I didn’t like doing this at all, but the last part I really didn’t like.
“Give yourself some time, do it after yoga,” Colt said. “You finish, you call me. Have someone walk it down to the Station when you get into the bar.”
I nodded again.
His face changed, I couldn’t put my finger on how but, I swear to God, it seemed like he looked like he was proud of me.
“I’ll call you when I get a reservation, tell you the time,” he said.
I nodded yet again.
“‘Tween then and now, honey, I suspect lots of shit is gonna go through your brain.”
He wasn’t wrong.
“Colt –”
He cut me off. “Ignore it.”
I closed my eyes and opened them again when his lips touched mine.
He lifted his head an inch away and stated quietly, “This is good.”
He wasn’t wrong about that either.
“Promise me, whatever marches through that head of yours, you stick with me. Tonight we’ll talk it out.”
“Colt –”
“Don’t say my name, give me your promise.”
I sucked in breath and when I let it out, I whispered, “I promise.”
His thumb left my chin to trail along my cheek.
Then he said, “I’ll be back soon as I can with your mat.”
“Thanks.”
“Later, baby.”
“Later.”
Then he let me go, unlocked the door and disappeared.
I turned to my parents and they were both openly watching me and more than likely had been openly watching Colt and me.
“Don’t start,” I warned.
“Got nothin’ to say,” Dad replied, “you know how we feel.”
I did and that didn’t help that feeling of fear that kept gnawing at my belly. Though it did make that feeling of happiness that was coating the region of my chest intensify more than a little bit.
“February,” Mom called when I dropped my head to look at the floor as I walked to the kitchen.
I lifted my head to look at her.
“No matter what, we love you, you know that?”
My step stuttered but I recovered. Then I swallowed.
Then I said, “I know that.”
“Now, can I have the last of the frittata?” Dad asked, eyeing my piece left in the skillet.
“Jack! That’s for Feb,” Mom scolded.
“She can make another one.”
“Jack!”
I hit the kitchen, grabbed the skillet and tipped it over Dad’s plate, sliding the last of the frittata onto his.
“We’re even for last night,” I said when I completed this task.
“What I saw at that door, girl, we already were,” Dad replied.
Damn, but I was definitely stupid.
* * * * *
Colt collected Feb’s mat, took it to his house and took advantage of the fact that her father was in one bathroom, her mother in the other and she was alone. Therefore, he spent some time necking with her pressed against the wall at the side of the front door. He did it until she moaned in his mouth and then he stopped, partly because he liked the idea of turning her on and then coming back to her later after she had time to let it stew. Mostly, because he liked her moaning in his mouth and if he didn’t stop, he wouldn’t have.
He wasn’t going to think about what happened between him and Feb last night or that morning. He was going to wait and see where their conversation led tonight. For his part, he was willing to set the past where it belonged and move on from there and he was going to do everything he could to get Feb to come around to his way of thinking.
He drove to the Station, parking out back, going in the backdoor and up the backstairs. He checked in, checked his voicemail then he walked down the front and saw Sully in the conference room with what had to be Marie Lowe’s parents.
He only gave them a glance, didn’t want to get caught in what could seem like a stare. It wasn’t right nor was it kind to stare at someone who’d just been tossed into the pit of grief.
He noted a lot in his glance.
He saw they were from money which meant the house was likely not just Denny providing for his wife but his wife being a trust fund baby.
The father had finally given into age, he was letting himself go, had put on weight, didn’t hold it even sitting down like he was comfortable with it in his flesh. The mother hadn’t given in, she’d had work done on her face, she was ten pounds underweight and she spent a goodly amount to keep her hair that healthy and blonde. Their clothes were expensive and likely designer but they didn’t shout it. Marie’s parents didn’t have anyone to impress, the company they kept knew they were society. Even heading down to a small town on the news that their daughter had been murdered, they were put together well. Not because they gave a shit what anyone thought about them. It was habit, it was ingrained.