Shot of a man?
Before I could ask, Deacon kept talking
“You don’t have that and I should let you make that play. But what you gave me, Cassidy, not gonna let you make that play. So you want shot of me, I’m standin’ right here. Now you say the words.”
“Are you crazy?” I whispered, knowing he was because there was no way in hell he could think I was shot of him.
Him shot of me, yes.
Me shot of him…
Absolutely not.
“You quit callin’,” he stated.
I finally moved, turning in my seat and keeping my eyes glued to his.
“You did too.”
“I was workin’,” he clipped.
I felt my eyebrows shoot up. “For weeks, without a moment to phone just to say hey?”
“For weeks, without a moment to phone and say hey,” he confirmed, his words still terse.
“Seriously?” I asked.
“Seriously,” he answered shortly and kept going. “Situation was not good. It was intense. And there were people there I did not know, I did not like, and I did not trust. No way in fuck I’m gonna take a call and expose shit to those fuckers. And no way I could take a call from you and not expose you mean somethin’ to me. Since I was with them practically twenty-four fuckin’ seven, I didn’t take a call and I didn’t make a call. Told you, I would not put you in danger. That world I live in, Cassidy, it does not exist for you and by that I mean you don’t know that world and that world does not know you.”
This made some sense, and some of it was very sweet.
However.
“So what’s that mean, Deacon?” I asked. “Incommunicado for weeks with no idea when that incommunicado will end?”
“Fuck no,” he returned. “It means you phone me so I know you’re good and you’re thinkin’ of me.”
Suddenly, I was over my shock he was there and this was because I was pissed.
“So I sit at home and give you that and I get nothing?” I pushed.
“You get knowin’ it’s good for me that I know I’m on your mind.”
I had to admit, that would be a nice thing to give.
But when there’s give, there should be get.
“And what do I get?”
“Woman, if you don’t already know that you’ve been on my mind every day for the last six years, I got no clue how to communicate that to you. Now that I’ve had you, that shit has not changed. It’s just got worse.”
My back straightened and I started glaring. “Worse?”
“Worse,” he confirmed on a downward jerk of his chin. “Now it’s not every day. It’s every hour. I don’t fight it, every minute. Fuck, every second, I don’t keep it in check. Every second, I’m thinkin’ of you, thinkin’ of gettin’ shit done, but only so I can get back to you.”
That was very, very sweet.
I was still pissed.
And this was because I got nothing from him, not one thing for a month!
“You didn’t tell me that, Deacon.”
“I fuckin’ did, Cassidy.”
“When?” I snapped.
He leaned toward me and shot back, “Every moment I was with you.”
I drew in a sharp breath.
Because in that instant, I knew he was right.
“You’re a vulnerability,” he ground out. “My vulnerability. I have no vulnerabilities. I spent years shavin’ every last one away from me so there was nothin’ left. Now I got one, a big one, and I do not give one fuck as long as she’s in Colorado, sittin’ on her porch, waitin’ for me to get back.”
Oh my God.
“Deacon,” I whispered, but got no further because he kept going.
“But I can’t know she’s doin’ that if she doesn’t,” he leaned into me again, “phone me.”
“What if I need you?” I asked softly, his words making me no longer pissed.
“Then you phone. You hang up. You phone again. You hang up. And you phone again. You keep phonin’, Cassidy, I’ll know I’m not just on your mind, I’m needed. And I’ll phone back. But I’ll do it on my way to you.”
Oh yes.
I was no longer pissed, like at all.
It was then I stood and faced him, saying in a calming voice, “I couldn’t know this, honey.”
“Right. Then I’ll educate you,” he returned, his words still clipped, showing he could definitely get annoyed. “Those five men you had, not one of them was a man like me. A man like me, Cassidy, does not sit on a fuckin’ chair on a fuckin’ porch by a fuckin’ river in the fuckin’ Colorado Mountains and tell a woman he wants to be sittin’ right there beside her when he’s eighty if he does not mean that shit.”
I felt my chin go back into my neck as I held his gaze, doing this to fight back the emotion his words rocketed through me.
Once I succeeded, I suggested, “Maybe we should get a system down.”
The mask slipped but only for his face to darken on the words, “You’re not shot of me?”
“Of course not,” I answered. “I just…you didn’t phone back so I thought you were shot of me.”
“Here,” he growled and I blinked.