“Morning! You hungry, kiddo?”
She nodded and slid onto one of the stools at the counter. She wanted to ask about Sully but didn’t. It wasn’t her business where he went or what he did.
Mac kept up a mostly one-sided conversation with her while he cooked. When he slid a plate of bacon and eggs in front of her, he laid his hand over hers. “Are you really okay?”
“It’s just hitting me, that’s all. And I really miss Bart.” She almost successfully fought the urge to sniffle. “I’ve never been away from him before. I know it sounds dumb, but he’s like my baby.”
“We’ll get him back for you, sweetie. One way or the other, and you won’t have to go alone. I promise.”
“I can’t ask you to go with me.”
His face and voice grew firm, commanding. “You aren’t asking.
I’m telling you, I’m going with you.”
“Will Sully let you?” She wished she hadn’t asked it.
He squeezed her hand before moving back to the stove. “He won’t dare say no.”
Mac didn’t offer Sully’s whereabouts and she didn’t pry. Mac took her to Tad’s and dropped her off while he ran errands. When he picked her up and they drove home, she managed to snag two grocery bags out of the truck before he could stop her.
“No, I’m helping.” She stuck her tongue out at him, daring him to take the bags away from her.
He laughed. “Okay, fine. Carry the damn bags, you stubborn brat.”
She paused at his playful tone of voice. Normally, comments like that would cause her to bristle or shoot back with a scathing reply.
But…
It felt different coming from Mac. She couldn’t explain it.
Sully returned home before dinner. Clarisse suspected from Mac’s puzzled look that he didn’t have any idea where Sully had been. Sully kissed him, then turned to her.
“Did you have a good day?”
She fought her body’s instincts. She could do this, dammit. He was a nice guy. “Yes, thank you.”
He held out his hand. “Come with me. I want to show you something.”
Clarisse hesitated before placing her hand in his.
He smiled, full of playful, teasing mirth, and led her to the front door with Mac trailing behind. “Mac, cover her eyes, don’t let her see.
Clarisse, use the handrail. I won’t let you fall.”
Like that, they helped her down the stairs. She didn’t know what waited, only that halfway down, Mac suppressed a laugh.
They led her across the driveway. She could tell by the feel of the gravel under her feet. When they stopped, Sully gently squeezed her hand before pressing something into her palm. “Open your eyes, honey.”
A bright green VW Bug sat next to Sully’s Jag in the driveway.
She looked at what he’d put into her hand—a keychain.
Numb shock hit her, followed by a wave of tears. She felt Mac slip his arm around her shoulders. “Well, how about that?” Mac said.
“Go on. Let’s see how you look in it.”
“Mac, did you know he was going to do this?”
He smiled and shook his head. “Nope. But now I know what he was up to all freaking day long.”
She turned to Sully. “I can’t accept this.”
He stepped forward and gently took her hands. “You can, and you will. This is a gift. It’s not new, it’s six years old, but it’s in good shape. I had my mechanic go over it. It’ll get good gas mileage and it’ll last you for several years. I put it in my name for now. I’ll pay the insurance for you until…things settle.”
She wiped the tears off her face and forced herself to hug him.
“Thank you.” She relaxed against him, allowing herself to rest her head on his shoulder. “You’ve been so nice to me and I’m such a bitch.”
“Stop.” He made her look at him. “You’ve been through hell.
You’re not a bitch. Don’t make me spank you.” The curl along the edges of his mouth belied his words.
She laughed. “Okay. Thank you.”
Mac walked ahead and opened the driver’s door for her. Sully climbed into the passenger side. “Want to take me for a quick spin?”
“Sure.”
Mac stuck his head in the driver side. “Dinner’s almost ready.”
“We’ll be right back,” Sully assured him.
They buckled up and drove to the end of their street and back.
When they pulled in, he started to unbuckle his seatbelt when she reached over.
“Sully…really. Thank you. You’ve been nothing but good to me.
I’m sorry I’m…difficult.”
“You’re anything but difficult.” He brushed a finger along her chin, sending a warm flutter through her core. “We need to get upstairs before we ruin Mac’s dinner and make him mad.”
Sully let her climb the stairs first and tried to keep his eyes off her ass as he followed. She was cute. She was also totally off-limits for several reasons, the first and foremost being the man who slept in his bed every night. The second, she was in no way, shape, or form someone he needed to even think about in that way due to what she’d been through. Despite Tad’s persistent hints, while Sully wasn’t adverse to a poly situation, Clarisse most likely wouldn’t want to join them in their relationship. Especially when, back to point number two, she’d been beat to hell and back.
Sully stayed up late working that night. When a story called, it called. He’d long ago learned to write when the words flowed. A little after midnight, he heard a noise from Clarisse’s room. By the time he reached her door, she was screaming.
Without hesitation and realizing he’d reached for a gun he no longer wore, he burst through her door to find her alone in bed.
A nightmare.
By the time he reached her side and pulled her into his arms, she was sobbing and clung to him.
“Shh, it’s okay. Just bad dreams.” He stroked her hair as she cried, trembling from fear and adrenaline.
Mac ran in carrying a baseball bat. “What happened? What’s wrong?”
Sully smirked. “Stand down, slugger. She had a nightmare.”
He put the bat down and joined them in bed, sandwiching her between them until she calmed.
She made no attempt to pull away from Sully.
He closed his eyes as he nuzzled her hair, smelled her shampoo, breathed her scent. “Why don’t you come sleep with us tonight, sweetie?”
Without a word she nodded, still shivering in his arms.
Fuck.
She was terrified. Whatever the dream had been, it did more than scare the crap out of her. It had probably triggered flashbacks of the attack.
Mac hovered, worried, as Sully helped her out of bed. Sully kept his arm around her, snugged her closely to his side, and led her to their bedroom. A few minutes later, she curled in his arms in their bed while Mac lay beside her and held her hands.
“Thank you,” she whispered.
Sully kissed her shoulder. “It’s okay. You’re softer to cuddle with than he is.”
“Hey,” Mac protested, but he smiled.
She looked over her shoulder at Sully, a wan smile on her face.
“I’m sorry I’m a pain.”
“Stop,” he firmly said. “You’re not a pain. Go to sleep and have good dreams. That’s an order.”
Clarisse found she couldn’t resist that command. Being protectively snuggled in Sully’s arms, Mac’s comforting presence there…
She felt loved.
Well, maybe not loved, but it felt a hell of a lot better than the terror she’d awoken to.
In the lonely, stormy sea her life had become, these two men provided a safe harbor.
She closed her eyes and tried not to think about the nightmare.
About the feel of Bryan’s fist shooting out and punching her as she’d turned from the stove after telling him to fuck off.
His angry voice as he kicked and punched her, then the terror as he wrapped his hands around her throat and threatened to choke the life out of her.
When he finally quit beating and kicking her, how he’d knelt in front of her.
“I want meatloaf for dinner. I’ll be home at the usual time. Have a good day.” His tone sounding light, as if he hadn’t just beaten the crap out of her.
The slamming of the front door and the sound of his car pulling out of the driveway, heading for work as if he hadn’t just threatened to kill her.
She’d lain on the cold kitchen tile for nearly thirty minutes before she could stand and call Raquel. Raquel had raced over, taken one look at her, and called 911 despite Clarisse’s protests.
She hadn’t seen Bryan Jackson face to face since. He’d claimed she was fine when he left the house, hence why he was put on administrative leave and not immediately fired. He’d acted like the desperately worried boyfriend wanting revenge against whoever had beaten his beloved girlfriend. He’d been wearing driving gloves when he attacked her, because of the cold morning, so there were no marks on his hands. No surprise, he’d denied he’d worn gloves on that morning.
He said, she said.
Not to mention Bryan’s father’s pull with the chief of police.
She tried to push that all out of her mind as she focused on the comforting feel of Sully’s body against hers.
Could she trust him?
It occurred to her that maybe the question should be could she afford not to?
Chapter Nine
Clarisse made a pointed effort to get closer to Sully over the next few days. Mac told her Sully would leave early Friday morning, flying to California for a conference. As her bruises faded, she needed less makeup to hide them. She stepped into Sully’s office doorway on Thursday night, hesitant to interrupt him.
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