evidence of my past.
âYouâve got a good head on your shoulders.â
I pulled coffee beans out of the freezer to make a fresh pot. âThatâs seriously debatable, Dad.â
âYouâre honest with yourself. Thatâs a good trait to have.â He gave me a tight smile when I looked over my shoulder at him. âI used your tablet earlier to check my e-mail. It was on the coffee table. I hope you donât mind.â
I shook my head. âHelp yourself.â
âI surfed the Internet while I was on there. Wanted to see what popped up about Cross.â
My heart sank a little. âYou donât like him.â
âIâm withholding judgment.â My dadâs voice faded as he moved into the living room, then strengthened again as he returned with my tablet in hand.
As I ground the beans, he flipped open the tabletâs protective case and started tapping at the screen.
âI had a hard time getting a bead on him last night. I just wanted a little more information. I found some pictures of the two of you together that looked promising.â He gaze was on the screen. âThen I found something else.â
He turned the tablet around to face me. âCan you explain this to me? Is this another sister of his?â
Leaving the ground coffee to sit, I moved closer, my eyes on the article my dad had found on Page Six. The picture was of Gideon and Corinne at some sort of cocktail party. He had his arm around her waist, and their body language was familiar and intimate. He was very close to her, his lips nearly touching her temple. She had a drink in her hand and was laughing.
I picked up the tablet and read the caption: Gideon Cross, CEO of Cross Industries, and Corinne Giroux at the Kingsman Vodka publicity mixer.
My fingers shook as I scrolled to the top of the page and read the brief article, searching for more information. I went numb when I saw the mixer had been Thursday, from six to nine, at one of Gideonâs propertiesâone I knew all too well. Heâd fucked me there, just as heâd fucked dozens of women there.
Gideon had stood me up for our appointment with Dr. Petersen to take Corinne to his fuck-pad hotel.
That was what heâd wanted to tell the detectives that he didnât want me to hear: His alibi was an eveningâmaybe the whole nightâspent with another woman.
Setting the tablet down with more care than necessary, I released the breath Iâd been holding. âThatâs not his sister.â
âI didnât think so.â
I looked at him. âCould you do me a favor and finish making the coffee? I have a call to make.â
âSure. Then Iâm going to grab a shower.â He reached over and set his hand on top of mine. âLetâs go out and erase this whole morning. Sound good?â
âSounds perfect.â
I grabbed the phone off its base and went back to my bedroom. I hit the speed dial for Gideonâs cell and waited for him to pick up. Three rings later, he did.
âCross,â he said, although his screen wouldâve told him it was me. âI really canât talk right now.â
âThen just listen. Iâll time myself. One minute. One goddamn minute of your time. Can you give me that?â
âI reallyââ
âDid Nathan come to you with photos of me?â
âThis isnâtââ
âDid he?â I snapped.
âYes,â he bit out.
âDid you look at them?â
There was a long pause, then, âYes.â
I exhaled. âOkay. I think youâre a total asshole for letting me go to Dr. Petersenâs office when you knew you werenât coming because you were going out with another woman instead. Thatâs just serious douchebag territory, Gideon. And worse, it was a Kingsman event, too, which shouldâve had some sentimental value to you, considering thatâs howââ
There was the abrupt scraping noise of a chair being shoved back. I rushed on, desperate to say what needed to be said before he hung up.
âI think youâre a coward for not coming right out and saying weâre over, especially before you started fucking around with someone else.â
âEva. Goddamn it.â
âBut I want you to know that even though the way youâve handled this is fucking wrong and youâve broken my heart into millions of tiny pieces and Iâve lost all respect for you, I donât blame you for how you feel after seeing those pictures of me. I get it.â
âStop.â His voice was little more than a whisper, making me wonder if Corinne was with him even now.
âI donât want you to blame yourself, okay? After what you and I have been throughânot that I know what youâve been through because you never told meâbut anyway . . .â I sighed and winced at how shaky it came out. Worse, when I opened my mouth again, my words were watery with tears. âDonât blame yourself. I donât. I just want you to know that.â
âChrist,â he breathed. âPlease stop, Eva.â
âIâm done. I hope you findââ My hand clenched in my lap. âNever mind. Good-bye.â
I hung up and dropped the phone on my bed. I stripped off my clothes on the way to the shower and set the ring Gideon had given me on the counter. I turned the water on as hot as I could stand it and sank numbly to the floor of the stall.
I had nothing left.