When Ronan said he was taking me home, the most logical conclusion would be that he meant to my place. So when we pull up to an unfamiliar house in Beacon Hill I stare over at his shadowed profile and wait for an explanation.
But Ronan being Ronan, he doesn’t bother giving me one. Instead, he steps out of the car and comes around to open my side and then escorts me up the stairs. He’s looking around the street, his eyes darting at every shadowed car and bush in the vicinity. And I’m used to him being uptight, but not like this. He’s on high alert, and it’s making me nervous.
“Is something wrong?” I ask him.
He glares at me. “Aye, something’s wrong. You were flashing your tits and ass for all the lads tonight. After I’d taken you. Made you my woman.”
I’m still staring at him in disbelief when he drags me through the door. And then I’m being attacked by the last thing I ever expected to see in his house.
A frigging Corgi.
I bend down to greet her, and she licks my hand before wiggling her butt back and forth and whining at Ronan. He calls her into the kitchen and gives her some food, but it’s obvious she only wants his attention. Ronan doesn’t seem to understand this… the most basic of emotions, and it’s just so Ronan that I can’t help but smile.
“She wants you to pet her,” I tell him. “Hold her.”
“How can ye tell?” he asks.
I want to tell him it’s obvious, but the more I’m around Ronan the more I learn he actually does need things like this explained.
“That’s why she gets so excited,” I say. “When you come in the door. She does it every time, right?”
“Aye,” he says. “I thought it meant she was hungry. That’s what Crow said.”
I roll my eyes and set down my bag. “No, Ronan. It means that she missed you. While you are out and about in the world and doing your thing every day, a dog only has interactions with you to look forward to.”
“But why would she look forward to that?” he asks.
“Because she loves you.”
He glances down at the little Corgi who is staring up at him with an expression I know far too well. It’s the same damned expression I get when I look at him, too. Ronan moves to the fridge, and the dog comes running to me. I pick her up in my arms and smile.
“You and me, sister,” I murmur. “We’re just a couple of suckers, huh?”
“Would you care for a drink?” Ronan asks very formally.
“No,” I answer. “What’s her name?”
He comes back into view. “Her name is dog. And how did ye know it was a girl?”
I frown at him and shake my head. “You have to give her a real name. And it’s pretty easy, Ronan. She doesn’t have any balls.”
He looks away uncomfortably and then sits down on the sofa. He’s back to being stiff and unnatural and I have no idea what I’m even doing here.
I sit down in a spare seat and continue to play with the dog. “What about Daisy?” I ask him. “I think it suits her.”
He watches the dog for a few moments and then shrugs. “That sounds… grand.”
“You hear that, Daisy?” I coo. “You’ve been upgraded from dog. You have a real name now.”
She whines and then gets overexcited, bounding off to go see her beloved master.
“Why am I here, Ronan?” I ask finally.
He won’t look at me. And the tension in his body is only growing with every passing minute. He stands up and makes a gesture with his hand.
“Will ye come with me?” he asks. “I’d like to show ye something.”
“Okay,” I agree cautiously. He’s acting really strange. Even more so than usual.
He walks down the hall, and for the first time I notice that the layout of his house is very similar to Lachlan’s. But the furniture is much less prevalent, and I highly suspect that he pretty much never has company. This is a house designed for function only. Eat, sleep, and read from the looks of it. Everything is clean and tidy, but not overly so. There isn’t much in the house at all for personal belongings. No photos, no knitted blankets or other personal effects that one usually collects over a lifetime.
When I stare at his back as he leads me down the dark and empty hall, it makes my heart ache for him. The only things this man has in his life are literally his brothers in the syndicate. And a dog that he didn’t even know should have a name. I want to ask him more about his background, and there’s a question on the tip of my tongue, but then he pauses in front of a room.
His room.
It’s obvious from the scent alone that lingers there. It’s Ronan’s personal space. Where he sleeps at night. There’s a bed with stark gray blankets and a closet full of suits and shoes and little else. A couple of books on the nightstand and a lamp to read by. That’s it.
I look up at him and wonder if this is some misguided attempt at flirting with me. Or getting me into his bed, which doesn’t seem likely. He’s very fond of taking me up against walls and then making a quick getaway. He doesn’t even like to remove his clothes.
“What did you want to show me?” I step inside the room and take a look around.