“You look startled, dear,” Norah said, concern lining her brow. “Is something wrong?”
Distracted, Emma looked up and shook her head.
She paused, seemed to be trying to make up her mind about something, then said, “I was surprised to see Mr. Payne this morning. He’d indicated last night after the ghost stories that he’d intended to lengthen his stay and that he had a favor to ask of me. It was odd,” she remarked, frowning. “You two seemed to be getting along so well.” She offered a kind smile. “I hope you didn’t have a falling out. Love’s too precious to squander on petty fights.”
He’d planned to stay? Had wanted Norah’s help? He’d never told her that he wasn’t leaving this morning. Of course, he’d never really gotten the chance, she conceded, remembering why. Hot kisses, tangled sighs, naked flesh and bone-wringing orgasms... Her belly clenched with remembered heat and her nipples tingled behind her bra. Merely thinking about him almost set her off and he was half-way to Atlanta by now, Emma thought, going home empty-handed when he could have had it all.
She carefully refolded the letter and slipped it back into the envelope, then stood on legs that weren’t altogether steady. She couldn’t accept this, Emma decided. Did she appreciate it? Yes. Did she love Brian Payne? More than anything.
But whatever this was costing him had to be more than she stood to lose.
“Have a safe trip back to Marble Springs,” Norah said.
“Thanks, I will,” Emma told her, smiling. Right after she detoured to Fort Benning and delivered the pocket-watch to Colonel Garrett.
If Payne wouldn’t do it, then she would.
* * *
Atlanta
“Where’s Payne?” Jamie asked.
Guy frowned, looked up from the surveillance report he’d been studying. “Same place he’s been ever since he came home yesterday afternoon. The Tower.”
In a completely uncharacteristic move, Payne had come directly home from the airport, bypassed the office without so much as a status report and taken the elevator upstairs. Guy had called to check in on him, but Payne had gone into lock-down mode and hadn’t wanted to talk. He’d kindly told him to butt out and Guy had thought it prudent given the ominous tone in his friend’s voice to take that advice.
Then again, when did he ever do the prudent thing? He stood, cocked his head toward the elevator. “Let’s go talk to him.”
Jamie cocked a you’re-shittin’-me brow. “Storm the Tower?”
Guy nodded. “Something’s wrong. This isn’t like him.”
“Didn’t he tell you to butt out?”
Guy blinked innocently. “He did. What’s your point?” He depressed the call button, waited on the elevator doors to slide open, then selected Payne’s floor.
Jamie grimaced, but followed him anyway. “I’ve got a bad feeling about this,” he said, canting his head to a skeptical angle.
“I do, too,” Guy told him. “If he’s gotten into the whiskey, then we know we’re in trouble.”
Payne wasn’t much a recreational drinker, but had been known to his the liquor hard when he found something particularly disturbing. He’d gotten dog-ass drunk when his mother had married a guy half her age several years ago--a marriage which had promptly ended in a nasty divorce six months later--and had gotten drunker still when Danny had died. Payne liked to be in control--thrived on it--which is why Guy suspected his friend rarely drank. Occasionally, though, something would happen which would force him to let go and feel like a normal human being and when that happened, he typically turned to alcohol for help.
If he was drinking, it could only mean one of two things--he either lost the bet and came home without the pocket-watch, or Emma Langsford had gotten under his skin.
Guy grimaced.
Worse still, it could be both.
Jamie knocked on Payne’s door and he and Guy stood in the hall and waited for him to open it. Half a minute later, Payne opened the door. Looking like death warmed over, he wore a silk robe, which had probably cost more than Guy’s entire NASCAR memorabilia collection, and held a bottle of Jim Beam loosely in one hand.
He and Jamie shared a significant look.
Oh, hell.
CHAPTER 14
Payne stared at Guy and Jamie for a moment, then turned on his heel and walked away, leaving the door open so that they could follow him if they so chose.
Which naturally they did, because they were nosy bastards who couldn’t leave well enough alone.
“I’m fine,” Payne said before they could ask. And it was sort of true. With the help of his good buddy Jim Beam, he’d discovered that he could actually numb himself into fine. So far it was working out splendidly.
The moment he started to miss Emma, to wonder if he’d done the right thing, if she’d ever forgive him, he merely hefted the bottle to his lips and miraculously, he’d begin to feel better. Honestly, Payne thought, as he strolled back to his recliner, he didn’t know why he saved getting drunk for nasty occasions.
Guy snagged the remote control from the coffee table, then lowered himself onto Payne’s leather sofa and began to idly channel surf. Jamie, on the other hand, had chosen to stand.
“Things went so wrong you’re drinking?” Guy asked.
Hell, that was obvious. Didn’t he see the friggin’ bottle in his hand? Payne felt a smile catch the corner of his mouth. Now that was precisely the sort of smart-assed remark Emma would have made.
“Bad enough,” Payne told him, hurt sugared-violet eyes flashing through his mind.
“If they were that bad, then why the hell didn’t you call?” Jamie wanted to know. “We would have helped you.”
Payne knew that and he appreciated it, but this was something no one could help him with. After a moment, he smiled without humor and said as much.
Jamie and Guy shared another one of those concerned looks. “Is this an I-didn’t-complete-my-mission problem or a girl problem?”
They’d find out eventually, so there was no point in lying about it. “A girl problem.”
Guy swore. “Dammit, Payne, I warned you about her. What did she do?”
Payne’s bleary gaze bored into his friend’s, silently warning him away from laying any blame at Emma’s door. “She didn’t do anything. She was great. I’m the problem.”
Guy scowled. “I don’t understand. What do you mean, you’re the prob--“
Jamie chuckled, and his knowing gaze sparked with instant knowledge only a guy who was also in love could recognize. “She thawed you,” he said, almost faintly, seemingly thunderstruck.
“Thawed him?” Guy repeated, looking completely bewildered. “What the hell are you talking about?”
“Are you blind?” Jamie countered, evidently thrilled that he’d figured it out. “He’s fallen for--“
The phone rang, cutting Jamie off before he could finish the thought. Payne had set the answering machine to auto-answer so that he didn’t have to deal with any calls and grimaced when Garrett’s voice once again sounded through the little speakers. “Payne? Payne? If you’re there, pick up.” Silence then, “Fine. I’ll say what I’ve got to say here and we’ll consider this done. Emma Langsford delivered the pocket-watch to me this morning. She said you’d had something come up, and couldn’t--“
Stunned, Payne scrambled for the phone. “What? What did you say?”
“So you are there. Excellent,” Garrett said. “Emma delivered the pocket-watch to me this morning. I don’t know why you sent her, but in any case, well done.” His voice brimmed with delight. “I knew you wouldn’t fail me. I’ve wanted this piece forever and thanks to you, I’ve got it. I know that you think I’m a bit obsessed but...”
No, he’d only failed her, Payne thought as Garrett continued to drone on into his ear. He’d doubted her. Why in God’s name had she taken Garrett the pocket-watch? Why hadn’t she given the bloody thing to Hastings and collected her reward? Had she lost her freakin’ mind? Payne wondered. What on earth would possess her
to do something so reckless? So irresponsible? So noble?
He reeled from the shock of it, from her selflessness and his aching heart expanded painfully in his chest when the gravity of her sacrifice sunk in.
She’d done this for him.
Without knowing why, Payne realized, because he’d never told her about Danny’s death, about Garrett’s favor and his own screwed up connection between the two. She’d given him the benefit of the doubt, had had enough faith in him that she’d been willing to sacrifice her own happiness without even knowing what would bring about his.
He didn’t know when anything, if ever, had touched him more.
“--at any rate, Major, I truly appreciate this. We’re even,” he said, and though it could have been simply wishful thinking on his part, Payne felt as though a choke-hold had been taken off his neck.
Debt paid. Honor in tact. Mission accomplished.
Only now he had one more. Payne stood. “Which one of you bastards is driving me to Marble Springs?”
Guy blinked and Jamie gaped. “What’s in Marble Springs?” Jamie asked.
With a resigned smirk, Guy fished his keys out of his front pocket. “It’s not what, but who,” he said, studying Payne as though seeing him for the first time. “I will,” he volunteered, “because this I’ve gotta see.”
Jamie scowled. “I want to go, too.”
“Too bad. You have to stay here with your pregnant wife.”
“She can come, too. Hell, she’s only pregnant. It’s not like she’s incapacitated.”
“This is not a friggin’ soap opera,” Payne snapped. “This is my life.”
Guy grinned. “You’re right. It’s better than a soap opera. We’ll wait in the car.”
* * *
“You’re using way too many flowers,” Darcy snapped. “How many times do I have to tell you, Emma? More greenery, less flowers.” She rolled her eyes as though Emma was a complete idiot. “It’s basic economics.”
No, it was cheap, Emma thought, biting her tongue. Darcy could hang on to more of her easy-earned cash if she filled an arrangement full of the less-expensive greenery and hoarded back more flowers. Unfortunately, she had the market cornered in Marble Springs and people allowed her to get away with it.
But she wasn’t here to debate Darcy’s poor business practices, she was here to work. Money was money and, if she ever wanted to start vet school, Emma needed it. Work was hard to find in her little hometown and she couldn’t afford to thumb her nose at the opportunity to make some cash just because the woman paying her was a certified bitch who delighted in making her feel like a second-class citizen.
Welcome to my life, Emma thought, her lips sliding into a wry smile.
Her mother had a hard time grasping this thought-process, but oddly didn’t have a problem with her giving the pocket-watch to the wrong colonel and essentially flushing ten grand down the commode.
That, she’d understood.
“I don’t know who this man is, honey, but I know if you’re willing to make this sort of sacrifice he has to be worth it.”
Evidently love was a universal language and any person who’d ever been in it recognized the dialect when they saw it.
Emma had been glad that her mother understood, because frankly, she didn’t think she could have withstood the disappointment and criticism if she hadn’t. She felt like she was broken inside and the other thing holding her together was her skin.
Hastings hadn’t been thrilled with the outcome either, but Emma had held her ground. Payne had found it first. He’d won. Hastings had roared and complained, but had been too honorable to demand his money back. The initial payment and expenses had never been contingent on her winning--that had been her price to make the trip in the first place.
And Garrett, of course, had been delighted. He’d been slightly confused by her arrival, but had ultimately been so beside himself for getting the watch that he hadn’t cared who’d delivered it. Emma had desperately wanted to ask him about Payne’s involvement--what he stood to gain--but didn’t.
In the end, it didn’t matter.
Whatever his debt, it had been paid and Emma had insisted that Garrett let Payne know that. Not for her sake, but for his own.
God, how she missed him. She missed him so much that it hurt to breathe and more than once over the past couple of days she’d considered calling him, but didn’t. If and when the time ever came that he wanted to see her, she was certain he’d let her know. The ball was squarely back in his court.
Emma heard the bell above the door ring, indicating that a customer had walked into the store. She started forward, but Darcy shot her a quelling look. “You just keep working. I’ll get it.”
The implication being she was too stupid to wait on a customer. Emma gritted her teeth and imagined enrolling in school. That was the goal here, dammit. She could take a little abuse if it meant she’d ultimately have the life she wanted, the one she knew deep in her heart that she deserved.
“Well, good afternoon,” Darcy said, and Emma recognized it as her there’s-a-good-looking-man-in-my-store kind of voice. Egads, the woman was such a whore, Emma thought with a mental eyeroll.
“I’m looking for Emma Langsford.”
Payne? she thought faintly.
“Emma?” Darcy asked him, as though she couldn’t quite believe that Payne would be looking for her.
“Her mother said I’d find her here.”
Seemingly drawn forward by the mere sound of his voice, Emma walked out of the back room and paused at the door. Her silly heart lightened and her palms tingled.
Payne’s gaze instantly found hers. Those wintry blue eyes were a bit blood-shot and tortured and she watched a relieved sigh leak out of his lips. It was gut-wrenching. “Hiding from me again, I see. I thought I warned you about that.”
Emma moved cautiously forward. “What are you doing here?”
“I came for you,” he said simply.
Darcy’s wide-eyed gaze bounced between them, but Emma ignored her.
“For me?”
Payne cast a hesitant glance at Darcy, then his gaze tangled with hers once more. “Is there somewhere we can talk?”
“She’s working right now,” Darcy piped up, smirking spitefully. “You’ll have to talk to her on your own time, I’m afraid.”
Payne turned the full force of his frosty displeasure upon Darcy and she actually backed up a step. “This is my own time,” he told her. “And I didn’t spend the last six hours in the car listening to my friends mock me for falling in love--and having to stop half a dozen times to accommodate the pregnant woman whose bladder has shrunk to the size of a pea who was with us--merely to be turned away by you. I’m talking to her now. She quits.”
“What?” Emma asked, startled by the whole falling-in-love comment. And she quits? she thought faintly, reeling. What the hell was he doing?
“You’re not working for her anymore. Get your things. We’re leaving.”
“Payne--“
“Get them,” he repeated.
Of all the high-handed nerve, Emma thought, but couldn’t muster any proper outrage. Only an idiot would find Payne’s bossy nature on her behalf so damned thrilling, but she did. Her heart did a little loop-de-loop and her belly fluttered with fizzy, delighted air. Truth be told, she was damned turned on as well. Emma hurried to the back, got her purse, then turned and shot Darcy a self-satisfied smile as Payne held the door open for her.
The look on her face was priceless.
“Do you want that store?” Payne asked the instant they were outside.
“What?”
“Do you want it? I’ll buy it in a heartbeat and put her wicked ass to work for you. God, you’re mother was right. She’s a bitch.” He glared at her. “How could you take the damned pocket-watch to Garrett and come back to this?” he demanded. “I left it for you so that you wouldn’t have to.”
“What?” Emma shot right back at him. “Think you’ve got the market cornered on
nobility? You needed it more than I did.”
“What on earth made you think that?” Payne demanded. “You did.”
He blinked. “What? How?”
“Payne, I knew it had to have been important to you. You don’t do anything without a purpose and when I saw all the trouble you’d gone through--all the money you were willing to let go of--simply to be able to hand that watch over to Garrett, I knew it had to be something...significant.” She swallowed, huddled deeper into her jacket. “You weren’t doing it for the money. Something else had driven you and even though you never told me, it didn’t make it any less important.”
Payne looked away and a muscle jumped in his tense jaw. “When Danny died, I wanted out of the military,” he told her. “I didn’t care what the cost, I just wanted out. Needed to be out.”
Emma nodded. “I can see that,” she said, aching for him. His pain was palpable, rolling off him little waves that were washing over her and pulling her closer to him.
“Garrett made that happen, and all he asked for in return was a favor.” He laughed bitterly. “It was the last tie, you see? The last thing left on my to-do list...and then it would be over. I could fulfill the obligation and start working on the guilt.”
Emma’s chest tightened. “Payne,” she said, cradling his dear face into her hands. “You have nothing to feel guilty about.”
He closed his eyes. “My tactics are what got my friend killed, Emma. I failed and he paid the ultimate price.”
Sweet God, she hadn’t expected this. Guilt had eroded that legendary logic. “I don’t know what happened on this mission. I don’t know why you’re friend died. But I do know you, Payne, and I know that you are The Specialist and the chances of you making a mistake that would have purposely cost your friend his life--would have put his life in any more danger than you and the rest of your unit--are slim to none. Did you do everything to the best of your ability?”
Men Out of Uniform: 6 Book Omnibus Page 30