chapter 16
When Linda woke, it was a little after six in the morning and Tony was gone. She wasn’t surprised, not by his absence or the pain that filled her because of it. But she was surprised by the depth of her renewed faith in him.
There was no way Tony was dirty.
She’d suspected it when he’d shown up as a defendant in her courtroom. She’d known it after he’d saved her life. And she’d believed it after being in his arms again.
She still believed it.
Now more than ever.
And she wasn’t going to let him run away from her again.
She winced at her mental slip. Okay, so he hadn’t run from her the first time. She’d pushed him away. She’d had to. And as far as she knew, she still had to. As much as she’d cherished being with him last night, even if she managed to prove he was innocent, she didn’t know if they had a future together. He still had his addiction. She was still running to be judge. Those two things didn’t go together.
She didn’t care. She couldn’t predict the future, but she was not going to let Tony destroy his life out of some misguided sense of duty or guilt.
She’d played the words of that fax over and over in her mind.
Listen to your instincts.
Her instincts told her Tony wasn’t a killer. And he wasn’t a criminal. For some reason he wanted her to believe that, but such a person would have cared more about his own safety than hers. He’d thrown himself on top of her, willing to take a bullet for her.
Tony had acted as a confidential informant once. Whatever game he was playing now, he had to be doing it for some greater purpose.
She lay in bed for several minutes, enjoying the scent of Tony on her sheets and on her body, then she got up. As she did, she felt liquid trickle down her thighs and froze.
He hadn’t worn a condom.
And she hadn’t even thought about its absence. She’d been too busy savoring the feel of him inside her. The wonder of being in his arms again.
What a fool she’d been.
Slowly she got dressed. While she was on the pill to regulate her cycles, she prayed that by having unprotected sex with her, Tony hadn’t risked her health. She couldn’t imagine him doing such a thing, even if he had been carried away by passion. But she could never have imagined him killing Guapo, lying to her or kissing a woman in front of her just to hurt her, either. He’d only taken painkillers before, but that could have changed. Maybe he took hard-core drugs now. Used needles. Dirty needles.
She shuddered and pushed her racing thoughts away. She’d let her hunger for him distract her. Now she had more reason than ever to talk to him.
She headed to work, completed the morning calendar, then took her lunch break with Tony’s bail receipt in hand.
The receipt listed his current residence. When she pulled up in front of the house, Linda found herself double-checking to make sure there wasn’t some mistake. He’d boasted about having money, and Lock, the attorney he’d retained, certainly charged an enormous amount of it. Yet despite his access to a lot of money, he was living in one of the worst neighborhoods in town. She wasn’t exactly sure what she was going to find but stalwartly kept moving.
As she made her way up the cracked walkway, she doubted it would be anything good.
There were several people hanging out on the porch of the dilapidated house. They were drinking and smoking joints, but looked relatively harmless. Nonetheless she was comforted by the weight of her Taser gun in her jacket pocket. If any of them made a move for her, she’d zap them without any hesitation. But just as she’d expected, they ignored her, too wasted to care.
She entered the house without knocking. There was a man in a dirty T-shirt staring at the illuminated television set.
“I’m looking for Tony,” she said.
He pointed toward the back of the house without even looking at her.
She checked several doors, but didn’t see him. Eventually she came to a closed door and knocked. The brunette from the courthouse answered it. Instead of the skirt and jacket she’d worn to court, she wore a tight red T-shirt and frayed cutoffs that showed off her trim body to its best advantage.
The woman laughed humorlessly. “Unbelievable,” she said. “The little prosecutor followed you here, Tony. Can you believe it?” She moved to the side so that Linda could see inside the bedroom.
Tony lay in the bed. Though he was halfway covered with a sheet, his chest was bare.
Just as it had when Tony had kissed this woman, pain once again stabbed at her. This time, however, it was multiplied a hundredfold, strong enough that it almost buckled her knees.
He’d gone straight from her bed to this woman’s?
Horror ripped a hole right through her until she swayed. That kind of behavior didn’t bode well for a woman who’d just had unprotected sex with him. She locked her knees together.
It had been her choice to waltz in here unannounced, but as much as it hurt to see Tony and this woman together again, she’d come for answers. And she was going to get them.
“We need to talk, Tony. Please.”
Justine snorted. “Such good manners. But we don’t want you here.”
Tony contradicted her. “Justine, give us a minute, would you?”
Eyes wide with disbelief, Justine turned to stare at Tony. “You just set up that meeting, Tony. Finally you’re close to getting what you want. What we both want. Remember that.”
“I remember, Justine. I promise.”
With one more look at Linda, Justine left.
Slowly Tony rose and the sheet fell to the floor. He seemed to be favoring his injured leg again, but as she got a quick glimpse of his toned, naked body, all she remembered was the pleasure he’d given her earlier.
“You’re blushing, Miss Priss.” Reaching down, he picked up the sheet and wrapped it around his waist. “Given what we were doing several hours ago, that’s pretty funny don’t you think?”
The nickname was something he’d teasingly called her when they’d dated. Then, it had always sounded affectionate. Now? She swore she heard the same affection in his tone. Had their time together impacted him? Softened him? Then what was he doing here? Naked with Justine just mere hours after he’d been naked with her?
“You didn’t wear a condom, Tony. I’m on the pill, so I won’t get pregnant, but do I need to worry about any other unsavory consequences of our little escape into the past?”
His eyes widened as if he, too, was just now realizing that he’d released inside her. He flushed and his throat convulsed as he swallowed. “You’re fine, Linda. I’ve never forgotten to wear a condom before, and I’m clean. I was just in the hospital, remember? They checked. And thankfully, nothing happened in jail to change that.”
Relief swept through her and she gave an audible sigh. “Okay. Thank you for telling me that.” She licked her lips, took in the messy, dingy bedroom and forced herself to turn back to him. “So what meeting was Justine talking about? What do you and she want?”
He smiled tightly. “What most people want. Money and even more money. And the meeting she mentioned is the first step in how I’m going to get it. So you see, killing Guapo had the exact effect I was hoping for. His former business associates are lining up to do business with me.”
She rolled her eyes. “Right. And you’re going along for the ride because obviously money is so important to you.” She swept her gaze around the room. “You’re living in the lap of luxury, aren’t you?”
Tony scowled. “Does Neil know you’re here? Or that I was inside your house—inside you—not too long ago?”
“Do you want to be back there? Because I won’t lie.” She took a deep breath, bracing herself. “I want you there, Tony.”
He actually took several steps back, as if he was afraid of her. But she was through playing games. It was best that he know that.
“Then you’re a fool. That meant nothing to me, Linda.”
She’d braced herself for the cut of his words but they still hurt her anyway. Big deal. She’d hurt before and she’d always picked herself up and kept moving. She’d do it now. “I don’t believe that.”
He swept the cluttered dresser, shoving its contents—clothes, books, newspapers and a few glasses—to the floor. He stared at what he’d done, then laughed and shook his head. “Like I told you earlier, you’re crazy.”
“No. You’re crazy if you think I’m just going to buy your act when I know who you really are.” She gestured at the room around her. At the debris scattered on the floor. “This isn’t you, Tony.”
“Damn it, stop it. Get it through your head that I don’t care about you anymore. That this is the life I want now.”
“You touched me as if you cared about me.”
“That was sex, Linda. For God’s sake, you’ve never been this full of yourself.”
“Guess you’re not the only one who’s changed, Tony. I’m stronger than I was. Nearly dying can do that to a person. I’m not buying that you killed Guapo. Not when my gut is telling me differently.”
“Why not? You assumed I’d start taking drugs again. Granted, you had ample evidence given the pills I was staring so covetously at. Your gut led you in the right direction that night, Linda. It told you I was a loser. Someone you needed to stay away from. Remember that.”
He turned, obviously intent on dismissing her, but swayed on his feet. He reached out to steady himself on the wall beside the bed. Linda stepped closer and gasped at how pale he’d turned. A thin film of sweat covered his face and his breaths were shallow and ragged.
“Tony, what’s wrong? Are you sick?”
He shook his head. “No. I’m just—I’m just tired. Leave.”
She stepped closer, reached out to touch him, but he backed away before she could.
“Damn it, leave me alone. Get out of here!”
He turned away from her, favoring his leg again.
It had always caused him trouble, but he’d hurt it in the fight with Guapo, and he’d hurt it again when he’d pushed her out of the way of gunfire. Yet... She looked around the room for the bottles of painkillers, but saw none. Spying the bathroom door, she pushed through it and checked around the sink and in the medicine cabinet. No pills there, either.
She believed he wasn’t a killer, but was it possible he really wasn’t a drug user anymore, either? He’d implied as much when they’d talked at the jail, when he’d hinted she’d ended their relationship based solely on suspicion rather than any actual betrayal. What if it was true? What if he hadn’t used drugs since before she’d broken up with him?
Despite the fact he was in significant pain?
The thought merely strengthened her belief in his innocence.
But why was he sticking to his charade? Maybe it wasn’t to help the greater good, but to help someone specific. Who was he protecting? How bad could the threat be?
She stepped out of the bathroom only to find him sitting on the bed now, his face in his hands. When they’d made love, he’d kept his clothes on. She hadn’t gotten to see him au natural or feel him that way, either. Now she stared at him, noting the differences in his body. He’d always been lean with nice muscles but there was a definite toughness that hadn’t been there before, and she couldn’t help wondering what those bigger muscles would feel like under her fingers, or taste like under her tongue.
Realizing where her thoughts had led her, she jerked her gaze up only to see him staring back at her, his eyes dark and heated rather than in pain. She stepped closer, wanting to take what he was offering, intentionally or not. Wanting to remind herself what it was like to be loved by this man who looked so different but who still inspired the same feelings of peace and pleasure and contentment in her body even as he challenged and frustrated her.
It was Tony’s duality that had always drawn her to him, she realized. The darkness she’d sensed under his sweet, affable facade. The darkness that was even more apparent now. As much as she’d hated his addiction, she also felt guilty because it was his layers and complexity that made him who he was.
And that hadn’t changed.
“Do you want me to call 911?” she asked. “Get an ambulance for you?”
He shook his head. “I’m fine, Linda. And I’ll be even better when you’re gone. Get me Justine. She’s the one I really want. If you don’t believe me, ask her exactly what I did—who I did—after I left you.”
He stared at her challengingly and despite the denial on her lips, she hesitated.
He looked like he was telling the truth. But it couldn’t be. He wouldn’t have done that to her.
She sucked in a quick breath, then practically felt her hope and determination deflate. Weariness overcame her.
This was ridiculous. She didn’t know what way was up anymore. She couldn’t distinguish the truth from lies. Tony didn’t want her here. Whatever his reasons were, maybe she just needed to accept that. “Fine,” she said. “I won’t bother you again.”
She left, her movements slow and robotic. She glanced around for Justine so she could deliver Tony’s message, but couldn’t find her. She was outside by the time she spotted the beautiful brunette, who was talking on the phone in hushed tones, her back to Linda.
“Nicco, now that Guapo’s gone, you need to listen to Tony. He’s smart. He’s going to take us places Guapo never could. He’s finally made contact with Guapo’s Rapture supplier. That’s going to be just the beginning.”
Linda’s heart pounded, the sound so loud she couldn’t hear Justine’s next words. She’d been wrong. So very wrong. There it was. Undeniable proof that Tony was working to take over Guapo’s place as a drug supplier. He was right. Whether he still cared about her didn’t matter. Just like always, he didn’t care nearly enough for it to matter.
She turned away and quickened her steps until she reached the street, wanting only to get out of there. She’d barely rounded the corner of the house when a familiar feeling caused her skin to prickle. It was the exact feeling she’d felt just before Guapo’s men had attacked her in the courthouse parking lot.