by Hannah Ford
As strong as Jake Novak always looked, for the first time, Raven struggled to take comfort from his strength. His brown eyes locked on her, his expression very serious but still calm, as if he could sense the troubles brewing under the surface and was treading cautiously.
“Sometimes these things happen…” Jake shook his head as he looked into her eyes. “We should just be grateful that everyone’s safe.”
Raven nodded, but her heart wasn’t in it. Everyone wasn’t safe. Nobody would be safe until Club Alpha was out of her life for good. But how could she make that happen? It was completely out of her control.
“I need to get my head together,” Raven said, blinking, as she walked into the hotel bedroom. She brushed past Jake, feeling his body heat and sensing his strength and wanting nothing more than to collapse into his arms—tell him everything.
No. You can’t risk it. Jake will go crazy and you won’t be able to stop him or control what he does next.
Jake followed her. “Do they even know how the fire started?” he asked, his voice probing.
Raven stood there in Jake’s room, realizing she didn’t even have a decent outfit to put on and feeling more and more helpless and angry. “No, they don’t know what happened.”
“I hope it’s not because of my connection to you,” he said.
Raven’s stomach tightened and a cold thrill of fear rushed through her. She turned her head and stared at him. “Why would you even say such a thing? Are you joking?”
Jake folded his arms. “It’s a possibility. A crazy fan—they can do some really stupid stuff. I’ve had death threats, stalkers, you name it.”
Raven swallowed and felt her throat tightening.
You need to say something. You can’t let them get away with this. Are you really going to spy on Jake Novak and tell Club Alpha about his secret military mission? If not, then what are you going to do?
“I can’t deal with that right now,” Raven told him, an edge creeping into her voice. “I can hardly think straight and you’re not helping.”
“You know it’s going to be okay,” Jake said, reaching out and caressing her hair.
He was too close, and she felt too torn and confused and guilty. “Please, don’t—don’t touch me.”
“Why not?”
“Because, you’re distracting me.”
Jake’s lip curled. “I’m distracting you. Huh.”
She looked at him. “Yes, you’re distracting me. What are we doing here? What is this?” she asked, waving her hands as if to indicate that them being in the room together didn’t even make sense.
Jake just looked at her, his warm brown eyes concerned but also searching, as if he could tell there was more going on than she was telling him. “This doesn’t seem like an ideal time to have a big talk about the state of our relationship.”
“Exactly.” Raven felt a sob nearly escape her throat, as she put on her shirt, pants and shoes from the previous night. There was a slight bloodstain on the knee of her pants and the elbow of her shirt was a little ripped.
That brought back memories of Zeke, his nail clippings and blubbery lips and threats, and then Max throwing her out of the car.
She came back to the present and looked around her.
The blanket and sheets still bore the telltale signs of their sexual encounter. Everything was messy and wrinkled and disorganized.
“Exactly what?” Jake asked, his tone still remarkably calm.
She blinked, confused, not remembering what they’d even been discussing a moment ago. But then she realized she had nothing to feel guilty about, none of this was her fault. Jake was the one who refused to let her in, refused to be in a real committed relationship with her. As long as he had that attitude, she couldn’t tell him about Club Alpha and what they were trying to do.
“You don’t want to talk about the state of our relationship because it would force you to admit the truth.” Raven smoothed her hair and straightened her shirt.
“What truth is that?”
She turned and glared at him. “You refuse to be in a real relationship with me. I can’t count on you for anything.”
Jake’s eyes hardened. “So what are you doing here, then?” he said. “Doesn’t this count for something?”
“It was fun,” she said, not blinking.
“You’re afraid and upset,” Jake told her. “Don’t take it out on me.”
“Don’t tell me how I feel.”
Jake smiled, but it wasn’t friendly. “I’m not telling you how you feel. I’m telling you how you’re behaving.”
“Yeah, I’m upset. My parents’ house burned down. Meanwhile, you come in and out of my life whenever you want, acting like you care, pretending that I can trust you when we both know that I can’t.”
“You can trust me,” Jake said firmly. “I’ve never done anything to intentionally hurt you or betray your trust.”
Raven looked down at the floor, her chest rising and falling quickly. She was at war with her own mind and heart. She wanted so badly to come clean with everything, but Jake wasn’t a known quantity. He was an enigma, capable of anything at any time. “The thing is, I know you believe that about yourself,” Raven said softly, finally looking at him again. “But you’re wrong, Jake. Everything about you is a lie.”
He swallowed and his eyes got a hollow, far away look as he took in her accusation. “Are you sure we’re still talking about me?” he asked. His eyes refocused on her, boring into her now, and Raven felt as if he could see through all the lies and half-truths.
She felt completely naked and exposed, and her heart was pounding. But she couldn’t allow herself to admit that she was in the wrong. “Yes, I’m sure we’re talking about you,” she lied.
He smiled bitterly. “Have it your way, then, Raven. When you’re finished in here, meet me in the lobby. I’ll have a car waiting for you.” He turned and walked out of the room and a moment later, she heard the door close.
Raven took only a moment to freshen up as best she could in the bathroom. As she was looking at her strained and tired eyes in the mirror, she heard the hotel room door opening again and then footsteps entering the suite.
“Who’s there?” she called out.
“It’s me,” Jake said. His voice was different somehow.
Her heart didn’t slow, but actually beat faster.
She swallowed with some difficulty, walking out of the bathroom to face him. “What now?” she said, challenging him, sounding crueler than she needed. It was as if she was baiting him for some reason.
Maybe you’re just scared to open up and let him in after all.
He was staring at her with a very strange look in his eye. “I’m not going to let you do this,” he said, and his strong jaw was fixed, and he had a determined look on his face that made her more frightened than ever.
“Not going to let me do what?”
“I started to leave the room to get you a car, to let you go on your own, and then it hit me. This is exactly what you want, Raven—you’re trying to push me away.” He stepped closer to her and she retreated a step.
“That’s not true.”
“Yes. It is.” He came forward again. “And I’m not going to keep falling for it.”
She shook her head. “I don’t have time for this, Jake.”
“Listen to me,” he said, softly but firmly. “I care about you, Raven. I care about you more than I ever thought I could care about another person.”
His words blew her away, but she was also completely at a loss for what to do now. He’d finally told her the very thing she’d been waiting to hear, but only after everything had gone sour.
“It’s too late, Jake,” she whispered.
“Why?”
“It just is.” She walked past him again, but this time he didn’t let her pass. He grabbed her arm.
“You’re not leaving without me.”
She spun and looked at him with tears in her eyes. “Stop it, okay? Just stop playing wi
th my emotions.”
“I’m not playing with anything. I’m telling you the truth, and I’m not going to stop telling you. I care about you.” And then he leaned in and kissed her, and from his lips—she knew.
She knew that he was telling her the absolute truth.
He took her breath away with his lips, and she was glad of it. Her heart felt like it would burst in her chest, and everything else melted, all the problems were like dust in the wind when he touched her like this.
Jake Novak. Jake Novak chose me, despite everything. Despite all the baggage, and the mess, and the drama.
But will he still choose you once he knows everything?
Raven pulled away abruptly, and Jake pulled back too, his brow furrowed. “Raven,” he began. “Just tell me what the hell’s going on.”
“Oh, God,” she murmured, putting a hand to her forehead and then felt everything start to spin. Spots appeared before her eyes.
Jake grabbed her in his arms and held her as her legs gave out.
“What is it? What’s wrong?” he asked again.
She collected herself, then stared into his brown eyes, and the love and strength she saw there gave her courage. Raven steadied herself, found her legs again. “I’m okay,” she told him. “I’m okay.”
“You sure?” he asked, letting go of her, but hesitantly, as if he thought a small breeze might knock her over.
“I need to tell you something,” she admitted. “There’s more to the story than I admitted to you.”
“How much more?” he said.
She took a deep breath and let it out at once. “I didn’t get mugged last night.”
Jake’s eyes narrowed. “You didn’t?”
“It wasn’t some random mugger who attacked me. It was Club Alpha,” she said, watching his expression for a reaction.
His eyes hardened. “Tell me who it was and exactly what they did. I want every detail, Raven.” His teeth were clenched and his shoulders stiffened.
“But Jake, you can’t just go beat them up. Not this time.”
He smiled coldly. “I’m going to do much worse than that, don’t worry.”
“I need you to stay calm.”
“So it was Club Alpha that burned your parents’ house down?” he asked, his fists clenching.
“Yes.”
“I’m going to fucking kill them.” Jake’s eyes were on fire with the kind of anger that Raven thought might allow one person to murder another.
Jake looked like the warrior he was at heart, and she could easily imagine him with this expression on his face leading men into battle in the desert a world away.
“This isn’t the time,” Raven said, trying to calm him. She put a hand on his forearm. “Not everything can be handled with violence, Jake.”
His distant gaze focused and returned to her. “I know that, Raven. I know that violence isn’t the solution to every problem. It just happens to be the solution to this particular problem.”
She rolled her eyes. “This reaction is exactly why I was afraid to tell you what happened to me.”
Jake smiled a little, almost despite himself. “Maybe you know me too well.”
“Promise me that I won’t regret telling you. This is dangerous for me. Club Alpha will punish me if they find out I told you.”
“I’m not going to let them near you, Raven. Yesterday was the last time anyone from Club Alpha will get anywhere close to you again. And they’re going to wish they’d never heard your name when I’m through with them.”
“Please, just calm down.”
“I’m perfectly calm,” Jake said, shrugging his muscular shoulders. “Come on. We should hit the road before it gets too late.”
“You’re coming with me to see my family?” she asked.
“Of course. I’m not letting you out of my sight from now on. Not until this problem is resolved.” He grabbed her hand tightly and started out of the room. “You can tell me the rest of the story on the drive.”
* * *
On the drive to her hometown, Jake and Raven were in the back of a sedan with their usual driver, but this time they had a car of security driving in front of them and one car bringing up the rear.
For the first time, Jake had seen fit to make sure they had a heavy security detail taking care of them. Raven had to admit it made her breathe a little easier knowing that there were so many people watching over them.
It was like what she imagined the First Lady must feel when she had the secret service making sure that nobody could get to her or the President.
Once they’d settled into the car ride for a few minutes, Jake turned to Raven with a serious expression on his face. “Okay,” he said. “Now you need to tell me everything that happened yesterday. I mean every single detail. Nothing’s unimportant.”
Raven swallowed. “Are you angry with me for not telling you the truth last night?”
Jake shook his head. “I’m not angry with you.” He sighed and glanced out the window at the quickly passing highway. “But we can’t have anymore secrets between us. It’s getting too dangerous.”
She nodded. “I know. And I’m sorry I didn’t tell you the truth. It’s been hard to trust…hard to trust anyone after the things I’ve been through.”
“I get it,” Jake said, and she knew that he wasn’t just saying empty words.
“Okay,” Raven said, taking a deep breath. “Here goes.”
She started to tell Jake what had happened to her when she’d left the hospital and Max had grabbed her and forced her into the car where the man who called himself Zeke had been waiting.
When she mentioned Zeke’s name, she expected to see some flicker of recognition in Jake’s eyes. Jake had known who Scott from Club Alpha was when she’d told him about that little encounter, but there was no reaction to this new person who’d entered their world.
Raven told him everything, and when she got to the part about Club Alpha’s spying operation, she saw Jake’s hands close into fists again and tighten until his knuckles were white. But his face was cool and impassive. He showed no emotion, not even as she continued to recount how they’d wanted her to find out information about Jake’s missions in the Middle East during his military service.
It was actually strange how little he was reacting to the story, given his temper.
Somehow, his lack of anger was almost more unnerving. It signaled to Raven that this situation was far more serious than anything else they’d ever discussed.
Finally, she told how they’d thrown her out of the car and told her to lie about being mugged.
At this point, Jake startled a little, as if he’d just been jolted by a cattle prod. “They told you to say that?”
She looked down, guilty. “Yeah.”
“And you went right along with it.” His voice was disbelieving.
“I was scared. I didn’t know what else to do.”
“But you realize that everything you’re telling me now could be a lie too, another lie in a series of lies. How can I trust anything you tell me after so much dishonesty?”
She looked back at him again, and her jaw quivered. “I didn’t think I had a choice. They’re powerful, and they’re stronger than me. You and I weren’t even speaking at the time, so how could I feel safe telling you the truth?”
Jake folded his arms. “But you just went along with their plan. Were you going to try and find out about my military secrets too? Was that seriously going through your mind as a realistic way to handle their threats?”
“No, of course not.”
“But you used their cover story.”
“I told you I didn’t know what else to do, Jake. I’d been thrown out of a car, threatened, and I was terrified.”
Jake shook his head. “You should have told me the truth, Raven. Right away.”
“I know that. But I was foolish and I lied. I’ve apologized and now you can either choose to believe me or not.”
Jake looked upwards, as if asking for help fr
om above. He closed his eyes and didn’t speak for a little while. When he opened his eyes again, he was staring at her with the kind of intensity that seemed so dramatic as to have been part of a scene from one of his movies.
Only she knew he meant it. This wasn’t just a role in a film. This was Jake’s life, and he wasn’t fooling around.
“Raven, I’m going to choose to trust you now. I have to, because I care about you and I want to believe you’re worthy of my trust. But you’re not the only one who’s been burned in the past.”
“I know.”
“And if you lie to me again—if you withhold anything from me--then I’ll have to do something very difficult.” He looked away as if it was too hard to even think about such a possibility. But then he looked at her again, finally. “If you ever intentionally mislead me again, I’ll cut you loose for good. It won’t be my choice—it will be because you’ve left me no choice.”
Hearing him say the words brought tears to her eyes, and they spilled over and down her cheeks. As hard as it was to hear him say such things, she understood his need to say it and know that she’d heard him. “I wouldn’t blame you,” she told him.
“So we understand each other,” he said, his brown eyes hard and unforgiving.
“Yes.”
He nodded, seeming like he wanted to say more, but then he finally just glanced toward the front of the sedan. “So Club Alpha’s expecting you to give them some dirt,” he said, musing aloud. “Maybe we can oblige them.”
“I don’t understand.”
“I’m not sure yet,” Jake said, “but I think maybe we can give them something to chew on. If we slow them down a little, it’ll give me time to plan a real response.”
“Don’t we need to involve the police?” Raven asked. “Hasn’t it gone far enough?”
“It’s already gone too far for the police,” Jake said, and his tone was ominous.
“I don’t understand how that’s even possible.”
“Well it is.” Jake took out his phone and then put it to his ear.
“Who are you calling?”
“Kurt,” he said. “I need to tell him what’s going on.”