Kit ran a hand through his hair, his frustration showing, but she refused to feel bad about that. “It’s not that simple.”
“It never is with you.”
Their relationship could never be seen as simple, not with the way it started, or even the way it ended.
Even she didn’t understand it sometimes.
“How about we start at the beginning?” Donna said, setting her pen down. “Sometimes, it only take a little clarity to better understand someone else’s perspective. So, if you both are willing, then we can start there.”
“It’s a long story,” Luna said.
Years worth of a story.
Donna nodded once. “Take as much time as you need.”
Luna looked to her husband, the man she had vowed to love, honor, and obey. She tried to think of the right words, where to start when it came to their relationship. There was so much.
“If it’s all the same to you,” Kit said, noting her unease, “I’ll start.”
She nodded.
Kit sat back, resting his arm along the top of the settee. “It all started when my brother called to tell me he’d bought a whore.”
Part One
Chapter One
Driving around the snow-capped embankment, Kit Runehart tuned out the click of the windshield wipers as they swept back and forth, clearing the flurries that collected there.
The woman sitting next to him—Aidra, her name was—held a tablet in her lap, scanning over the ten requests that had been sent over the last twenty-four hours.
“Here’s one you might want to consider,” she said, using two fingers to enlarge the text and picture. “Do you remember Martin Fitzgerald? He’s asked that you find his missing shipment of weapons.”
Kit glanced in her direction. “That doesn’t sound terribly interesting.”
“His fourth shipment in as many months, but he can’t find where the problem is. He fired the movers, even killed a few of the dock workers, but no one has any new information for him.”
That was because he was looking in the wrong place if the guns were where Kit thought they could be—this wouldn’t be the first time someone double-crossed their partner. “Send him our fee—tell him I’ll take it.”
“Of course.”
Another fifteen minutes in the car and they were finally arriving at the picturesque cabin, nestled deep within the mountainside—if one weren’t looking for it, it could have easily been missed.
Pulling around, parking directly in front of the cabin, the SUV trailing him followed suit. Kit climbed out, foregoing the heavy gray coat in the backseat of his car despite the chill in the air.
The cold assaulted him the moment he was outside the car, his riding gloves only helping slightly, but Kit didn’t let the frigid temperature bother him as he headed around to the boot of the car. With one press of the button on his key ring, it popped open, revealing the man inside whose wrists and ankles were tied together and a strip of duck-tape covered his mouth.
Reginald Branson was a wanted man, not just by US authorities, but by the very couple Kit had brought him to. There were questions that needed to be answered, and he’d taken the job so they could be provided.
“Get him out,” Kit directed one of the four enforcers he kept with him.
The Wild Bunch, they liked to be called—though once, in a different life, they had been known as Winter’s Children. But Kit understood the need to bury one’s past.
Especially when it was as dark as theirs had been.
Though he didn’t need the extra level of protection—he had spent more than a decade training with the Lotus Society—it made his life easier when he didn’t have to get his hands dirty anymore.
Up the stairs they went, the door already swinging open before Kit cleared the landing. The security who opened it barely made eye contact—probably remembering the last time they had met like this.
The man had thought to disarm him, so Kit made it a point to show him why that wasn’t such a good idea.
A fire raged inside the hearth across the room, flames licking at the iron that encaged it. Two other guards in dark suits, wired comms in their ears, stood on either side of it, but it wasn’t to the pair of them that Kit directed his attention, rather the man he had come to see, and his wife.
The two were as clean cut as they came, and didn’t look anything like the people Kit ordinarily dealt with, but their case had been special—and for once he lowered his fee and accepted their offer.
“Mr. and Mrs. Clarkson, so sorry we had to meet under these conditions,” Kit said with a wave of his hand to the door.
He didn’t think they truly cared that it was snowing outside and below freezing temperature, their attention was on the man currently on his knees, wide eyes darting around the room.
He might not have known why he had been targeted, at first—or he might have, considering his crimes—but the he was probably wondering why he hadn’t been handed over to the legal authorities.