“I will come to your house tonight. We will review these together.”
I refused to meet his eyes.
“If that’s the way you want it.”
“It is,” Salt said quietly.
“Good.” The Captain slapped his desk with finality. “Come back in tomorrow and tell me what you want to do.”
What I wanted to do was go dig a hole and bury myself in it but I couldn’t say that out loud. Couldn’t give my bastard of an ex-partner the satisfaction of knowing how badly he had hurt me—how deeply his treachery cut.
Instead, I lifted my chin and left the Captain’s office with my head held high and my heart aching.
It’s your fault, whispered a little voice in my head. Your fault he left and he’s never coming back.
I knew it was true but it didn’t make his betrayal hurt any less.
Chapter Seventeen
The knock on my front door startled me. I was standing in the kitchen, cutting up vegetables for a crudités platter to serve while we reviewed the video evidence.
I know making a tray of snacks sounds stupid but it was what I had done the first time Salt had ever come over to my house, not long after we’d become partners. I forget why he came—probably to review evidence from some case or other. Anyway, I had made a vegetable platter with sour cream dip and now I found myself doing it again. I don’t know why—maybe I was trying to take myself back to the time before I’d cared about my partner as more than a partner. Maybe I wanted to rewind the clock and pretend nothing had ever happened between us.
Now, however, I decided it was a ridiculous idea. It wasn’t like I could pretend away the hurt inside me—the gaping hole of loneliness that had opened in my chest where my heart used to be. All I could do was try to hide it and get through this night as well as I could.
The knock sounded again. I threw down the knife and, leaving the half finished carrots and celery on the cutting board, went to answer the door.
Salt was standing there looking very tall and grim with the flash drive curled in one large fist. He has his own key to my place so he could have just let himself in but clearly he wanted to keep things formal. Well, fine—I could do that too.
“Good evening, Detective Saltanov,” I said evenly.
Salt didn’t look happy but he returned my greeting in kind.
“Detective Sugarbaker,” he rumbled, inclining his head.
“Won’t you come in?” I stepped aside to let him enter. Normally when we went to each other’s houses we made ourselves at home. Salt always went right to my refrigerator to see what I had to eat. But now he stepped inside and then just stood there. It was a reminder to me that things weren’t “normal” between us and never would be again.
“This way,” I said shortly, and led him to my living room as though he didn’t know the way.
Salt followed me silently and had a seat on the couch when we got there.
“The flash drive?” I asked.
Wordlessly, he dropped it into my hand.
I went over to my laptop and plugged in the flash drive. Thanks to Salt, who had found a way to hook my computer to my television, I was able to bring the images up on my large flat-screen.
I grabbed the remote and, since Salt was sitting on the couch, I took the loveseat which sat perpendicular to it.
It hurt my heart to do that—to sit away from him. I couldn’t help remembering all the times we had sat together on my couch to watch movies. Salt had never actually put his arms around me or cuddled me—we hadn’t gotten that physical until our time at the Institute—but we always sat close, our thighs touching. And sometimes when the movie was long or I was tired, I would lean my head on his broad shoulder and just rest there. Once or twice I even fell asleep and only woke up when Salt was tucking an afghan around me to keep me warm.
I would never be able to do that again, I realized. Never be able to draw comfort from having his big, warm body so close to mine. We were never going to have another movie night and I was never going to fall asleep with my head against his shoulder. We would never— Get over it, I advised myself roughly. He doesn’t want you anymore. And can you blame him? Look how needy you let yourself get at the Institute. Look at all the weird things you did together. Salt was probably just acting but not you, Sugarbaker—no, you got into it. Deep into it. You liked being a Little—playing the Babygirl to Salt’s Papa. He probably knows that and it disgusts him. You drove him away yourself by being too damn needy and strange so don’t start mooning over him now. Just because he’s sitting on your couch right now doesn’t mean he’ll ever want you back as a partner or anything else. He’s already gone.