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Be My Hero(18)



"No," I answered as I opened the door to my room. "It's just the three  of us." I kept the light off so the sudden blare wouldn't hurt Julian's  eyes, but the cop flipped it on as he stepped into the room behind me.  And of course, the baby's wail grew louder.

"Hey, little man," I murmured. "Did Mommy wake you up? I know she did,  you poor thing. And you just got to sleep too. I'm sorry, bud." Kissing  his hair as I cuddled him against my chest, I swayed on my feet, hoping  to rock him back to sleep. With my nose buried in his dark curls, I slid  my gaze to the cop who wouldn't stop gawking.

"That kid's black," he blurted out, shocking the shit out of me.

I blinked, wondering what Julian's ethnicity had to do with anything. "Gee, really? I hadn't noticed."

At my sarcastic answer, he shook his head. "But . . . you're . . . why  are you the one coming back here and taking care of him when he's  obviously not yours?"

For a split second, I saw red. Just because my blood didn't flow through  this child's veins didn't make him any less mine. I loved this kid more  than just about anyone.

"Because no one else is going to take care of him. And he is mine. He's my stepson."

Eyeing me strangely, the cop nodded slowly. Something akin to respect  glinted in his eyes before he said, "Next time you get mad at your old  lady, keep your tone down, will you? If we take too many calls at the  same address, someone eventually goes to jail. And that someone would be  you."

I nodded, realizing he was trying to give me a break and a friendly  heads-up. Some people would've taken it as a threat, but I knew how  these guys worked.

"I hear you," I answered.
         

     



 
He lingered another moment, his gaze returning to Julian who'd closed  his eyes and was snuggled peacefully against me. "Cute kid," he finally  said.

I grinned and shook my head. "I'd say thank you, but he didn't get his looks from me. Obviously."

Sniffing out a short laugh, the cop tipped his hat. "Keep the volume of those arguments down." And then he was gone.

Listening to them bid Tristy a farewell as they left the apartment, I  continued to pace the floor with Julian. I knew all too well that if he  were even the slightest bit awake when I laid him down, he'd holler his  head off. He had to be completely out of it.

When Tris appeared in the doorway, her arms folded over her chest as she stared into my room at us, I sighed.

"Okay, maybe I shouldn't have yelled and pounded on your door," I  confessed before she could start in on me. "And yes, I could've waited  until morning. But, shit, Tris. Are you really that miserable here? Is  it so bad that you'd rather go out and get high, not knowing where  you're going to wake up, what's going to be done to you, or who you'll  end up with than having a roof over your head, a clean bed to sleep in  each night, and a constant supply of food?"

Tears filled her eyes. She wiped the back of her hand across her cheek,  smearing them. "No, but . . . Damn it, Pick. I get so . . . so sick and  tired of being cooped up in this place all day. And I thought it'd be  okay if it was just marijuana. Nothing heavy. It's just . . . the kid's  always here. There's just no break. You get to go off to work; you don't  have to constantly listen to him cry and demand shit all day."

I blew out a breath and closed my eyes, resting my cheek on Julian's  head. "I wish you had come to me and told me this instead of looking up  Quick Shot. Damn, Tris. If you need a break, I can get you a break. I  can watch him every evening I have a night off, and you can go out and  do whatever. Plus, I'm sure Mrs. Rojas next door can babysit one or two  times a week."

When Tristy's eyes lit with excitement, I knew I'd said the right thing. "Really? You'd do that for me?"

"Tris." I rolled my eyes. "When have I not done everything within my power to get you whatever you needed?"

"That's true," she admitted with a sheepish shrug.

"If you promise not to contact Quick Shot again, I'll make sure you have more . . . freedom. Okay?"

"Okay." Then she stepped in the room, looking relieved. "I can walk with him for a little bit if you want?"

Her offer shocked the shit out of me. "Uh . . . yeah. Sure." We fumbled  awkwardly as I tried to pass the sleeping kid off to her. Julian stirred  but didn't wake. When his head was securely propped on her shoulder and  she patted his back in a motherly manner, I stared openly, unable to  look away.

"What?" she asked, giving me an irritated frown. "Am I doing something wrong?"

"No." I grinned and shook my head. "Nothing. You're doing great. I'm  going to change into something to sleep in and get a snack. Be right  back."

When she nodded, I grabbed a T-shirt and a pair of sweats and darted out  of the room. I couldn't stop grinning as I changed in the bathroom and  then ransacked the kitchen, looking for food. I finally just smeared  butter on some saltines, sandwiched them together, and called it good.  After tossing all the disposable trash I found on the counters, I  stacked the dirty dishes so there was some counter space left and  hurried back to my room.

I'd been gone five minutes max, but that must've been too long for  Tristy. She'd already settled Julian back into his crib and returned to  her own room.

With a disappointed sigh, I stroked the sleeping kid's head before  settling into my own bed, where I dropped crumbs all over my sheets as I  polished off my snack. I guess I couldn't expect too much from the new  mommy yet. So for now, I'd take five minutes. She'd touched him and held  him. That was progress.





Chapter 6


EVA


My roommates were driving me crazy. A week after the wicked witch of  Florida had swooped in to mess with Mason and Reese's life, the  awkwardness in our apartment grew so thick I was sure it'd smother all  three of us. And it was Mason's fault entirely.

Reese tried, she really freaking tried to move past it, to shrug off  Mrs. Garrison's visit and get on with her life. But Mason just wouldn't  let her. He kept acting like some kind of abused dog who'd been kicked  in the ribs one too many times. He shied away from Reese, couldn't look  her in the eyes, stopped touching her completely. His guilt was so  tangible it left a nasty aftertaste in my mouth. Despite her normally  upbeat personality, even Reese had stopped attempting to be cheerful.

They were both so miserable; I hated it.

So when Mason walked into the kitchen one evening while I was fixing  myself a snack-carrots, apple slices, and celery smothered in peanut  butter because I wanted to deliver a healthy kid-I dropped my butter  knife on the counter and grabbed his arm, yanking him close. I'd had  enough of this shit.         

     



 

He tried to jerk back in surprise, but I wouldn't let him go.

"This has to stop," I hissed, glancing warily toward the opening of the  kitchen in the hopes that Reese didn't walk in any second and catch me  chewing him out.

"What? I just walked into the kitchen." Pulling his arm away, he managed to free himself as he scowled back.

I snorted. "As if. Your non-stop moping is sucking the life out of Reese. I hope you realize that."

His face drained of color, telling me how much he'd noticed it . . . and  hated it, too. But the way his jaw tightened said he was pissed I'd  brought it up. Stepping in close, he whispered, "What the hell am I  supposed to do about it? I can't stop what happened. It already  happened."

"Yes, it did. But it's over and done with. All you can do is control how  you react to it. And you're having a really bad reaction. It's dragging  Reese down with you."

His eyes filled with torment. "Don't you think I know that? It's killing  me to see her every day with all that pain in her eyes. But I don't  know how to stop it. There aren't enough apologies on earth to make up  for what happened. And there's no way to fix it. No way to-"

"Just stop right there." Rolling my eyes, I set my hand over his mouth  to shut him up. "You're thinking about this all wrong. Looking for  forgiveness from her is not what you need, because newsflash, numb nuts:  she's already forgiven you. That's the amazing thing about Reese. She  forgives. And an even more amazing thing about her is that she moves on.  Just think about it. Were you able to tell her ex-boyfriend had tried  to kill her and nearly succeeded just four months before you met her?  No, because she has this super power of being about to get past awful,  disturbing, traumatic events. It's all part of the beauty of who she is.  She would've gotten past this last episode with Mrs. Garrison too, but  you're not letting her. Every time you pull away, or refuse to meet her  eyes, or dodge a conversation, it kills her."

Mason closed his eyes and covered his face with both hands. He gulped  audibly and took a moment to regain his composure. Then he blew out a  breath and dropped his fingers.