I foresee me living out my life as a walking, talking corpse. A zombie. Someone who used to have a heartbeat, but is now just going through the motions.
• • •
The phone is ringing when I unlock my door. My landline rings so seldom that I forget that I even have one most of the time. I give Dozer a quick scratch and head for the kitchen to grab it before it stops ringing. I can’t even imagine who might be calling me on it. Probably a telemarketer.
“Hello?”
The pause is so long that I’m getting ready to hang up when I hear the baritone voice that I’ll likely never forget.
“Hello, Kat.”
Chills break out on both arms and my skin feels both cool and hot at the same time.
“What do you want, Senator Sims?”
“You used to be such a pleasant girl,” he remarks.
“You’ll have to excuse me if I can’t find any pleasure in hearing your voice.”
He ignores that.
“I’ve got a proposition for you.”
“I’m not interested.”
“You don’t even know what I’m going to say.”
“It doesn’t matter. I don’t care what you have to say. The answer is no.”
“Even if it could save your friend?”
There’s a hitch in my pulse. It feels like my heart almost stops for a second. “My friend?”
“Yes. Kiefer Rogan. He is your friend, isn’t he?”
Air freezes in my chest like wedges of thin ice. “And what does he need saving from?”
“Not what. Whom.”
I’m quickly becoming irritated with his vagueness. “Why don’t you just tell me what it is that you want, Mr. Sims,” I say, emphasizing a title he will feel is disrespectful.
If it needles him, however, he hides it well. When he resumes speaking, it’s as though he’s embroiled in polite conversation with an old friend. “Kiefer Rogan is a man of secrets, secrets I’d be willing to bet he’s never shared with you.”
If he’s hoping to hurt me, it’s working.
“Everyone’s entitled to their secrets.”
“In any case, they’re not really entirely his secrets to share.”
“What’s that supposed to mean?”
“Did Rogan ever tell you how his father died?”
A lump of dread forms in the back of my throat, making me feel for a few seconds like I can’t breathe. I focus on drawing air in and out of my lungs slowly. Steadily. “No, but I think you already know that.”
“I do, but there’s no reason I can’t enjoy this.” His tone is smug and it sets my teeth on edge. But he’s got my attention, so I hold my tongue until he continues. “There was an unfortunate accident involving his younger brother. He had enlisted in the Army just before graduation. His father found out and tried to cripple him with a crowbar. Kurt hit him in the head with a baseball bat. Killed him instantly. Kiefer wasn’t willing to trust his brother’s future to the fickle legal system in this country, but he trusted his coach enough to tell him what had happened, to ask his advice. His coach came to me. He knew I could help, that I could make things . . . go away.”
My stomach feels like a ball of lead is sitting in the bottom of it. I know just how adept he is at making things go away. At letting criminals go free. “Why should I believe you? Why should I believe any of this?”
“Because that’s why Kiefer will do as I ask, no matter what. When I wanted him on a Special Forces team that my senate committee oversaw, he enlisted in the Army. When his brother was injured and discharged, Kiefer came home and went back into the ring to fight for me. He’s smart enough to know that I hold the keys to his brother’s past. And his future.”
This is too much information, too fast. “Wait, what? Rogan was in the Special Forces?” He’d mentioned the Army, but not Special Forces.
“He didn’t tell you that either?” He’s smiling. I can hear it. He’s enjoying torturing the girl who dared dump his son. He probably blames me for Calvin setting me on fire, like it’s somehow my fault his son is psychotic.
Obviously the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree.
“No. He didn’t mention that.”
“Don’t feel too poorly. There’s not a lot he would even be permitted to tell you about, but pillow talk can be quite an effective . . . relaxant. If the partner is good enough.”
Another knock at me, as if to say that I wasn’t good enough in bed to worm all of Rogan’s secrets out of him. To hear this man, this disgusting monster of a man, degrade the beauty of what we shared makes me crazy.
“Why don’t you just get to the point?” I snap. “And why is it, exactly, that you think I’d care about helping Rogan?”