Page 95 of Killian (West Bend Saints 4)
âWait, what did you mean that everyone is basically a chef?â I watch her layer a piece of dough onto a pile of apples that looks much too large to fit in the pan, her hands flying as she crimps the edges. She looks up at me. âDoes he cook? Has he cooked for you?â
âHe cooks,â I confirm dreamily. I can feel myself grinning like a complete idiot, but I'm happy. More than happy. âHeâs cooked for me. Really well.â
June makes little slices in the top of the pie before adding decorative pieces of dough to the top: little leaves. Of course she has an infant and a toddler and runs a bed and breakfast and adds decorative leaves to the top of her homemade apple pie. If she hadnât become the closest thing I had to a best friend in this town over the past two years, Iâd totally hate her.
She raises her eyebrows. âIt looks like cooking isnât the only thing heâs good at,â she says, the corners of her mouth turned up.
I suppress a giggle that seems to rise up involuntarily from my throat. âNo,â I agree. âCooking is definitely not the only thing heâs good at.â
She slides the pie into the oven and turns back to me. âWhat are they teaching these young boys now?â
Heat rises to my cheeks, and I know Iâm flushing.
Images flash in my mind, one right after the other â Lukeâs mouth on my breast, his tongue swirling around my nipple.
Me straddling his face, lying across his body, my lips wrapped around his cock.
Luke, lying naked in my bed with his body stretched out and his head on my pillow, explaining how to cook a soufflé just before I slide my hand down his body, wrap it around his cock, and give him cause to shut right up.
âWow, you really are smitten,â June says.
âWhat?â
âWhat, says the woman staring off into space at the mere mention of her boyfriend?â
âHeâs not my boyfriend,â I insist, shaking away the images in my head, still distracted by thoughts of Luke. I canât exactly help it. Heâs an incredible distraction.
June smiles, her head cocked to the side. âYou sure about that? Because youâre awfully smitten for a fling. And youâre not seeing anyone else.â
âIâm not smitten.â I pop another apple slice into my mouth. Olivia wanders over and demands one, then little Stan follows suit, and I grab cheese sticks from the refrigerator to go with the apples. âHere you go, guys. Snack time. Smitten is for, like, sixteen-year-old girls. Not women my age.â
âSmitten,â June says, shrugging. âItâs the most accurate way I can think of to describe your current state, what with all the daydreaming and mooning about.â
I toss an apple slice at her and she laughs. âMooning about.â I snort. âNow you just sound like a grumpy old lady.â
âI am a grumpy old lady.â
âYou guys are talking about mooning?â Cade walks into the kitchen and heads straight for June, planting a kiss on her forehead and squeezing her ass at the same time. Stan and Olivia run headlong for Cade, crashing into his legs, and Cade scoops them up in his arms. âHave you been helping cook? It smells like apple pie in here.â
Cade sets the kids back down to play and theyâre off, running into the living room, Stan dragging Olivia behind him, the cars immediately forgotten.
âIn the oven,â June says as Cade scoops coffee grounds into a fresh filter. âI swear, youâre going to die at an early age, drinking that at this time of day.â
âIâm already far too old to die at an early age.â He turns on the coffee pot. âAnd this old man got worn into the ground, getting up with the baby last night.â He starts the coffee and walks behind June, sliding his arms around her.
âHe let me sleep all night,â June brags. âNine whole hours.â
âI thought you looked refreshed,â I note.
âIâm not the only one looking refreshed,â June says, eyeballing me.
âIs this a conversation I want to be part of?â Cade asks.
âNo,â I say immediately.
âI thought so. Whereâs the little minion who kept me up all night?â
âKeep your voice down,â June warns. âSheâs sleeping. Like a log.â
âSheâs a vampire baby, I swear. Sleeps all day, up all night.â Cade sighs. âWhy donât I go watch the other hellions so you can have this conversation I shouldnât be a part of?â
âSee how nice heâs being?â June says to me. âItâs all an act just to get pie.â
Cade snorts, slapping June on the ass as he turns to pour himself a cup of coffee. âDonât let her fool you,â he says back. âItâs no act. Iâm nice all the damn time. This is a prime specimen, right here. Grade-A husband material.â
âGet out and leave us alone, since Iâm cooking for you and everything. Make sure the children donât destroy the living room.â
âYeah, yeah.â Cade waves at her as he leaves, coffee cup in hand. âIâm requesting steak for dinner, though.â
âWhat about you guys?â June asks. âAre you staying for dinner, or do you have other plans?â She practically leers, wiggling her eyebrows when she says other plans.
âI think Luke and I are⦠I think heâs cooking for me again,â I say as she laughs.
âCooking. Oh? Is that what theyâre calling it these days?â
âShut up.â
âEveryoneâs in the living room, so nowâs the time,â she says. âSpill it. Heâs hot, isnât he? The sex is totally amazing, and youâre doing it like bunnies, and he has a big ââ
My phone goes off in my purse, and June laughs.
âSaved by the bell,â I say.
âIs that your phone or your viââ
âOh my God, you think I carry a vibrator in my purse?â I hiss, pulling out the phone and sticking my tongue out at her. I slide my finger across the screen. One text, from Luke.
Canât make it tonight. Somethingâs come up. Call me.
âIs that from him?â June asks. âIs he sending you love notes? Thatâs so adorable.â
I roll my eyes and slide my phone back into my purse. âHeâs not sending me love notes,â I say, sighing loudly. âAnd yeah, weâre staying for dinner.â
Juneâs brow furrows. âAnything wrong?â
âIâm not sure.â
28
Luke
I glance in my rearview mirror at the empty road, then reach between my legs for the cell phone Iâve wedged in there. Sliding my finger across the screen for the millionth time since I've been on the road, I verify that there's no signal. But I knew that already.
I called Elias after leaving Silasâ place. Heâs in Hollywood with his girl, River Andrews, a big-time movie star. They're at some awards show tonight. When I called, there were people around, stylists or something. I told him Iâd keep an eye out for him on television so I could see how stupid he looked in a monkey suit. He called me an asshole and told me heâd try to flip me the bird if he could.
I'd tried to call Autumn again before I left, but it went to voicemail. I left a second stupid message â terse, short, not at all what I wanted to say.
What the hell do I want to say to her?
Iâm the guy who fucks bimbos with big tits and small brains, girls who donât ask for anything more than a good time and no damn conversation. Iâm the guy whose idea of commitment is a second beer. Iâm not the guy who cooks dinners for some girl, playing with her kid, not wanting to leave in the morning after I fuck her senseless all night.
Every day I keep going with Autumn is another day playing this charade. At some point, Iâm going to break her fucking heart. And I donât want to be that asshole.
I donât know if I can be still.
Iâm afraid I canât stay still. I canât give her what she needs.
She deserves more than me.
Fuck, this is goddamn depressing, driving down a deserted road in a truck with just my thoughts for company. Time to think is never good, not in my book, anyway. Itâs one of the things I appreciate about sm
oke jumping â or base jumping, rock climbing, snow boarding, hell, anything that floods your system with adrenaline the way that shit does.
Take smoke jumping, for instance. You jump out of a fucking plane, gear strapped to your ass, and itâs just you and fate. Yeah, youâve got skill and your gear and all that bullshit, but anything can go wrong. Itâs a dice roll.
And when youâre in the air, freefalling, itâs like white noise.
Pure adrenaline.
Everything in the world turns off, and you donât think.
Itâs the same thing when youâre in a fire. Despite all the sounds â trees groaning and cracking under their own weight and falling to the ground with an earthshattering thud, the roar of the fire â all you care about is the seconds in front of you and nothing else. Youâre not thinking about past or present or future bullshit.
When I left West Bend and got my first taste of that â the way my mind turned off, unburdened with all my family bullshit, worrying about my brothers â I knew I was hooked on all of it: jumping, climbing, boarding, surfing, whatever ate up my focus completely and entirely.
Driving is the exact opposite of that.
I pull out my phone, slide my finger across the screen, as if something different is going to happen this time.
No signal.
Screw Silas and all of this.
Conflicted. I think thatâs what the shrinks call this shit. I have conflicted fucking feelings about her death.
I was more than interested in her death before I read that bullshit in her diary about killing the old man for money. Money, of all things. Itâs not like we grew up with money and then lost it somehow. We never had any our whole lives. She never had any. So when the hell did money become so damn important?
So I donât know why Iâm crawling along this windy road up the side of the mountain and way the hell outside of West Bend. Itâs colder as the elevation increases, the trees up here bare of leaves. I donât know where this cabin is, but itâs cold enough here that thereâs probably snow on the ground at the top. Normally, Iâd be pleased about the fact that snow weather is coming soon. That means snowboarding. And snow bunnies.
Except now, all Iâm thinking about is the fact that Iâm driving my ass up the mountain in the damn cold while Autumn and Olivia are hanging out in their warm house without me.
I donât like it.
I donât like that I donât like being away from them.
This whole thing is making me edgy as hell.
I check the paper again, holding it against my steering wheel as I squint to look at my crude drawing of Silasâ directions. If it were anyone but one of my brothers asking me to meet him and whoever the hell else up here in the middle of nowhere, Iâd tell them they were fucking crazy.
But itâs Silas.
So Iâm driving up to a remote cabin to meet him and his con artist girlfriend. And her team.
Isnât that some shit?
When I finally find it, everyone is already there.
âIs this the twin?â A nerdy-looking dude yells from across the room before I even get a word out.
âWeâre just brothers.â I look at Silas and roll my eyes. âI hope we donât look that much alike. Iâd hate having to look at your ugly mug in the mirror every day.â
âYeah, unfortunately weâre brothers,â Silas says, wrapping his arm around me and trying to put me in a headlock. We struggle for a second until I look up to see his girl holding a glass of champagne and standing in front of us.
âBoys, please donât destroy this place,â she says.
âYeah, okay.â Silas laughs as he lets go of me and slides his arms around her. He says something to her, his face pressed against hers. I look away from the intimacy of the moment, a pang of jealousy running through me.
Silas makes the round of introductions. Tempest, his girl, is striking. She's way too beautiful to be with him, I decide to tell him later. And sheâs smart. The whole group of them are. They're smart and charming and⦠criminals.
Thereâs Iver, dressed in a suit even though weâre out in the middle of nowhere, talking about places Iâve only seen on TV â Monte Carlo and Santorini and Crete. He should be a pretentious dick, the kind of guy with too much money that you just want to punch, except that in the next breath, heâs showing me how to scam people in card games.
Thereâs Emir, who I think might be the nerdiest nerd Iâve ever met. He hardly looks up at me when I walk in and basically spends the rest of the night hunched over computers â four of them lined up on a table, wires crisscrossing and zigzagging everywhere in a tangle â working on God-knows-what. Probably an algorithm involving world domination.
And thereâs Oscar. Oscar is old school, the grandfather of the group. Heâs classy and British or European or something with an accent, and heâs quiet. He looks completely unassuming, a doddering old man, but then he says something and you realize that not only has he heard everything going on, but that heâs sharp as a tack.
They make normal conversation, talking about old times, old heists, stuff Iâd be interested in if it werenât for the fact that Iâm sitting here instead of at Autumnâs place. I get annoyed that weâre not talking about what weâre actually here for, the con or whatever the hell it is weâre going to do thatâs going to solve everything. But then Elias is on the television, and Iâm momentarily distracted. He doesn't flip me off at the awards show, although River does punch some jerk in the face who tries to talk in the middle of her acceptance speech, and I immediately like her.
I think about what Autumn and Olivia are doing right now. Theyâve eaten dinner, Iâm sure. I wonder what Autumn cooked â probably some atrocity. Olivia has had a bath by now. Autumnâs sitting beside her on the bathroom floor, her knees tucked up to her chest while looking at a magazine, Olivia playing in the tub with her bath toys and drawing on the walls with crayons made of soap. When Oliviaâs done, Autumnâs bathing her and then reading to her.
I finally got to read a story to Olivia the other night.
I palm my cell phone, wanting to look at it again, silently cursing my stupidity for being so wrapped around the axle about a girl.
Except I know it in my gut. Sheâs not just any girl. Sheâs the girl.
It hits me, right there, that realization crashing against me full force like a ton of bricks.
âWeâre going to grift the town,â Iver says.
âItâs so dramatic when he says it that way,â Tempest says, rolling her eyes. âYouâre always so over-the-top with these things.â
âYou need a little more flourish in your life, darling,â he says.
âI have just enough flourish, thank you.â
âLook, maybe we just let it go,â I say, shrugging.
âFuck, are you kidding?â Silas asks.
âNo, Iâm not joking. Iâm aggravated,â I tell him, the edge returning to my voice with a vengeance. I donât want to screw around here with them. Donât they get that? âItâs not like one of us canât just go kick the hell out of Sheriff Easton and get his confession on tape or something. Shit, I can go wail on him myself.â
âThat doesnât solve the issue with the town,â Iver points out.
âWeâve looked into the mining company, the one buying people off their property,â Oscar says. âThese people are no good. They're the worst kind of business. They have a history of destroying towns, blowing into a place like West Bend and bribing law enforcement, stealing peopleâs homes out from under them. Then, they strip everything from the land, make a windfall, and pull up out of a place, the town totally destroyed, residents left in the lurch."
âSo what?â I ask, feeling suddenly defensive and noncompliant. âThis isnât my fight. Iâm not Robin Hood, taking from the rich and helping the poor.â