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Hot Alphas

Page 24

by Lora Leigh


  “I believe him.”

  She turned her head and stared at him.

  Two seconds later, he had to dodge the roses as they came flying at him.

  “Sorry.”

  Tate slid Chris a look as she settled down next to him. “Are you?”

  A grimace twisted her face. “Well. Technically, I probably should be. In all honesty, no. I wish I had a bucket of dirty water or something to dump over your head.” She sighed and leaned back, bracing her weight on her hands and stretching her legs out. “You’re such a stubborn ass, you know that?”

  “Yeah.”

  “You are so like him.” Her voice was husky and when he glanced over at her, he saw the misery in her eyes. She sniffled and averted her face.

  Reaching out, he slid his arm around her shoulders. For a minute, she held herself rigidly. Then she sank against him, her voice cracking as she whispered, “I miss her, Tate. Sometimes I wake up, thinking she’ll come home. I can barely remember what she looked like, but I remember her voice, and how she smelled and how we danced around the kitchen some nights. I think … maybe she’s out there. Maybe she’ll come home.”

  “I know.” He rubbed his cheek against her hair. “I know, Chrissie.”

  A minute passed and she sucked in a breath, then pulled back, swiping the back of her hand over her eyes.

  He pretended not to notice.

  “She looked like you.”

  He watched as she turned her head and stared at him. He smiled at her and shrugged. “You want to know what she looked like. Just see yourself. Without the crazy rainbow hair and all.” He smiled, pushed a hot-pink section of her bangs back. “But she looked like you. She was pretty. Funny. She yelled a lot and she drove me crazy and she made us work too hard.”

  “She was a good mom.”

  “Yeah.” He caught her hand in his and squeezed. “She was a good mom.”

  Chris closed her eyes. “Dad…”

  He sighed and lifted her hand, pressed a kiss to the back of it. Then, unable to sit still, he rose from the porch and started to pace. “I’m going to talk to him later. I’m trying to work things through in my head. But I needed a resolution, Chris. It’s not fair—it wasn’t fair to him, to you—”

  “Or you.”

  He shot her a look.

  She sat on the porch, her elbows braced on her knees. She stared at him, her green eyes vivid. “It wasn’t fair to you, either. I know why you did it. Hell, Dad knows why. He’s the one who’s been telling me and Jensen all this time to leave you alone with it.”

  He didn’t want to hear this. Turning away, he jammed his hands in his pockets, he braced himself because he also knew, as much as he didn’t want to hear, Chris was going to say it anyway.

  “You needed to have some kind of answer—something in your head that made sense,” Chris said. “This was the only one you could come up with. So you focused on it. Because you did, you lost your father and your mother.”

  Tate closed his eyes.

  Behind him, he could hear her coming toward him, but he didn’t move. Didn’t turn to face her. When she circled around to face him, he had a hard time meeting those sharp green eyes. “Are you done punishing yourself now?”

  “I’m not—”

  “Oh, bullshit.” She shook her head. “You spent fifteen years telling yourself that you should have gone out there, said something, done something … stopped her from leaving. You were fourteen. You were just a kid. So was I. So was Jensen. Yeah, they had a fight. Dad shouldn’t have said the shit he did. He didn’t make Mom leave and no matter what…” Her voice tripped, then steadied. “No matter what happened to her, she didn’t ask for it. The only person to blame in any of this is the son of a bitch who took her from us.”

  “We’ll never know who that is.”

  She looked away. “No. We’re never going to know. We’ll never know what happened, where she is. Not after all this time. But I’m not going to let my life stop because of that. She would have wanted us to be happy—all of us.”

  * * *

  This would be the easier one, Tate told himself. Jensen wasn’t going to make it hard on him and, hey, he even got a smile out of it, just sitting there and waiting for her.

  Feet propped on the edge of her desk, he had the pleasure of watching his sister threaten to throw a mouthy bitch in jail, after said mouthy bitch shoved Jensen.

  Granted, Jensen had all but taunted her into it, chin up, eyes glinting with an I dare you smirk in them.

  But Leslie Mayer had gone into the station looking for trouble, and she’d found it in the form of Detective Jensen Bell.

  Jensen had grown up to be a cop. Out of all of them, she was the most solid, something that had baffled Tate for only a very short while. She’d lost her mother but that hadn’t sent her down a spiral. It might have done that to Tate and Chris, but it had centered Jensen.

  She’d lost her mother and she’d do everything she could to keep another child from suffering the same, another family from going through the misery the Bell family had suffered all these years.

  As Leslie Mayer was led out of there by two uniformed cops, still screeching at Jensen, his sister headed over to her desk, pausing only a second when she saw him waiting there.

  “You had way too much fun with that,” he said.

  “Hey, a girl’s gotta get her kicks somehow, right?” She knocked his feet off her desk and dropped into the seat. “Why are you here? It’s awful early for you. You usually skulk in your den until the day is half done.”

  “I don’t skulk.”

  “Brood. Whatever.” She shrugged. “You made up with Ali yet?”

  He felt the hot, red crawl of blood creeping up his neck. Half the damn town, he mused. From the corner of his eye, he saw the grin on her face and the way trouble glinted in her gaze.

  “People sure are interested in my love life.” He turned back to face her. Leaning in, he studied her closely, more closely than he usually let himself.

  If Chris was a gothic Tinker Bell—attitude and chaos in one tiny little package—then Jensen was her polar opposite. Every bit as slim and slight as the youngest Bell sibling, yes, and there were physical similarities, but while Chris was all clashing colors and short temperament, Jensen was order. She wore her dark hair in a neat, chin-length cut and she probably spent five minutes on it a day—including washing. Her makeup bordered on the nonexistent and her clothes were just like her, efficient and simple.

  She looked like a cop.

  That was all she’d wanted to be.

  She cocked her head and studied him, her green eyes narrowed to slits. Lips pursed, she continued the study until Tate had to fight the urge to squirm.

  “Something’s different with you,” she finally said.

  “Yeah? I went and had my nails done. Sweet of you to notice.”

  She snorted. “Yeah. That’s it. Let me guess, you used one of Chrissie’s favorite colors she’s always pushing on me … Razzle Dazzle Red or something?”

  “Nope. I went with Fru Fru Pink.” He smiled, relaxing a little as she jabbed at him. He leaned forward, bracing his elbows on his knees and rubbing his face. Man, he was tired. He felt like he’d aged a year in the span of a day. “Listen … I, uh, I’ve been thinking about things. Mom. Dad.”

  She was quiet for a long time. So quiet, he finally lifted his head and saw her eyeing him, a sad smile on her face. “Finally figured it out, Tate?”

  He blew out a breath. “So you aren’t going to throw roses or something at me?”

  “Roses?” She grinned. “Let me guess. You’ve already told Chrissie?”

  “Yeah. Know the bucket of flowers she keeps up on her table when she works?”

  Jensen arched her brows.

  “She pelted me with them.” He rubbed a finger over the scratch on his cheek. “Fortunately, most of them didn’t have thorns.”

  “Yeah? Then what?”

  He shrugged. “We talked. Wanted to come over and see
you.” He blew out a breath and straightened back up in the chair, staring up at the ceiling without seeing it. “I’m going to hunt him down later and talk to him. He’s probably going to tell me to get the hell out, but I’ll try.”

  “He won’t tell you to get out.”

  “Why not?” he bit out. Shoving upright, he moved to the minuscule window she had by her desk. Jensen didn’t have an office but as one of the two lieutenants, her work area was a little bigger. By maybe two inches. She also had a window. He focused on it while temper sparked and brewed inside him. “Why not, huh? I did my damnedest to turn you all against him. I spent fifteen years hating him. I hassled every cop who’d listen to me to reopen the case and dig deeper into his story. Why shouldn’t he tell me to get out?”

  “Because he understands.” Jensen didn’t bother getting up. She stretched her legs out and rested her elbow on the desk, glancing around the room, but most of the other cops had headed out to lunch or were out on patrol. The few left were too far away to hear them, although the siblings knew they’d try. “Tate, you needed a target. He let himself be that target. The same way you were the target when I found out my boyfriend was cheating on me senior year. Instead of going after him, you made me mad at you instead.”

  Tate glared at her. “I just wanted to handle the punk myself. He shouldn’t have been messing around on you anyway.”

  “You still let me take my mad out on you … it was safer.”

  He looked away. “Nah. That jackass wouldn’t have lifted a hand to you—he couldn’t handle a woman who stood up to him. Probably why he kept fucking around on you.”

  She sighed. “Fine. You want to play that way, go ahead. He did the same thing you do. Now I am going to do what Mom would have done—give more unsolicited advice. Stop standing there worrying and just talk to him.”

  CHAPTER 6

  The old man was sitting behind the shop where he’d been working all these years.

  Ever since he’d closed his place down. Hard to keep it open, when half the people who used to bring him business started giving him the side-eye, wondering if he had indeed killed his wife.

  Gut in knots, Tate moved across the busted pavement slowly, wondering how much of that was his fault. He’d never been quiet about what he’d thought. Was he to blame for that, too?

  A busted bit of glass crunched under his boot and his dad tensed, slowly lifted his head.

  He turned and looked and across the parking lot, their gazes locked.

  Then Doug went back to eating his lunch. His actions were slow and mechanical, like he did it only out of necessity. I’m human. I gotta eat. So I will.

  Tate understood that. That was how he approached almost everything in life. I’m human. I gotta eat, gotta sleep, but I don’t much care if I do it or not. I’m only doing it because I have to.

  The only things in life that he took pleasure in were his art—and that was a release more than a pleasure—and Ali, her kids.

  Fuck, he needed to get a better grip on life. Ali was everything, her kids were an added blessing he felt he had no right to.

  But shouldn’t there be more?

  The wooden bench gave under his weight as he settled across from his father, but a foot or so down so he could look at the crumbling cinder block of the garage, rather than Doug. It was easier that way. Simpler.

  He opened his mouth, then snapped it closed after five seconds passed with no words coming.

  Clearing his throat, he tried again, but the words evaded him.

  A quiet sigh drifted under the hot summer sun. Doug said softly, “Boy, whatever it is that’s eating you, just let it go.”

  “I can’t.” He slanted a look at his father. They didn’t look much alike—the artist in him could pick up the similarities—the shape of their hands, the set of their mouth, their eyes. But mostly, Tate took after his mom’s father. Physically, at least. Everything else, though, that was his dad and that was why this was so hard. He clasped his hands together and pressed his forehead to them, staring at the table while words circled through his head.

  They were there. If he could think them, he could say them.

  Right?

  His hands felt painfully empty and because he was having the hardest time concentrating, he tugged a little leather journal from his pocket and flipped it open. It was full of a thousand sketches, it seemed—he’d fill a page and then move on to the next, and the next until he had no room left. He’d then buy another one. This journal was about half full. He started to sketch and once his hands were moving, he could almost imagine the block in his head moving.

  He sketched a wall. He’d add a ginormous wrecking ball smashing through it—he’d do the damn ball in the shape of his head. “I messed up. I was wrong.” He managed to get those words out as he finished the outline of the wall. He wished he could stop there.

  “Tate, you had a rough life. You don’t need to—”

  “The hell I don’t.” He lifted his head slowly and met his father’s eyes. His own eyes, he realized with a jolt. Not just the color, or the shape or the size. But everything about them. He realized Doug would do this, too. He’d force himself to own up to the hard shit. Maybe he wouldn’t expect it of others, but he damn well expected it of himself.

  The knot lodged in his throat and he threw the pencil he held down. “Fuck, Dad.”

  “You’re too much like me, you know.”

  He sucked in a breath and went to say something, but before he could, Doug just continued to talk, his voice low and easy. “And … too much like your mom. Too much like yourself, even. If that makes sense. I don’t think you could be any more contradictory if you had to.” A hint of temper finally showed in the older man’s voice as he tossed his sandwich down and dragged his hands over his face. “You don’t want to expect anything from anybody, and at the same time, you seem to set the highest fucking expectations. How is that even possible?”

  Tate ran his tongue across his teeth. Then he shrugged. “I’m an asshole?”

  Doug’s eyes shot to his face and then a slow, reluctant smile lit his face. “No.” He shook his head. “No, you can be, and too often, you are. But that’s because of the kick in the face life gave all of us. I think…” His voice trailed off and then he sighed. “I think if your mom hadn’t gone and disappeared the way she did, you would have been a different man. You’re a good man now, but you’re harder. Sadder. I hate it.”

  Tate didn’t know how to respond to that. Uncomfortable with the way the conversation was going, he sighed and shook his head. “Dad, there’s no point in talking about any of that. I just … look. I’m sorry. I was wrong, and I’m sorry. I can’t make any of it up to you.”

  He would have said more, but his father reached out and covered his hand with his.

  It was the first time they’d touched in more than a decade. Tate recalled, vividly, the last time his father had touched him—high school graduation. He’d tried, yet again, to bridge the gap between them. Tate had told him if he laid hands on him again, he’d bury him.

  Shame rose up in him, thick and dirty and black. He couldn’t take this back, not any of it.

  “You don’t need to make a damn thing up to me,” Doug said. “You’re my son. The one thing I wanted to have again … other than to tell your mom how sorry I am … well, you called me Dad again. I don’t need anything else.”

  His dad’s image blurred. Looking away, he focused hard on the cinder block wall of the garage, staring at it until his vision cleared.

  An awkward silence fell and he had no idea how to fill it, no idea what to say to this man who was all but a stranger to him now.

  After a moment, Doug cleared his throat. “I hear you have something going with Ali.”

  Tate flicked him a look. Half the damn town. Probably closer to all the damn town. Shrugging, he reached for his pencil again and started to sketch. “Yeah. We’re … ah. Well, we’re working on it.”

  “She loves you.”

  Ha
nds still over his sketch pad, Tate looked up.

  Doug smiled. “I see how she looks at you. If you love her, boy, don’t let that slip away. You have no idea how precious that is. Sometimes, you don’t realize it until it’s over and gone and you have no chance of ever getting it back.”

  I almost lost it. But he couldn’t talk about it with his dad. This … thing was too awkward, too strange. He just met his dad’s eyes and nodded. “I’m not going to let it go.”

  CHAPTER 7

  He’d stood here.

  Just here, a hundred times.

  Maybe even more.

  At the foot of his mother’s empty grave, waiting, wondering, hoping for answers that just weren’t going to come.

  For the first time, he stood there without feeling the weight of all those questions, all that anger.

  “I don’t think you’d want me to keep carrying all that around,” he said, while a breeze kicked up, blowing his hair back from his face.

  He sighed and then looked away. “Screw that. You wouldn’t want it. I was wrong. You’d probably kick my ass if you could see how I’ve been acting all this time.”

  He couldn’t undo it, though. All he could do was go forward.

  “I’m going after Ali.” He paused as the words hung there, tentative and soft. Then he nodded. “Yeah. That is something you would like. I love her.”

  Closing his eyes, he let himself smile. “I don’t know how I’m going to handle any of that, but I love her and we’re going to make it work.”

  He waited a few more minutes, might have said something else, but a fat, heavy drop of rain came down, fell on his nose. He shot a look up at the leaden sky and blew out a breath. “Good-bye, Mom.”

  He turned his back on the grave and strode out of the cemetery, but instead of heading straight to Ali’s, he cut down by the river as the rain started to come down harder.

  Miles down the river, far, far outside of sight, something, buried for years, shifted.

  The car, pushed out of place after a year of heavy rains, started to drift.

  * * *

  Tate stood on Ali’s porch. Although he had a key, he didn’t go to the back door. He lifted a fist, knocked.

 

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