“Eve,” he began, lifting his chin at a defensive angle, even now refusing to give so much as an inch. “I did what I thought was best for you and for your future. I did what—”
“And more than that,” Blake cut him off. “He
“Shut up, Blake!” her father yelled.
“Fuck you, Patrick!” Blake shot back. “I’m done being your puppet! I could’ve won Eve all on my own if you’d just given me more time! If you’d kept your nose out of—”
She stopped listening because suddenly it was all too much. Her entire world, everything she’d ever known to be true, every
“G-get me out of h-here, Billy,” she whispered
“Done,” he said. Then to Mac and Delilah he called, “Come on. We’re getting the hell out of this snake pit.”
Snake pit?
Well, not anymore! She was finished with them. Finished with—
She didn’t get to finish the thought because Billy started half carrying/half dragging her in a beeline toward the elevator.
“Wait, Eve, I—” her father jogged over to them and reached for her. On instinct she pressed closer to Billy.
“Retract that hand before I rip it off, fuckwad,” Billy snarled lowly, sounding more like a beast than a man.
Her father snatched his fingers back like the air between them had turned into a gaping shark’s mouth. His eyes, his lying, double-crossing eyes pleaded with her when he said, “Please, Eve, I—”
“But I haven’t finished speaking with my daughter,” her father announced, still trying to play the I’m-rich- and-entitled-and-you-don’t-scare-me card even though everyone in the elevator knew it was all just a show. Because even Eve, naive, sheltered Eve could see the fear in her father’s face.
“I believe you’ve said just about everything that needs sayin’,” Mac informed him. “Now, please be so kind as to step back.”
The words might’ve been phrased as a request, but Mac’s tone was more in the line of do-as-I-say-or-find- yourself-eating-my-fist.
Her father obeyed. But before the silver doors slid shut completely, Blake got in one final, parting shot.
“And if someone’s trying to kill you,” he yelled, “start looking at your father! That business deal he got us involved in? Well, it’s sunk! We’re all bankrupt! And your inheritance and life-insurance policy are probably looking pretty sweet right now!”
Okay, she couldn’t hold it in any longer. She tossed her head back and cried out with her all her fury and betrayal, all her grief and hurt. Billy raked her into his arms, pressing her face against his chest, whispering in her ear, “Shh, sweetheart. I’ve got you. I’ve got you, and nobody’s gonna hurt you again.”
Oh, if only she could believe him…
Chapter Sixteen
Bill stared down into his Styrofoam coffee cup. Its contents reflected his mood. Black. And bitter…
“They still back there?” Mac asked after returning from the vending machine. He ripped open a box of raisins, dumped a handful into his palm and tossed the lot to the back of his mouth before slumping onto the bench beside Bill.
Taking a quick swig from his cup, Bill winced at the acrid taste—as far as he could figure, the only people who liked their bean juice stronger than covert operators were cops—before glancing across the sea of messy desks that made up the bullpen of Chicago’s overworked homicide department. The place looked like an office supply store had thrown up. Post-its were stuck everywhere, white boards were covered with pictures and notes and magnets, and inboxes were overflowing with thick manila file folders. The air smelled like years of desperation, frustration, and sweat…and stale doughnuts.
The late hour meant the floor was nearly deserted, though one detective still sat over in the corner wearing a half-undone tie and wilted suit jacket—apparently that was the standard uniform for Chicago’s murder-cop force—and henpecking his keyboard with the index fingers on each hand. The sharp, intermittent
Or maybe it was the fact that, for the last hour, Eve and Delilah had been MIA, sequestered in separate interrogation rooms, getting grilled over the details of the stick-up and murder at Delilah’s and that nasty scene up in her father’s condo. And his not being able to check on Eve to make sure she wasn’t having a nervous breakdown was making him…well…teeter on the edge of having a nervous breakdown.
“Yeah.” He reached into his hip pocket to pull out his trusty bottle of Pepto. If anything deserved an antacid chaser it was that coffee. “They’re still being questioned.”
And damn, but the thought of Eve having to relive this awful day was enough to have his ulcer doing hat tricks that had nothing to do with the strength and acidity of the police station java. Unscrewing the cap on the bottle of pink medicine, he tossed back a mouthful. The chalky liquid was a welcome relief to his burning stomach. Too bad there wasn’t a similar cure for his blistering thoughts or the hot ache in his heart.
She’d been through so much in less than twelve hours.
Then again…she
So, yeah. There was still that.
Mac interrupted his dismayed musings. “Did you see those photos they were talkin’ about?”
“Yeah.” He blew out a breath. It ruffled the hair that’d fallen over his forehead. “But not until months after they’d been published.” One of his teammates who’d been sick and tired of his hangdog face had shoved one of the articles under his nose in an attempt to snap him out of his funk. Unfortunately, it’d had the opposite effect. Because even though at the time he’d already known he’d lost Eve forever—she’d been married for two weeks by then—seeing her in another man’s arms, seeing her laughing and smiling had ground Bill’s already broken heart