by R. Linda
Kenzie walked toward the front door, and I followed. If it was at all possible to feel someone’s eyes burning a hole in your back, I felt it. Seven sets of eyes watching as I walked outside behind Kenzie.
“What’s up?”
“Did Ryder tell you I called the other night?” I asked, falling in step beside her as we wandered around the perimeter of the roadhouse.
“No.”
Of course not.
“But Harper mentioned something.”
“I don’t want to freak you out, but Chace showed up at your apartment a few nights ago.”
“What?” She stopped and leaned against the wall, right beside the garage door that would hopefully become my workshop one day.
“He was causing all sorts of racket, banging on your door and wanting to see you. But I told him to get lost.”
“You did?”
“Of course. I said I’d watch out for you, and I meant it.” I reached my hand across and placed it on her arm, taking a step closer. I couldn’t help it. There was a gravitational pull that lured me to her.
“Thank you. Did he say anything?”
“Yeah. I think he’s stalking you.”
Kenzie’s eyes widened. “By stalking, you mean he knew about the pizza?”
What? How did she know that?
I tilted my head and waited for an explanation.
“He stopped me the other morning as I was leaving for work and said something about us having pizza. I assumed he’d seen me throw out the pizza boxes or something on my way out.”
I clenched my jaw. I couldn’t believe he was there in the morning as well.
“Shit. Babe, no. I’m pretty sure he’s watching you.” I stepped closer again, my other hand coming to rest on her hip. “He knew about us eating pizza, and he knew other things.”
I didn’t want to tell her what he called her. Even though the guy was a jerk, hearing someone call you that couldn’t be a good feeling.
“What things?”
“The way we were sitting on the sofa.”
“Side by side eating pizza?” Her expression was hopeful, but I could see the doubt in her eyes.
“The way you were sitting on me.”
Kenzie gasped and ran her hands through her hair, tugging on the ends. “Oh, my god. How? Why can’t he just leave me alone?”
“I don’t know. But the guy’s a fucking psycho. He didn’t even flinch when I threatened him.”
“You threatened him?” She smiled up at me.
“Choked him a little and told him next time he came around, he’d wish it was your brother kicking his ass.”
“Why is that so hot?” she blurted before biting her lip.
“Because you think I’m hot?” I teased.
“Calm your ego.” Her hands came to rest on my stomach, soft and warm. I wanted to feel them everywhere. I wanted to lean in further. Kiss her. Wrap her legs around me. Bite her lip. But I couldn’t. Too many chances to get busted.
“But, in all seriousness, I’m worried about the guy. I’m worried he’s going to do something.”
“Me too. I was going to bring Cole home tonight, but I don’t think I will.”
“You shouldn’t go home either.”
“I’m not letting him run me out of my home. I don’t think he’d hurt—” She stopped and squeezed her eyes shut, deep in thought.
“What is it?”
“I don’t know. Just something that happened a couple of years ago, I guess.”
“What happened?” I frowned. I didn’t like the sound of that.
“Ryder got arrested for almost beating Chace to death. Said he wanted to cause him as much pain as he caused…someone else.”
“Who? What happened?” My fingers gripped her hips tighter. I was liking her brother more and more.
“I don’t know. Ryder refuses to talk about it. But what if Chace really is dangerous?”
“You need to speak to your brother. Find out what he knows. Until then, stay somewhere else.” There was no telling what he was capable of. If whatever he did was bad enough that Ryder nearly beat him to death, then Kenzie needed to know. It was putting her and Cole at risk.
“No.” Kenzie shook her head.
“Why the hell not? Kenzie, this is crazy.” I cupped her face and made her look at me, and her body leaned into mine.
She smiled at me.
“What?”
“You called me Kenzie.”
“And?”
“I think I prefer ‘babe’ better.”
My mouth dropped open in shock.
“Is that so?” I lowered my head and pressed a kiss to her jaw.
She nodded.
“Noted,” I said softly as my lips grazed her ear. “And, babe?”
Her fingers dug into my sides. “Yes?” Her voice was soft and breathy.
“Talk to Ryder.” I took half a step back and straightened before I slammed her into the wall and kissed the hell out of her. If I did that, I wouldn’t stop.
Kenzie groaned.
“I’ll talk to Ryder, but I am not staying somewhere else. It’s my home. I’ll keep my door locked. You’re right next door. My only concern is keeping my son away and safe. I’ll go to the police again. Tonight. After I leave here, I’ll see if they can do anything else. Okay?”
“I still don’t like it, but okay.” I was just going to have to be extra vigilant. I wasn’t letting him anywhere near her or her son. “And I’m going with you to the police station.”
I grabbed her hand and pulled her back toward the diner, reluctantly dropping it when we were in sight of the windows.
Kenzie
I was in hell. Pure hell. It was torture. My brain was scattered, and my body was on fire. I got back into the diner with Jeremy following close behind, and I was a ball of nerves. Both from the revelations about Chace and the instant way my body reacted to Jeremy’s presence. I had almost convinced myself it was the wine that night that made me want more of his kisses, his hands on my skin. But I was wrong. I hadn’t had a single drop of wine today, and all I wanted to do was strip that shirt off his body and li—
“Everything okay?” Ryder asked as I fell into the chair. I was sure my face was flushed. Sweaty, even. And nothing even happened. All Jeremy did was kiss my jaw and run his thumb across my hip bone.
“No. We need to talk.” I narrowed my eyes on him.
“Now?”
“That would be nice.” I stood back up and walked away, but not before catching Jeremy’s dark gaze and hint of a smile.
“What the hell is going on between you and Jeremy?” Ryder asked the moment we were back outside.
“We are not talking about me.” I turned to look at my brother.
“Then why are we talking?” He folded his arms across his chest.
“Okay, fine, we are, but we’re not talking about my relationship with Jeremy.”
“Your what?” Ryder growled.
“What?”
“Relationship?” He could barely even speak the word. His lip curled in a sneer, his hands flexed. I rolled my eyes. He was so damn protective, but he didn’t need to worry about Jeremy. I was safe with him. That, I was certain of. Chace, on the other hand, was a ticking time bomb.
“Give it a break, Ryder. Not in a romantic way. Relationship has multiple meanings. He’s my neighbour. A friend. And he’s just looking out for me.”
“Yeah, right. I see the way he looks at you. The same way I look at Bailey.”
“Whatever. It’s nothing.” I kicked at the gravel with my boot and looked down at the ground so Ryder wouldn’t see the smile I was trying to hide. The way Jeremy was looking at me had my skin tingling all over.
“Bullshit. It’s something. I’ve never seen you act like that with someone.”
“Like what? You’ve seen me sit in a room with him for five minutes.” I rested my hands on my hips and tapped my foot on the ground. I didn’t want to discuss this now.
“That’s all I need, si
s. It’s that magic twin shit we have going on.”
“Oh, really, do tell…” Stupid twin connection. It didn’t happen often, but when it did, it was really inconvenient.
“You like him.”
“I do not.” I didn’t. Did I? Maybe I did. I couldn’t tell. I liked his company. I liked his face. It was handsome. And his body. The tattoos. Those lips. I liked the way he made me feel.
Crap.
“You do. You’re too nice. You don’t say anything sarcastic. You’re too friendly.”
“And, what? I’m usually a bitch?” I raised an eyebrow in challenge.
“No. You’re the biggest smartass I know. But not with him.”
“Don’t be stupid. You don’t know how I speak when we’re alone.” I snapped my mouth shut. That came out wrong. But he was right. Normally, I was sarcastic and blunt, but for some reason, with Jeremy, I wasn’t. As much, anyway.
“You like him. And you’re afraid to say the wrong thing, so you’re all nice as pie.”
“Maybe I do. I don’t know. But so what?”
“So, nothing. I just wanted to hear you admit it.” He smirked. Jerk. I punched him in the chest. “I want you happy, Kenz. And if an ex-criminal makes you happy, so be it. He just better not hurt you.”
“Dude, we’ve been neighbours for, like, a week. This is not an insta-love story. It’s way too freaking early to be talking happily ever after.”
“Not really. Not when he’s the first guy you’ve shown interest in since the douchebag.”
But that was because I compared every guy I met to Chace and to Ryder. If they had any of Chace’s qualities, I didn’t want to know them. I wanted a guy Cole could look up to, like he did Ryder. I wanted a guy who would treat me the way Ryder treated Bailey, like she was his everything. I didn’t know what my mother did when she raised us, but she nailed it with Ryder. He was kind, protective, caring. He was my hero, and I wasn’t afraid to admit it. It was hard for anyone to measure up to him.
“Speaking of…we need to talk about him.” And now Ryder knew about my unsure feelings toward Jeremy, it wouldn’t be so hard to bring up the fact Chace had seen us kissing, somehow. Maybe.
“What?” His frown lines deepened, and his fists clenched. His eyes turned black, just like they always did at the mere mention of Chace.
“I need to know what happened.” We never kept secrets. Never. But this was something my dear, stupid brother refused to tell me. That fact alone was enough to set off warning bells. It was bad enough that he either couldn’t talk about it or refused to acknowledge it further.
“When?”
“Don’t play dumb. When Johnny had to bail you out.”
Ryder’s eyes narrowed, and his jaw clenched. The vein in his neck throbbed. A tell-tale sign he was angry.
“No,” he hissed through clenched teeth.
“Yes.”
“It has nothing to do with you.”
“It has everything to do with me. He’s stalking me,” I shouted, shoving him in the chest.
“He what?” Ryder’s eyebrows lifted in surprise.
“Don’t act like you don’t know. I know Jeremy spoke to you about it when he called me. Which, by the way, you failed to tell me about.”
“All he said was Chace knew you were eating pizza.”
“Even you’re not that stupid, Ryder. How the hell would Chace know that, huh? How would he know we sat on my sofa and shared a meal? How would he know we kissed? Because he’s watching me. Somehow.”
“You kissed?”
I threw my hands in the air with a groan and walked away. “That’s what you focus on. Out of everything I just said, all you heard was Jeremy and I kissed. Yes, okay. We kissed. It was great. I enjoyed it a lot. I want to kiss him again.”
“Aww, that’s nice to hear, babe.” Jeremy’s voice sounded from behind me. I spun on the spot to glare at him. He held his hands up in surrender. What was he doing out here?
“You kissed my sister?” Ryder asked.
Jeremy winced.
“That’s not the point, Ryder. Chace saw. We were in my locked apartment on the second floor. And. He. Saw,” I ground out.
“Shit.” Ryder pulled on his hair and kicked the wall beside the ice freezer.
“Look, obviously something pretty bad happened. We’re just trying to find out how much of a danger he is to Kenzie and Cole.” Jeremy stepped forward, hands still held up to show Ryder he didn’t mean any trouble.
“Why are you out here?” Ryder asked Jeremy. “This has nothing to do with you.”
Jeremy folded his arms, his muscles flexing, pulling tight the sleeves of his t-shirt. “Things looked like they were getting heated. Just doing the neighbourly thing and checking on Kenzie.”
“Yeah, well, this is our business. Piss off back inside,” Ryder replied.
“No can do. Sorry.” Jeremy shrugged and leaned against the freezer, crossing his legs as he watched me carefully.
My stomach fluttered, and I had to suppress a smile. This was not the time to smile. I was angry at my brother, and I needed answers. I didn’t need to go getting all giddy over a guy with really, really nice arms and tattoos.
“Please, Ryder. Just tell me,” I pleaded. I wasn’t above dropping to my knees and begging him. Though I’d probably put him in a headlock and throw him to the ground first.
Ryder closed his eyes and tilted his head back. When he looked back at me, I saw everything. He didn’t even need to speak. It was all there in his expression. The pain, the anger, the anguish. His eyes were burning with rage. He was hurting just as much as he was furious. My heart stopped, and my stomach churned.
“Bailey,” he whispered and slumped down against the wall. Resting his elbows on his knees, he continued. “He tried to attack Bailey.” His head dropped into his hands, too overwhelmed to speak.
I wanted to throw up. The thought of anything like that happening to anyone, let alone Bailey, made me sick.
“What kind of sick, fu—” I stopped talking when Ryder punched the freezer beside him in anger. Me getting pissed off wasn’t helping anything.
I fell to my knees in the gravel in front of my brother and grabbed his hands. Jeremy’s arms hung limp at his side, but his back was ramrod straight, jaw clenched. He caught my eyes, and I could see the same fury in him as I did in Ryder. I couldn’t speak. I didn’t know what to say. How did you respond to something like that? Instead, I sat there quietly holding my brother’s hands.
I knew whatever he had been hiding was bad. I also knew what Chace did was classed as attempted sexual assault. I’d found that out last year when Brody’s friend looked into Chace for me. But I never imagined it was Bailey. My brother was a knight in skinny jeans. He was the first one to stand up for someone else. He was a protector by nature. And I stupidly assumed that maybe he’d stopped Chace from groping a drunk chick at a party or something.
Okay, maybe I didn’t stupidly assume.
Maybe I knew deep down inside that it was all to do with Bailey.
Maybe I just didn’t want to admit that something like that could happen to someone I cared so much for. Bailey was like a sister to me.
I didn’t want to push him, and I didn’t want to know any details. All I wanted to know was that Bailey was okay. That it was stopped before it went too far.
“D-d-did h-he—” My voice was scratchy, and the lump in my throat stopped me from getting the words out.
Ryder shook his head.
I breathed a sigh of relief, the weight of his confession lifted off my shoulders.
“You got there in time?”
Again, he shook his head. He looked up at me with red rimmed eyes—he wasn’t crying, but he was damn close—and cleared his throat.
“Jack.”
“Jack?” I gasped in surprise. Jack was a gentle soul, not a fighter by nature. He was Ryder’s roommate and best friend at uni. And he was also the loudest, most inappropriate person you could ever meet. But he cared. He wore
his heart on his sleeve and would do anything for Ryder, Bailey, and Indie.
“He got there just—” Ryder swallowed and clenched his jaw.
“In time.” I finished for him. “Shit. I’m sorry.”
Ryder’s eyes cleared as a mask of indifference settled over his face. He stood and brushed off his jeans. “Not a word to anyone.” Then he walked back inside with no further explanation, for which I was grateful. I wasn’t sure I could handle hearing the details.
I sat on the ground for a while longer, Jeremy coming over to sit with me. “You okay?”
I bit my lip and shrugged. I didn’t know what I felt. It was jarring to find out the father of your child could be capable of such a horrendous act.
My stomach rolled again. I pushed myself up and ran around the corner. Hunching over, I emptied the contents of my stomach. Gross. Jeremy’s hand rubbed soothing circles on my back. And I groaned, throwing up again. So not attractive. I didn’t want him to see me like that. I stood and classily wiped my mouth with the back of my hand. My skin was damp, and my hands were shaking. Jeremy put his arm around my waist.
“Come on. Let’s get you cleaned up.”
I winced. Great impression I was making.
“A little vomit isn’t going to turn me off, babe.”
“I said that out loud?”
“Yep.” He opened the doors to the diner and, ignoring everyone else, he led me down the hall and into the bathroom.
I splashed my face, rinsed my mouth out, and fixed my hair. All I wanted to do was go home and have a shower.
I felt dirty. And that was stupid. But it didn’t make it any less true. Dirty by association. I knew there was something wrong with Chace, but I never would have imagined he could do what he did. And Bailey. I didn’t know how she stayed at the same uni with him. I would have been out of there in an instant. She was stronger than any of us gave her credit for.
I had been furious with Ryder for acting so stupid and getting himself arrested, but it all made sense now. I was proud of him for protecting his girlfriend and almost wished he’d beaten Chace harder.
“Feel better?”
“No.”
“Want to get out of here?”