by Alice Ward
“Zek and I wrapped up the trial last night, and he was acquitted. It was a great case, and helping him meant the world to me.” I shrugged and glanced down as I pulled at the strings on one of the blue placemats beneath my arms.
She swatted at me and smiled. “Good for you. Stop picking at that and tell us the rest of the story. You don’t come visit too often, especially not in the middle of the week. I’m thinking your crying spell gave you up… what happened? Did he hurt you again?”
“Again?” Dad moved up to stand beside Mom on the other side of the breakfast bar.
“I had a crush on him as a kid, Dad. He didn’t return the feelings. It was nothing.” I lifted my eyebrow and glanced toward my mother, trying to get her to hush. We could talk later.
“With Zek? He’s your brother’s age. You’re way too young for him, peanut.” My dad reached out and tugged at a strand of my hair. “He’s a better choice than that French fry potato head guy you married though. I couldn’t stand that guy. Always analyzing everything and pointing out how pretty stuff was.”
I laughed and rolled my eyes. “Dad. He was an artist.”
“I don’t care. I don’t like it. I’m glad his pretty ass is gone.” My dad turned his back to us and started working on dinner as Mom pulled up a chair across from me and leaned her forearms against the counter. “What happened?”
“Zek’s not too old for me, right? You and Daddy have five years between you. Zek and I are four, I think.” I sat back.
“No, silly. Ignore your father. No one will ever be right for you. You’re his only little girl. Now, enough of that stuff. What happened? Talk to me.” She reached out and laid her hands down on the table, palms up.
I slid mine into hers and gripped her tightly as she gripped mine in return.
“I’m still in love with him. After all this time, I thought maybe I could just slip in, save the day and get back out unscathed. I thought…” I choked on my words and closed my eyes, trying to save myself from putting too much emotion on display. It wasn’t about being real in front of my mother, but more about having to confront how much it hurt that things were fucked up between me and Zek once more. It would almost have been better to never have gotten involved with him again.
Safer, at least.
“Oh, Alisa. I’m sorry that your heart is hurting.” She squeezed my hands. “Do you think it’s just because you’re vulnerable because of what happened with Ben?”
“I don’t know. I hope it is. I have to push through and defend Zek in this next case, but I’m not so sure we’ll come out of it with a good verdict. When the government wants to pin something on someone, they’ll find a way.” I pulled my hands free and wiped at my face. “I’m sorry I’m so emotional. I came to spend time with you guys and cheer up.”
“Well, just be you, and we’ll figure out the rest.” She got up and walked around the table, pulling me into another warm hug as she kissed the top of my head. “I think you’ve got a lot going on. You need to take things slow and not try and rush into anything at work, or in your personal life. Help Zek as best you can, and let things progress as they naturally do between you two.”
“That’s the problem.” I pulled back. “It took two years for me and Ben to decide there was even anything between us to explore. With Zek, it’s like two powder kegs ready to explode when we’re in the room together. He makes me come alive and want so much more emotionally than I have. He makes me want to live more, bigger, better.”
“Then he’s the one.” My dad patted the table in front of me. “He’s always been the one. So what if he’s old enough to be your dad. Age isn’t that big of a deal.”
I rolled my eyes and got off the stool I was sitting on. “You’re ridiculous, Daddy.”
“Ridiculously cute.” My mom giggled and moved back into the kitchen as I disappeared down the hall.
“Gross,” I called back to them just before walking into my old room. My mom hadn’t changed it too much, but then again, I’d never been one of those girls with pink walls or gobs of pictures stuck all over the place. I was a lawyer for a reason, and organization and neatness had always been part of the picture for me.
I dropped down on my bed and pulled out my phone, scanning through Zek’s texts. I wanted to call him so bad, but I wasn’t sure what to say. I love you? I’m coming over? I can’t imagine my life with anyone but you?
“I never have been able to.” I flopped back onto the bed, realizing how unbelievably stupid I was being, but I couldn’t help it.
My mom poked her head into the room. “Mind if I come in? You disappeared. Did Dad and I run you off?”
“Yep. You guys are gross.” I chuckled and turned onto my side, pulling my knees up to a fetal position. She mimicked me, and snuggled up until our arms touched.
“I love you.” Her smile was warm and drove remembrance of a great life, a great childhood, a great family deep into me.
“I love you too. I’m so glad for you and Daddy.” I rolled my eyes and growled as tears filled my eyes again. “I’m grateful for stinky head too.”
“Does your brother still let you call him that?” She reached over and wiped at my tears.
“No. He doesn’t know.” I laughed and pushed her hand away softly as I wiped them away myself. “I hate feeling like this. I guess it’s lack of sleep.”
“No, it’s not. Well, maybe some of it is, but it’s you trying to live in a gray area that doesn’t exist for you. You’re a lawyer and always have been very linear. You’re either really good, or insanely bad.” She lifted her eyebrow and we laughed. I had been a rather rowdy teenager.
“I think you’re right. It’s so weird, all this stuff between me and Zek. I need to do my job, and my firm is quite clear on us remaining objective and apart until the case is over, but maybe I’m taking it too far. I let him near me one minute and push him away with all of my might the next.” I rolled onto my back and let out a long sigh. “I just want things to be easy.”
“They’re not going to be, Alisa. It’s not black or white. It’s somewhere in the middle. It’s a maybe, sorta, kinda area, and you’re not good with those. You’re just not, honey.” She reached over and brushed the back of her fingers down my cheek. “Does he care about you?”
“He says he’s in love with me, that he always has been, but I’m not sure I believe that.” I turned back onto my side and studied my mother’s beautiful face. I needed to get home more often. I’d almost forgotten how good it felt to be with her and Dad.
“I believe it. How could he not be?” She smiled, and I responded in kind. “You’re talented, insanely beautiful and a rebel under that guise of well-to-do lawyer. You’re every man’s dream.”
“Funny… I don’t feel much like it right now.” I reached over and squeezed her shoulder.
“What else is bothering you? There’s something you’re not saying. I can see it written all over your face.” She gave me a warning look that I’d seen far too many times in my youth.
“I guess part of what I’m struggling with is whether Zek is guilty or innocent in this new case we have coming up. What if he did do it? Then what?” I couldn’t tell my mother that Zek had admitted his guilt. I was under very specific client/attorney covenants with Zek, though I wouldn’t have told her otherwise. He’d trusted me with that information, and it wasn’t going anywhere.
“Did someone die because of him?” She brushed my hair behind my ear.
“No.”
“Did someone suffer dismemberment or mental sanity?”
“No.”
“Would you want him to see you through something like this if you were in his shoes and he was defending you?” She smiled, knowing that she could bring me to the truth. She always had been able to.
“Of course I would.” I nodded. “So it doesn’t matter?”
“It matters, but not in whether you love him or help him, baby. It matters in that he will have to turn away from that type of activity and come back to being a
man that not only he can be proud of, but that you can be proud of too. You understand? We all make mistakes. Everyone deserves redemption and a second chance, right? That’s what we believe.”
I nodded. “Yeah. You’re right.”
“I usually am.” She chuckled.
“But what if he goes to jail, Mom? I’d have to say goodbye again. I’m not sure my heart could handle that.”
She reached out and cupped my cheek. “You’re so much stronger than you think you are. If Zek Kellington is the man for you, then you fight for him. Nothing can conquer the power of love, Alisa. Nothing. Don’t let your wayward thoughts and well-founded concerns snuff out something that might be in the making. Love can destroy all that doubt. If he’s the one, then don’t give up, and for God sakes, stop backing down.”
“And if he’s not the one?” I sat up and worked to pull my hair into a ponytail as my father called to us from the kitchen.
“Then you’ll need to help me find the key to your Daddy’s gun cabinet. He’ll take care of the old boy if nothing else.” My mom got up and walked out into the hall. “Let’s go see what your father’s doing before he burns down the whole damn house.”
I laughed and followed her, forgetting my worries and promising myself that I would resolve to be more real, more open, more willing around Zek. He was the one. I had no doubt at all.
He always had been.
CHAPTER 5
Zek
I stayed at the office until late that evening and drove home knowing that things had to change. I’d resolved myself to talking with Lizzy about taking Alisa off the case. It wasn’t so that she would take up my offer to be my woman, but so that she wouldn’t feel the devastating blow when we lost. I wanted to be optimistic, and she was a damn fine lawyer, but I’d done the crime. We were going to lose. She didn’t deserve to feel the false guilt she would suffer from something that was inevitable.
After making myself a couple of sandwiches, I dropped down onto the couch and turned on the news, hoping to catch the tail end of it. The story was all about Jessup, and the newscasters were having a field day going through each person that would now be part of the trial. The part on me must have already aired, because I’d seen just about everyone I knew flash up on the screen other than me.
“Shame.” I leaned forward and finished the cold beer I had sitting on the table in front of me. I wanted to call some of the old boys from school to see where Dane was and why his greasy-ass mugshot wasn’t on the TV too. He had to have turned us all in. There was no other way he would come out of the situation without more years in jail than all of us put together.
“Slick bastard.” I sank down into the comfort of the couch and reached for my phone as it buzzed. The number was unknown, and thinking it might be Alisa for some odd reason, I answered it.
“Zek Kellington.”
“Hi Zek. It’s Lyndsay.” Her voice was soft and sweet, much like it had been when we first met.
“What do you need, Lyndsay?” I didn’t have the time or the patience for her.
“I still have a handful of things over there. Do you think I could stop by tonight and pick them up? I don’t want to bother you. I wouldn’t be but a minute.”
She was trying to get her way with me. Funny how quickly I’d bent to her in the past until she realized she didn’t have to be sweet all the time. She could be a mean bitch, and my hope for things to get better would hold us together when nothing else did.
“I’m headed to bed tonight, but I’ll call you tomorrow when I get back into town.” I stifled the need to sigh in aggravation at having to see her.
“You sure? I could bring over some beer and we could talk about everything. I know your trial went great. I’m sorry you had to go through that shit.”
“Tomorrow. I’ll call you then if I get back into town in time.” I dropped the call and tossed the phone onto the couch next to me. That bitch didn’t care if I’d been pulled through the ringer. Her latest boy-toy must have dumped her or not been able to keep up with her materialism. She wasn’t getting back into my good graces under any circumstance.
The newscast caught my attention as a middle-aged woman was expanding more on the Jessup situation.
“… I think my biggest concern is for all of these families. Can you imagine having your husband do something like this and not consider at all what it might do to you as his wife? To your kids?” The female touched her chest. “They have no concept of protection and family.”
“I would think they just weren’t considering those things at that time, but some of these men are known as great family men.” Her co-anchor gave her a look as if she were overdoing it.
“No. That’s not possible. Anyone with any sense of family would have turned away from such a nasty scandal. These women’s lives are on the fritz. Who wants to raise kids with a criminal? Who deserves that type of life?”
I turned off the TV and let my head drop back. “Fuck.”
The woman was right. No one deserved it. Least of all, my Alisa.
*
“Why aren’t you being more positive about this?” Mark glanced over at me as I drove us up to the cabin. I’d called him early the next morning and pressured him into taking the day off to spend some time with me. I could almost feel my time growing short, but I’d never tell him that. We were too close, and I almost regretted it as he sat next to me.
“I don’t know. I guess because I did it. I deserve to go to jail.” I shrugged and pinched my bottom lip between my fingers as my mind moved between the fear of losing my freedom back to Alisa. “I really think my best bet is to talk to Lizzy and get Alisa off the case. There is no way to win this one.”
“Fuck that. You’re just talking out of your ass.” He popped me in the chest with the back of his hand. “Stop spewing negativity. Alisa is the best attorney in the city. She won that rape case for you just a few days ago. Give her a chance.”
“It’s not the same, Mark. You know how she and I feel about each other. If she loses, it’s not like losing another case. She feels like she’s going to lose me.” I let out a painful huff. “And I guess she is losing me in a way.”
“You’re not going to jail, and we’re not talking to Lizzy. There are loopholes for everything. Hell, turn Dane’s ass in. They’re always willing to give out deals to people who have intel that they want. Dane was the mastermind behind this crazy crap. Give him over to them. This isn’t your fall to take.”
I pulled up to the cabin, grateful we were there. I needed some fresh air and a bit of time to process everything. First thing first though, I wanted to hike up my favorite mountain and fish for a few hours. Then I could go back to worrying about everything. It’s not as if my problems were going anywhere anyway.
“Yes, it is, but let’s forget this shit for a while. I need a break from life.” I turned to my older brother and forced a smile. “Get your old ass out of my car and let’s see how long we can hike before you’re crying like a girl.”
“Please. The last time we did this, you bitched about the heat and your feet until I wanted to feed you to the bears. Remember?”
“That was you.” I popped him and got out of the car as he reached for me.
He got out on his side and lifted his hands into the air, stretching and letting out a groan. “One more thing, and then I’ll not bring up any of this shit unless you do.”
I walked around the car after grabbing my fishing box. “What?”
“Whether you go to jail or not is irrelevant. You gotta fight this thing. Alisa, Lizzy and I are here to help you, Zek. No more pushing us away in hopes of trying to spare us something. We’re family. At least me and Lizzy are.” He chuckled. “That pretty blonde you had wrapped around your finger as a young girl is still very much wrapped. You can push her away, but it’s you who will regret that.”
I shrugged. “It’s the mature thing to do. Besides, Lyndsay called last night. I think maybe I should use her to push Alisa even farther away. She des
erves better than I can give her now, or most likely ever. That’s the same reason I fucked up things with her when we were kids. You know just how much you love someone when you’re forced to have to let them go. It’s for the better.”
“Whatever. Fuck that mess, but it’s your life.” He took his fishing-pole from me and walked to the house. “We going up Cherry Peak or Death’s Grip today?”
I stopped just beside the cabin and glanced in the distance at the mountains. “I think Death’s Grip is more fitting. Just make sure you wear socks this time. I’m not carrying your big ass like I did that one time.”
“Hey. I didn’t realize socks protected your feet. Give a guy a break. Shit.” He walked into the house and left me standing there, smiling.
My brother was a complete idiot, and yet he was mine. He and Lizzy had everything I hoped to find in a relationship, and one day I would. That time wasn’t now, and where my insides constricted painfully at the thought of not having Alisa right now, it was for the better.
Mark poked his head out of the front door and whistled. “Let’s go. Get in here and help me put this food up.”
I’d almost forgotten that he’d brought a bag of stuff from his house for dinner. We usually caught our meals, or went into the little town just down the road.
“I’m coming. Useless ass.” I jogged up the stairs and walked into the cabin, thinking of the last time I was there. Alisa had wanted to walk through the happenings of the rape case and ended up in my bedroom on her knees. My cock twitched at the thought, but I released it quickly. It wasn’t going to happen again for a while, if ever.
“Have you talked to Alisa about her getting off the case?” My brother called from the kitchen.
“No. Well, I sort of mentioned it.” I walked in and shook my head at the beer he offered. “Water, dummy. We’ll drink later this afternoon.”
“Whatever. Beer does the body good.” He shrugged and popped the top on one.
“That’s an apple.” I moved into the kitchen and picked up where Mark left off with putting various items up.