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Raw Deal(31)

By:Cherrie Lynn


The puppy-dog eyes he gave her through the fringe of his lashes squeezed her heart. "Even if I promise to be good?"

"You're always good."

"I'll be extra good." He brought his mouth to hers and she devoured the  sweetness of the ice cream on his tongue in a slow, thorough kiss that  made her body think yes, indeed, she could take more. And she did, right  there on his kitchen floor against the cold, hard tiles. He was so  gentle and careful, obviously taking into account their earlier  exertions, and her release ripped another little piece of her away for  his safekeeping as she sobbed his name.

Afterward, as they composed themselves and settled across from each  other on the floor to more thoroughly enjoy their middle-of-the-night  snack, she found herself thinking about the horrible day when she'd  first met him. How shocked she'd been to see him at the cemetery and how  utterly different he'd been from everything she had seen until that  point. If someone had told her then that she would be here with him like  this tonight, she probably would've severed all ties with that person  because they were obviously delusional. Watching him slowly pull his  spoon from between his lips with obvious pleasure, she smiled and leaned  her head back against the bank of kitchen drawers behind her. He sat  opposite her against the island, his legs stretched out beside hers.  Lifting one foot, she tickled his side with her toes.                       
       
           



       

"Did you ever imagine us here?" she asked him. "In your wildest dreams?"

"In my wildest ones?" He grinned, showing off perfect laugh lines. "Maybe."

"Do you believe in omens?"

He considered her for a moment, his eyes gentle. "Not really. Why do you ask?"

Shrugging, she turned her attention back to digging another scrumptious bite from the carton. "It's silly."

"Tell me. Maybe you can convert a hardened cynic."

"Tommy had a thing for eagles. You might have noticed the tattoo on his back."

"Had my face smashed against it a couple of times. Incredible piece of work he had."

"I've never seen a real one before, you know? Well, maybe at a zoo or  something when I was a kid. But I saw one circling above his service  that day. All by itself against the blue sky, just . . . strong and  beautiful and . . ." Dropping her gaze, she growled in frustration at  the sudden heat gathering behind her eyes, pressing her fingertips to  her forehead. He put one hand on her shin, rubbing comfortingly,  encouragingly. "Then I saw you," she finished when she had shoved the  tears back where they belonged.

"What do you think it meant?" He asked, out of genuine curiosity, she  thought. Or at least it sounded that way. Not humoring or patronizing  her.

"Rowan asked if I thought it was him saying goodbye. It was my first  thought when I saw it, but I've never believed in things like that  either. Probably a stupid coincidence I've given entirely too much  thought to, right? But it keeps coming back to me."

"I think we have to take solace wherever we find it. If it's therapeutic  for you to believe it was him, then believe it. And don't let anyone  take it from you."

She fell silent for a time, scraping her spoon against the inside of the  ice cream carton to get at the soft, melty part and taking a bite. "You  don't seem to like talking about your past," she ventured, flicking a  glance up at him. "I want to ask, but I don't want to intrude."

"You couldn't intrude if you wanted to. I'll be an open book for you. I don't offer that to many."

"Did you . . ." Trailing off, unable to phrase the question, she could  only look up at him helplessly. "I don't want to dig up what the press  says. I deliberately avoid it. I don't want to listen to everyone else,  either. And I don't really want to hear it, but . . . I guess I need to.  Whatever it is."

"When I was seventeen," he began, abandoning his spoon in the ice cream  so that it stood straight up and not looking at her, "I killed a man in  our house."

"Was it an accident?" she asked, her heart thudding hard.

His jaw stiffened, hard as granite. Otherwise he was as still as  sculpture. "No. I fucking meant to do it. Said it was an accident to  keep my ass out of jail, told everyone that, but he was beating my  mother. He'd beaten her to the ground, unconscious, and was still  beating her. He would have killed her. I don't know why, maybe over  money or drugs or sex, but I didn't care. I returned the favor, and I  didn't stop until that son of a bitch was dead."

Savannah laced her hands together in front of her mouth, simultaneously heartbroken and horrified, robbed of words.

"Some people think I should have called the police. My mother would have  been dead before they got there. Some people think that once I subdued  him, I should have stopped. I guess they have a point. But seeing her  there . . ." His voice cracked and he drew a deep breath before going  on, "Beaten and bloody and so small on the floor in a puddle of her own  blood . . . I couldn't stop. All I could imagine was that we would never  be safe, Mom or Zane or Damien or me, even if they picked the guy up  and he went to jail, he would be out in no time and we would all be in  danger then. I knew how the system worked."

"And you were let off?"

"Eventually. They determined it was justifiable. Zane was there so he  could back me up. I don't know where Damien was but I'm glad he was  gone. Mom was slow recovering-probably because all the drugs had taken  their toll. She was never the same, and about seven months later, she  was gone."

"I'm so sorry, Michael. For everything."

"I never meant to hurt your brother, Savannah. Beat him, yeah, even beat  him bad. But never that. Never what happened. It's the darkest,  emptiest, most fucking catastrophic feeling you can ever imagine and it  shredded me. I couldn't deal. I could have gone the rest of my life  without knowing it again. When it happened with Tommy . . . Jesus  Christ, I can't describe it." He scrubbed his face hard with both hands,  as if to wipe away the emotion. She bet there wasn't enough force in  the world to do that. "I kept thinking of your family, and how I didn't  know you but you probably wanted to do to me what I did to that guy  fifteen years ago. That it was payback."                       
       
           



       

"No, no. I know you didn't mean for it to happen," she said, prompting  an open stream of tears to flow down her cheeks. She didn't even care  anymore about them. After what he had just shared with her, being  embarrassed of a few tears seemed ridiculous. She crawled over to him  and collapsed onto his chest, sighing as the strength of his arms came  around her, clutching her as fiercely as she did him. Each of them  soaking in the other's strength. He shuddered against her, grappling  with his unnamable demons. We have to take solace wherever we can find  it, he'd said, and somehow, by some divine intervention or alignment of  the stars or whatever the hell else determined their destinies . . . he  was her solace.

"I'd better get you back," he murmured into her hair, his fist clenching  in it as if the thought was unbearable for him. And she knew he was  right, that Rowan would probably never forgive her for staying the night  with him, but it was unbearable for her too.

"I know," she said softly. And not all of her tears after that were for  her brother. More than a few were for Michael, and for herself.



Savannah opened the hotel door to Rowan's furious green eyes and crossed arms.

"You slept with him."

The accusation cut right to the heart, as Savannah had known it would.  She maintained her silence, her mouth tightening, and turned to retrieve  her carry-on bag from the bed.

Rowan chased after her. "My God! What are you thinking? After all that  lecturing me about Zane, and you run off and screw the reason for this  entire mess?"

Savannah calmly extended the handle on her suitcase and glanced around  the room before turning back to Rowan with a deep inhale. "I did not say  that I slept with him, and I don't appreciate that."

"Why else were you out so late?"

"I don't know, talking? Don't you think we would have a lot to talk about?"

"Like what? Did you find out why he would keep going after Tommy after the ref called the fight? I'd really like to know."

"No, I didn't, because I know he didn't mean to hurt him. I believe it down to my soul."

"What he meant doesn't matter." Rowan's eyes brimmed with tears. "It  still happened. I don't know how you can look at him. Forgive him if you  absolutely have to, for whatever reason, and let it fucking go!"