The room was silent briefly, the ladies giving Daisy a moment to collect herself before Sheridan chimed in. “She thinks you’re on a gig. Opportunity of a lifetime.”
“She what?”
“Thinks you’re out of town on a gig. When the police arrived at the scene, she was trying to report you missing,” Sheridan said. “I might have told her you were…on a plane…to Europe.”
“To Europe? And she believed you?” Daisy laughed, not sure whether Sheridan was serious or just being Sheridan.
“She didn’t have a choice. You were gone, and I was the only one with answers. I couldn’t have her asking anymore questions or filing a missing person’s report, so I told her we heard your soundcheck earlier in the evening and my client…wanted you on her new album.” Sheridan shrugged like it was no big deal, but Daisy knew it was. Had Sheridan not intervened, Daisy may have been inadvertently exposed.
“I told Cally I stayed behind to tie up loose ends because you didn’t want to leave her in a bad way with a client. Before I could do that and congratulate the senator on a successful fundraiser…all hell broke loose.” The room was silent, all eyes and dropped jaws focused on Sheridan’s elaborate story – then the laughter erupted.
“I can’t believe you came up with that, Sher,” Eva said between bouts of laughter. “That is the most ridiculous story I’ve ever heard.”
“Well, I was on the spot and didn’t know shit about this Cally person or our witness here. I just…said the first thing that came to mind. It was either that or take her out because she was a loose end.”
“Oh my God!” City laughed. “Take her out? Sheridan…there were a hundred other ways to handle that, and stories to match.”
“Screw you guys. I saved the day and the witness. Next time, send me with a damn script.”
“Well, I think you did a good job – even if the story was very…Hollywood,” Daisy joked. “And actually, it wasn’t too farfetched for us. She believed it because it actually suits me. I’m kind of…free spirited that way. Cally knows the more ridiculous the story or opportunity, the more likely it’s me. So, bravo.”
“So, you’re a little bit hippy is what you’re saying,” Lydia inquired, relating to that topic more than any of them knew. Before Declan, she was a bit whimsey herself – rich whimsey.
“Maybe.” Daisy shrugged. “I just don’t have a lot of roots and stuff. I kind of do what I have to do to keep a roof over my head and food on the table for Gibson and me. I guess I just float around a bit and focus on living.”
“Does that include pursuing music?” City asked.
“No. I mean, those opportunities find me. I love to sing, to perform, but I don’t want it to be my job. Then it’s not something I love, but something I have to do. I don’t want it to lose its magic.”
“Wow. That’s really beautiful,” Lydia replied, and the rest of the ladies nodded in agreement. “I’ve heard you. Out on the balcony, I assume. Your voice is incredible. I can tell you love music. It means something to you.”
She smiled. “It does. I sing to my Gran. She’s in a home because I can’t care for her anymore. She says the music is healing, but I think she means healing for me, not her. She knows it’s hard for me. She’s getting up there, ya know? And then Gibson. She’s a hot mess sometimes and the music…it calms her down. Music just…makes everything better.”
“Has Luke heard you sing?” Lydia asked with a grin.
“I don’t think so. He’s usually gone when I’m singing to Gibson. She’s taken to him, and she doesn’t like anyone – especially men,” Daisy replied after considering the question.
“And how about you?” Eva grinned. “Have you taken to him?”
“Ew. Can we not talk about this? He’s my cousin.” The ladies laughed at Sheridan’s complaining and now covered ears.
“Do I think he’s a nice guy? I suppose. He doesn’t really say much. He grunts a lot,” Daisy admitted. “When he’s here, he feeds me, like all the time. Sometimes he’ll sit and watch a movie with me, but that’s about it. He seems nice enough, but when I try talking, he just listens. It’s like talking to myself.”
“He doesn’t take you out at all? Not even to Wired or Scoops downstairs? They’re literally part of this building,” City asked in surprise.
“Nope. Not safe until we get the all clear from Carter, and no one has heard from him yet. So, I’m stuck here – the rooftop and balcony are my only escape.” Daisy laughed.
“Luke…he’s a special guy,” City began. “He’s been through a lot – just since I’ve been part of the family, ya know? He has a big heart, but doesn’t show it, because then it can be broken. If anyone has seen the world in all its darkest moments, it’s Luke.”
“When we were kids, Luke was the outgoing one, the loud one,” Sheridan added. “He started all the football games, the first one to jump in the ocean – he was the doer. He chose a career only he could pursue, and he had what it took, but it changed him.”
“The military?” Daisy asked.
“So much more than the military you and I know. Our boys did a lot with their careers – did the stuff we only see in movies, never on the news. But Luke…he did more than the rest, saw more – lost more,” Sheridan explained, her eyes welling with emotion.
“Lost more?” Daisy’s heart sank, and she wasn’t sure she wanted to know the answer to her own question. “A loved one?”
“Worse. He lost himself,” Sheridan deadpanned. “He doesn’t think he deserves…normal. It’s like he can’t appreciate what he does have because he’s afraid it’ll be taken away because of the things he did. Things he had to do.”
“That’s…awful.” There were no other words to describe what Daisy felt for Luke and what he had been through. “He doesn’t think he deserves it – any of you – his brothers—”
“That about sums it up,” Sheridan cut in.
“Sher’s right,” City confirmed. “You should see him with the kids – pure joy. Then he just…stops. Like something triggers and he remembers who he is. He’d do anything – anything – for the people he loves, and he has.”
“He has,” Daisy repeated, knowing full well where City was going with that statement, but afraid to ask more. She didn’t want to know – didn’t need to know. It didn’t change who he was to her. If anything, it helped her understand him better.
The door opened, and the room went silent as all eyes shifted to Luke. He stood in the entryway, staring back at the women and their sullen expressions.
“Why do I feel like I just walked into a hornet’s nest?” After an awkward silence and no answer, he said, “Okay? Did I do something?”
“Yes,” Sheridan cut in. “You’ve been keeping her locked up in your castle, jerk.”
He looked around the space. “Castle?”
“You know what I mean. She’s not an animal – let her out of her cage,” Sheridan insisted with her own brand of sass.
“I…uh…” Luke was at a loss. He really had walked into a hornet’s nest, given the sharp stares he was getting in support of Sheridan’s outburst. “I’ll see what I can do.”
The ladies stood, quick to clean up any remaining evidence of their afternoon. With a hug for Daisy from each, they said their goodbyes, promised to visit more, and made sure she knew she could visit any of them any time. She appreciated that, and would make good on the offers. She enjoyed each of them immensely and appreciated how supportive they were. Not only of each other, but of her.
As the women filed by Luke, they dropped a kiss on his cheek and gave him a brief hug that made him look entirely too awkward and uncomfortable. When Sheridan reached him, she whispered, “Take the girl out to Wired for a coffee, or at least sit with her on the rooftop. She’s lonely.”
Luke nodded, his eyes drifting to Daisy. He could see the change in her demeanor as each of the ladies left. Maybe she was lonely. He didn’t see how, given how much she talked. Maybe that was the point – she did all the talking.
/>
As the door closed behind him, he made his way to the living room, grabbed the remaining bowls and spoons Daisy couldn’t, and followed her to the kitchen.
“Where’s Gibson?”
“With Dec. She didn’t want to leave Dick,” Luke replied.
“Huh. Those two seem to be pretty fond of each other,” she said, making her way back to the couch.
“Maybe,” Luke replied in single-word Luke fashion.
“Anyone hear from Carter today?”
“Nope.”
“Okay then,” Daisy said, her expression leaving little to the imagination.
“It should be anytime,” Luke offered, earning a puzzled look from Daisy. “That we hear from Carter. We should hear…anytime.”
“Oh. Okay. That’s…great.” Her smile was weak, and one hundred percent forced. He saw the real emotion she was feeling, and it was anything but great. “We got into a lot of sugar this afternoon and I’m feeling a little sluggish. Do you think maybe we can grab a coffee downstairs?”
“Not safe. We need to wait for—”
Daisy interrupted with another one of those false smiles. “Carter. Wait for his call. Got it.”
She picked up a magazine City had left behind and began turning the pages one at a time, slow as can be with her eyes fixed on the balcony, or what was beyond. She was lonely. He was keeping her like a caged animal. It was with good intentions, but nonetheless, it was miserable. Daisy was somewhat of a homebody, she loved her movies, but she wasn’t an introvert, that was certain. She needed out – needed to breathe a little. She needed to be Daisy.
“You know what?” he eventually conceded. “Get your shoes on. We’re grabbing a coffee.”
Finally, there it was: the smile he had been missing. “Shoes are already on. Let’s go.”
“Wired only, though. Got it? Nowhere else. We can’t.”
“I’ll take it!” Grabbing his arm, she pulled him out the door, and somehow, he felt her joy.
When they hit the sidewalk, she couldn’t help but think about what the ladies told her about him. Sure, there was more to the story, but it was his story to tell. That didn’t mean they couldn’t have their own story, though, and be friendly, if not friends, while they were together.
“Do you talk?” she asked.
“What do you mean?”
She giggled. “Do you talk?”
“Of course I do. I’m talking now.” Unimpressed with the line of questioning, he gave her a bewildered look.
“I stand corrected. You talk, you just don’t engage in actual conversation.” She shrugged, nodding her head as if it all made sense. “And grunting – you do lots of that.”
“I don’t grunt,” he defended, annoyed by the accusation.
“You do…” she said, full of calm.
“I…” Luke threw his hands up, realizing he was engaging in juvenile banter a moment away from him tugging her pigtail and her stomping on his foot. He grunted in frustration. How she got such a rise out of him so easily was beyond him – and he dealt with terrorists on a regular basis. Another grunt, and he shook his head.
“Two grunts in a row,” she sing-songed.
They ordered their drinks and were waiting at the pick-up counter when his phone rang. He stepped just out of earshot, keeping his eye on her the entire time he spoke to Liam on the other end. When the drinks were done, he hung up and returned to her side before he walked her back to Watermark.
“That was Liam. Carter called. He’s in DC now. All the usual players are where they’re supposed to be and there’s nothing out of the ordinary between Nashville and DC. A few follows along the way, but he expected that.”
“Follows?”
“He was tailed. A few people from Nashville followed him back to DC, and it doesn’t look like a coincidence. He’s following up with his team out there.”
“Is this a good thing? Because it sounds incredibly frightening.”
Luke heard the trepidation in her voice, and it bothered him that she felt the way she did. It was a serious situation, and scary, he imagined, to her, but this was what they did. “Daisy, he knows what he’s doing. Those guys did exactly what he’d hoped they would do. This is a good thing. We’re a step closer to nailing this thing down.”
“Did he say if…if anyone came here?”
“It was a clean run.”
“Do I get a lesson on how to speak Luke? I have no idea what a run is, or why it’s clean.”
Luke chuckled – something new for him that only she seemed to provoke. “It means you weren’t followed. You were on the run, it was clean. If anyone caught on that there was a witness, it was long after you were gone. This is a good thing.”
“Oh! So, I can go out more? I mean, I get that I have to stay here, but—”
“No.” Luke’s tone was firm, not his usual monotone, but more threatening. “You still don’t leave the building – we don’t know enough yet. And you certainly don’t do it without me or one of my brothers. And even then, it’s for coffee at Wired or the pub only, got it?”
“But nobody followed us.”
“That doesn’t mean they won’t find you.”
“What about exercise?”
“You don’t need to exercise. You’re plenty thin,” he said, looking her up and down. “But there’s a gym in the building.”
He had an answer for everything. “Fresh air. Everyone needs fresh air and a little sunlight. It’s healthy.”
With an eyeroll to beat all eyerolls, he fired back, “Balcony, rooftop, walks to get coffee or the pub. That’s it – no exceptions. You take me or one of my brothers, or you’ll really feel trapped.”
She gasped. “Fine. What about Ronan and Ryker?”
“What about them?”
“Am I allowed out of the house with them, Dad?”
“Dad? Jesus, Daisy. Fine, Ronan and Ryker too, but that’s it. Don’t even ask about Eva, City, or Sheridan. I don’t care how trained they are…it’s a hard no.”
“Because they’re women?”
“Yes! Because they’re women. Is that what you want me to say? They’re women, and we protect them, then we beat our chests and piss all over everything. How about that? Was that better?”
“Chauvinist,” she said under her breath.
“Pest,” he rebutted.
“Pest! You’re impossible. I’m a…a…prisoner, and I didn’t even do anything wrong.”
Luke stopped in the middle of the sidewalk to face her. “You are a prisoner, you’re right.”
She crossed her arms in defiance. “I’ve been kidnapped and held hostage for my own safety. How does that even make sense? Prisoners have rights. They get so many hours of daylight and social time if they behave. This is too much.”
“Right on all counts, but remember, being a prisoner is what’s keeping you alive. Once they figure out you’re out in the world, they will be looking for you, no doubt. And they won’t stop until they find you. They’ll want to kill you like all the witnesses before you. Keep that in mind the next time you want some fresh air.”
Luke didn’t have anything more to say to that, because she was right. She was a prisoner simply for being in the wrong place at the wrong time. It wasn’t fair, she didn’t deserve it, but it was the hand she was dealt, and they had to make due.
She was stunned, eyes filled with uncontrollable emotion. She knew he was right, and that was the worst part. Plus, these people – these strangers – were putting their own lives on the line to protect her and getting nothing from it. She felt spoiled and selfish, and she was neither of those things. There were no words to fire back, so she waved her white flag.
He felt bad when he saw the emotion building because she didn’t ask for this. It wasn’t like her to behave this way. She was feeling trapped, like a caged animal. Just as Sheridan had said.
Luke turned and started to walk toward Watermark again, and Daisy followed. “What do you want for dinner? I’ll cook.”
Dai
sy shrugged. “What are my options?”
“Whatever you want. Anything,” he replied, hoping the gesture would be seen for what it was.
“I could go for a fat steak and a beer.”
He smiled. Again, something he didn’t do often, unless she was around. It was starting to feel familiar – feel good. Steak and beer, he thought. Dream girl. His own internal admission startled him. What was he thinking? But if he were entirely honest, despite their spat…or many spats, he didn’t hate that she was stuck there. In fact, it had only been a handful of days and he didn’t remember what it had been like without her.
He was in trouble.
6
The days passed quickly, and they fell into a routine as roommates with plenty of highs, but more lows. Daisy talked, Luke grunted. Daisy got frustrated, Luke grunted. Luke cooked dinner, Daisy was in awe. Daisy sang, Luke was in awe. Daisy wanted to go for a walk, Luke said no, Daisy grunted. It wasn’t easy, but it wasn’t hard either, and it just became who they were.
Luke had taken Gibson for a mid-day run to help the anxiety he saw brewing in her – she was licking off patches of fur again. When they returned, and the dog was still having a hard time, Luke was concerned. The run hadn’t helped, and Daisy wasn’t home. She was off visiting one of the ladies in the building, inevitably contributing to the wedding planning.
He liked that the women had all bonded and she at least had that little bit of freedom. It wasn’t leaving the building, but it was something other than being locked up. It also meant she had someone else to talk to because she. Liked. To. Talk. He did not.
As much as Luke hated to interrupt whatever she was up to, Gibson was pacing, whining, and licking. He didn’t know what to do for her. When Gibson was especially worked up, only two things seemed to calm her back down: laying on Luke’s bed…all night, on his pillow, wrapped around his head, and Daisy’s singing.
Brother's Keeper V: Wylie (the complete series BOX SET): NEW RELEASE + Series Box SET included! Page 72