by Lori Foster
Del turned her face to his. “I’m sorry,” she said very softly, and meant it.
“Oh God, don’t. Don’t apologize to me!” He sat up and switched on a light, shocking her, making her blink against the glare of it. “You should slap my face, Delilah. Or curse me or...hell, I don’t know what. But don’t apologize.”
She looked up at him, her eyes welling with emotion, and his expression crumbled.
“Oh, babe, no, don’t cry.”
That got her laughing again, a wobbly, pathetic laugh. “Don’t apologize, don’t cry.” She sniffed, and gratefully accepted the tissue he handed to her. She blew hard before continuing. “I’ve thought about it, and I can see why you believed Rudy. We haven’t really known each other that long, not long enough for unconditional trust.”
She scooted up to sit against the headboard. “Trust doesn’t really come easy to me, either.”
“Tell me what to do,” Mick said, touching her cheek to remove one lingering tear. “Tell me how to prove to you that I do trust you.”
She blinked. “Do you?”
He settled himself beside her, and their shoulders touched. Del had the sheet to her chin, but Mick barely had it covering his lap. Even now, in a vortex of emotions, he stole her breath away. He folded his hands over his abdomen and stared at the far wall.
“Damn right I trust you,” he said. “I think it was myself I didn’t trust all along. But you...almost from the minute I saw you, I wanted you. You drew me like no one ever had, and that shook me because I wasn’t used to anyone affecting me like that.” He glanced down at her. “It’s scary the way you make me feel.”
Del lifted his left arm over her shoulder and curled into his side again. “Okay?”
His arm tightened. “Better than okay.”
“Will you tell me about your childhood?” She felt him stiffen, felt the stillness that came over him, body and mind.
“Why do you want to know?”
“To try to understand. I’ve gotten the impression it wasn’t great, but that kid’s a part of you.”
“No.”
“You can’t run away from your past, Mick. All you can do is deal with it.”
“I’ve dealt with it,” he muttered.
Del knew she was pushing, but it was important to her to know all of him, the good and the bad. “Then you shouldn’t have any problem sharing with me.” To force the issue, she added, “Since you trust me.”
“That has nothing to do with trust.”
“Of course it does!” Again she twisted to look at him, but he pressed her head back to his shoulder. Del grinned. “You know, even Neddie trusted me enough to confide in me. He told me about his past and things he’d done, things he regretted.”
This time Mick turned her face up to him. His fingers were hard, firm on her chin. “What things did he tell you?”
“You first.”
“Delilah...”
She only raised a brow, waiting.
He sighed, gave a slight shake of his head and then kissed her forehead. He settled back, and though his pose was relaxed, she felt the rigid way he held himself. “Family services took me away from my mother twice. The first time it happened, I was about five. She’d gone out partying and hadn’t come back, and a neighbor reported her.”
Covering her shock and her sympathy, Del asked, “How long was she gone?”
“All weekend. In those days, other than her disappearing every now and then, it wasn’t so bad. The house stayed kinda picked up and she had a regular job and she still seemed to...like me.”
Seemed to like me. Del’s heart cried out at the hurt he must have felt. She smoothed her hand over his chest and kept quiet.
“They gave me back to her easy enough, and I was glad. Sometimes being with her was rough, but it was nothing compared to not knowing what would happen, or being stuck with strangers. My mother promised to take some classes, to get into rehab for her drinking, and voilà—I was back home.”
“Were things any better then?”
He laughed. “They got worse, actually. She was embarrassed that her neighbors knew I’d been taken away, so we moved. She got a new boyfriend and started drinking even more, but she was careful to put on a good show for the folks who checked up on her. It was another couple of years before things really went down the toilet.”
Del cringed at the idea of something worse than a mother neglecting her son for an entire weekend, but again she kept silent, wanting him to talk.
“My mother had an affinity for drink first, and men second. She moved them in and out of our house, but none of them ever contributed, and most of them didn’t care to see me too often. Until I was about twelve, I tried to just stay out of sight. But then her liver went bad and she got really sick, and the guy who was with her at the time took her to the hospital. She had to stay awhile, and he skipped out, so family services had me again. That was the worst. I mean, at five I probably needed looking after. But at twelve? I’d have been fine on my own, and when they finally let her out of the hospital I knew I had to take over or I’d get taken away from her for good. Not that I’d have missed her much, but...” He shrugged.
“The familiar,” Del said, “is almost always easier than the unfamiliar.”
“Yeah.” He smoothed his fingers up and down her bare arm for a few minutes, thinking. “I was bigger than her by then, so she couldn’t close me off in my room anymore or use threats against me. I could outrun her, and smacking me hurt her worse than it did me. So I told her how things were going to be.”
Del shivered at the harshness of those words, at the awful reality he’d faced at such a young age. “At twelve years old, you took charge?”
“Damn right. And she listened, and did as I said, because she knew otherwise I could get her arrested.”
“How?”
“She had men in the house who were thieves and cons. She’d done a lot of stupid stuff while drunk, including prostituting herself for drinks, gambling with money we didn’t have, accepting stolen goods in exchange for a room—usually to someone busy dodging the law. Our television, and for a while our car, were both stolen.”
Del wondered if that was why he’d chosen to work Vice, because he’d already seen the other side of it.
“A lot of the men would make big promises, some even to me. They’d talk about taking care of her, buying things, but they all lied. Family services lied, too, always telling me things would get better. And she was the worst of all—she lied every damn time she said she loved me. After that, she’d always tell me not to say anything to anyone because she’d be taken away and I’d be left all alone.” He laughed, a rough, humorless sound. “I knew it was bullshit all along. Whatever maternal instincts she’d had got drowned in a bottle early on. By the time I was twelve, she’d already pretty much wiped her hands of me, but my new conditions really finished things off.”
He drew a long breath. “She did as I told her, and she hated me in the bargain.”
Del hugged him tight. “What, exactly, did you tell her to do, Mick?”
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
“We sold our house, which we were about to lose anyway, since she missed more and more work from drinking and couldn’t make the payments. I didn’t want to end up on the street, and neither did she. I checked around and found an apartment building—the one right next door to where you rent. It was a terrible area even then, but I used the money we made off the house to buy it, and the rent from the other apartments was income. I was in charge, taking applications from renters, collecting the rent, running ads when necessary.”
“You did all that at twelve?”
“There weren’t a lot of choices.” He smiled down at her. “But it wasn’t bad. Hell, it was the best it had been for a while. She stayed drunk and ran around with every Tom in t
own, but she knew better than to screw with the bill money. When I got old enough, I got a job and that helped, too.”
“When did you meet Angel?”
His gaze brightened with a smile of genuine warmth. “She moved in when I was sixteen. Her first son, Grayson, was just a little-bitty squirt, and she’d been in a car wreck and was barely able to get around herself. I helped her out, and she started tutoring me in the school subjects I had problems with. Angel was...she was the type of woman I hadn’t seen before. She didn’t lie or make things up. If something needed to be done, she found a way to do it.”
Del felt more tears gather and quickly swiped them away. “I know she loves you.”
“Yeah. She does. She thinks of herself as a big sister, or a surrogate mother, I guess.” Mick reached over and tweaked Del’s nose. “Now, you talk about a role model, that’s Dane. Alec, too. They’re both great guys.”
She caught his hand and held it to her cheek. “They say the same about you.”
Del kissed his palm, and he asked, “Delilah, will you forgive me?”
She hesitated to be totally honest with him. She knew that she loved Mick, and she’d rather die than hurt him. But the night was quiet, the light low, and he deserved the truth. “I can forgive you, because I understand.” I love you too much not to. “But I don’t know that I’ll ever feel the same again.”
He went rigid. “What does that mean, Delilah?”
She wished he hadn’t turned the light on. She’d have preferred the concealing darkness, which made confessions so much easier. “Since the day I met you, I’ve seen you as bigger than life, a knight in shining armor, fearless.”
He snorted. “That’s nonsense. Hell, I just told you, you scare the hell out of me.”
She shook her head; nothing really scared Mick, she knew. And she certainly didn’t have that type of power over him. If she had, he wouldn’t have turned on her so easily. “I write about heroes every day, but I didn’t know they existed. I didn’t think any man would deliberately risk his life to keep someone else safe. I didn’t know a stranger would risk his life, not for me.”
He frowned over that.
“I saw you as...” she shrugged helplessly “...the best of everything.”
Mick shoved away the sheet and stood. Gloriously naked, he stalked to the window and looked out at the black, balmy night. A large oak blocked what little moonlight there might have been. No leaves stirred; all was silent except for the bumping of her heart.
The faint light from the bedside lamp threw a glow along one side of his body, causing shadows to dip and swell over his muscles and bones, exaggerating his strength, which she already knew to be considerable. She wanted to touch him everywhere. She wanted to eat him up. And nothing, not even her hurt, could change that.
“I come from nothing, Delilah.” His voice broke the night, harsh and raw. “For most of my life, I was nothing. Despite how they feel about it, I’m like a stray that Angel dragged home and everyone accepted. I owe Angel and Dane and their whole goddamn family for showing me what family is, for letting me know how a real life could be, and for helping me to get that life. I owe them for who I am now. But if you stripped them away and left me with just myself, with just the bare bones of me, I’d be back at square one. And that sure as hell isn’t a white knight.”
“No!” She struggled to her knees, clutching the sheet to her throat. “You are who you are, Mick Dawson, a strong, capable man with or without anyone else.”
He whirled around. “I am not a damn hero.”
He looked livid, his eyes red, his nostrils flaring. Del stared.
“Don’t you dare put me on some fucking pedestal,” he growled, “because I’m guaranteed to fall off. I’m human, and I blunder my way through life just like everyone else.”
When she remained silent, wide-eyed and stunned, he stomped back to the bed, caught her upper arms and lifted her from the mattress, causing her sheet to fall. She worried for his injured shoulder, and his injured soul.
“You thought I was impervious to cold, too, that I had insides made of iron.”
Del sputtered. “Don’t bring up my coffee now!”
“You don’t know what I go through, how I fight every day to make sure I stay deserving.”
Deserving of what? she wanted to ask, but she couldn’t. “Mick...”
“To a lot of people, right and wrong are clear-cut values. But not to me. I force those ideologies into the front of my mind all the time—that a woman strung out on drugs is wrong, not just desperate. That a young man with a gun is a criminal, not a kid trying to survive. I don’t even know what a white knight is, but I know what the rules tell me, and I follow those rules to the letter.”
Del swallowed her hurt. Looking at him, seeing his pain, hurt even more. “Did those rules tell you to protect me when you knew it might get you killed?”
His jaw clenched; his entire body tightened. But his hands didn’t hurt her. She knew without a doubt that Mick would never, ever physically hurt her.
“An officer has to take action when he sees a civilian threatened.”
She barely heard what he said. “Did those rules insist you turn me in because you thought I was breaking the law? Or did you do that because you thought I’d used you?”
He tipped his head back and groaned. “Both.”
“Mick?” She needed to touch him, to soothe him, but his hold didn’t allow for that. So she gave him the only words she knew that might help. “I forgive you.”
His gaze jerked to hers, hot, burning, filled with relief, with satisfaction, greed, elation.
She saw the pulse racing in his strong throat, saw the muscles in his shoulders quiver, saw the glaze of relief in his eyes.
“I want you,” he groaned. “More than I’ve ever wanted anything. More than I wanted my mother to care, more than I wanted Angel to be safe.” He shook her slightly. “More than I want my next breath. But I’m just me, and if you try to make me more than that we’ll both be disappointed.”
Del licked her lips. It sounded to her like he loved her, though he hadn’t quite said so. “Do you want me now?”
He lifted her a few inches more until his mouth ground down on hers, bending her head back. His tongue thrust deep. Her body came into stark contact with his, making her aware of all his hard angles and firm muscles, and the long, hard length of his throbbing erection.
Just as quickly his kiss eased and he gentled his hold. His velvet tongue licked, teased, then slowly withdrew. “I’m sorry,” he murmured against her mouth, nibbling on her lips, softening them. “I need you.”
“Your shoulder,” she said in alarm, fearing he’d hurt himself.
And Mick groaned again, a sound of half humor, half awe. “Even when I act like a marauding bastard, you don’t put me in my place.” His expression was less strained, and a half smile curled his mouth. “You’re something else, Delilah Piper, you know that?”
“Something good?” she asked.
He smoothed her hair, stroked her lips with his thumb. “Something wonderful,” he whispered, and then he kissed her again, this time with such sweetness, such love, she didn’t even need to hear him speak the words. She couldn’t resist him. He’d tell her what she wanted to hear sooner or later, but for tonight she had him, she had his confidences, and that was more than enough.
* * *
The second Mick awoke, he knew the other side of the bed was empty. He sat up in a rush, panic closing in—and saw Delilah sitting in the chair by the window. He eased back, but his heart continued to stutter and his stomach still cramped. “You couldn’t sleep?”
A dark shadow made up her form in the gray, predawn light, and still he sensed her smile. “Watching you is more fun than sleeping.”
He realized the sheet was around his ankles, and he cocke
d a brow at her. It was easier to breathe now, with her so obviously teasing. “Taking advantage of me?”
“Yes.”
Mick stretched and yawned. With his initial alarm gone, he realized he felt better today, less frazzled, but not completely satisfied. He didn’t think he’d be content until he had Delilah committed to him one hundred percent. And that meant getting a ring on her finger and hearing her say the vows.
When she was officially his wife, then maybe he could relax.
He’d made progress last night, though he hoped like hell she’d never put him through anything like that again. He hated rehashing the past. It shamed him, reminded him of how weak he’d been, how far he’d struggled. And whether Angel admitted it or not, he always knew he’d never have made it without her. If it hadn’t been for Angel, he’d be on the other side of the law right now, the one being arrested for God only knew what, rather than a cop doing the arresting.
It was an emotional struggle he dealt with every day.
He heard Delilah sigh as he stretched his left arm high, and grinned. She was so blatant about enjoying his body, both by touch and sight. He was glad he hadn’t spent his life chasing women and screwing around like so many males seemed driven to do. It made their relationship that much more special. She was the only woman who’d ever lived with him.
“I thought you’d be writing,” he said as he stood and went to his dresser to get some shorts.
She turned to watch him. He knew his way in the dark, but still he flipped on the wall switch, wanting to see her better.
She looked...dreamy.
“I didn’t even think about writing.”
He frowned, stepped into his gray boxers and went to her. She wore his shirt, and that turned him on. Of course, if she’d been wearing nothing at all, or the sheet, or her own T-shirt, he’d have still been turned on. She couldn’t breathe without making him hard.
He stood looking down at her, dreading the question he had to ask. “Did I interfere with your work?”