“You came at me like—”
“I’m sorry,” I say. “And I never say I’m sorry, but I’m fucking sorry. I go at things, Faith. I know you know this about me. I push. I want answers the minute something threatens what matters to me. And you, Faith Winter, matter to me.” I lean back to look at her. “And no matter what you tell me right now, or when you’re ready, I meant what I said. I’m in this with you until the end. I am not leaving. I’m not turning on you. I am not letting you go.”
“And yet you thought the worst of me.”
“Not you. But the worst, yes. Things happen that are sometimes out of our control.” Like everything I feel for this woman, I add silently before I continue, “I always go to the worst place, because then I get ahead of what I’m facing. What we’re facing, Faith. I pushed because—”
“Like I pushed her,” she breathes out. “I pushed her, Nick. I pushed her until she was dead like my father.” She buries her face in my shoulder and sobs, but in another instant, she’s pushing away and swiping at her cheeks. “I think I’m going to keep crying. I need to go…”
“No,” I say, cupping her face. “No. You do not.” I thumb the tears from her cheeks. “You’re right where you belong, Faith. With me.”
Her lashes lower. “You don’t understand.”
“Make me understand.”
“Not now or I’ll cry and that is weak and confusing.” Her lashes lower and her fingers curl around my shirt.
“Why is it confusing or wrong to cry?” I ask, my hands moving to her shoulders.
Her lashes open, her eyes meeting mine. “You haven’t cried for your father.”
“I didn’t see my father for years before he died, sweetheart. It’s different.”
“I was with her. When she died. We were fighting, and then she just dropped dead. And the guilt—Oh God.” Her hand goes to her forehead. “I told you. I can’t keep talking now.” Tears pool in her eyes again. “I can’t keep talking…now.” She leans into me and buries her face in my chest, her body quaking with silent tears that she clearly struggles to control. I don’t want her to stop crying, to hide anything from me, and bastard that I am, I all but created that need in her.
I scoop her up, carry her to the sitting area to our left, and set her down on the couch, framed by a table and two chairs, her legs over my lap. But she doesn’t let go of my shirt, her face still buried in my shoulder. And she hasn’t stopped trembling, trying to pull herself into check, and still she says, “I’m okay.” She pushes away from me, swiping her cheeks and sitting up. “I’m fine.”
Guilt, and my intense need to control every damn thing around me, is now my enemy. I went at her. I pushed when she didn’t need to be pushed. But saying that to her won’t make her believe me now. I have to show her she can trust me again. I cup her head and pull her to me, giving her a quick kiss and saying it anyway. “It’s okay to not be okay with me, Faith. I’m an asshole, but this asshole is crazy about you and on your side.” I don’t force her to reply. She doesn’t need to do that. “I’ll be right back.” I kiss her again and release her, standing up and walking into the house.
I cross the living room, kicking myself for my reaction to Faith’s confession. She baited me, and I let her, though I’m not certain she even realizes she did it. She’s punishing herself. Maybe testing me at the same time. Trying to decide if she really can trust me. Fuck. I need her to know she can. And I failed whatever that was. Worse, I failed because I let that note of my father’s mess with my head when I meant what I said to Faith. I know her in ways I’m not sure I’ve ever known another human being. I know she is not a killer, and yet I reacted as if I thought she was just that: A killer.
Entering the kitchen, I stop at the corner built-in bar, pressing my hand to the edge of the counter. “You’re an asshole,” I murmur. “Such a fucking asshole, just like she said.” And why, I think? Because I felt, for just a moment, like control was lost, and I had to grab it and hold onto it.
I push off the counter, and grab a glass, needing the drink I came in here to get for Faith. Scanning my many choices, I opt for my most expensive Macallan, pour three fingers, and down it. Smooth. Rich. Almost sweet in its perfection. I open the mini freezer under the counter, add ice to the glass, and refill it. Then, with the bottle in hand, I return to the balcony, where I find Faith standing at the railing again. Seeming to hear, or sense my approach, she rotates and meets me back on the couch, her tears gone. Her hands steady. She sits down and I go down on a knee in front of her. “Drink this,” I order, offering her the glass.
“I’d argue,” she says, accepting the whiskey, “but I never allow myself to be numb like I was a bit ago, and as it turns out, I’d like to feel that again.” She sips, testing it, and then downs it before handing me back the glass. “Thank you. That was smooth and, I suspect, quite expensive.”
“You’re worth it, and I vote we sit here and down the entire bottle.” I move to the cushion beside her and refill the glass, down the contents and refill it again, offering it to Faith. “I know you didn’t kill her.”
She studies me a moment, takes the glass, downs the whiskey, and sets the glass on the table. “Do you? Because I don’t. I think that’s why your reaction got to me so much.”
“I told you—”
“It’s okay,” she says, grabbing my leg. “In fact, I should apologize, because when you walked into the house, I realized something. I set you up. Not on purpose. But come on, Nick. I dropped the ‘I killed her’ bomb.”
I’m stunned that she’s self-analytical enough to come to the same conclusion I did, and in the same timeline I did. “Why, Faith?”
“Some part of me feels so much guilt that I wanted you to come at me. I wanted you to punish me.” She gives an uncomfortable laugh. “I think I’m pretty fucked up and you should run, Nick.” She tries to pull her hand from my leg.
I cover it with mine, holding it in place. “I’m not going anywhere, Faith, and I’m not letting you either. Not without a fight. One hell of a fight. And as for being fucked up. We’re all fucked up. Anyone who claims they aren’t is lying.”
“You don’t seem fucked up at all. You’re successful. You know yourself. You seem to know me.”
“I do know you, but obviously you don’t quite know me, yet, and I need to fix that. Starting with your current misconception of me. Of course, I’m fucked up. My mother left my father for slutting around and then died and left me with that man. I blame her. I blame him. I blame me. I fear the fuck out of being just like that man.”
“You aren’t.”