“No biting!” growls Murph.
“You were tickling me,” complains Tanner.
And with that, the last of my apprehension fades. There was no real danger here, just brothers roughhousing.
Dean motions for me to follow him as his brothers argue back and forth and break into another wrestling match.
When we’re in the other room and the sound of their fighting is muffled, he raises his eyebrows. “Sorry about them,” he says. “They had a strange childhood, it’s not their fault.”
“Same childhood as you,” I say, “and you seem normal enough.”
He shrugs. “I don’t know, Camille. I did kidnap you, after all.”
“That’s a good point,” I say. “Um, I should probably tell you since you’ll find out soon anyway. I may have called my friend and told her where we were. And she may be coming to ‘rescue’ me. I just felt like I owed you a warning, because she’s a little bit… well, she’s something. And I thought you should know.”
He raises an eyebrow. “You know the worst thing you can do as a hostage is escape. The second worst thing you can do is call in a rescue mission.”
“Mission?” I say. “That might be giving Selene too much credit. A mission is a plan, it has purpose, and it can happen cleanly. Selene is like a wrecking ball, or a bomb. Or maybe just a big, heavy ball strapped to a chain that you can smash things with.”
“I thought you were friends,” says Dean.
“No, I don’t mean she’s heavy, I was just trying to--nevermind. Just don’t say I didn’t warn you.”
“Consider me warned,” he says.
A moment passes and I can see something in Dean’s eyes, as if there’s more he wants to say. “I spoke carelessly,” he says. “Last night. When--”
“Let’s not talk about it,” I say quickly. “Look, I know how this all must look to you. Why would I want to go back to a guy like Sean, right? But it’s more complicated than that. I can’t just…” I make a frustrated sound. “I don’t know.”
“It’s only as complicated as you make it,” he says.
“No,” I say, annoyed. “That’s bullshit. It’s as complicated as it is. Don’t you think if I could just wish it all away I would?”
“I didn’t say it isn’t real, Camille. I said it doesn’t have to be complicated.”
I shake my head. “Then you don’t understand. You don’t understand a thing.”
“I understand more than you think,” he says, taking a step closer.
His hand is on my arm, and even the innocent touch lights my nerves on fire, flashing waves of hot excitement through my traitorous body. I want to pull back. I should pull back, but I’m weak, and with his hands on me I’m able to believe that Sean can’t get to me.
“I know that,” I say with less conviction than I’d like.
“You’re stronger than you think you are.”
I expect some kind of grand, inspirational speech, but that’s all he says. Except he says it with so much confidence and conviction it’s like the words are pushed into me, as if he can make them true just because he wills them to be.
“Daddy,” says Jen, making me jump and pull back from Dean, even though I’m supposed to be pretending to be his fiancée, I feel like we were just caught doing something inappropriate. She leans in the hallway leading to the sitting room Dean pulled me into, holding a jar of peanut butter. “I have the best idea you’ve ever heard. Peanut butter and jelly jars. Jelly on one side, peanut butter on the other. You’re welcome. Oh, and Daddy, I want to steal Camille for a little bit. We need to have some girl talk.”
Dean quirks an eyebrow. “Pretty sure they already have that. And who says you can just--”
“Okay,” I say cheerily, hurrying to follow Jen and enjoying leaving Dean in a confused huff of manly irritation more than I probably should. Part of me is glad to see Jen seeking me out this early. After the cold reception I got from her last night, I thought I could probably only expect the silent treatment from here on out.
Jen leads me outside by the pool. The sun has mostly risen now, and I can fully appreciate the landscape for the first time. The entire crystal blue expanse of water is made to look natural with sheetrock, cobblestones, and even a bubbling waterfall that trickles through the stones from a grassy bowl of water on a small hill. I realize there’s also a section of the pool that leads below the house, and if my guess isn’t wrong, it looks like it leads to a section of the pool that is indoors.
Jen takes me to a wooden structure where a bed hangs suspended by four ropes at each corner. “C’mon,” she says, hopping up and laying on her back with her feet dangling over the edge. “You’ll love it.”
I can’t help smiling a little as I hop on beside her. The bed sways gently when I climb on, and I stare up through the wide openings in the roof at the blue sky and the clouds lazily sliding by.
“You said we had to have some girl talk,” I say. “Should I be worried?” I look over to Jen, who is staring at the sky with a small smile on her face. She’s a beautiful little girl, but she has eyes older than her years, and I recognize the look from my own childhood. From my experience, little girls only get that kind of hardness and wisdom in their eyes when they’ve suffered a great tragedy, and I can’t help wondering what happened. When I look at the life she has and the father she has, I can’t imagine what could go wrong, but then again, if she’s Dean’s daughter, where is her mother?
I assumed divorce before, but now I’m not so sure, not after seeing Jen up close and getting a sense of the pain in her past.
“Only if you’re planning to hurt my daddy.”
I laugh. “I’m harmless.Trust me.”
“Good,” she says, threading her fingers over her small belly and looking over at me with the kind of ease and lack of self-consciousness only a child can manage. It feels good though, like this little girl might actually come to accept me given time, and I never knew how badly I needed that until now. “So, how long have you two been together?”
Dangerous question. Dean never said how long he claimed to have been dating this fictional woman. “It has all gone by so fast, to be honest,” I say quickly. “He seems a little moody here though. I’m used to him being more… happy. Is he always like this at home?” Maybe it’s a dangerous question on my end, but at least it changes the subject.
“Hmm,” says Jen. “Daddy is happy, I think. He just worries about me. He doesn’t really know how to talk to me about what happened, so he just doesn’t, and I think he thinks about it a lot.”
“Right,” I say, not wanting to admit I don’t know what happened, because it’s probably something his fiancée should know. “Well, hey,” I say. “You can talk about it with me, if you want.”
She gives me an odd look, and I can’t tell if she’s appreciative of my offer, or inwardly laughing at the idea of her confiding in me so soon.
We spend nearly an hour just lying together, chatting when it suits us and enjoying the silence of the morning when it doesn’t. She still keeps me at an emotional arm’s length, clearly unsure of how she wants this all to proceed or what her final ruling is on me, but knowing she’s willing to give me a chance warms my heart. There’s a peace in being here with her, a peace I wouldn’t have imagined in a million years considering I’m a hostage. It feels good to be needed, even though I doubt Jen will ever admit to needing me. I can tell this little girl has bottled up so much, and she probably could really use a woman in her life to vent it all out with. Some crazy part of my mind even goes to the fact that I’d be able to stay a part of her life if I was with Dean for real. I’d spend holidays laughing around a table at his crazy brother’s jokes and with Jen... Dean would be there with us too. With me.
I can’t tell if this whole situation is just making me lose it, but I already feel less like a hostage with Dean than I did with Sean, and the stubborn fantasy Dean has sparked in me is starting to seem a lot less crazy, not to mention a lot less stupid.
5
Dean
I’ve been letting Camille think she has the freedom to leave, but my phone is set to alert me if any of the perimeter doors or gates are opened, and if any of the motion sensors throughout the grounds are triggered. I feel a little guilty for the deception, but only a little. She knows what this is. Whether we’re civil with each other or not, and whether we dress it up and pretend to be in a relationship, she’s my hostage. That’s the cold truth.
I did let her out of the house to go shopping for clothes today. I think she enjoyed getting to pick out anything she wanted. She hasn’t said as much, but I get the impression she doesn’t come from money, so even the small luxuries are exciting for her. She’s not like some of the women I’ve been with in the past, ones who weren’t happy unless I was willing to spend millions on them. The money was never the problem, it was the type of woman who lusted after it. Nothing ever turned me off faster.
Now that it’s evening, it marks almost twenty-four hours since I took Camille hostage, and I’m starting to lose track of all the dangerous ideas I’m getting about her and the things I’d like to do to her.
My brothers are already starting to get suspicious of the way Camille and I act around each other, though, and it probably won’t be long before Jen picks up on it too. I’m going to have to talk to her and work something out, or else this whole facade will be for nothing.
Jen has wanted a woman in our lives for a long time now, but getting involved in a serious relationship has felt like it would betray my sister’s memory, like I’d be writing over what little bit of memory Jen has of her. Pretending to be involved with someone bought me time, but I knew sooner or later I’d have to either come clean or figure something out. Taking a hostage wasn’t exactly how I imagined figuring it out to go, but now that we’ve come this far, there’s no turning back. Besides, Camille seems to be fitting perfectly into my crazy little family. The only problem is now it almost feels too perfect, like all the time I’ve spent pretending was only paving the mental pathways to let Camille into my heart on a fast track.
I’m lounging in the living room while Jen and Camille are locked away in Jen’s room. I think I hear the faint sounds of music, which doesn’t surprise me. When Jen isn’t at school, she spends the vast majority of her time playing her guitar. She even uploads most of her stuff to YouTube and claims to have a few thousand subscribers. I’d be surprised if she was playing for Camille though, because Jen never lets me hear her music. She won’t even tell me the name of her YouTube channel.
I am surprised to hear the faint sound of Camille’s voice singing back though. I guess I did tell her that Jen thought she was a performer. Maybe she’s trying to sell the idea she’s some kind of singer? Which she actually could be based on what I can hear of her voice.
A few minutes after the two of them come out from Jen’s room laughing about something, there’s a loud, authoritative knock at the door
Cursing, I get up from the couch and grab the poker from the fireplace. “Go to your room,” I say to Jen. My heartbeat quickens and I ready myself for a fight. If Camille’s asshole of a boyfriend managed to find us, he’s going to have to learn a hard lesson. She’s not going back to him. No fucking way.
Jen and Camille ignore my alarm, creeping behind me to see who’s at the door.
I look through the peephole and see a very short woman with hair so bright red it can’t be natural.
I toss the poker aside, feeling the tension bleed out of me in an instant. It must just be the friend Camille was telling me about, though I’m not sure how she managed to get through the front gate without me buzzing her in.
I open the door.
The little woman looks to be in her twenties, like Camille, and she’s relatively pretty, but it’s hard to focus on anything but the blistering scowl she’s aiming up at me.
“You’re the kinda--” she starts, but I move forward, pushing a hand to her mouth and closing the door behind us.
When I remove my hand, she jabs a finger up to my face. Her eyes are bulging and her mouth is frozen in a small, angry “O” of surprise, and for a split second, I feel a real stab of fear toward this little woman. “You touch me again, and I will kill you in your sleep,” she hisses.
“You can’t talk about the kidnapping,” I say. “I don’t know what Camille told you, but she agreed to pretend she’s my fiancée. My daughter and my brother’s don’t know the truth.”
She plants her hands on her hips. “Great. So I can blow your whole creepy game up even more easily than I thought. You want to let me in, or do you want me to ram the fucking door down myself?”
I look her up and down and decide she definitely can’t ram the door down. “I’m not going to let you in, not until you give me your word that you’ll keep the secret.”
“No?” she asks, flashing a crazed smile as she rolls up her sleeves. “Then step aside, you gorgeous asshole, and say goodbye to your door!”
I sigh, moving to give her room.
She lets out a frenzied war cry and runs toward the door, throwing her shoulder forward at the last second. There’s an anticlimactic thump as she collides with the door then crumples in front of the still-intact door like a sack of potatoes. “Fuck,” she groans from the ground. I think she’s thrown in the towel, but one of her stubby legs shoots out like a piston and bangs into the door, which opens slightly a few seconds later, but only because someone inside turned the door handle and pulled it open a hair.
Camille’s face appears in the crack. “Did you want to come in?” she asks.
I motion for Camille to shut the door, and she thankfully obeys.
I kneel beside the little groaning woman. “Do we have a deal?”
“No,” she says. “A deal is when we both get something out of it. What do I get for keeping your secret?”
“You get to leave at some point. Alive.”
She narrows her eyes. “Really? You’re going to try to go the scary kidnapper route?”
I say nothing, only stare at her face that’s now glistening with sweat.
“I’ll keep your stupid secret,” she says. “But if you think you’re going to hurt my friend while I’m around, you just remember what I did to your door,” she says, kicking it one more time in emphasis.
Trying my hardest not to grin, I nod. “Fine. We have a deal, then? As long as I don’t hurt your friend, you won’t hurt yourself trying to ram me, and in exchange you keep my secret.”
She stands, brushes off her pants, and then spits in her palm and extends it toward me. “Deal,” she says.
I look at her glistening palm and then shake it. “This is disgusting. I hope you realize that.”
“I didn’t expect you to touch it, to be honest,” she says, moving through the door, wiping her hand off on the door frame as she passes through. She tackle hugs Camille once she’s inside, wrapping her legs around Camille until they both tip over and fall in a confusion of laughter.
Selene whispers something in Camille’s ear once they’ve regained their feet. Camille’s eyes bulge.
“No,” says Camille.
“You sure?” asks Selene. “I’m pretty sure we could bring him down. I go low, you go high. Don’t be afraid to use teeth, you know, the usual drill.”
Camille gives me an apologetic look. “I did warn you,” she says, as if in explanation.
I wave my hand dismissively. “It’s fine. She seems harmless enough.”
I realize my words were chosen poorly when I see the look on Selene’s face. “They all say that until I make a body out of them,” she says darkly.
“You can’t make a body out of someone,” says Camille. “People already have bodies, that’s just stupid.”
“You could totally make a body out of someone,” adds Jen.
“Right,” says Selene. “Like I turn them into a body. A corpse.”
“The girl who had to call me at 2 A.M. to kill a cockroach is out there making corpses and taking names. Uh-huh.” says Camille sarc
astically.
“I take it you’ll be expecting a room?” I ask.
Selene nods, puffing her chest out and holding her head high. “Something with a view will do.”
“Who is this little firecracker?” asks Tanner, who walks out of the kitchen, followed closely by Murph.
“Selene,” she says, looking up at my towering brothers.
Tanner discreetly straightens his eyebrows and gets down on one knee, reaching for Selene’s hand. She lets him take it and watches with amusement as he plants a kiss on the top of her hand.
“I’m Tanner,” he says in a hilarious attempt at making his voice deeper and more sultry. “Tanner Sharp.”
“Selene,” she says, batting her eyelashes.
“Oh barf,” blurts Camille.
I chuckle. “I second that.”
Selene throws a glare at Camille, who still wears an unapologetically grossed out face. “What?” she asks. “Are you the only one who’s allowed to let a hot guy woo her? Maybe I want to be wooed too.”
Murph steps forward with an asymmetrical grin. “In that ca--”
“Not by you,” snaps Selene.
He clears his throat, shrugging at Jen, who is grinning at the scene playing out in front of her.
“I haven’t been--” starts Camille, but she seems to remember she’s supposed to be my fiancée mid-sentence. “I haven’t been wooed in hours, actually,” she says slowly. “I think I’m overdue, Dean.”
Even though I can tell she’s just trying to cover up nearly misspeaking, I can’t let the opportunity pass. I should, but I can’t. So I step forward, slide my hand around the small of her back, and lock eyes with her. Maybe I can get her out of my system. Just a taste. Just enough to get her out of my system so I can focus on helping her and not on my throbbing cock.
So I kiss her. My lips crash against hers and the power of the moment makes my ears ring. Her mouth is hot and sweet against mine. To my surprise, her soft lips lust for more and her teeth pull at my lip, fingers spearing through my hair and clutching on like she never wants to let go. Within seconds, I realize the kiss has had the exact opposite effect from what I intended. It only convinces me further that I might never be able to let her go, and knowing that makes my stomach go cold.
Single Dad's Hostage: A Fake Marriage Romance Page 4