Authors: Bella Andre
said that Zach was exactly like Jack Sulivan.
Jack Sulivan’s life had been perfect. He’d had a beautiful
wife he loved and eight great kids. He’d been the definition of
charmed.
But he’d stil died.
And left them al behind.
* * *
to get to Zach. She was at the entry gate to the race track when
Ryan’s arms came around her.
“You can’t go out there.”
She fought Ryan’s hold with every ounce of strength she
had, but Smith was there, too, and the brothers’ muscles were
like steel clamped around her.
“Let go of me!”
she screamed at the two superstars while
a dozen photographers spun back and forth to film the crash and
a dozen photographers spun back and forth to film the crash and
her and Smith and Ryan.
But his brothers just held her tighter as she watched flames
engulf Zach’s car.
He was supposed to be indestructible...and hers
forever.
She’d known he wasn’t, that nobody was buletproof. But
it had been easier to lul herself into a false sense of security than
to have to face the utter loss of control that came from sitting
helpless in the stands while he raced a car at dizzying speeds.
She could stil feel the imprint of his lips on hers, from the
kiss he’d left her with. She’d stopped praying a long time ago,
had substituted hard work and focus and reality for those
prayers.
Now, her lips wouldn’t stop moving, wouldn’t stop
repeating, “Please, God. Please.”
The smoke from the fire extinguishers grew thick and dark
around the car as the emergency crew attacked the flames. Her
tears mixed in with the smoke and the dust from the track as cars
skidded to a stop one by one. The other drivers got out to watch
the scene unfold, horror on their faces as they yanked off their
helmets.
Suddenly, she saw boots. Legs. And then a man throwing
himself to the ground, roling out of the way of the flames.
Shock made Smith and Ryan’s hands loosen just enough
for her to slip free, to hurdle the gate. The roar of the crowd
mixed with the pounding of her heart in her ears as she sprinted
toward Zach. His crew had dragged him away from the car, had
toward Zach. His crew had dragged him away from the car, had
al backed away themselves as the flames only grew taler,
brighter.
The explosion rocked the ground, but even though she
stumbled, she got right back up on her feet.
Zach pushed up from his knees to pul off his helmet. She
crashed into him at the exact second his eyes met hers, and she
pressed her mouth to his face again and again. “Lori said you
were indestructible. I didn’t believe her. Now I do. Thank God
nothing ever touches you.”
His eyes flashed with darkness before he puled her so
tightly to him that it almost hurt.
“I love you so much,” she told him in their last private
moment before the track doctors, the other drivers, and the rest
of the Sulivans descended. Heather didn’t want to let go of
Zach’s hand, didn’t want to lose that connection, but she knew
he’d be al hers later.
Believing he’d been spared from the car crash and fire so
that they could have their forever, when his fingers started to slip
free of hers, she let him go.
After the emergency crew checked Zach out and he’d
convinced his brothers and sisters that he was okay, Heather had
known without being told that al he wanted was to get away
from the race track. She’d thought she would be the one to drive
from the race track. She’d thought she would be the one to drive
home, but when he’d headed for the wheel she’d realized it was
probably best that he dealt with driving a car sooner, rather than
later.
There were so many things she wanted to say to him, so
many things she wanted to tel him—how much she loved him
and how she wasn’t sure about these races, but would try to be
open to them in the future if they were realy important to him—
but just as she buckled into the passenger seat and they headed
off toward the city, his mother caled.
Mary Sulivan’s distress over the accident was palpable.
And yet, Heather admired the calm that lay at the foundation of
her love for her son. If Zach had seemed a bit short, even a little
irritated with the mother Heather knew he loved, she figured it
was one of a dozen natural responses to the crash. There had
been so many people hovering around him wanting reassurance
that he was okay. He had to be exhausted.
But even though she hadn’t been the one fighting like hel to
right the car, and then to escape it, Heather stil couldn’t find her
own calm. It would take time to stop seeing the man she loved
go up in flames every time she closed her eyes. And until that
day came, she wanted to live every single minute with him to the
fulest. She was done holding back a part of her heart from him,
done waiting for that other shoe to drop.
Today she’d learned just how precious life—and love—
truly was.
Standing in his kitchen cooking dinner, the knife almost
sliced through the tip of Heather’s finger instead of the bel
sliced through the tip of Heather’s finger instead of the bel
pepper as another image of Zach spinning out on the track
zinged through her head. Just as she put the knife down, Zach
walked out of the bedroom. His hair was wet from the shower,
his perfect face scratched up and down the right side.
Thank God he was alive.
Despite her lingering distress over his crash, she couldn’t
help smiling at him. The truth was that she’d always grinned like
a fool whenever he was around. Only, Zach didn’t smile back.
It was the first time he’d ever not smiled back.
“Gabe’s coming over.”
She was surprised to hear he was up for a visit from one of
his siblings when she could see how beat he was. “Is he going to
bring over the rest of Cuddles’s things?”
“No.” The word shot like a bulet from his lips. “He’s
coming to take her back.”
Even as he said it, Cuddles was rubbing against his calves
trying to get his attention. But he wasn’t scooping her up into his
arms.
Instead, he was ignoring the puppy completely. He wasn’t
even looking at her.
“I don’t understand,” she said, and she didn’t, couldn’t
possibly believe that he was serious. “You just told them you
were keeping her.”
He shrugged, the shrug of a man who didn’t seem to care
what he’d said to a seven-year-old girl...or what other promises
he might have made along the way to anyone else.
“She’s better off with them. The dog needs a kid around to
play with.”
The dog?
The way he said it was different than when he caled
Cuddles and Atlas
mutts
o r
fur balls.
He was affectionate,
teasing when he said those things. But this was just plain
dismissive.
The paramedics had said he didn’t have a concussion. Had
they been wrong?
“Zach.” She started to move toward him, but the remote
expression on his face stopped her in her tracks. “Are you
feeling okay?”
“I’m fine.”
He sat down on the couch and grabbed the remote, flipping
on the TV. The sound of another car race immediately started
up. Bile rose in her throat at the sight of the cars racing in circles
around the track.
She wanted to scream at him, wanted to throw something
at his big, thick head. Her feet unstuck from the kitchen floor and
she yanked the controls off the coffee table to jam her thumb
over the red
Off
button.
“I can’t watch that right now.” The TV screen went back to
black. “How can you? Don’t you remember you almost died out
there today?”
Before he could answer, Cuddles walked over with one of
Zach’s leather shoes. The puppy plopped down in front of him
and started chewing it, her big brown eyes trained on him as if
and started chewing it, her big brown eyes trained on him as if
she were waiting for a command to do otherwise.
“Aren’t you going to stop her?”
Zach barely glanced down at the puppy. “No. Summer wil
figure out how to get her to stop making mistakes.”
“She’s a puppy. She’s going to make mistakes.” But
wasn’t the truth that some mistakes were so big that they
couldn’t be undone? Like trusting someone to actualy love you
right. “She trusts you, Zach. Gabe and Megan and Summer are
just strangers to her. You’re her family.”
And hers, too, or so she’d thought. Finaly, she’d had the
family she’d never thought could be hers. A future filed with
laughter. And love. So much love it had made her head spin.
Now, though, it was spinning for reasons that had nothing
to do with love.
Please,
she thought, the word running around and around
in her head just the way it had hours earlier. Only this time she
wasn’t begging God, she was silently pleading with a flesh-and-
blood man.
Please don’t do this.
His face was like granite. “She’l be fine.”
Every one of Heather’s instincts told her to run. To flee. To
get out and protect whatever was left of her heart while she stil
could. But something was obviously wrong.
Very wrong.
Zach hadn’t cracked a smile, hadn’t given her one of those
smug looks she always wanted to kiss right off his face.
And, she realized with a dark hit of pain in the pit of her
stomach, he hadn’t so much as touched her since they’d left the
stomach, he hadn’t so much as touched her since they’d left the
track.
He was
always
touching her.
She forced herself to move toward him, rather than away.
“There’s something you’re not teling me. Something that
happened out there on the track.”
“I’m alive,” was his offhand reply. “Everything’s great.”
His eyes were so cold, so shuttered. Al she’d wanted was
to have him back, but not like this.
Not when he suddenly seemed to be a shel of the man
she’d thought he was.
The pain in her stomach grew bigger, but the need to have
the real Zach Sulivan back—
her Zach
—was bigger. Big
enough that she kept moving closer.
“I can’t imagine how it must have felt to be in that car,
trying to get out while it burned. But you walked away from it.”
Whenever she’d gotten stuck in darkness, he’d always
fought for her. He’d made her laugh, he’d held her when she
cried, he’d taught her how to trust again, and to believe in love
when she’d thought it wasn’t possible.
Now she needed to fight for him.
“Talk to me, Zach. Tel me what’s going on.” The word
please
was on her tongue when the doorbel rang.
She could barely stand to watch as Zach shoved al of the
puppy’s things into a grocery bag, picked up Cuddles, and
pushed both the bag and the puppy into his brother’s arms.
The little Yorkie whimpered as she looked from Gabe to
Zach.
Zach.
“You sure about this?” Gabe asked his brother.
“I agreed to keep her for two weeks. Time’s up.”
Gabe’s eyes moved from his brother to Heather. She could
see worry in them, and disappointment.
The same disappointment that was choking her until she
could hardly breathe around it.
“Summer told me you needed a dog because she thought
you were lonely. She was so happy that you were going to keep
her. She thought you wanted the puppy.”
Heather waited for Zach to soften at the mention of the little
girl...or for him to at least acknowledge the way Cuddles was
struggling to get from his brother’s arms into Zach’s.
“I don’t need a dog.”
He didn’t say anything else, but he didn’t need to for
Heather to hear what he was realy saying.
I don’t need anyone else.
She wanted to be anywhere but there, with Gabe’s eyes
taking in her devastation. But she was glad she’d stayed, glad
she’d actualy witnessed Zach doing what he was doing, because
it was the only way she could ever have made her heart face the
truth.
She didn’t realize Atlas had gotten up from his nap on his
dog bed and moved to her side until she felt his big head nudge
her hand. She put her hands on his neck and shoulders, letting his
steady warmth give her the strength she so desperately needed.
Hadn’t she known the other shoe would drop at some
Hadn’t she known the other shoe would drop at some
point? That it had to because it always did?