"Which I'd love to hear about, you know."
"I know, I know." I sigh, that feeling of being the new family screw up coming bubbling up inside. "I've been off the grid a little, I know."
This feels good, even if I'm not saying anything. It feels cathartic, opening up a little to family, even though there's so much I haven't and can't tell him or any of my siblings.
Not now. Not yet.
"What's going on with you, Si-Si? Just the Jayson thing, or something else?"
"It's … school. I dunno."
"What about school."
"I don't know, Row. You didn't go to college and you're doing fine, Ivy dropped out and is killing it. Stella dropped out and is kicking ass as a nurse-"
"Okay, stop, seriously. I own a dive bar, Sierra."
"Well, but don't you like owning a dive bar?"
"Love it."
"Well?"
"But that's not you and you know it. And Ivy took a fuckin' gamble with that lifestyle blog. She got lucky with that. In a million other scenarios, she's living at home in her old bedroom at Mom and Dad's waitressing for cash. And Stella had help, in case you forget Mom and Dad basically half-parenting Carter while Stella got her shit together."
Rowan sighs, and I can picture him in whatever hotel the whole family is shacked up in out west, pinching his brow. Maybe a beer in his hand as he stands by the pool.
"You're the standard Si-Si. You're what the rest of us try and be. You and Kyle, obviously."
I groan. "I don't want to be that, though."
"I know. No one chooses that. Well, maybe Kyle."
I grin.
"So you're confused? Having a midlife crisis?"
"Maybe a quarter-life one," I say glumly, toying with the phone cord before running my hands over the leather wheel of the car. For a minute, even though it's true that I don't know a thing about driving stick, I wonder what it would feel like to just turn on the engine, put the car in drive, and just go.
"Join the club, dude. That's like every Tuesday for me."
I smile.
"The thing is, you power through it. It gets better. It always does."
"Thanks, Row," I say quietly in the stillness of the car, the last of the driving-into-the-sunset daydream fading away.
"Any time. So what else is going on with you?"
"Oh, complexities galore."
My mind goes to Connor, and my body tingles all over again at the very recent memory of the things he does to me. The way he talks to me. The way he stirs some sort of darkness inside of me that makes me shiver.
"Feel like sharing?"
Not in a million years.
"Nah. You go have fun with everyone."
"Eh, early night over here. Dad's pretending he's not sleeping down by the pool again, Mom's had one glass of wine, so, you know, she's half in the bag."
I laugh, grinning, but also feeling the pang of something like sadness.
"Look, whatever it is, I've got some advice."
"Shoot."
"Stop thinking so much, Sierra."
I frown, and I can hear my brother chuckle over the phone.
"I'm serious, and you know what I'm talking about. You think too much. You analyze the fuck out of everything until you've seen every angle, but while you've been weighing how best to approach it, whatever it is passes on."
I scowl in the darkness of the car.
"C'mon," Rowan says, as if reading my mind through the phone. "Spill it. What else is going on with you?"
I sigh, chewing my lip and breathing in the air of the car. It smells like Connor in here, and there's something about his scent enveloping me like this that sends that shiver through me all over again. It also makes me feel like a complete dork, like I'm in grade school writing his name across my notebook.
"There's this guy-"
"Ooookay, yeah that's my cue."
"Oh c'mon! You said you wanted to hear-"
"Yep, I don't need to hear about my little sister's love life. That's Ivy and Stella territory."
I roll my eyes as Rowan chuckles.
"Just tell me one thing."
"What?"
"He a good guy?"
I'm quiet.
"Well, is he better than Jayson? As low as that bar is fucking set?"
"Yes," I laugh.
"He keeping you safe? Out of trouble?"
Yes. Maybe?
"I think so."
"Well, all right then. Tell him I'll fuck him up if he pulls anything with you."
I grin at the thought. As tough a nut as my big brother is, Connor's just another world of toughness.
"Thanks, Row," I say quietly.
"For?"
"For answering."
There's another pause.
"You sure you're okay?"
"I am now, yeah."
"Chin up, Si-Si."
Maybe I do think too much.
I put the phone down after saying my goodbyes to my brother, and I lean back in the big leather bucket seat.
Maybe I need simple. And as silly as I feel for even thinking it, I'm not sure the man upstairs can in any way be described as simple.
I roll my eyes. Yeah, it's a ridiculous thought to even go there with Connor, despite the things he's just done to me and made me feel.
Sex is sex, and that's that. I'm a big girl, and I understand how this works, and I get that the two of us coming together like that is just the power of mutual attraction in a stressful environment.
A hot, broken, beautiful distraction.
The knock on the side window has me shrieking as I nearly jump out of my skin. I scream at the man standing next to the car in the dark parking garage, and I'm scrambling across the stick shift to the other side of the car as fast as I can scramble, when I freeze.
He's holding a badge in his hand, and he taps it against the glass again.
"Why don't you step out of the car, Ms. Hammond."
Something cold shivers through me and the pit of my stomach drops out inside.
He knows my name.
The real insane thing is that twenty-four hours ago, seeing a man with a badge here at Connor's place would have had me shrieking for joy.
So why does it shoot fear through me now?
"Out of the car, if you would," he says again, his voice slightly muffled through the closed door.
I take a shaky breath, feeling my heart still racing as I slowly open the passenger side of the car and pull myself out.
The man smiles thinly at me over the top of the Charger, and he raises his badge again. This time, I notice the letters on it.
F.B.I.
"I'm agent Marlow, Ms. Hammond, and I thought we might have a chat."
He's older, maybe in his forties, with graying hair, a sallow, lined look to his face, and piggish-looking eyes set back in his head. And a mustache, which generally creeps me out.
Believe me when I say us being alone in the basement parking garage of a basically abandoned factory building makes that creep-factor about a million times worse. I swallow the lump that forms in my throat, my mouth dry. Goosebumps breaking out across my skin.
I've never been in trouble. Not ever. I've never even had a speeding ticket.
That was before I burned a garage down.
I think about running before I realize how stupid that would be, and instead, I nod slowly, biting my lip.
"You know why I'm here?"
"I-" I bite back the tears. "It was an accident," I say softly.
It's such a lame thing to say.
Agent Marlow smiles thinly again. "I'm sure it was. You know, arson is no joke, kid."
I look at the floor of the garage, feeling it sink out from under me.
"But that ain't why I'm here."
I look up at him sharply.
"Here's the thing, Ms. Hammond," he says quietly, stepping around the car towards me. I shiver, but I don't run, my feet glued to the floor.
"I don't know how you got mixed up with Connor Roarke, but you need to untangle yourself from that."
"I'm not tangled," I say quietly.
"Oh no?"
"No, we're- we're just friends."
"Friends who wear each other's boxer-briefs and undershirts?"
I turn red as I drop my eyes to the ground.
"You have any idea who he is?"
"I told you, we're just-"
"Right, you're just friends," Agent Marlow spits. "Let me tell you about your friend, Ms. Hammond."
He reaches into his trench coat and pulls out a manila folder, which he slaps onto the hood of the car in front of me.
"Have a look."
"I- no, thanks."
"It wasn't a request."
I shiver as my eyes dart to his dark brown ones, narrowed menacingly at me. Slowly, I open the folder and glance down.
My hand flies to my mouth, and I shove the folder away.
"No-"
"Keep looking," Agent Marlow snarls.
I swallow back the horror as he shoved the folder back my way.
The body is face down in the photograph, blood soaked into the carpet around it and still leaking from the two huge holes in its back.
"Keep going," Agent Marlow says darkly.
I choke on my breath as I flip to the next page, almost throwing up - charred bodies in a blackened room.
"You ever burned down a garage?"
"Two. And an apartment building, an underground gambling spot, and three cars." He frowns. "Four cars."
And very suddenly, I realize Agent Marlow is right: I don't have any idea who Connor is.
"This is just his day-to-day shit, by the way. This folder is a snapshot. I got a whole fucking drawer on the guy back at the office. Trust me, it gets worse."
I shake my head, looking away and trying to swallow back the nausea. "Why are you showing me this?"