Authors: Piper Vaughn
didn’t get it. I’d just hoped since we both had the
time free, we would spend some of it together.
Instead, the moment he got back from the baptism
he had to photograph that morning, he’d vanished
into his studio.
I’d been tempted to knock more than once, but
I figured he was probably working. So I’d kept
myself busy with other things—cleaning, laundry,
reorganizing the entryway closet, even some
Pilates. Finally, after hours of me tinkering around
the rest of the apartment by myself, he’d appeared
in the kitchen while I was heating some of the
leftover vegetable soup I’d made a few days
before, looking bone tired and miserable. He’d
brushed a too-light kiss across my cheekbone,
grabbed a bottle of tea from the fridge, and gone
out into the living room to slump down onto the
couch. And since then he hadn’t moved.
“Fuck!”
His sudden outburst—so loud our neighbors
probably heard it across the hall—nearly made me
drop the bowl of soup I’d been carrying to the
breakfast bar. I quickly set it on the counter and
went over to him to see what was wrong. “Asher?
What is it?”
He was sitting on the edge of the couch with
his elbows on his knees, his fingers buried his
hair. “I just tried to call Archer for the fifth time
today,” he muttered, “and it went to voice mail.
Yet again. He told me he’d try to get me some
cash, and now he’s avoiding my calls.”
I stepped closer and reached out to touch his
shoulder. “Ash—”
“
Goddammit!
” His shout made me flinch, but
it was his sudden flurry of movement that sent me
stumbling back and falling onto the love seat.
For a moment I wasn’t sure what had
happened. Then I realized the half-empty tea
bottle, which had been sitting innocuously on the
coffee table only seconds before, had been
reduced to nothing more than a mess of brown
liquid and shattered glass at the base of the
opposite wall. He’d thrown it, luckily missing the
entertainment center and the TV, but he’d done a
bit of damage to the drywall, not to mention the
puddle that was spreading across the light beige
carpet.
I stared at him in shock, overcome by an
unexpected trembling. The room was filled with
the sound of his panting, his hands were curled into
fists at his sides, and for the first time ever, I was
afraid of him.
The last man to lose his temper around me
had decided to work out his anger on my body. In
the months we’d been together, I’d never
experienced even a flicker of fear around Asher.
Not once. With him, I’d felt nothing but protected,
safe—until right at that very moment.
I knew he wasn’t mad at me. He hadn’t even
touched me. But that knowledge did nothing to
alleviate the twisting nausea in my stomach, the
clamminess on my skin, the shaking I couldn’t
seem to get under control now that it had started.
“Oh, shit,” he said, as if he’d only just
realized what he’d done, himself. His eyes were
still on the mess he’d made. “Oh, Jesus. I didn’t
mean to do that. I’m sorry. I’ll go get the—” He
looked at me then, and his words broke off.
Whatever he saw in my face made the blood drain
from his. “Dusty….”
Asher took a cautious step toward me, and I
shook even harder, helpless to stop myself.
“Dusty, no.” He went on his knees and
reached for my hands slowly, giving me a chance
to pull away if I wanted.
I forced my hands to stay where they were, let
him thread our fingers together. My breathing was
ragged, my pulse racing madly from nerves and
fear. I didn’t want to be scared of him. I didn’t
want
it. The fact that it was an instinctive reaction,
one I hadn’t been able to prevent, made me feel
even worse. Most guys wouldn’t be so freaked
over a little moment of anger. I knew that. But
most
guys had probably never been that bottle, the thing
being flung against the wall in a fit of rage.
I had, and I remembered.
“God, I’m such an asshole,” Asher said,
gripping my fingers tightly. “I lost my cool for a
second there. This is so not like me, Dusty. I swear
it isn’t. I’ve been stressed to death, but that’s no
excuse. I’m sorry, okay? Don’t be scared. Don’t be
afraid of me. I’d never hurt you.” He paused and
released my hands so he could bring his own up to
cradle my face. “Dusty? You know that, right?”
I managed a thick, dry swallow. Next, I
nodded, just once. Asher looked about as bad as I
felt, his eyes dark and damp with remorse, mouth
quivering. And I did know. I knew, deep down, he
never would hurt me. But as the saying went, old
habits die hard. I wasn’t sure if I could have
stopped how I’d reacted even if I’d known it was
coming.
“I’m sorry.” Asher rested his forehead against
mine. “Dust… I love you so much. I’ve just… I’ve
been so….”
“I know.” I wrapped my arms around him and
drew him closer to me, offering comfort while
taking some for myself. His shudder of relief
rocked us both. My own shaking had finally
calmed. “I know,” I repeated. I kissed him softly
and nuzzled my nose into the space next to his.
“Ash… let me help. I have a couple grand in
savings. You can pay me back later, okay?”
“Dusty….”
“Please.” I pulled back far enough so he
could see my eyes, see how serious I was. “You’re
working yourself to the point of exhaustion, and
it’s killing me to watch. Just take it, okay? Take the
money.”
He stared at me for a few long, tense seconds.
Then slowly, he nodded. “All right.”
“Good. Tomorrow, I’ll get it for you, and
we’ll go from there.”
Asher nodded again, but he wasn’t looking at
me anymore. His cheeks had flushed red with what
I knew was humiliation. “I should clean up my
mess.”
I shook my head and slid off the love seat and
onto his lap, burrowing my fingers into his hair and
forcing his gaze to meet mine. I wasn’t about to let
him hide. There wasn’t any need for him to be
embarrassed. Not with me. “No,” I said. “We’ll
clean it together.”
And I wasn’t just talking about the bottle.
Asher
“YOU’VE got to be goddamned kidding me!” I
dropped my phone on the couch rather forcefully.
Threw was more like it, but at least I threw it on
the couch and not the floor where it would shatter.
I couldn’t afford to buy a new one. Especially with
all the money I might be spending very soon.
“What, hon?” Dusty poked his concerned face
around the corner from where he’d been folding a
stack of laundry.
“Archer’s phone is turned off. Like
permanently off. That little fucker.”
“What are you—?” Dusty broke off when I
grabbed my keys and headed for the door.
“I’m going over there.”
“Are you sure that’s a good idea?” Dusty’s
eyes got all big and worried. I would’ve smiled if
I wasn’t so far beyond the point that it wasn’t
possible.
“If I don’t, and the dumbass has taken off
somewhere I can’t find him, then I’m totally
screwed. Maybe I should’ve just let my mom
ambush him. Then I’d know where he was.”
“You really think he’d just take off and screw
you over that badly?”
“Probably. That’s why I’m going over there.”
Dusty put down the shirt he’d been holding.
“And I’m coming with you. You’ve been in this too
much by yourself. I know he’s your brother, but I
want to be there.”
I surprised myself by nodding. I wanted him
to be there for me too.
The ride to Archer’s place was tense and
quiet. Dusty kept his hand on my leg the whole
time, either in support or maybe just to calm me
down. I couldn’t remember the last time I’d gotten
so angry. Maybe never. I was shaking by the time
we pulled up. Visibly so. Dusty moved his hand
from my thigh to my arm.
“Hon, what are you going to do if he is
gone?”
I huffed out a mirthless laugh. “I don’t know.
Go find him and kill him? I probably should’ve
called the cops at the beginning. I just didn’t want
to, you know? He’s still my brother.”
Dusty nodded. “I know. And that makes you a
good person. Yeah, he screwed you over, but you
still love him. I get it.”
“Sometimes I wish I didn’t, but yeah. I love
him.”
“Then let’s go see if he’s still around. Maybe
he’s come up with some cash somehow.”
WE COULD smell the weed before we were even
at the front door. Dusty shot me a concerned look,
and I just rolled my eyes. Of course. He had drugs.
He couldn’t give me any damn money for the bills
he racked up, but it was no problem to supply the
entertainment for his deadbeat friends. The door
wasn’t locked. I just opened it and waltzed into the
thick haze, ready to kill the first person I came
across.
“Oh, it’s hot, angry twin.” I remembered that
kid’s face. I wanted to stomp it.
“Where’s Archer?”
I got a giggle in return. “He’s in his room, but
I’m not sure you want to go in there.” Eyebrow
waggle.
Jesus Christ.
I rolled my eyes and stormed
down the hallway to Archer’s room. He was in
there, half-dressed, with two, no, three other guys.
They were all bombed out of their heads and in
various stages of getting it on. I stalked over there,
grabbed Archer, and pulled his arm as hard as I
could. He stumbled a little bit, then tried to yank
his arm away.
“Ow, Ash. That hurts. Stop.” His voice was
slurry. Probably drunk too.
I dragged him out to the hallway. Yeah, it was
technically public and some of the neighbors might
hear, but I wasn’t doing it in front of his friends.
“Is this how you’re working to help me pay off the
bills? You said you were going to give me cash
today, remember?” I ground out, once we were in
the hall with only him, me, and Dusty.
Archer’s head lolled back. “What’s he doing
here?” he mumbled.
“He’s here to make sure I don’t kill you.
Answer the question. Where’s the money?”
Archer giggled. “I had to party. It was… like,
well, you know.”
“No, I
don’t
know. I’ve been working my ass
off. You can’t even meet me halfway?”
“Jus’ change your number or something. They
can’t find you then.”
“Fuck, Arch.” I dropped him on the ground.
“Ow, ow, ow,” he mumbled, then made the
noise again and laughed. “Owwwww.” I left him
there, forming vowels with his mouth and poking at
the air in front of him.
“I’d love to know what else he took,” Dusty
whispered. “You think he’ll be okay?”
I gritted my teeth. “He’s better off with me not
here. I’m gonna flatten him.” Dusty put his hand on
my back, tentative. I knew he was still a bit
startled from my outburst the other night.
Damn.
Could any more personal bullshit of mine taint our
relationship? “I’m starting to think I might have to
do what you said.”
“Call the cops?”
I sighed. “Maybe. I’m not going to do it when
he has who knows what the hell drugs in his
system, though. Sleep on it, I guess.”
I hated Archer for putting me in such an awful
position. Lose way more money than I had, or turn
my brother into a criminal. Officially. My stomach
cramped, and I sagged against the wall.
“Hey, why don’t you let me drive us home?”
Dusty asked.
I handed my keys over without protest.
I SPENT the night following up on leads for gigs.
One of the magazines I’d applied to, local food
and travel, had asked if I wanted to shoot some
scenes for their wine country issue. The pay was
less than half of one of Dom’s shoots, but I’d
already called Dom so many times in the past few
weeks. He’d given me everything he had. My
schedule was packed, morning to night: weddings,
porn shoots, birthday parties, even the odd portrait
here and there. It was the best I could do. It wasn’t
enough.