“He knew more than you?” Layne asked.
“Well, yes, of course, Layne.” Her tone suddenly held the sharp edge of sarcasm. “He’s a surgeon. A medical doctor. He’s nearly a decade older than me and he’s had at least that much more schooling than me. He’s from the city, not a cowtown. His family lived in Paris for three years. He speaks fluent French. Of course he’d know more than me.”
The bastard made her feel small. Stupid and small.
Christ, but he was going to enjoy getting in that guy’s face.
“I take it Jarrod’s problem wasn’t just that he couldn’t keep his dick in his pants but he wasn’t much fun at home either,” Layne remarked.
“No,” Rocky answered on a whisper, her eyes glued to his. “He wasn’t much fun at home.”
They both fell silent and held each other’s eyes and Layne knew she was thinking the same thing he was thinking.
They had fun at home. Even when they were fighting, they had fun. They were young, they were in love, they had fantastic sex, he made decent money, she had a bright future, they both weren’t afraid to work hard, they got along and when they didn’t they fought clean, they made each other laugh and life was just fucking good. He had never, not once when they were living together, dreaded going home. When work was done or when he’d be heading home after drinks with the guys or doing an errand, he looked forward to going home to Rocky.
And now he knew she felt the same.
Slowly, his body tensed with expectation, and, fuck him, anticipation, as she began to lean toward him, saying, “Layne –” when they heard a key scrape the lock and she sat back and twisted her neck to look at the door.
Fuck!
His eyes went over the back of the couch to see Merry walk in.
“Sorry,” Merry said, closing the door behind him. “Saw your truck, brother, but to get to my bed, I gotta walk through this room.” He walked to the dining room table and tossed his keys on it, finishing with, “Hey Roc.”
“Hey Merry,” she replied and Layne looked at his watch.
It was nearly midnight and he needed to get his ass home, not just getting the fuck away from a Raquel Astley with passion in her eyes, or pain, but because his sons’ curfew was midnight and he needed to make sure they didn’t break it.
He lifted his feet off the coffee table and pushed up, muttering, “Gotta go.”
Merry was shrugging off his leather jacket. “Don’t mind me. I’m wiped. I’m goin’ straight to bed.”
Layne rounded the couch as he heard Rocky get up. “Gotta be home for the boys.”
Merry had wrapped his jacket around the back of a dining room chair and his eyes came to Layne.
“Heard the ‘dogs won,” he remarked.
“Yep,” Layne replied, coming to stand a few feet from Merry.
“They got talent this year,” Merry noted.
“Yep,” Layne agreed.
Merry’s eyes grew sharp. “Heard about Tripp, big man.”
“Figured that was makin’ the rounds,” Layne stated.
Rocky burrowed into her brother’s side until he slid an arm around her shoulders and she did this whispering, “It was bad, Merry.”
Merry looked down at her upturned face and nodded then looked back at Layne.
“You gonna do somethin’ about that?” he asked.
“Formal complaint,” Layne answered.
Merry shook his head, mumbling, “That isn’t what I’d do.”
No, Layne knew, that wasn’t what Merry would do. Merry had control, just not very much of it.
“There are times, man, when you gotta play it smart. This is one of those times,” Layne replied quietly.
Merry’s eyes fell to Layne’s gut, showing Layne they’d both learned the lesson about playing it smart. Then he looked back at Layne and nodded.
Then he said, “Welp, gotta hit the hay.” He leaned down and kissed the top of his sister’s head and after he did, she tipped her head back and grinned at him. He gave her shoulders a visible squeeze, let her go, walked to Layne, clapped him on the shoulder and then walked down the hall, saying, “’Night.”
“’Night, Merry,” Rocky called.
“Later,” Layne said and headed to the door.
Rocky followed him.
Merry had a two-bedroom condo. It wasn’t the greatest condo, it wasn’t shit. At his age, even after the divorce where he let his ex have the house, he could do better. Then again, he had an Excursion, a speed boat, a Harley, a timeshare in Florida and a taste for expensive whisky. Unlike Rutledge, to have expensive toys on a cop’s salary, Merry had to juggle and, sometimes, make sacrifices.
Layne opened the door and walked out into the cold. Rocky held the door open then moved to stand with a shoulder against the jamb, the door mostly closed, she’d wedged herself between them and her eyes were looking up at him.
“I’m sorry about Tripp, Layne,” she said gently.
“He’ll be okay,” Layne replied and she nodded.
“Thanks for helping with the apartment,” she said.
“Not a problem.”
Her eyes slid to the side and he watched her thinking.
He should say goodnight and get the fuck out of there. They didn’t need to go where they were heading tonight. They needed to stay focused. Both of them. They had what they had and then it went bad. That was a long time ago. He couldn’t get caught in the memories. The good times then and the way he was finding she was now didn’t change the fact that she’d turned her back and walked away and didn’t explain why. She’d torn out his heart and shattered his world. He didn’t see video of her taking it from the front and back but that would almost make it better, at least that was a reason.
“Even with all the dramas,” she broke into his thoughts, “it was a nice night, Layne.”
“Yep,” he agreed, finally got smart and drew a line under it, “later, Roc.”