“I have a string of safe houses set up all across the country,” he said.
I must’ve misheard. “What?”
“I have a safe house in almost every state. I have more than enough money to keep us comfortable for the rest of our lives, if it comes to it. I’ve moved most of my funds to places outside the Pack.”
“What are you talking about?”
“I know he is coming and you are afraid. If you don’t want to fight him, you and I can disappear.”
I stared at him.
“The mass transit is gone. No planes, no reliable roads. The world is big again, Kate. He will never find us.”
“What about the Pack?”
His upper lip trembled, betraying the edge of his teeth. “Fuck the Pack. I gave them fifteen years of my life. I fought for them, bled for them, and the moment my back was turned, they attacked my wife. I owe them nothing.”
Curran reached over and covered my fingers with his hand. “I’m serious. Say the word right now and we’re gone. We can take Julie with us, if you want.”
“Jim would find us.”
“No. I covered my tracks. If Jim does find us, he’ll wish he hadn’t. Besides, Jim is a friend. He would understand and he wouldn’t look for us very hard.”
It wasn’t a bluff; I heard it in his voice. He would do it. He would walk away. “You would leave all these people, all the bowing, and the . . .”
His gray eyes looked into mine. “If I fought for them and was crippled, they would all say nice things, and then they would replace me and forget I was ever there. You would stay with me. You would take care of me, because you love me. I love you too, Kate. If you ever became hurt, I would not leave you. I’ll be there. Wherever you want ‘there’ to be.”
I felt like crying. Great, he’d turned me into a weeping weakling.
“Would you like to leave?” he asked.
I swallowed. “Not unless you want to.”
“Then we will stay. For now.”
“Yes.”
“Okay,” he said.
I was lucky. Somehow, maybe because of all the messed-up shit the Universe had thrown my way, I’d gotten him. He was mine, completely mine. He loved me.
I kept making barriers between us and then heroically knocking them down. Whether it was because of fear or mistrust, or for whatever other reason, I had to stop doing it.
I glanced down. The food was cold, our plates sat empty. “Do you think it will keep?”
He stood up. “Hell yes.”
THE CANDLES DIDN’T KEEP. BY THE TIME WE MADE IT back to the kitchen, the candles had dripped wax over the candelabra. I poked my steak—lukewarm. The baked potatoes were cold. Corn on the cob was barely warm. I didn’t care.
“I’m starving.”
“Got to keep your strength up.” Curran grinned. “So you can keep up.”
I clasped my hand to my throat and made some strangled noises. “Help me, I can’t breathe, your ego is pushing all the air out of the room.”
He laughed.
“This menu looks really familiar,” I said, loading my plate. I’d switched to a sweatshirt and sweatpants. My dress had been discarded anyway and besides, we had agreed to take our plates back to the couch, and I didn’t want to get food on it.
“Mm-hm,” Curran said, spearing a chunk of meat. “Apple pie is in the fridge.”
He’d recreated the menu he requested for the naked dinner. Ha!
“How did you even know my shoe size?”
“I’ve seen your foot up close.” Curran pointed to his chest. “I’ve seen it here.” He moved his hand to his jaw. “Here.” He touched the place over his cheek where my kick had cut him. “And here.”
Aha. “Would you like to watch a movie while we eat?”
“Sure. What sort of movie?”
“It has everything: action, drama, comedy, beautiful soundtrack. Hot male lead.”
His thick eyebrows crept up half an inch. “That last one isn’t exactly a plus.”
“Jealous of the actors now, are we?”