by Stacey Lynn
“You’ve got a date?” the older male voice said. Something inside my chest warmed and flipped at the question.
I wasn’t on a date. Neither was Declan.
“No,” Declan said, “A friend…staying for a while.”
“I know all your friends, Declan,” the male voice continued to say as he pushed his way in. I saw a flash of dark brown appear from behind Declan’s shoulder and then those eyes widened. I could barely see him, but based on the way his eyes then crinkled at the edges, he was also smiling. “Well, hell. I don’t know this friend though, do I?”
“Watch yourself,” Declan growled, his voice low and thick.
His friend’s eyes darted to Declan before he nodded once. The smile disappeared as Declan took a step back and waved them in.
“Trina,” Declan said as the guy and his son—a teenage son—walked in. The boy had a bag thrown over one shoulder and his eyes were glued to Declan’s. “This is Aidan and his son, Derrick. I feel like an ass—”
“Language,” Aidan interrupted.
“Heard it all from you,” Derrick muttered, his lips twisting into a grin.
Side by side, the two guys look almost like spitting images of each other. Derrick was lanky, a young boy growing into a man, whereas Aidan had filled out…much more nicely.
He was attractive in that blue-collar, hard-worker kind of way, and his smile was friendly when he held out his hand.
“Trina, huh?” He grinned. If I were that kind of girl, or looking for that kind of guy—or any guy—I might have felt that smile down to the tips of my toes. “Didn’t know Declan had company tonight, but it’s nice to meet you.”
I shook his hand, much less tentative than I would have for Declan. My eyes shot over to see him standing with his arms crossed over his chest, his gaze fixed on where Aidan’s hand was wrapped around mine.
I yanked my hand out of his grip and stepped back, nodding. “Sorry. I was sort of—”
“A last-minute surprise,” Declan said for me. “And I’m sorry. I totally forgot about tonight,” he finished, turning back to Aidan.
Aidan gave me a look I barely caught before meeting Declan’s gaze. “I need to cancel?”
“You okay with Derrick hanging out here tonight?” Declan turned to me and I frowned, uncertain why he was asking. It was his house. “Want you comfortable,” he explained, his voice lowering, although there was no point. Aidan and Derrick both gave me a strange look that I felt more than saw.
“It’s fine,” I muttered, taking a step back into the living room.
And it was. In fact, it was better. A teenage boy in the house meant Declan and I wouldn’t be alone, and while I saw and felt that he was a decent guy, and so far had treated me with care, that didn’t mean a night alone with him would be comfortable.
“I can go.”
“No,” Declan said, pinning me in place with his voice. “You stay. And if you’re okay with Derrick being here, he’ll stay, too. This happens sometimes when Aidan has a date.”
“I can reschedule,” Aidan chimed in, although the way he said it said he wouldn’t be happy about doing it.
“You don’t get out enough.”
Aidan smirked. “Pot meet kettle.”
Something simmered between the two of them as they stared each other down. The tension sparked and crackled, and I jumped when Derrick dumped his bag on the hard floor. “You got pop, Declan? Because Dad’s all out and I’m thirsty. I’m also ready to kick your ass tonight.”
At my expression, whatever that might have been, Derrick simply said, “Call of Duty. It’s a game we play when I’m here.” He walked by me, disappearing into the kitchen, and shouted loud enough for us all to hear, “Although it’s a bunch of crap because I am thirteen and old enough to be on my own for a night.”
“Yeah,” Aidan muttered, grinning at his feet. “Except I remember what I was doing when I was a few years older and since Derrick there is the result, no way in hell is he ever staying alone.”
Aidan looked so young that I’d figured he must have been a young dad, but at that surprise, a laugh escaped my lips before I could stop it.
Both men looked at me. Aidan shrugged his shoulders, unashamed of his actions or the result, and Declan’s eyes went soft, soft in a way I didn’t fully understand.
This whole situation was overwhelming and awkward.
“All right,” Aidan said, clapping his hands.
That must have been what finally got Boomer’s attention, because all of a sudden he barked and I heard his paws hit the floor.
He rounded the corner, his tail wagging like it did when he was excited, and before I could stop him, his front paws were on Aidan’s chest, shoving him back into the front door.
“Holy fuck,” Aidan gasped, his hands immediately flying up in the air.
“I’m so sorry,” I gasped, and tried to jump toward Boomer to grab his collar.
Declan beat me, his large fingers wrapping around Boomer’s collar before I could get to him, and something about that quick motion made me snap.
“Get off him!” I shouted, and lunged forward, somehow shoving Declan out of the way. “Get your hands off him!” My hands wrapped around Boomer and I yanked him down, pulling him to my side.
When he was back at my feet, I heard a harsh whisper. “What in the hell?”
“Cool it, Aidan,” Declan said.
He crouched in front of Boomer, hand out, palm up, completely nonthreatening.
“Trina.” I didn’t catch the concerned tone in his voice. All I heard was my name, and I knew my dog had done something wrong. Again.
I flinched and curled myself around the animal when a shadow fell over us. I pressed into Boomer’s fur harder until Declan whispered, “It’s okay, babe.”
Babe.
That one word echoed inside my head and I realized what I’d just done.
I’d just made a complete fool out of myself.
Blood rushed from my face and I stepped back, protecting Boomer at the same time. “I’m so sorry,” I whispered, my limbs beginning to shake. “I don’t know…I just saw you reach for him…”
Tears blurred my vision and before either man said anything, I gripped Boomer’s collar and turned to rush him outside.
I completely ignored Derrick, who I barreled past on our way to the sliding door, but once the door was opened, I shoved Boomer through it and then my back hit the cement wall. I slid down until I was sitting on the cold cement, my feet pulled up to my backside. I dropped my forehead to my knees while my body shook and trembled.
Would I ever stop being so afraid all the time?
—
A shiver rolled through me when the quiet latch of the sliding door disengaged and opened.
I sensed Declan step outside and felt his body lower down until he was crouched low, next to me.
When I turned my neck, resting my cheek on my knees, he was squatting down, elbows on his knees, hands clasped together, looking out at the yard where Boomer was trying to catch the bugs that flew near the solar lights around the fire pit area.
“I made a fool of myself in there.”
He said nothing, just watched my dog with a blank expression. The only indication he heard me was a slight tic in his jaw.
“It’s just a dog, Trina. And it was just an accident. No harm done.”
I thought of how I must have looked when I shoved Declan’s hand off Boomer’s neck, crazed about my animal because someone touched him. “I’ll leave if you want. You were kind to give me a place to crash, but I don’t know you or your friends, and it’s probably not smart—”
Without looking at me, Declan interrupted. “I’m going to be straight with you.”
I flinched and pushed myself to my feet. Declan mirrored my movement, taking a step to the side and putting that distance between us that I appreciated.
Was he aware he always seemed to give me more personal space than should be necessary?
“I’ve gathered from th
e faint tan line on your ring finger there”—he stopped and pointed to my left hand—“that you’re either married or very recently separated. I’m also guessing that the asshole who put that ring on your finger is responsible for the bruise on your cheek, and I’m willing to bet it wasn’t the first time he did that. But because of that, you need to know that I have never…would never…raise my hand to a woman or an animal. Especially over something as pointless as a dog being a dog, which means he might do something stupid. I wouldn’t do that, and my friends wouldn’t do that.
“I also wasn’t bullshitting you when I said you’re safe here, so if you want to fucking leave, I can’t stop you. But don’t do it because you’re afraid of being in these walls.
“Now, I’m going to go blow shit up with Derrick on the PS4. You’re welcome to join us or watch. If not, you can go take a bath or a shower and relax, or do whatever the hell else it is you do when you want to just chill out.”
Chill out.
I couldn’t remember the last time I did that.
And a bath sounded heavenly.
Still, I found myself saying none of that. Instead, my mouth moved before my brain could catch up and I blurted, “You swear a lot.”
My mouth dropped open, awareness that I’d just corrected him hitting me. Kevin wouldn’t stand for that, and I stepped back, bracing myself, when Declan smiled. If he saw me flinch, he chose to ignore it.
“Yeah, babe, I do. Probably a fuck of a lot more than I should, but I gotta be honest. If my mom hasn’t broken me, my brother, or my dad of that habit since the day I was born, the chances of it stopping now are about zero.”
He winked, and something warm blanketed my skin.
He was teasing me, or taking the time to explain something, and he had a point. I learned the hard way men didn’t change no matter how badly you wanted them to.
Still, I had another brain-to-mouth malfunction when I suggested, “You could start a swear jar. Especially when Derrick is here, since even Aidan says he doesn’t want you cursing around him.”
He threw his head back and laughed.
The sound was rich and deep, and that warm blanket wrapped around my skin, heating me further, in a way I hadn’t experienced in possibly ever. I looked away, afraid he’d see me blushing. He just shook his head and walked away.
“You want to start me a swear jar while you’re here, go for it. I’ll do one better,” he said and looked at me over his shoulder in the doorway. The light from inside the house hit his face, making him seem bright. “All the money you collect, you can take with you when you fucking leave.”
My lips twitched when I realized what he’d done. “That will cost you a dollar.”
“No shit?”
“That’s two,” I whispered, feeling my lips stretch in a smile. It was genuine and real and felt foreign on my own skin.
“Well, hell,” he said and turned to walk away. “I’ll need to hit the damn ATM tomorrow.”
He gave me one last look as my smile grew.
“Those aren’t really so bad,” I told him, knowing exactly what he was doing. He was finding a way to give me money without me having to ask…which I wouldn’t, anyway. “Is Aidan gone?”
“Yeah. Derrick will take the couch tonight, which works because we’ll be up late playing games. Like I said, you can join us or not, whatever you’re comfortable with. Aidan will be here tomorrow around nine to pick him up.”
He stepped inside, closing the sliding door behind him, once again giving me space.
I turned back to Boomer and looked up at the dark sky that held the slightest haze of clouds. I wondered what my life would have been like if I had seen Kevin for the kind of man he truly was before we were married.
Would I have been able to have a man that seemed as kind as Declan, willing to hang out with his friend’s teenage son while the dad went out on a date? Would I have had the small but warm house that felt cozy and lived in, instead of massive and sterile like mine?
I felt like I’d lost my time. I would never know, because there was no way I would ever truly be free of Kevin.
He would never grant me a divorce, regardless of where I ended up.
At least not without a fight, and he had the resources to make that fight nearly impossible for me to win.
Which left only one option—I had to figure out a way to get myself someplace safe, where he couldn’t find me…
And figure out a way to live the rest of my life alone, knowing I’d lost out on the dreams I’d had since I was a little girl.
—
I sat up with a start and my hand flew to my chest. My heart beat erratically against my mostly healed ribs. There was only a slight pain from the sudden movement as my eyes took in the strange room.
I wasn’t in my bedroom. I wasn’t in the hotel. I was in a bed that was at least a thousand times more comfortable than that ratty, lumpy mattress.
After taking several breaths, I remembered where I was.
Declan’s house. He was essentially a stranger with a wicked scowl and large muscles, but with a kind voice, which I figured could sometimes be scary too, if he wanted it to be.
Not that I had seen or heard that.
With my heart rate slowing, I tried to remember the dream that caused me to wake up so abruptly. As I tried to grasp it, I came up short.
I was left with the lingering sensation of fear, and an echo of a woman’s voice screaming “Never again!” but that was all I could recall.
It took me several more moments to realize Boomer was no longer in the room with me, even though the door was still closed. I also caught a quick whiff of bacon, and heard masculine voices downstairs.
I didn’t know whether to be scared that someone had been in my room and took Boomer out, or grateful that for the first time in a week, I didn’t wake up to my dog licking me to consciousness.
Digging through my bag, I pulled on a pair of pink-and-blue pajama pants and threw a baggy but comfortable sweatshirt on over the pink cami top I slept in.
After using the restroom to wash my face and brush my teeth, I headed downstairs, walking slowly and focusing on the noises coming from the kitchen.
“She’s pretty, though,” I heard Derrick say. My feet paused before I turned the corner into the kitchen.
There was a clink of silverware before Declan replied, “She’s a friend and in trouble. I’m just helping.”
“Yeah, but my dad says you haven’t been out since Mara left, and now you got a hot chick in your house.”
Before Declan could respond to that, I hurried into the kitchen, hoping that my cheeks weren’t as flushed as they felt. “Good morning!” I chirped, and glanced around for the coffeemaker.
“Hey,” Declan said from his chair at a small two-person table in the tiny eating area.
He shot Derrick a quick glare, and I watched as the young teenager shoveled his mouth full of eggs before he grunted a hello in my direction.
I shook off the unease of the conversation they were having and asked, “Do you have any coffee?”
“You bet.” Declan pushed back from the table and walked the short distance to a corner I hadn’t been able to see from the doorway. When he turned around, he handed me a simple black mug and stepped back. “There’s more bacon in the pan on the counter,” he said, gesturing toward the stove. “Do you take cream or sugar?”
“Black is fine,” I muttered, still not fully awake. “Where’s Boomer?” I asked when I saw two bowls on the floor by the fridge, one filled with water.
A strange warmth fluttered in my chest as I realized Declan had fed and taken care of Boomer, something Kevin never did, and made clear he never would. If I wanted to bring the damn dog into the house with me when we were married, he wasn’t doing a damn thing to take care of it. His words, not mine.
“Outside,” Declan said as he sat back down at the table. “He was whining when he heard me up this morning, so I let him out so you could sleep. Figured you needed it.”
>
My mouth went dry for a moment before I found my voice. “That was nice of you. Thank you.”
He seemed to understand more about my situation than I had told him. Perhaps he had some uncanny sixth sense. Perhaps he was a secret superhero. Whatever it was, it started that strange, warm, fluttering feeling all over again.
I filled my mug and stood in the corner of the kitchen chomping on a piece of bacon. We all ate in a silence. It felt strangely comfortable.
Watching them give each other a hard time while they played videogames last night probably helped. I had enjoyed watching Declan playfully shove Derrick around when the kid beat him, or toss him a high five when he did something great. Declan might be large and muscled and intimidating on his own, but when he was sitting cross-legged on the floor next to the young teen, he radiated excitement and friendliness. Probably why I wasn’t scared, knowing he’d been in my room this morning.
From the short time I’ve known him, he seemed to be a man worthy of trust and honor.
A knock from the front door jolted me out of my thoughts and I looked at Declan.
“Probably my dad,” Derrick said, and grabbed his plate from the table. Just as he was sliding it into the sink, Aidan’s voice bellowed from the front of the house.
“Hello? You losers up yet?”
“In here, Dad!” Derrick tossed me a smile as he headed out of the room. “I’m going to go grab my stuff. Thanks for the games last night, Declan. Nice to meet you, Trina.”
“You too,” I mumbled, my coffee mug pressed against my lips. I watched him go and then watched as Declan rose from his chair.
“I’ll be back in a minute,” he said. “You can hang back, but there’s something I’d like to talk to you about once they’re gone.”
Unease swirled in my gut at his tone. Not demanding, but serious.
I watched him leave the room, knowing whatever he had to say was something I wasn’t going to like.
Chapter 6
Declan
Damn, she was pretty. Even thinking it might make me an asshole, but as she sat across from me in the living room, clearly uncomfortable with the conversation we were about to have—one that needed to happen—I couldn’t stop thinking about how pretty she looked when she was still half-asleep.