Ren threw his napkin down and pushed back his chair, muttering, “Fuck.”
“Are you expecting someone?” I asked as he walked away.
“Are you in my house?” he asked back.
“Yes,” I pointed out the obvious.
At the door, hand on handle, he turned to me and answered, “Yes.”
What did that mean? I’d never had visitors at his house.
Then again, I frequently got visitors at my apartment. Ren knew that because he’d been there a lot when I got them. So clearly he expected this to go on and I made a mental note to do something about that since it sounded like he didn’t like it much.
And it must be said, when it interrupted dinner and discussion on the later positions in which Ren would be giving me the business, I didn’t like it much either.
He looked through the double row of three square windows set high in his door. I heard his sigh all the way across the house (his sigh was that big) and he opened it.
I couldn’t see anything since Ren was standing in the door and hadn’t fully opened it, but I did hear a deep, somewhat familiar voice I couldn’t place ask, “Is Ally Nightingale here?”
When I heard Ren’s answer of, “You wanna explain why you want that information?” I pushed back my chair and threw down my own napkin.
“We need to have a chat,” the familiar voice answered.
I walked that way as Ren replied, “And you’re lookin’ for her here, how? How is it that you’re here lookin’ for her?”
The voice had turned guarded, probably with caution and maybe a little irritation, when it returned, “Man, she’s yours and her apartment is a black hole. Where else would I look for her?”
I made it to Ren’s back and put a hand there, but it was clear the voice’s answer was acceptable because he was moving back to open the door.
I then saw how I knew the voice.
Jacob Decker. And Jacob Decker was Chace Keaton’s friend. And Chace Keaton was my girl Faye’s hot guy badass.
I’d met him briefly during the brouhaha up in the mountains. And when I saw that mountain of muscle, thick dark hair and intelligent hazel eyes, I lamented there were no Rock Chicks left I could toss in his path. He looked like a man who could handle a Rock Chick. Even a man who needed one. The more fucked up her life, the better. And if there had been one left, it would be me causing mayhem in order for him to get one.
“Deck, hey,” I greeted as I stepped back with Ren and Jacob Decker stepped in.
His eyes went to the table, flowers, food and candlelight, then they skimmed through Ren and me.
“Interrupting. Apologies,” he murmured.
Ren slid an arm along my shoulders, moved us into the house and out of the entryway, and Deck followed.
What he didn’t do was accept Deck’s apology, though his moving us all in probably didn’t need words. I suspected Jacob Decker spoke macho alpha so he likely wasn’t offended.
“This won’t take long,” Deck assured as we settled in the living room and his eyes settled on me. “I’m cleanup in Carnal,” he announced.
I didn’t get it.
“Sorry?” I asked.
“The situation in Carnal. I’m batting cleanup,” Deck said the same thing with more words.
Therefore, I still didn’t get it.
“Uh… those dudes buried Faye to force Chace to get the dirt other dudes were holding on them. My crew got that dirt. We turned it over. They have it. No cleanup necessary.”
“You did do that. You also turned over enough to the cops they took down two of those guys,” Deck replied.
I did do that. Or Brody, Darius and I did that.
I shrugged.
“Them’s the breaks,” I stated blithely. “Anyway, added deterrent to the others not to fuck up. It should all be good.”
Ren got closer and his arm got tighter when Deck’s face went way scary.
“You don’t understand me,” he said on a growl. “Nothing is good. My boy’s woman got buried alive. I’m cleanup in that situation in Carnal.”
I finally got it.
Those dudes were not going to get away with burying Faye alive.
I was down with that. Those shitheads deserved whatever this mountain of man had in store.
And anyway, that meant I could tick one thing off my watch list.
I didn’t speak macho alpha, therefore could not communicate telepathically, via chin lifts or through actions to other macho alphas, so I felt it prudent to agree verbally. I did this by mumbling, “Okeydokey.”
“You got anything that will help me do that in a timely manner,” he stated, “It’d be appreciated you turn that over to me.”
“What we have, you’ll have by tomorrow,” I told him, adding a call to Brody on my to-do list for the next day.
He nodded, reached in his back pocket, pulled out a wallet and then a card that he handed to me.
“Email,” he said.
It was my turn to nod as I shoved his card in my back pocket.
Deck looked at Ren. “No blowback.”