The Closer You Come

“No,” he said, careful to moderate his tone. “I haven’t seen or spoken to her.”


Her shoulders slumped with defeat and, if he wasn’t mistaken, a big dose of fatigue. She worked far too much, couldn’t get much more than a few hours of sleep each night. While he admired her fortitude, rarely having seen anyone push themselves so fervently, he knew she couldn’t go on like that forever. Soon she would break down. If she hadn’t already.

“Are you okay?” he asked. “How are your ears?”

Chin trembling, she said, “They’re better. I can hear.” A second later, the trembling stopped, and determination darkened her eyes. Stubborn side engaged. “By the way, I never heard from you, so I didn’t know which of us needed to deduct the money. I just took a guess at how much I owed you.” She stretched out her hand. In her palm rested three crisp one hundred dollar bills.

He jolted back as if she’d just offered nuclear waste, wondering how long she’d had to save for so little. “Hell, no. That’s way too much.” A single penny was too much, he decided. “The lamp was ugly, so you did me a favor. I should probably pay you for getting rid of it. And the nightstand has a crack, nothing more. It’s no big deal.”

Brook Lynn breathed a sigh of relief as she stuffed the money in her purse. “If you’re sure...”

“I am. Now, how much do I owe you for the implants?” he asked.

She shifted from one foot to the other. “They...weren’t cheap.”

“That’s fine.”

“Like, over two thousand dollars not cheap.” She whispered the amount, as if scandalized. “If your furniture cost something similar—”

“No.” He didn’t blink. “I’ll bring the money to Rhinestone Cowgirl tomorrow. The full amount.”

She looked taken aback. “You know where I work? Never mind. Everyone knows. I don’t...I can’t accept so much...I—”

“Just say thank you and save us the trouble of arguing. You won’t win.”

She rubbed at her temples in a clear effort to ward off an oncoming ache. “Thank you.”

Better.

“And now,” she said, squaring her shoulders. “I guess there’s nothing more for us to say.”

He hated himself and his weakness for her, but he wasn’t ready to be parted from her, even though he knew better than to try to hang on to anything. The longer you had it, the more it hurt when it was taken away—and it was always taken away. “I’ll walk you out.”

“No need,” she said, turning on her heels. “I’ll be okay on my own.”

“Okay or not, I’m still walking you out.” He would not be like the double-douches at the restaurant and leave her on her own.

She’d definitely gotten the implants fixed. Without reading his lips, she had a ready reply. “If your goal is to make sure I make it to my car, feel free to watch me through the window. You do like it when women walk away from you, do you not?” She disappeared through the doorway.

“Poor Jase. Denied and burned at the same time,” Beck said, shaking his head with mock sympathy.

West grinned. “Would you like some aloe vera for your soul, Jason?”

He flipped both of them off, choosing levity over man-pouting, and raced after Brook Lynn.

The moon seemed to have withered into a small hook, its golden glow hidden by clouds. The air was fragrant with the sweet scent of the magnolias, roses and strawberries growing along the edges of the house, turning what should have been a creepy night into a time for lovers. His hands curled into fists.

Brook Lynn stiffened as he came up alongside her, but said nothing to rebuke him.

“Pepper spray,” he said, noticing she carried her weapon, at least. “That’s good.”

“Oh, this isn’t pepper spray.” She held up a tube of hand sanitizer. “I don’t want to hurt people, just germs.”

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