Untouchable: A Dark Bad Boy Romance

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Untouchable: A Dark Bad Boy Romance Page 45

by Kathryn Thomas


  “You can’t keep her cooped up forever,” Alec said. “You need to loosen the leash.”

  “You know I can’t do that,” Lind retorted. “Not until we get the bastard.”

  “And how long do you think that’s going to take? Another day? Another week? Another month?”

  Lind looked away briefly, embarrassed by his own giant failure. “I don’t know,” he mumbled. He looked back at Alec, his eyes sparkling with crazed determination. “But it’ll happen. We’ll get him.”

  “We will,” Alec confirmed, softening slightly. “But in the meanwhile, you need to let Eve live her life.”

  “I’m not taking any chances,” Lind said stubbornly.

  Alec’s sharp features hardened further. “Very well,” he said, crossing his arms in front of his chest. “But you’ll watch her yourself.”

  Lind stared at him in disbelief. “Excuse me?”

  “The boys are tired. You’re putting all of our resources in this mad 24/7 surveillance plan of yours, and we just can’t have it anymore.”

  “I can’t watch her. I need to be looking for Douglas.”

  “What do you mean, you can’t watch her?” Alec repeated, incredulous. “She’s your girlfriend!”

  Lind glared. “I thought the club would always have each other’s backs, including those of members’ families and loved ones.”

  “And we do,” Alec said, glaring right back. “You can’t accuse anyone of turning his back on you, Lind. But this has to stop. Either drag her over here where she can be safe without hogging the guys, or watch her yourself.”

  “I can’t—”

  “Make it happen,” Alec cut him off sharply. “I don’t care what you have to do, just make it happen. It’s an order.”

  Lind clenched his jaw so tightly that he could almost hear his teeth grind. “Why are you being like this?” He was vaguely aware of just how childish that question sounded, but he couldn’t help it.

  “Why am I being like this? Why are you being like this?” Alec retorted just as maturely. “Do you realize just how obsessive you have gotten since you got that letter? You’re freaking everyone out.”

  Lind could hear the unspoken, “Myself included” in Alec’s words, and it stopped him cold. Alec Moore was not a man to get easily scared, let alone freaked out.

  One always expects it to be some grand happening that will shake them out of their torpor, but the truth is, it’s always the little things that hit us the hardest and deepest. Presently, Alec’s unspoken words were like a truck slamming into Lind. Had he really gone that crazy over his need to protect Eve?

  “When’s the last time you even saw her?” Alec asked quietly. Clearly, he could see that he was finally getting through to his friend, and he was more than ready to jump at the chance.

  Lind shook his head numbly. “I don’t know,” he admitted. “Three days ago, four. I lost track of time.”

  He cringed inwardly as he spoke. In his frantic effort to keep Eve safe, he had not been there for her at all. He had been so consumed with his frenzied, fruitless search that he had forgotten about the woman he was trying to protect. There was something ironic to the whole thing.

  For the past few weeks, Lind had lived in a constant state of hyper alertness, almost of alarm. He didn’t sleep more than a couple of hours per night, and he obsessed over finding the man who was putting everything and everyone he loved in jeopardy. When he did sleep, he was plagued by nightmares. Sometimes it was Margaret Taylor dying, sometimes it was Alec. Sometimes it was Eve. And then he would wake up and do it all over again. His only thoughts were to find Douglas Taylor and to know where and with whom Eve was at all times.

  “Shit,” he whispered softly, blowing out a long breath, the one that he had been holding in all this time.

  He couldn’t even imagine how Eve must be feeling. He must have been scaring her almost as much as the unnamed threat that hung over her head.

  “Yep,” Alec said gently. “You screwed up.”

  Lind shot him a scorching glare, but he found that his friend was smirking, clearly teasing him.

  “Look, I want Eve safe, too. Believe it or not, she’s kind of grown on me,” Alec admitted. “And I want the son of a bitch found and dealt with, too. But this is not the way to do it. You’re exhausted. Even if there was a clue as to where to find Taylor staring you in the face, you would be too worn out to see it. As for the rest of us, you haven’t exactly let us in on your progress. We can’t help you if you don’t let us.”

  Lind cringed some more. It was true. He had taken this on all by himself, feeling like it was his sole responsibility. As usual. He didn’t know what prompted him to not let anybody in—even when it mattered. Shouldn’t he be trusting his brothers enough to let them help him by now?

  “There’s not much progress to speak of,” he admitted. The words and the failure they spoke of tasted bitter on his tongue. “I’ve looked everywhere I could think of.” He pointed at the crossed out spots on the map.

  Alec leaned over and peered down at it. He took a long look, and then he nodded. “Why don’t you let us take it from here, at least for today?” he suggested. “You should go to your girl and get some rest.”

  Lind hesitated.

  “Relax, you’ll still be involved,” Alec said, guessing his thoughts. “Come back bright eyed and bushy tailed tomorrow and we’ll all work on this together. Ok?”

  After another moment’s hesitation, Lind finally nodded. He was surprised to find that it felt good to relinquish control, even if just for one day.

  “It wasn’t your fault, you know,” Alec said after a moment.

  Lind looked at him, puzzled.

  “What happened to Margaret. You couldn’t have stopped it.”

  “I could have found another way,” Lind said.

  Alec shook his head. “We both know it was the best option we had to take down the Italians.”

  “Was it, though?” Lind retorted. “No matter how much I try, I just can’t convince myself of that. There must have been some other way.”

  “I don’t think so,” Alec said. “And even if there was, you can’t keep torturing yourself forever with ‘what if’s.’”

  Easy for you to say, Lind thought bitterly. You weren’t the one to come up with the stupid idea.

  Out loud, he didn’t say anything. It didn’t matter because Alec was not done talking.

  “More importantly,” he said, gently but firmly, “you can’t project your guilt on Eve.”

  Lind blinked, completely thrown. Was that what he had been doing? Was that why he had been so obsessive? Was he projecting all the remorse he still felt over the death of Margaret Taylor onto Eve? He wanted Eve safe, which was only natural. But he supposed Alec was right; the way he had been going at it was not the right way to do it.

  “Do you really think that’s what I’ve been doing?” he asked.

  “Do you really think it isn’t?” Alec retorted.

  Lind exhaled slowly, blowing out the weight of all the realizations he had experienced over the past few minutes. “I guess it is,” he finally admitted. He stared at his friend in wonderment. “When the hell did you get so smart? Have you been taking psychology lessons from Lucas?”

  Alec grinned. “I’ve always been smart; you’ve just always refused to see it.”

  Lind shook his head, but he sobered up quickly. “I love her, you know,” he said after a moment. He tasted the words on his tongue, and he found that he liked the taste. He should tell Eve, he decided. If the words tasted this good when speaking them to someone else, he could imagine how heavenly they would taste if he spoke them to the woman in question. “I’ve never loved anyone the way I love Eve.”

  For a moment he thought Alec might tease him, but he didn’t. There was a time when he would have, but fatherhood and marriage truly had changed Lind’s best friend. He had become a more mature man, one that didn’t necessarily run from emotions anymore—his or anyone else’s.

  �
�I know you do,” Alec said. He hesitated. “Does she?”

  “I don’t know,” Lind admitted.

  “Well, have you told her?”

  “No.”

  “Then maybe you should.”

  Lind nodded. He definitely should.

  “Now get out of here before you pass out.”

  Lind gave his friend a grateful smile. “Thank you,” he said sincerely. He didn’t have to add the, “For everything”; it went without saying. It was unspoken, and Alec heard it as loud and clear as Lind had heard his friend’s unspoken words from earlier.

  Alec nodded gruffly. “Now go,” he mumbled.

  Lind smirked. His friend might be willing to finally embrace emotions and feelings, but that didn’t mean they didn’t still make him uncomfortable. He patted Alec’s back as he walked past him and out of the room where he had spent the better part of his nights over the past few weeks.

  As he left the room and finally allowed himself to relinquish control over his mission, he felt lighter than he had in a while. Yes, all the realizations he had just experienced had packed a punch, but it was a hit that he had needed to take. Despite the sleep deprivation, his head felt clearer than it had been in days. He was finally putting things in the right perspective. The way he had gone about protecting Eve had been the wrong one, but he knew exactly what to do now to make it right again.

  He trusted Alec enough to let him handle the matter of Douglas Taylor for one day. Today, Lind decided, his priority would be Eve. Like it should have been all along.

  CHAPTER FORTY THREE

  Eve’s head was spinning in a way that couldn’t even be compared with how it had spun before—and God knew there had been many occasions for head-reeling over the past few weeks, and especially over the past few days.

  “I love her, you know. I’ve never loved anyone the way I love Eve.”

  She had not meant to eavesdrop, it just happened. After she had called Lind earlier that morning to suggest they have breakfast together and he had brushed her off yet again, Eve decided that she’d had enough. Despite all of her fears, doubts, and insecurities, she had tried to give their relationship one more chance and had been looking to reconnect with him. Lind, however, would resist all of her attempts. It was like hitting a wall over and over again and still trying to push through.

  She didn’t know what it was about his latest refusal, but something finally snapped within Eve and she came to a decision. She wasn’t going to stand for this anymore. She was living like a prisoner in her own house, in her own life, and she was sick and tired of feeling that way.

  Her heart broke even as she drove to the Diamondbacks’ headquarters, with Lucas in the passenger seat. The man knew something was up, but to his credit he didn’t ask any questions and left her alone throughout the whole ride.

  She had felt like a prisoner before, back when she was stuck in a life that simply did not represent her anymore. Back when she was stuck with Alan in the worst of ways. She never thought she could feel this way with Lind, too. She had expected so much more from him, from them. She had been naïve; she knew that now.

  And so it was with a heavy heart that she parked outside of the old warehouse and made her way to the main room where she had been told she would find Lind, pouring over maps and clues, obsessing over finding his archenemy like he had been doing for the past few weeks.

  She had stopped just outside the ajar door to get herself together, gather her thoughts, and summon all of her strength. She had hesitated when she had heard Alec’s voice, hesitant to interrupt the conversation between the two men. And she had stopped cold when the voices drifted back to her clearly enough that she could hear the words.

  “I love her, you know. I’ve never loved anyone the way I love Eve.”

  Eve’s heart began to pound fiercely in her chest.

  “I know you do. Does she?”

  “I don’t know.”

  “Well, have you told her?”

  “No.”

  “Then maybe you should.”

  Eve could not listen anymore. She turned around and marched as quietly and as quickly as possible to the outside of the building. She sat on the bench at one of the tables that had been set outside and breathed in big gulps of fresh air.

  Could she have been imagining it? Could Lind really love her? Could she have been spectacularly wrong about him?

  Lind’s voice as he spoke to Alec had been calmer and gentler than it had been in weeks. He sounded like the Lind that Eve knew and had fallen for.

  Could this be right? Could Lind be coming back to her after all?

  “Eve.”

  Eve looked up sharply. Lind was standing just a few feet away from her. He looked disheveled, dark hair unkempt and blue eyes rimmed with red circles, but he had never looked more handsome in Eve’s eyes. She forced herself to rein in her mounting enthusiasm; after all, she could be wrong about this. After all, Lind could still backtrack.

  “Lucas told me you were here,” he said, walking over to the table. He hesitated. “May I?”

  Just the fact that he had to ask whether he could sit next to her made Eve’s heart break a little all over again.

  She nodded. “Please,” she said, trying not to sound too eager.

  Lind sat down next to her on the bench. Their eyes locked, and Eve knew she could do nothing to hide the hope in hers. She couldn’t help it; she had been waiting for a sign for so long…

  “How are you?” Lind asked. For the first time in what felt like an eternity, he wasn’t just asking. He wasn’t just making conversation. He really wanted to know, and for once he wasn’t too busy to listen to the answer.

  “I’m okay,” Eve said. It wasn’t a lie, per se; in fact, she wasn’t quite sure what she was.

  “Alec is taking over for the day,” Lind said after a moment. “Would you like to go for that breakfast?”

  Eve looked at him in disbelief. There was nothing in the world she wanted more, but she knew she couldn’t go anywhere with him until she knew that she had not dreamt what she had heard.

  “Did you mean it?” she asked.

  Lind frowned in confusion. “Did I mean what?”

  “What you said back in there, to Alec,” Eve said. “I didn’t mean to eavesdrop,” she added quickly. “I just…happened to be there.” It sounded weak to her own ears, but it was the truth. She just hoped Lind wouldn’t think she had been spying on him.

  He didn’t seem to think so, but he did narrow his eyes a fraction in suspicion. “How much did you hear?”

  “Not much,” she admitted. Just the important part. She licked her lips nervously. “You said…” She took a deep breath. Oh God. What if it wasn’t true? “You said you love me,” she finally said. “Did you mean it?”

  Lind stared at her. His eyes looked more impossibly blue than usual. “Of course I meant it,” he said.

  The wave of relief that rushed over Eve then was so intense that for a moment she feared she might pass out from it. “Really?” she asked again.

  “Yes.” Lind reached out and took her hands in his. “I mean it, Eve. I love you. I’m hopelessly in love with you. I know I haven’t exactly proved it lately, but it’s the truth. The fact that you don’t know that only goes to show how much of an ass I’ve been.” He tightened his hold around her fingers. “I’m sorry,” he said sincerely. “I’ve been handling this all wrong. I’m so sorry.”

  By now, Eve’s already galloping heart had kicked up a stampede in her chest.

  “I love you, too,” she said. Because really, what else was there to say?

  “Really?” Lind looked genuinely incredulous.

  “Yes,” Eve said vehemently. “I love you.”

  “Even after everything?”

  “Even after everything,” Eve said. She wasn’t about to argue with the fact that “everything” had been quite hard to swallow, but she was too happy to get into that right now. “I love you,” she repeated, willing the words to sink in for him.
/>   Apparently, they did. Lind tugged on her wrists and pulled her close. He wrapped his arms tightly around her, clutching her to him like he was afraid she would disappear if he let go. It was a legitimate fear; after all, that was just what had almost happened. He cupped her cheek with one hand, his thumb stroking her cheekbone almost reverently. Then, he buried his fingers in the golden locks at the back of her neck and pulled her in for a kiss.

  Eve all but melted in his arms. She clutched the front of his t-shirt with one hand and encircled his waist with the other, pulling him desperately closer.

 

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