Authors: Kristen Ashley
Tags: #adult, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Suspense, #Mystery
“Faye –”
I interrupted him. “And I don’t know about your father. You’ve told me some but not all, definitely not what would drive you to behave the way you did tonight. For your mother’s sake, it seems a not difficult thing to do, putting up with him for fifteen minutes to shield her from that emotion.
He
seemed capable of doing that for her. But obviously, whatever it is runs deeper. And obviously, you don’t intend to share it with me.”
“It
is
deeper,” he shared, just not much because he didn’t go on.
“No kidding?” I asked, hiding my despair behind sarcasm.
“Give me time,” he urged quietly.
“How much do you need, Chace? A year? Ten? Twenty?” I shot back, now hiding behind anger.
“It isn’t pleasant,” he whispered.
“So is a lot of stuff in life,” I replied. “Clue in, I am not your mother. Yes, I read. And yes, I do it a lot. And yes, I did it before you because life can suck and living in a fantasy world is a lot more fun than living in the real world sometimes. This was not a weak choice, it was an informed one. The cops in my town were dirty, my father was getting pulled over all the time because he didn’t like it and didn’t mind saying it but didn’t have the power to stop it. Innocent men like Ty Walker were being extradited states away to stand trial for murders they didn’t commit. Women who weren’t all that nice but still, that doesn’t matter, were being murdered. My friends got cheated on by their boyfriends or dumped after they slept with them or lied to or broken up with for what seemed no reason at all. You know I can go on. There’s not one thing wrong with saying, ‘To hell with that garbage,’ and immersing myself in worlds where happy ever afters
are
guaranteed or things are so fantastical, you know they’re not real, even the bad stuff. But that doesn’t mean I’m weak or fragile. It doesn’t mean I’m incapable of living my life. Everyone finds things they enjoy so they can escape. I’m not a freak. Even you do it with your sports. Part of me likes that you want to protect me from unpleasantness but part of me feels like it’s a slap in the face that you think I can’t cope when I can.”
He took another step toward me saying, “It’s worse than you could expect.”
“Okay,” I returned instantly. “Maybe it is. But you not sharing tells me you don’t trust me to be able to handle it. Which means you don’t trust me to hold up my side of the relationship. Which means we don’t actually
have
a relationship. I don’t have to have had one to know that both people in a relationship have responsibilities for keeping it strong and making it thrive and part of that is taking each other’s backs. You have mine but refuse to allow me to take yours. I’ve been cool. I’ve been patient. I’ve given you time. You want more, take it but don’t drag me with you as you struggle with this crap, Chace. Because the longer we’re together the more
you
should get to know
me,
come to the understanding I can handle it and trust me. You aren’t even close to that. That tells me you won’t be. So you want to keep your dark secrets, let them eat at you, fine. But don’t make me watch it happen.”
“So what you’re sayin’ is, hours ago, you told me you love me and now, I want a couple of days to get my head straight, you’re breakin’ up with me,” he said low, a warning. A warning I no longer gave a frak about.
“Yes,” I replied.
“Just like that?” he asked.
“No, it’s never happened to me before but I doubt after I fell head over heels in love with a wonderful man who kept important things from me, I’ll get over it just like that. I’ll drink with my girls and cry and wonder if I made the right decision. Then another man will come along, he won’t be as wonderful as my first love, but I suppose I’ll eventually get over it and move on.”
This was the way, way,
way
wrong thing to say and I knew it when the air went from smothering to stifling and Chace moved.
I tried to keep my cool as I watched him shrug off his coat and throw it over the footboard of my bed and I did this by sharing, “It’s cold, Chace, and the door’s the other way.”
His eyes sliced to me and he clipped, “Stop that shit.”
“What shit?” I asked
“The cold, remote Faye. It’s shit,” he answered.
“You’re right. It is. It’s a façade to hide the fact my heart is breaking. But, whatever. That isn’t your problem anymore. Now, can I point out, you told me you need space but you’re still fraking here?”
“Another man is not gonna come along,” he informed me and I stared.
Then I asked, “What?”
“You are not movin’ onto another guy,” he crossed his arms on his chest and finished, “Ever.”
“That choice is not yours.”
“Yeah it is,” he returned swiftly. “You can’t give away what’s mine.”
“You aren’t getting this, Chace, but just now, I took it back.”
“Can’t take back what’s mine either.
God! He wanted to go, why wouldn’t he just
go?
I had to shut this down.
“I thought you were tired,” I reminded him.
“Thought of movin’ on,” he stated and I was back to staring.
Then I thought I got it, it hurt but whatever. I had wine and, tomorrow, I’d call the girls and then, in about fifty years, I’d get better so I invited, “There’s the door. Move on.”
“Was this close to it,” he continued.
“Chace –”
“Then you came back into town.”
I felt my head jerk in surprised confusion.
Chace kept speaking.
“Decided with one look at you, I’d put up with it, all the shit that was gettin’ worse at work ‘cause my end game would be you.”
Was he saying what I thought he was saying?
“The town’s sweet, cute, quiet, pretty librarian in my bed, my ring on her finger, enjoyin’ it as I taught her how to enjoy it, plantin’ my babies in her, building a family.”
Holy fraking
frak!
He
was
saying what I thought he was saying!
No, he was saying
more.
I stopped breathing.
He continued talking.
“One look, at the grocery store, you in the aisle, your nose in a book. Stared at you, so fuckin’ cute, but I had no clue how you could shop and keep your nose in a book. But there you were, doin’ it. You looked up, saw someone you knew, smiled at them and I knew eatin’ all that shit at work would be worth it when I was ready to make my play. That cute in my bed. That hair. Those eyes. That smile. Definitely worth it. So I ate it, bidin’ my time, gettin’ the wild out of me so all I’d give you was sweet. You’d move to Gnaw Bone, Chantelle, I knew you would so I could kiss that bullshit good-bye, get myself out of it without takin’ you away from the folks you loved when I claimed you.”
Holy frickity fraking frak, frak,
frak!
I forced air in my lungs.
Chace moved toward me and kept talking.
“Waited too long.”
I watched him come to me, my heart beginning to beat harder and my feet no longer not moving because I was trying to be cool but because I was frozen solid with shock. He came to a halt one foot from me so I tipped my head back to look at him.
He lifted a hand, pulled the wineglass from mine and set it on the counter with an alarming-sounding
clink.
I looked at the glass in a vague effort to ascertain that it wasn’t broken then I tilted my head back to look back at him, mouth open but I didn’t say a word.
He did.
“He touched you.”
I blinked because I didn’t understand his words.
“What?”
“He touched you,” Chace repeated.
“Who?” I asked.
“My father. He wasn’t only in your presence, you, my Faye,
mine,
cute and clean and sweet, he
touched
you. Took your hand, held it,” he stopped speaking abruptly, sucked breath in through his nose then bit out, “Put his
mouth on you.
”
Okay, now, what on earth?
“So?” I asked quietly when he said no more.
“He likes kink.”
I blinked again because these words were unexpected and also I didn’t know what they meant.
“What?”
“Kink,” he ground out then, “Sex, darlin’, can get adventurous and you don’t carry on with this bullshit play you got goin’ on, we’ll have time, I’ll show you how and we’ll explore that in good ways that we both like. But it can also get weird. To each their own. I don’t give a fuck what someone does to get off. What I do not need to know is that my Dad likes it weird and when I say weird I mean sick-fuck, turn your stomach,” he leaned into me for emphasis even though he put undeniable verbal emphasis on his final word, “
weird.
”
I didn’t want to know this. I didn’t want him to know this. I didn’t know why he was sharing this. And I didn’t want to know
how
he knew this.
But he told me.
“Misty and a girlfriend took an assignment from Arnie Fuller and they did that shit to my Dad. They also taped it. They also blackmailed him with it. And I’ve seen that tape.”
My mouth dropped open as my stomach clenched and bile filled my throat.
I closed my mouth to swallow it down.
Chace’s eyes moved over my face and when they locked on mine, he whispered, “Yeah. That unpleasant enough for you, Faye?”
It definitely was.
“I –” I started.
“Gets worse,” he cut me off and I blinked again.
Worse?
How could
that
possibly get
worse?
Chace told me.
“Her play, soon’s you get over the shock of learning that jacked up shit, you’d figure out. But still, I’ll tell you. She used that tape to get money from my Dad. Arnie used it to get my Dad under his thumb and Misty used it more to get my ring on her finger. They played that tape for me and told me the way. Either I marry Misty and tow the dirty cop line or my Mom sees that tape. So I wind up with a fuckin’
wife
who did my Dad dirty in more than one way. I got that shit burned in my brain and her slut ass sleepin’ in my fuckin’ bed. Top that, through that shit, I know what they’re doin’ to Ty, I know why and I can’t do one fuckin’ thing to stop it or my Mom pays. In the end for all I know, I got no shot at anything, Misty doesn’t let me go or shit doesn’t get cleaned up. No future. No family. No
you.
Nothin’ that I wanted, wanted all my life, important things like a woman I loved in my bed and kids we made under the roof I provided by doin’ good work I was proud of. Just a bitch in my bed and a Dad who cheats on my Mom and
how
he cheats a memory I will never, ever erase.”
Oh my fraking
God.
“Chace –” I whispered.
“You want more?”
My heart seized.
“More?” I breathed.
“Yeah, Faye,” he leaned in deeper, “
more.
”
I didn’t but I would take it. Still, he didn’t give me the chance to accept or refuse.
He kept right on going.
“Before Misty, before she did that to my Dad, I was Frank. I did what I could for the citizens of this town knowin’ things were gettin’ ugly but keepin’ my nose clean. I worked my brothers, hopin’ they’d turn from the dark side. After they had me, after I saw that tape, I had no choice but to join their ranks. My mother saw that, tonight, she was good, tonight, you helped her keep it together but she saw that, Faye, trust me, she’d unravel. Hospital stay. My count since I could remember, she’s had four. One lasted six months. This would destroy her. If by some miracle she got better, she couldn’t live with him. Problem is, she can’t live without him. Knowin’ that, knowin’ she had nothin’ good to get out for, she might
never
recover. I don’t want my mother in a hospital the next thirty years. I got no choice. Keep my mouth shut, take my envelopes filled with dirty money, look the other way and step up when they gave me an assignment.”
“You returned the money,” I reminded him quietly. “It said so in the papers.”
“Yeah, but when my father’s cronies, The Elite, got their shit in another mess, this mess involving Arnie, a mess that had to be sorted with muscle behind a badge, they sent me. With no choice, I went.”
I didn’t understand.
“Chace, I don’t –”
“A man tried to horn in on Arnie’s blackmail and extortion business and they sent me to talk him down. Except, to talk him down, I had to use my fists and with that tape in an envelope ready to be couriered to my mother, I had no choice but to do it.”