Page 74 of Killian (West Bend Saints 4)
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. âYour 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 con man 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 knowing what you want. You have to figure that shit out. Otherwise, all youâre going to have is regret.â
âLetty, I donât need a lecture -â I began, ignoring the fact that I could feel Silasâ eyes on me.
âAll of us need this lecture, from time to time,â she said. âLife is too short to not take what you want from it, and that includes having ties to people, people that matter. Drifting around is only fun for so long, or if youâve got some place - someone- to come back to.â
I didnât say anything, only half-listening as Letty lectured me. What the hell was I thinking, bringing Silas here? I should have known that Letty would like him way too much.
I tried to ignore the voice in the back of my head, the one that said thatâs the exact reason Iâd taken Silas to meet her.
âNow.â Her voice broke through my thoughts. âNow that the both of you are here. Letâs talk about this town. I asked Tempest to do some research for me.â
34
Silas
âAre you sure you want to do this?â I asked.
Tempest looked over at me from where she sat in the passenger seat. âAre you okay with bringing me here?â
âIâm okay if youâre okay,â I said. God, I sounded like such an idiot. Lettyâs question about me being Tempestâs boyfriend had thrown me off earlier.
The problem was that I didnât want to be Tempestâs boyfriend. We were twenty-four, too old for that shit. Twenty-four was young for most people still dating and playing the field. But Tempest and I, we werenât young twenty-four-year-olds. Weâd both been through too much.
And we had too much damn history to ever date.
I couldnât imagine taking her out to dinner and trying to get to know her.
I didnât want to take her to dinner and the movies. I wanted to take this girl home. For good.
This girl was mine. Sheâd always been mine.
âIs it weird for you, coming back here?â
I shrugged. âSort of,â I said. âNot really. I mean, I came back to my momâs house when I got back to West Bend, for a little bi
t. And we came back here after the funeral and shit. I was going to poke around here a few weeks ago too.â
âBut you got arrested,â Tempest said.
âYeah, before I even had a chance to go inside,â I said. âAnd since then, wellâ¦â
âWell.â Tempest tucked her hair behind her ear and licked her lip. That damn lip. My cock stirred watching her, and I had to tell myself to cut that shit out.
âYeah,â I said. âSince then Iâve been with you.â I opened the car door. âLetâs go.â
Before I put the key in the front door, I warned her. âItâs - not what youâre used to, you know. I mean, we were poor and-â
Tempest put her hand on my arm. âSilas,â she said. âYou donât have to explain anything to me about your childhood. I understand. And Iâve been to your house before.â
âOh yeah.â Iâd forgotten about that.
âYeah,â she said. Inside the door, she looked around. âSo, weâre looking for anything that might link your mom and the mining company.â
âOr Jed,â I said. âOr the Mayor. Elias said someone made a comment about her sleeping with the mayor.â
Tempest drew in a deep breath. âOkay,â she said. âYou start on one side of the house and Iâll start on the other?â
âThank you for doing this.â I couldnât put into words what I felt, why it meant something that Tempest was here with me. I knew it was a big deal, the fact that sheâd taken me to meet her grandmother, despite her protests to the contrary.
She looked behind her as she headed down the hall. âIâm glad you brought me here,â she said.
It wasnât more than thirty minutes later that Tempest yelled from the other side of the house. âSilas,â she said. âI found what weâre looking for.â
I followed her voice to my motherâs bedroom, where she stood holding a small book. âWhat is it?â
âYour momâs journal,â she said. âI just started paging through it, looking for what was around the time of her death.â
âLuke came through here and didnât see anything,â I said. âWhere was it?â
Tempest pointed to the wall. âI took the grate off the wall, there,â she said.
âHowâd you know to look there?â
Tempest shrugged. âI figured if there was anything that might link the sheriff to something hinky, heâd have probably already been here and taken something if it were hidden in a place that was obvious, like under the mattress or in a drawer. The place doesnât look like itâs been tossed, but if heâs smart, thatâs what he would have done. The grate is where Iâd stash something if I needed to hide it. Or under a floorboard. Or outside, under a crawlspace. Or -â
I interrupted her. âOkay, I get the picture. Did you read it?â
She opened to a page. âOnly a little bit,â she said. âJust to see if there was anything there.â
âIs there?â
She nodded. âYou probably should sit down.â
âWell, fuck,â I said. âSo, Luke and I were right. There was something going on, and Jed and his dad are both dirty. Thatâs no big fucking surprise.â
âNow you have answers, at least,â Tempest said. âHow do you feel about your mom?â
âYou mean, reading her confession to killing my father?â I asked, shaking my head. âPissed off.â
âIâm sorry, Silas,â she said.
âItâs not even the fact that sheâs the one who killed him,â I said. âI mean, heâs been a dickhead my whole life. He beat on all of us. Itâs the fact that she killed him now instead of years ago, when we were kids.â
âBack when he was terrorizing you,â Tempest said.
âExactly,â I said. âI mean, he beat on us right in front of her, you know? Youâre going to watch your kids get the shit kicked out of them, going to let that monster kick the shit out of you, and not do anything about it? But youâll kill him over money? Thatâs fucked up.â
Tempest shook her head. âItâs a shit deal, Silas.â
I shrugged. âIt is what it is, I guess,â I said. âI didnât shed any tears for her before, and I feel a hell of a lot less inclined to do so now.â
âWe also know whatâs going on in the town,â she said. âAnd we have an idea of who killed her.â
âWe should bring this to my brothers,â I said.
Tempestâs face looked drawn. âI donât know if I should go with you,â she said.
I covered her hand with mine. âYou think Elias hates you,â I said.
âI know he wouldnât have been happy about what happened, Silas,â she said. âMe leaving and all. Yeah. Iâd guess he hates me.â
I smiled. âAnd you care what he thinks?â I asked. âThis Tempest who gives a shit is really endearing. This nervous Tempest is pretty cute too.â
âShut up, Silas,â she said. âI didnât even say I would go.â
âI have the car,â I said. âYouâre going.â
âWhere the hell have you been?â Elias asked, his voice loud. Then he looked behind me. âWhoâs this? You have a girlfriend. Why didnât you say that?â
I rolled my eyes. âElias, this is Tempest.â
âHi, Elias,â she said. I reached beside me, took her hand in mine. It felt cold, and I looked at her, biting her lower lip. I couldnât help but feel happy she was nervous; it meant she cared enough to worry about what Elias thought about her.
âThe Tempest?â he said. âI didnât even fucking recognize -â He stood in the doorway, not moving or inviting us in. âWhat the fuck are you doing back here? And what the hell are you doing with her? This girl tore you to pieces when she left.â
Tempestâs face flushed, but she didnât say anything.
âElias,â I said through gritted teeth. âItâs not any of your business.â
âScrew that,â he said. âOf course itâs my fucking business. Iâm your damn twin.â
âElias Saint.â Riverâs voice cut through the tension, and Elias turned his head a fraction of an inch, still glaring at me. âGet out of that doorway and invite them inside.â
I glanced at Tempest and mouthed âitâs okayâ while Elias turned around and walked down the hallway toward River, leaving the door open behind him.
âCome on in,â she said as Elias stormed past her. âTempest, is it? Itâs lovely to meet you. Iâm thrilled to see Silas looking so happy. Iâm River.â
Tempest smiled. âWe watched one of your movies the other day,â she said. âSilas told me about you.â
âGood things, I hope,â River said.
âOnly good things,â Tempest said.
River motioned us inside, led us to the living room. âCome in,â she said. âIgnore Elias. Heâs all bluster. He doesnât mean anything by it.â
Elias walked up behind River and put an arm around her, the gesture protective. âHell yeah, I meant something by it,â he said.
âElias,â River said, her tone warning.
Tempest blanched, and as skittish as sheâd been about us earlier, I was afraid this would give her reason to leave.
âShut the hell up,â I said. âMy love life is none of your