Page 19 of Silas (West Bend Saints 2)
âYou find a way to distract me now, and Iâll show you the workshop when weâre done,â he said. His fingers danced over my nipple, erect to his touch.
âThat sounds like a deal for me too,â I said.
âHow long has it been?â Tempest stood at the counter, her back toward me, stirring a bowl of cookie batter with a wooden spoon. A pair of my sweatpants, too large for her, hung around her hips; and she wore one of my t-shirts knotted up underneath her breasts, baring her midriff. She looked over her shoulder at me, hair falling messily in pieces from its ponytail, and my heart swelled just looking at her.
âWhat?â I asked. I was distracted, too distracted by the fact that this girl- this girl who Iâd loved for so long, this grifter whoâd conned Coker- was standing in my apartment, wearing my clothes, and baking fucking cookies.
Cookies.
Like she was Martha Stewart or something.
Tempest turned around, her back against the counter, the bowl and spoon in her hand. âYouâre staring,â she said. âYouâre looking at me likeâ¦I donât know what itâs like, but youâre creeping me out.â
I grinned. âOh, Iâm creeping you out, am I?â
âYeah, I mean, Iâm not sure if youâre hungry or -â
âIâm definitely hungry,â I said.
Tempest smiled. âYou just had your fill of me this morning.â
âI know. And now Iâm starving again,â I said. âWhat were you asking? Iâm too distracted by the fact that I can see right through that shirt youâre wearing.â
âWait,â Tempest said, turning around and setting the bowl down on the counter. âIs there a cookie sheet here?â
âDo I look like the kind of guy who has cookie sheets in his house?â I asked. âYou should have told me you wanted me to pick those up at the store when you sent me for the cookie stuff.â
Tempest sighed. âDo you have a pan, at least?â she asked. âAnd I was asking, how long has it been since Iâve been here?â
I opened the counter and handed her a flat pan. âThe days are blending together, arenât they?â
Tempest looked at the pan, her face scrunched up. âI guess this will work,â she said. âItâll just be one giant cookie, right?â
I watched as she poured batter into the pan, the act of us cooking in the kitchen now a regular routine. It had been three weeks since sheâd agreed to stay here, since sheâd decided to press the pause button on everything else that existed outside of this place. When she left to get her things at the bed and breakfast where sheâd been staying, I was sure she wasnât coming back.
But sheâd returned not even an hour later, standing in my doorway.
The next day, I was certain that sheâd be packing up and running. But she stayed. And one day turned into three, turned into ten, and now it had been three weeks.
I felt myself getting used to having her here.
She felt like home.
I didnât want to go back to reality. There were things I knew Iâd need to deal with - Elias had called last week after someone had told him Iâd gotten arrested, and started to lay into me, so I knew he was wondering what the hell was going on. I needed to rejoin the real world at some point.
But holing up here with Tempest was the closest Iâd felt to peace in a long time. And I thought she felt the same way.
My cell phone rang, interrupting my thoughts. I ignored it the first two times, but on the third, Tempest insisted. âSeriously, Silas,â she said. âAnswer the damn thing already. Just because weâre holed up here doesnât mean you shouldnât answer your phone.â
I chuckled as I walked into the bedroom to get it. âHello.â
âWhere the hell have you been?â Trigg asked. âShit, man, Iâve texted you and called you. What the hell?â
âIâve been busy,â I said.
âToo busy for your fucking friends?â he asked. âWhat, you screw one girl whoâs out of your league and youâre suddenly hot shit?â
I was silent.
âWait,â Trigg said. âAre you still screwing her? Youâre not still in Vegas, are you?â
âNo, Iâm not in Vegas,â I said.
âYou didnât say you werenât still screwing her either,â Trigg said.
âBecause itâs ridiculous and Iâm not answering that.â
âYou are,â Trigg said. âShit, man, Iâve known you how many years now? I know when youâre avoiding shit or trying to lie. Youâre the worst damn liar in the world.â
âTrigg,â I sighed. âWhat the hell do you want?â
âWell, I want to know about the TV producer chick,â he said. âBut since youâre not talking about that, Iâll tell you why I called.â
âThat would be nice,â I said. âGetting to the point would be wonderful.â
âIâm doing you a damn favor, Silas,â he said. âYou could be a little nicer about it.â
âSorry, Trigg,â I said, my voice sing-songy. âDid I hurt your feelings? Iâll even say please.â
âYou should,â he said, fake sniffling. âQuit screwing around. I wanted to tell you that some weird shit has been going on with Coker.â
âWhat do you mean?â I asked warily, waiting to hear that Coker was looking for Tempest and the rest of her team.
âHeâs all around the fight circuit looking for fighters, bragging about some big money-making opportunity he has going on,â Trigg said. âInternational fights. Heâs talking about making people stars. Abel and I are obviously not idiots. But some of the guys are getting into it.â
I exhaled, my relief palpable. Whatever Tempest had promised him, Coker was apparently too much of a tool to have realized that they werenât going to deliver. âYeah, I would stay out of that, Trigg.â
âDo you know something about it?â Trigg asked.
I stopped. Tempest would want me to be discreet. âNah, I donât know anything,â I lied. âBut if itâs something Cokerâs involved in, you donât want to be.â
Trigg was silent for a minute. âRoger that,â he said. âThereâs another opportunity for you, though. Cokerâs not involved in it at all. One of the other promoters wants you- heâs been trying to get in touch. Thereâs a fight coming up that has a big purse. Ten grand. Have you been keeping up with shit?â
Had I been keeping up with shit? Iâd been running in the mornings with Tempest, using the heavy bag that hung in the corner of the garage downstairs for practice.
I wasnât supposed to be fighting. Doctorâs orders. The last fight had been impromptu, unexpected, really. I was doing Abel a favor.
I wasnât trying to get back into it, but the pull was strong.
âYeah,â I said. âIâve been keeping up with shit.â
âYou should do this fight,â he said. âI know that last one was it for you, that you paid off your tab to Big Johnny, but itâs ten grand. That would be a lot of weekends bouncing, you know?â
âI donât know,â I said, thinking of Tempest in the other room. I knew sheâd hate the idea of me fighting.
âTen grand, Silas,â he said. âThis guy had a hard-on for you specifically. Heâs been trying to track you down. What could you do with ten grand?â
âIâll think about it,â I said, hearing Tempest behind me.
âWhatâs there to think about?â Trigg asked.
âDude. I said Iâd think about it,â I said.
âWell, think hard about it,â Trigg said. âAnd fast. Itâs coming up real soon. Need to know ASAP.â
I sighed. âYeah. Iâll let you know.â
I hung up the phone and turned to face Tempest, who slid her arms around me. âWhatâs up?â she asked.
âThat was one of the guys I trained with out in Vegas,â I said. âDid you know Coker hasnât figured out that youâre scamming him yet? Heâs looking for fighters for some international TV channel or something.â
Tempest grinned. âI told you weâre good at this,â she said. âWe usually string them along for a while. Emir
has something set up to auto-respond on email to the mark for a few weeks and blow him off. By the time they realize theyâve been conned, weâre somewhere else.â
âIâd say youâre a sneaky bitch, but I approve of you scamming Coker, so I wonât.â
âI am a sneaky bitch,â she said, looking up at me, her smile radiant. She slipped her hand down the waistband of my sweatpants. âWant to see how sneaky I am? Do you think we can do it before the cookies come out of the oven?â
âHow long are they in the oven?â
âTwelve minutes,â she said.
âRace you,â I said.
âSorry about the cookies,â I said. But I wasnât sorry in the least.
Silas laughed. âIâm not. It was worth a giant burnt cookie. And a house filled with smoke.â
âMy Nana called me yesterday,â I blurted out. I hadnât told Silas about her. Weâd spent the last three weeks screwing and talking about things that had happened in our lives since we were teenagers. But we hadnât talked about West Bend. Or about the shit that had happened with the sheriff. Or about how my grandmother had asked me to look into things. I didnât want reality to intrude on us, to pierce this perfect little bubble we had going.
We were living in this little fantasy universe weâd created, and I found myself not wanting to leave. And yet, I wanted him to meet the person who was most important to me, my grandmother.
âIs she in West Bend?â
âSheâs at the nursing home in town,â I said. âExcuse me- an assisted living facility.â
âIâd heard she moved away,â Silas said. âAfter what happened with your parents and stuffâ¦â
âShe didnât move far away,â I said. âBut sheâs here in town now. I want to take you to meet her.â
The smile that crossed Silasâ face couldnât have gotten any fucking bigger if it tried. âAll right.â
âItâs no big deal,â I said, holding my hand up. âI mean, itâs not some giant thing. Donât make a giant thing about it.â
I was lying. It was the biggest of things. I couldnât believe Iâd just offered to have Silas meet my grandmother. Sheâd think I was marrying him.
Silas was still grinning. âYeah,â he said. âNo big deal. When?â
âSeriously,â I said. âYouâre making it a thing. I can see it in your face. Donât. You can meet her whenever. Maybe tomorrow or something.â
âNo way,â he said. âHow about now?â
âNow is sudden.â
âExactly,â Silas said. âI donât need to give you an opportunity to change your mind.â
Nana gasped audibly, her hand over her mouth, doing her best to be as dramatic as possible. âOh my stars,â he said. âThis is Silas, isnât it? My, my, my, look at those eyes.â
Silas chuckled. âItâs nice to meet you, Mrs. Weston.â
âOh, and heâs as polite as he is good-looking, isnât he?â she asked, gesturing to the chairs in the room. âCall me Letty. Mrs. Weston makes me feel like my mother, and that makes me feel like Iâm a hundred years old and Iâm not quite there yet. Sit with me and visit, will you? I told you he was a young Paul Newman, didnât I? Those eyes. Of course, I hadnât seen you in person, just photos from your mother.â
âYou were friends with my mother,â Silas said.
Letty sank into her armchair and smoothed the pant leg of her tracksuit, todayâs choice a pink and purple rhinestone studded number. âI donât know that Iâd call us friends exactly,â she said. âYou mother - God rest her soul - I donât mean to speak ill of the dead, but your mother was a...complicated...person.â
Silas made a sound that sounded like a cross between a laugh and a cough. âComplicated is a good way of putting it.â
âWell, then you know, I donât think your mother really had friends,â Letty said. âIâm not sure she was really that capable of something of that nature. But we were good acquaintances, Iâd say, on account of us both being black sheep in the town. Your family and mine, we had that in common.â
âPeople didnât take too kindly to my parents and me running out of town the way we did,â I said. I felt badly about the effect weâd had on so many people.
âOh now, I can see that worry line right in the middle of your forehead,â Letty said. âA young girl like you shouldnât have lines already. Stop concerning yourself with things that happened years ago. Iâve always been a bit of a black sheep, well before your parents did their thing. And besides, it adds a little color to my life, having a salacious story like that- my grifter daughter and her conman husband. It ainât hurting me a bit.â
I laughed. âNana, Iâm not sure you need any more salaciousness added to your life.â
My grandmother leaned forward and looked at Silas. âSheâs talking about my active social life here,â she said, winking. âOf course, if I were sixty years younger, Iâd give someone like you a run for your money, young man.â
âOh my God, Nana,â I interrupted. âPlease do not hit on Silas. Holy shit.â
âWatch your mouth,â she said, and I couldnât help but laugh.
âYouâre the one who said you were, and I quote, fucking fantastic the last time I came to see you, Nana.â
âIâm not talking about your language,â she said. âIâm talking about your telling me to not hit on this man sitting in front of me whoâs a dead ringer for Paul Newman. Or, whoâs that other fellow, the young one with the blue eyes?â
âI donât know, Nana,â I said, laughing and shaking my head. Silas leaned back in his chair, arms crossed over his chest, smirking as he watched us go back and forth.
My grandmother waved her hand. âYou know who Iâm talking about,â she said. âThat actor. The one who plays bongos naked in his house.â
Silas laughed out loud. âYou mean Matthew McConaughey,â he said. âWell, thank you very much, Letty.â
I shook my head. âDonât encourage her,â I warned. âThe next thing you know, sheâll be telling you to stand up so she can get a better view of your ass.â
âOh, would you like me to stand, Letty?â Silas asked, smiling and feigning standing. âIâm happy to oblige.â
âYou two make me out to be some kind of lecherous old woman,â Letty said.
I raised my eyebrows. âWell, you are certainly no nun.â
Letty laughed. âThereâs no confusing me with a nun, thatâs for sure,â she said. âNow, more importantly, this Silas. Is he your boyfriend?â She turned to me, making a show of ignoring Silas.
âNana!â I said. âHeâs sitting right there.â
âWhich is exactly why I asked,â she said, directing her attention to Silas. âAre you her boyfriend?â
I looked at Silas, my eyes wide, and he grinned, leaning forward in his chair. âIâd like to be, Letty,â he said. âMore than that, even.â
Letty whooped and turned to me while I glared at Silas, my heart pounding in my chest. I couldnât think of anything except the fact that Iâd brought him here, to meet my grandmother, and now he was ambushing me, right here in front of her.
My head was swimming.
Lettyâs voice broke through my thoughts. âI hope you heard that, girl,â she said, narrowing her eyes as she looked at me.
âIâm too old for a boyfriend,â I said, looking at him. âWeâre not teenagers.â
âNo,â Silas said, not breaking eye contact. âWe arenât teenagers. And youâre right about being too old for a boyfriend. We agree on that.â
My heart skipped a beat. That was sudden, his changing his mind. I didnât know if I was relieved or disappointed.
I was afraid I was more disappointed.
But when I looked at Silas, he seemed nonplussed. He smiled and winked at me. What the hell was he thinking?
âYou know,â Letty said. âLife is too short to dick around not