Good Behavior: Chapter 23
Good Behavior: An MM Forbidden Romance (Wild Heart Ranch Book 2)
Itâs nice waking up in Bramâs arms in a room that isnât the exact size of our bed. I could get used to it.
When we got to the bunkhouse last night, Ant was still passed out on Erikâs lap in the living room. Erikâs large hand rested on Antâs shoulder like he was trying to protect him from the things weâd been too late to stop. He had a thousand-yard stare going that neither Bram nor I dared interrupt.
We werenât in much better shape, truth be told. Bram only made it halfway through our shower before he lost it. I held him as he sobbed, then held him some more as he tossed and turned through the night.
I saw both of his kills, and he was decisive in the moment. Ruthless. But in retrospect, itâs a terrible thing to take a life. Even if he wouldnât change it.
We havenât slept much when morning light filters through the blinds. He, Charlie, and Erik have a brief conversation about what to do with Ant. They decide he needs to stay busy for the time being and ask if Iâll go to work with him today.
So, despite being a big damn hero yesterdayâBramâs wordsâIâll be spending today building fences and making sure Ant doesnâtâ¦actually, they wouldnât specifically say what theyâre worried heâll do.
Thankfully, he seems like himself when he busts me creeping out of Bramâs room at the ass-crack of dawn in borrowed sweatpants and Bramâs well-worn college T-shirt.
âShut up.â
âDidnât say anything,â he says, sipping his coffee.
âYeah, well. Your eyeballs are .â
He lifts his chin at me as I make my way through the living room. âYou going in to work?â
âYeah. Something about making sure you donât go on some mass killing spree.â
âDrama queens,â he says, rolling his eyes.
âYou know, just because youâre more or less a Bash doesnât mean you have to kill people.â
âFuck off,â he grumps into his coffee.
âFine. Iâll go get changed and be back in thirty.â
âSlut,â he cracks.
âYou would know,â I shoot back, then grimace. âSorry, that probably wasnâtââ
He snorts into his coffee and sends me off with a middle finger.
The day goes pretty well. I donât fall asleep at the wheel, Ant doesnât brutally stab anyone, and we both manage to avoid getting hate-crimed, so thereâs that.
Midway through the day, we get texts from Charlie, calling us in for a meeting at the bunkhouse after work. When we arrive, Bram, Levy, and Erik are already sitting around the coffee table.
Tired and a little full of myself, I walk right up to Bram and sit on his lap. Rather than push me off and tell me to shower, which I was sure heâd do, Bram pulls me in close, nuzzling against my neck.
âI love the smell of your sweat,â he whispers. âHave I ever told you that?â
âUgh. Gross,â Ant says, standing a little closer than either of us realized. âIâm going to sit next to Erik.â
Laughing and not at all fooled by his little maneuver, I take the empty space next to Bram and snuggle in against him.
Charlie and Justin walk in a few minutes later, grabbing additional chairs from the kitchen.
âThanks for joining us today, especially Nacho and Ant, since youâve already put in a full day.â
âI have a feeling regular work hours donât apply here,â I answer, thrilled when Bram grabs my hand.
Sitting on the chair like heâs about a hundred years old, Charlie nods. âThatâs probably accurate, but letâs get right into it so everyone can get on with their evenings.â
We lean in, curious about what he has to say.
âAlright, quick update on the state of things. First, the ranch has been cleaned up, all the bodies dumped, and most of the dogs are on their way to a breed-specific rescue organization. Theyâll need a massive amount of retraining, but the organization feels positive it can be done. Probably not as family dogs, but many show potential for K-9 units domestically and in military operations.â
Erik smiles. âI took one to retrain for the search-and-rescue missions, and Hopper took the one following him around. He said his Great Dane, Zoe, needs a friend.â
Charlie face-palms. â
. Did you warn Liam?â
Erik laughs and holds up his phone.
Charlie, clearly exhausted, snorts. âTrue enough. Any questions?â
We all shake our heads.
Justin is the next to speak. âCharlie has an idea about the fencing company that he brought to me and my brother, and I think itâs a good one. Regarding the trailer full of people we helped, a number of them qualify for a trafficking visa, and theyâll need employment. Of those, a few showed interest in the fencing, but theyâll need to be trained.â
Turning to Ant and me, Justin continues, âIn order to say yes, I need to make sure you two are comfortable with handling most of that since it will need to be done in Spanish. Weâll adjust your salaries accordingly.â
Ant and I look at each other and shrug.
âSure,â I say, answering for the two of us. âJust checkingâ¦youâre not using them for cheap labor, are you?â
To his credit, Justin doesnât look offended.
âTheyâll be on the same pay grade as everyone else.â
Charlie grabs his hand. âMy hubby is too pure to do anything unethical.â
I chuckle to myself, and Ant makes a disgusted sound at the back of his throat while sticking out his tongue.
âGuys,â he moans, bored already. âCan we not talk about how yâall are? Like, focus please.â
Charlie smiles warmly, but thereâs hesitation there. âOf course. But then that does bring us to you.â
Ant shifts uncomfortably.
âWhat about me?â he asks as though he thinks we wouldnât be discussing his whole sneaking-into-the-mission-and-stabbing-a-guy-in-the-face-until-he-didnât-have-a-face .
Iâd given him a few opportunities to talk about it while we were working, but he was having none of it. He can slip that maneuver past me, but he wonât be so lucky with the rest of them.
âYou followed us to the property even though we made it clear you were not to be a part of the mission,â Charlie says, his voice even and kind. âYou endangered the entire team.â
Ant throws his hands up. âI saved Erikâs life.â
âI hear you. But we canât operate if we canât trust you to follow the mission parameters. Thatâs job one. Anybody on a team whoâll go off like that isnât someone the rest of us can depend on. If you wanted to show us youâre ready for this, you did the exact opposite.â
Scrunching his nose, Ant responds, âWell, I guess Iâm just not on your team then, am I?â
âIf youâre not on our team, youâre a liability. And I do want you on the team, Ant. In some capacity. Eventually. But until you go to therapyâ¦â Charlie opens his hands, silently asking Ant to see reason.
Eh. I think heâs going to be disappointed.
âI donât feel bad about killing him, Charlie.â Ant crosses his arms over his chest and lets out a huff. âHe was going to kill Erik.â
Itâs our turn to shift uncomfortably. Heâs not wrong.
Bram holds up his finger. âCan I say something about that?â
Charlie gestures for him to take the floor.
âAnt, I killed two people last night, and I didnât sleep a wink. When I found out we have access to an excellent therapist, I called her this morning, and Iâll be getting on calls with her once a week for at least the next month. I think itâs a mistake to assume that lack of guilt equals zero trauma.â
âOh my God-d-d-d,â he exaggerates, rolling his eyes. âSo dramatic with the . Believe me, I know trauma, and that wasnât it. I feel fine. Yâall canât force me to do something I donât want to do.â
âI hear you, Ant. Really, I do,â Bram says, readying himself for the larger point. âBut while you feel fine with what happened, none of the rest of us do.â
Antâs disbelief is like its own presence in the room. âNot even the fact that I saved Erikâs life?â
âOf course weâre grateful for that, but thatâs not what Iâm talking about. Once it was clear the man was dead, you continued to mutilate him. While we would never force you to do anything, we have decided as a group that you cannot join us on any missions, even search-and-rescue missions, until you see a therapist.â
âDo you think Iâm crazy?â
Everyone else shakes their heads, but theyâre lying, and he knows it. Theyâre scared of him and for him, and having worked closely with him these last several months, I donât think thatâs the way to approach this.
Instead of going along with everyone else, I nod in response to his question, cracking a smile. âDude didnât have a face after you were done with him. Thatâs, like, the of sane.â
He sticks his tongue out at me, amusement returning to his eyes. He knows I have his back, even when that means telling him the truth he doesnât want to hear.
Dropping his eyes to his hands in his lap, he squares his jaw.
âI know I went a little overboard. But you canât keep me from helping. You donât know what those people did to me. The sex was the least awful part of that life. I was made to feel so worthless all the time. Mine wasnât some extreme, horrible, rare case. There are thousands, millions, of people, mostly kids, being forced into the worst-case scenarios possible, again and again. If youâ¦â
Weâre all frozen, quiet as he clenches his fists, finding the rest of his words.
Finally, shaking his head and pulling his shoulders up around his ears, he spits out, â
I have to do . If you donât let me do something with you, I do something on my own.â Pinning a look on Charlie and Erik, he continues, âAnd you wonât be able to stop me.â
A chilled quiet follows his declaration. I donât think a single one of us doubts his intentions.
Charlie, in his gentle, calm way, is the first to break the silence.
âAnt, your history makes you both the best and worst candidate for the things we want to do. You understand the victimsâthe survivorsâin a way that none of us ever can. But you lack the objectivity and good decision-making skills required in these ops. You have not shown even the slightest bit of remorse for taking a life. Even when itâs necessary, most people feel remorse about that sort of thing.â
âWell, maybe remorse is one of those things that got beat out of me.â
Another uncomfortable silence.
Erik leans forward, supporting his forearms on his knees. âMy cousins, Anders and Odd, donât have your background, but they donât feel remorse when they kill someone either. Hell, if itâs someone particularly bad, Anders enjoys it.â
âSee? Yâall work with him all the time.â
âBut he was raised in a healthy, loving home. Anja and Georg always knew exactly who he and Odd were, and they didnât want them institutionalized, so they trained them and set strong boundaries with them. You have had none of those things.â
âThatâs not my fault!â Ant says, getting more upset.
Erik is careful with his next words. âWe know, Ant. Weâre not blaming you. You canât know what you donât know. Itâs justâ¦you scare the hell out of us.â
âWhy are you picking on me? Is it because I look so young?â
âNo,â we all say, though Erik is slower to join in.
âWhatever,â Ant says, getting up and stomping to the kitchen. âEveryone here has killed someone.â
I raise my hand. âIâve killed two men in self-defense, and I havenât ever recovered from that, and I doubt I ever will.â
âWell, I guess that makes you better than me,â he says, yanking on the junk drawer.
I let out a frustrated breath and join him in the kitchen. âNo. It means theyâre never going to make me the pointy end of the stick. But whoever is at that pointy end? They need to have their head on straight, at least enough to work with the team. Anders, whatever else he is, works with the team.â
Ignoring me, he finally wrangles open the drawer and grabs a pair of scissors. I hold up my hands and step back. Erik jumps up, and Ant points the scissors at him. âStay back.â
âDude, what are you doing?â I ask in Spanish, wondering if heâs actually going to get violent.
He grabs his ponytail and starts violently hacking at it right above the elastic. His hair is thick, so if he thought he could do it in one dramatic snip, thatâs not happening. Still, weâre frozen all over again as he chops through the hair.
he barks, eyeing Erik as he holds up the decapitated ponytail.
I donât know what, exactly, is done, but Iâve always suspected heâs kept the long hair for a reason. Whatever that reason is, heâs over it. Walking to the garbage can, he stomps on the pedal, dropping the thick hank of hair into the bag.
Catching our concerned looks, he asks, âWhy are you looking at me like this? All of you have been acting like I am this little broken boy since you brought me here. So Iâm cutting off the last part of that life. Thatâs not me anymore.â
None of the professionals have any words, so I go in again in Spanish, speaking low and fast. âYou dramatic asshole. Itâs official. You look like a crazy person now.â
âIâm. Not. Crazy.â His eyes blaze as he defiantly pushes the choppy strands behind his ears.
I hold up my hands. âYouâre right. But weâre not lying when we say youâre worrying the hell out of us. Seriously. The hair is nothing.
We were in the middle of everything fucking going wrong, and there you were. What if that guy had gotten the drop on you? He was easily twice your size. What if heâd fallen on you when you took out his Achilles? What if you hadnât been able to take his gun? You got so lucky, and you donât seem to understand how bad that is.â
âWhy is it bad that I got lucky?â
âBecause if you can get lucky, you can get lucky. Even as crazy as he is, Anders is focused. When heâs in the middle of an op, he is working for the good of everyone. You were completely on your own, and you do not realize how dangerous that made the situation for everyone else.â
âAgain, I saved Erikâs life. How did I make it worse?â
âBecause the people here love you, and if anything had gone wrong with that, they would have sacrificed themselves to save you.â
Looking over at Erik, he snarls again. âYeah, they love me. Like a brother, remember?â
âSome people donât even get that in a lifetime. Fuck, I know this thing with Erik is hard for youâ¦â
âDonât fucking say it. I donât want to hear it.â
âOkay, but you can break your own heart and keep making shitty decisions based on all the shit you survived, or you can face your past and make something amazing of your future. I know which one Iâm rooting for.â
His eyes finally meet mine, andâ¦shit. His feisty attitude does a damn good job of covering up the reality of how much pain heâs been in this whole time. But now itâs sitting there right behind his eyes.
âYou say that, Nacho, but you donât have any idea of the things I have to face. You want me to talk to a therapist to dredge up all this bullshit. Brother, I canât,â he says, grabbing my wrist, his voice cracking. âItâs too much.â
I pull him into a hug, whispering in his hair, âThe therapist isnât gonna make you talk about anything you donât want to. Everything theyâve said sounds like she knows how to help. Just tell her what you told me. Hell, sheâs Andersâ therapistâsheâs probably heard way worse.â
He buries his face in my chest, laughing and crying as he shakes his head, hugging me back. I shed a few tears for my friend, but if thereâs anything this life has taught me, itâs that people are pretty fucking resilient.
I choose to believe that about Ant. Hell, I choose to believe it about myself too.
âSo, uh, did yâall finish making plans for world domination?â Charlie asks, joining us in the kitchen.
âNot before heâs at least had a chat with Hedy,â I answer, squeezing him close.
Ant pushes away from me, but he does it affectionately. âUgh. Fine. Iâll see her, but that doesnât mean Iâm going to cooperate.â
âDonât worry, Ant,â Bram says with a smirk. âUs therapists have a way of getting our patients to cooperate.â
I turn to him, open-mouthed. âDid you really just go there?â
âIâm the guy fucking his patient. What makes you think I wouldnât go there?â
His joke, so completely inappropriate, puts a huge crack in the tension in the room, and the air fills with groans and laughter.
âNow, if you all donât mind, Iâm going to fix this hair,â Ant says, turning toward the hallway.
âBut youâre not gonna hurt yourself, are you?â Erik asks, worry lines creasing his forehead.
With a deep, put-upon sigh, Ant shakes his head. âI want people to die. Not myself. Iâve survived too much to give up now.â
Hesitating, Erik walks up to Ant and yanks him into a rough hug, kissing the top of his head. I feel terrible for my friend, knowing that this kind of affection is the worst.
Ant pats Erikâs chest, stepping away from him. Sending us a small wave, he heads down the hall, disappearing into the bathroom.
Charlie shakes his head. âI donât know what you said to get him to cooperate, Nacho, but thank you. He worries the hell out of me.â
Justin and Charlie share a look. Both of them made attempts on their life, so the fear is reasonable.
âHe worries me too, butâ¦I believe him when he says heâs not gonna hurt himself. I think living is a form of revenge for him.â
Charlie shrugs. âAfter I survived my attempt, I definitely had a attitude. Iâll take it.â
Justin grins, wrapping himself around his husband. âAh, see. Thatâs where you failed. You fell in love with me anyway.â
Charlie kisses him with a smile. âThatâs completely the fault of your attitude.â
Holding up his hands in a mockery of innocence, Justin fires back, âIt worked, didnât it?â
Charlie kisses him again, this time lingering.
Levy clears his throat. âDonât know if yâall remember, but I was shot in the abdomen yesterday, so if we could move this meeting along, Iâd appreciate it.â
Itâs Bramâs turn to roll his eyes. âYou were barely grazed. Donât be dramatic.â
âDramatic?â Levy laughs, then winces as he holds his side. âSays the guy who lost his shit at the doctor trying to put me together.â
âThe ? Do you mean ? I was looking out for your well-being.
â
They go back and forth for a few more minutes until Levy reaches out and grabs his brotherâs hand. âThank you. Really. I know I scared the shit out of you.â
âOnly because you fainted at the sight of a little blood,â Bram fires back, then looks instantly regretful.
Shaking his head, Levy kisses Bramâs temple. âItâs okay. We can make jokes about the fact I saw our parents die.â
âFuck you,â Bram grumps, patting Levyâs cheek.
âAnt was right,â I say, gesturing to the lot of them. âYâall are dramatic as fuck.â
Charlie waves his hands, trying to get us back on track. âOkay, Nacho, point taken. I do want to get this last part out of the way while Ant is out of the room and my husband still feels super loving toward me.â
Justin narrows his eyes as Charlie faces me.
âNacho, youâve been clutch in these last two ops. Youâve shown quick thinking and leadership, and youâre exactly the kind of guy we would like to bring on.â
âWait,â Justin protests. âYou canât take him from the fencing company!â
âIâm not trying to do that. But if we have a rescue where heâd be valuable, Iâm going to pull the husband card. That is if Nacho agrees to help.â
Justin thins his lips, even as his eyes sparkle with mischief. âWhen do you pull the husband card?â
âYou like it when I pull the husband card.â
âGuys,â Levy says, comically gripping his side.
âExcuse me. You will be putting Ignacio in danger like you did last night,â Bram says, his voice meant to broach no argument.
That sets off another round of bickering, this time between Justin, Bram, and Charlie.
Having not been asked my opinion, I finally lean in close to Bramâs ear and whisper, âYou do know the bossy thing only works when weâre playing, right? That doesnât actually work out here in the real world.â
His jaw drops as I kiss his cheek.
âNo, Nacho. Absolutely not,â he says, even though he has to know heâs already lost the fight.
âWonât you be going on some of these operations?â I ask, thinking Iâve made a very solid point.
âSure. Butâ¦I have multiple black belts. I can handle myself.â
âYeah, well, Iâm a black belt in keeping my brown ass out of trouble. Also, you canât tell me what to do.â
Everyone else is looking back and forth between us, like itâs a verbal tennis match, waiting to see what the other has to say. Bram, noticing the attention, takes a deep breath. âWe will discuss this later.â
âCan we be naked when we do?â
Something about that must tickle Erik because he begins to laugh. Hard. In fact, heâs laughing so hard that when his laugh cuts off abruptly, we all follow his line of sight.
âAnt, holy shit, dude,â I say. âYou just did that in the bathroom? Right now?â
âYeah,â he says self-consciously, running his fingers through his hair. âIâd already watched a bunch of TikToks on how to do it, and I was mad, soâ¦yeah.â
âDude. Maybe you should be a hairstylist.â
âShut the fuck up,â he says, shooting me the double bird. Shaking out his hair, he raises his chin at me. âYou really like it?â
âYou look amazing,â I say, hopping off Bramâs lap to get a closer look.
Itâs on the longer side of a shorter haircutâlike a modern shag that could probably use a bit of a cleanupâbut itâs perfect for him. Better yet, he actually looks closer to his age now.
He shrugs. âIt didnât take long.â
I give him a double thumbs-up. âI approve. Hedy will love it.â
He grumbles under his breath, saying, âI already promised I would go.â
Grinning broadly, I fire back, âI know. Iâm just making sure you follow through on your promise.â
He scrunches his nose. âI hate you.â
I drag him into a hug. âI love you too, bro.â
Just as Iâm declaring my eternal affection for Ant, I catch Bramâs eyes. They flick away briefly, then come back to mine with all the weight of a sledgehammer.
Oh fuck. I felt that in my chest. Weâll definitely be talking about my role at Wild Heart later tonight.
Ant looks between the two of us and shakes his head. âAh shit. Itâs on now.â
Ignoring Antâs commentary, Bram gets up and prowls toward me. âLevy, I assume youâre okay for the evening?â
âYes, I am.â
âExcellent.â Pausing to possessively wrap his arm around my waist, Bram sends everyone a quick salute. âThen goodnight, yâall. Iâm taking Nacho home now.â
Jeers and whistles spin up, and I laugh, pulling him in for a kiss. Grabbing my hand, he marches me out of the house with a proud smile.