Convictions: Kelly and Stephen

Home > Other > Convictions: Kelly and Stephen > Page 17
Convictions: Kelly and Stephen Page 17

by Dewick, Delinda


  He watched her movement around the pond, willing her to see him with her heart instead of her head this time, praying that she would understand. He needed more from her; he needed her complete trust and faith.

  She walked back over and knelt down by his side, searching his face for some kind of reaction. His gaze met hers squarely, for the first time since that awful evening when Detective O’Brien led him away. That night there had only been pain in his eyes. Today there was light, and more.

  She finally saw it, the answer that she had been searching for. Stephen Long was not a man to let doubt enter his heart. Stephen was a man of conviction. He acted solely on his convictions, and would never let what he saw as a weakness in character steer him in the wrong direction. He lived his beliefs and he believed in only what his heart told him.

  When he said he’d love her forever, he meant it and that wouldn’t change. Forever meant forever and no misstep on her part would, or could change that. He had given her the key to his soul and he wasn’t the type of man to take that back. Whatever problems they encountered they would handle together, side by side, if only she could just have faith.

  She had found her answers in his eyes and for the first time she came to the full realization that he didn’t need to speak a word. Everything that was in his heart, everything that he wanted her to know, had been right there for her to find, all along. At one time, he had spoken the words that she wanted and needed to hear. But at that same time he had also told her that words meant little to him, that only actions mattered. It was time for her to prove to him that she understood.

  With that astonishing revelation, Kelly met his gaze fully. She smiled and shook her head astonished that it had taken her so long to really see him. Her eyes told him that she finally understood. “Stephen, I get it now.”

  He answered “I know.”

  “But can you ever forgive me?”

  He nodded “I already have. I told you once that I won’t live in the past.” He reached into his pocket and pulled out a small black velvet box and pressed it into her hand.

  She gasped as she opened the box to reveal a perfectly cut one caret diamond ring. “When did you get this?”

  “While you were at your parents” he answered, smiling slyly. That explained Phyllis’s strange comment the day Kelly had returned to Hanlon.

  Stunned, she broke off her inspection of the ring to look into his eyes. “You knew then that you wanted to marry me?”

  “I knew the first time that you walked through my door.”

  She continued to watch him, again stunned by this new revelation. How was it possible that she hadn’t seen all of this? How could she ever have doubted him?

  His eyes had suddenly gone dark as night, as his mood had once again turned serious. “Kelly, if you, I, and our child are ever going to have a shot at a long, happy life together, the life that we both want, then you will have to make me promise, right here and right now. You will need to make me a promise that will never be broken?”

  “Anything” she answered.

  He took the ring from the box and placed it on her ring finger “you will have to promise me that you will never, under any circumstances, ever doubt me, my intentions, or my love for you again.”

  Tears sprung to her eyes. As she leaned down to kiss him she whispered “I promise.”

  And she meant it.

  THE END

  Sneek peek at Convictions II: Carly and Jason, the second book in the Convictions Series from Delinda Dewick…

  Chapter 1

  It was late, well after midnight, when Carly locked up. Heading north towards home on foot, she pushed her medium length blonde hair back off her shoulders. Home for Carly is a two unit house about four blocks north of Max’s Tavern. When the weather allows, she prefers to walk home from work, allowing for time to stretch her muscles, and time for her mind to clear itself of the day’s drama, giving her a reasonable chance at falling asleep right away when she finally makes it to bed.

  Max’s Tavern is the neighborhood bar for downtown Bellis, a working man’s bar. Many relationships have started there, probably just as many have ended. And fights are a regular occurrence so Carly keeps a baseball bat behind the bar for the few times that she isn’t able to talk the regulars down off of their testosterone high.

  She knows just about all of the regulars, has grown up with most. Women frequent Max’s occasionally, usually to find a man, retrieve a man, break up with a man, or to make one jealous. But most of her regular customers are men; local union workers or contractors. Carly has been working at Max’s for nearly fourteen years.

  Tonight had been slow, which was typical for a Tuesday, but painful for the bartender. The early rush produced the regular “after work” crowd, people who come in to get primed before going home, which helps them to tolerate the monotony that is their ordinary life. But by seven most of them are long gone.

  Later on there had been a few older patrons, ones without families, who had come in later hoping to chase away the loneliness with beer and the company of others, no matter how pathetic the “others” might be. Carly keeps their glasses full until they’ve had too much, and then gently lets them know when it’s time to leave, of course insuring that none are driving. These people are her family, or as much she has left, and she looks on it as her personal responsibility to see that no one finds trouble with the Bellis PD, at least not as a result of being at Max’s Tavern.

  Bellis, a town of nearly six thousand, is located in Butte County, South Dakota, just a stone’s throw from Wyoming and Montana. Its biggest claim to fame is its close proximity to Sturgis, home to the largest annual motorcycle rally in the U.S. August can get pretty crazy in Bellis, as the crowds roll through. But mostly the people of Bellis are quiet, hardworking, and immensely thankful for their luck at having been born in this part of the country. Carly was born, raised, and graduated in Bellis, and now at nearly thirty she’s as much a permanent part of its landscape as anyone else.

  “Carly, get in the car, now.” Carly was startled out of her thoughts by the police cruiser that had pulled up to the curb alongside of her.

  “Kevin, leave me alone. I’m walking tonight.”

  “Carly, another girl from downtown got raped two nights ago. It’s not safe for you to walk anymore. Get in the car, please.”

  “I don’t need you to babysit me Kevin, I can take care of myself. Here’s an idea, maybe you should go protect and serve the community instead of stalking me?”

  Kevin’s face turned red with anger. “Suit yourself you stupid bitch. You deserve whatever happens to you.” Rolling up his window he hit the gas pedal squealing his tires as he pulled back out into the road.

  She shook her head, silently berating herself for the mean spirited comment. She should have found a nicer way to get her point across but Kevin just wasn’t responding to politeness anymore. Rudeness was the only thing that had an impact on him these days. Was it her imagination or was he getting more ornery with time? She wished that he would find a way to get past her and move on with his life as she was trying to do with hers.

  She walked another block and a half, noticing a glimmer of something coming from under a tree up ahead. Despite her cavalier attitude with Kevin, she was very much aware of the string of rapes that had paralyzed Bellis. Carly was careful to remain attentive and be aware of her surroundings. And she carried a can of mace in her bag just in case. But she wasn’t going to let fear stop her from doing the things she enjoyed, she had so few of them left, and walking at night when the streets were empty, when she could hear herself think, was one of them.

  It was a light, or the reflection of a light bouncing off of something shiny, like steel or chrome maybe. She put her hand in her bag and wrapped it around the can of mace just in case. As she got closer a figure stepped out from underneath the over grown old oak, it’s branches obscuring what else might be under it. Carly instantly recognized the tall perfect form of Jason long before she was able t
o make out his facial features, or his cat like eyes. She let go of a sigh of relief and the can of mace in the same instant.

  The source of the reflection she had first seen was the street light above shining down through the tree branches onto the chrome of Jason’s Harley Davidson. He had been leaning against it, apparently waiting for her, but had stepped out onto the sidewalk when he spotted her approaching. “I’m sorry Carly. I didn’t mean to scare you.”

  “Jason, what are you doing out here? I thought you headed home a while ago.”

  She was caught off guard whenever she faced him directly. At five feet eleven inches tall, Carly was unaccustomed to having to look up to meet a man’s eyes. Jason was several inches taller than her, and for the first time in her life, Carly did not feel awkward.

  “I’ve been paying attention to the news so I’m making sure that you get home ok. This is a bad time for a beautiful young woman to be out here on her own. Would you like a ride?”

  “No, but thank you for the offer; my place is just there, a few more houses up.”

  Jason Collins was the new guy in town, having relocated to Bellis a few months ago for work. Lately, he had made a nightly routine of stopping into Max’s before closing and had not been shy about making his interest in Carly known. But she did not return his interest, and she thought she had made that well known too. Still, he was nice to look at.

  “Ok, I’ll walk with you then.”

  Carly smiled and shrugged her shoulders, after all, she couldn’t stop him from walking along; it was a public sidewalk.

  “Look Carly, it’s no secret that I’m into you. “

  “Well, you shouldn’t be. I’ve got baggage and no desire to share it with anybody.”

  “Don’t you think that I deserve the opportunity to decide that for myself?” His voice was low and husky.

  “I’m sorry Jason, but it just can’t work out between us.”

  “Carly, it’s really not my intention to complicate things for you and I certainly don’t want to pressure you into something you’re not ready for. I just enjoy talking to you and being with you, and honestly, I thought we had a connection.”

  It wasn’t that she didn’t find Jason attractive. On the contrary, he was probably the most attractive man she had ever met. And despite what she said out loud to him, she too had felt the connection. Carly was flattered by his attention directed at her, but a romantic relationship was out of the question for her.

  They arrived at the front porch steps that led up to her door. Carly climbed the five steps, searching for her keys. Jason stayed at the bottom, leaning on the railing. As she turned to thank him for looking out for her, Carly’s eyes slide past him to the distant corner. He followed her eyes, spotting the patrol car that was turning onto a side street.

  Turning back to her and pointing a finger over his right shoulder Jason continued “I don’t know what the deal is between you and Barney Fife; you told me once that he wasn’t your boyfriend, but I don’t get the feeling that he knows that.”

  She couldn’t help laughing at his reference “No, he’s not my boyfriend. There is nothing between us.”

  “Good, because I’m pretty sure that I’m reading you right; that you have the same feelings for me that I have for you. Carly, I’m a patient man. I can wait until you work through whatever it is that’s holding you back. Anyway, I just wanted to be straight with you, I’m not going anywhere. I’ll be easy to find when you change your mind.”

  She watched his eyes while he talked. His eyes were the most unique color of dark amber and they burned with emotion as he talked. There was something about him, besides his strikingly good looks. There was something deeper, and that’s probably what had scared the hell out of her. “Good night Jason.”

  “Good night Carly, sweet dreams.”

  He watched while she unlocked her door and disappeared inside, closing and locking the door behind her.

  She leaned back against the door, not moving until she heard his motorcycle engine fire and ride slowly by, up the street in front of her house. Carly wanted to rip the door open and stop him from leaving. But she didn’t; she couldn’t.

  Her head was spinning with a variety of new sensations. She could no longer deny that Jason was bringing out emotions that she thought she had put away for good over a decade ago. Carly was almost thirty years old and hadn’t been on a date since high school.

  She hadn’t lied to Jason; there was nothing between Carly and Kevin, now. But they had been an item in high school. He had been the captain of the football team, she was a cheerleader, and everyone told her that she and Kevin belonged together. So she went out with him; what could it hurt.

  They had been voted homecoming king and queen, prom king and queen, and the couple most likely to stay together forever. Before long everyone else had Carly convinced that this was the way it was supposed to be; she and Kevin were destined for each other. They were the official school couple, destined to be high school sweethearts who hung in there for the long run.

  But everything changed after Danny died. She was no longer able to pretend that she cared so she broke it off, for good. Not so for Kevin, he had always loved Carly; apparently he still did. Here more than ten years later, and despite the fact that she hadn’t let him touch her since high school, he still stalked her, treated her like she was his, protected her, and wouldn’t let anyone else near her. She had never before complained about that last part because to be perfectly honest, she didn’t want anyone and Kevin’s interference kept her from having to deal with being hit on, or having to issue rejections.

  Carly had convinced herself that she wasn’t missing anything, and the truth was, up until now, she probably wasn’t. There just wasn’t anyone in this town that she cared about seeing outside of work. At least that’s how she used to feel, before Jason. He had been right, she did have feelings for him, and they were strong feelings.

  Despite her attempts to keep him at arms distance, somewhere over the last several weeks Jason had gotten in, and it had caught her by complete surprise. Something had changed within her, something hard to pin point. For the first time in her life she desired a man and it was getting increasingly harder with each minute that she spent with Jason, to pretend that their feelings weren’t mutual.

  Available Summer of 2016

 

 

 


‹ Prev