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A Real Live Hero

Page 17

by Kimberly Van Meter


  Thad nodded and returned to the fishing line. She supposed everything had been said that needed to be said. Her soul felt shredded. She was forcing Trace to do something that went against his nature, and she was looking like the bad guy in her family’s personal drama. Nothing about this trip seemed right. Nothing about her life seemed right. “Do you hate me?” she asked.

  “I could never hate you, Laney. You’re my big sister and I love you, but I think your priorities are really screwed up.”

  She winced. Yeah, she was beginning to realize that. “If I agreed with you, how do you think I should go about changing that?”

  Thad grinned and he looked every bit her younger brother with his boyishly handsome face and his beautiful eyes. “I guess I’d just start changing what you don’t like. But then I’m a simple guy.”

  She laughed and wiped the remaining moisture from her eyes. “That’s some pretty good advice. I guess life doesn’t always have to be so complicated.”

  “Nope. I always say if your socks are wet, don’t spend time complaining. Just change them and go on with your day.”

  Delainey’s smile widened. That’s what she’d been doing. Spending too much time complaining about wet socks. “Since you’re so full of good advice, tell me what I should do about Trace.”

  “Can’t help you there. Besides, I think you already know what you need to do about Trace. You don’t need me to tell you.”

  “How is it that you’re still single?” she asked, cocking her head at him. “The girls here have got to be dumb not to snatch you up, Thad Clarke. You’re a good guy.”

  “Can I put that on my online-dating profile?” he teased, and she rolled her eyes. He chuckled as he returned to the fishing line, checking hooks and reknotting frayed line. “Are you going to help me finish this line, or are you going to take off?” he asked.

  But before she could answer, someone else answered for her.

  “Sorry, kid, but she’s going home with me.”

  Delainey startled, her heart jumping into her throat as Trace appeared from the darkened hallway. “Good God, you scared me.” She hadn’t heard him come in, and she didn’t know how much of the conversation he’d heard, either. But just seeing him standing there, his eyes blazing and brooking no argument, the possession in his voice obvious, she shivered and a smile trembled on her lips. She still hadn’t answered, but when he grabbed her hand and began leading her out of the house, she didn’t fight him.

  “Bye, Thad!” she called out and followed Trace out the door.

  CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR

  TRACE HAD EXPECTED Delainey to give him an earful as soon as they climbed into the truck, but surprisingly she remained silent. He didn’t know whether to be grateful or worried. But as they drove the distance to his house, his truck eating up the miles in the dark, he didn’t care what the outcome—he wasn’t sorry. “You probably ought to just keep your stuff here,” he said gruffly. “Because you and I both know this is where you’re gonna be while you’re here in Alaska.”

  “What about my crew? What am I supposed to say to them?” she asked absently, as if the question was simply a formality because she really didn’t care about the answer. “I thought you said you’re tired of people talking about you and your business. Openly sleeping with me will only make that worse.”

  “When it comes to you, I don’t care. I don’t understand a lot of what is happening between you and me, and I’m not even going to pretend to try. All I know is that if you’re here, you’re sleeping with me.”

  Delainey didn’t argue. The fact that she didn’t put up much of a fuss gave him pause. Frankly, he’d expected a bigger argument from his staunchly independent woman. “Are you feeling okay?” he had to ask. “Because you’re not acting like yourself.”

  Her small smile confirmed that something was up. There was a wistful sadness clinging to her, and he had a feeling it had nothing to do with the little spat at the Rusty Anchor. His demeanor changed. He was no longer consumed with getting her to see things his way. He just wanted to be there for her. “What’s going on? Did Thad say something to upset you?”

  “No. Well, yes.” She seemed to struggle with the words until they finally tumbled out and she was helpless to stop them. “I’ve come to the realization that I’m a terrible person,” she said.

  “What? No, you’re not,” he quickly disagreed, not liking where she was going. “Who told you that?”

  “No one needed to tell me. I came to the realization myself, and I can’t hide from that fact anymore. Thad says I need to get my priorities straight, and he’s right. I value all the wrong things. My father is dying in a hospital room, and I can’t bring myself to sit there next to him. I can’t hold his hand and pretend or forget what a terrible bastard he was when we were growing up. I want to be the bigger person and forgive, but I can’t. Thad can, but I can’t.”

  “It doesn’t make you a terrible person. It makes you an honest person.”

  She shook her head in denial. “No, Trace. Don’t you see? I have put so much value on all of the wrong things that I don’t remember what it feels like to value the things that are true. I have an emptiness inside of me that I’ve been trying to fill with all the wrong things. But here’s the worst part—even knowing this I know I can’t change. I’m driven to succeed because everyone expected me to fail. I have sacrificed so much for that ambition, and what has it yielded me? Not a lot,” she answered before he could try. She barked a short, miserable laugh. “Trace, I would’ve made a terrible wife. You probably would’ve ended up hating me if I’d stayed, and I definitely would’ve hated myself.”

  “You don’t know that. You’re taking a guess from the past about a future that never happened.” He drew a deep breath. He needed to get her off this track because the journey wasn’t going to be a smooth ride if they kept traveling that way. “Let’s table the heavy stuff for the night. We have an early call in the morning.”

  “You’re so sweet. I should’ve seen that a long time ago. I’m sorry.”

  “Stop apologizing. We both made choices that in hindsight might not have been the best. Let’s leave it at that.”

  Delainey followed him into the house, seemingly complacent with his suggestion, but after she brushed her hair and readied for bed, she pulled away from him to roll onto her side.

  “What’s wrong?” he asked, perplexed that she would insist on the distance between them.

  “I need some space.”

  “That’s the last thing you need,” he disagreed on a low growl. “You’re punishing yourself as some kind of needless penance.”

  “Trace, you’ve always been good at everything,” she started. “You don’t know what it’s like to struggle to be good at something so that other people will recognize your skill. I’ve been struggling my whole life for someone to notice me, and sometimes I just feel like giving up. But I won’t. Even if I should.”

  In spite of the fact that she wasn’t facing him, Trace wrapped his arm around her belly and pulled her close. He nuzzled the back of her neck and kissed her softly. He hated the raw pain he heard in her voice. She was fighting demons he couldn’t even imagine. “Tell me what you enjoy about your job. Help me to understand.”

  “Do you really want to know?”

  “I wouldn’t ask if I didn’t.”

  She paused to reflect and then said, “I like being in charge of so many people at once and watching something materialize out of nothing. I like being able to turn on the television and see something I created for the enjoyment of others. Vertical Blind was the last major production that I produced. I liked that it wasn’t a typical reality show but a drama about rock climbers. It was unique and different and exciting. I really thought it was going to shine. But it was expensive to shoot, and in the end the ratings didn’t support the expense. We were axed after only fou
r episodes. It was humiliating. But even though the show didn’t make it, I was proud of the work. It was a good show.”

  “Sounds like something I would enjoy, if I watched television,” he said. “So you had one failed show. It doesn’t mean that you’re no good at what you do. It just means that luck wasn’t on your side.”

  “Logically, I know that, but deep down it just reinforced that belief inside of me that I’m not good enough. That I’m a fraud pretending to be someone when in truth I’m really nobody.”

  He wanted to shake her and make her see that she was somebody to him, but he didn’t because he knew her insecurities had nothing to do with him and never had.

  “Forgive me for playing into the stereotypes, but I would think that a place like Hollywood would reinforce those insecurities no matter how confident a person started off.”

  “You’re right. The town is filled with people looking to tear someone down just so they could stand on top of the fallen on their climb up. I guess I thought I would fit in better because I never really fit in here.”

  Her admission was a shock to him. How could she have felt as if she didn’t belong in her own hometown? “What do you mean?” he asked.

  She shrugged. “I always felt like an outsider here. I could go through the motions, but I didn’t feel as if I had anything in common with the people here. I don’t like fish and I don’t want anything to do with fish. The fact that my father is a fisherman makes me feel as if I’m betraying my roots in some way by admitting that. People who live and die by the sea cannot understand somebody who has no affinity for that lifestyle. I wanted to go somewhere warm, where I could wear my flip-flops year-round, and where when I put my feet in the ocean my toes don’t freeze off. I wanted everything that Alaska wasn’t.”

  “So you found happiness.” He had a hard time saying the words because it hurt to know that there was no way she would ever find happiness with him in Alaska. “Don’t apologize for what brings you joy.”

  “I love that it was eighty degrees on Thanksgiving, and I love that I have more summer clothing in my closet than I ever did in my entire life in Alaska. But I don’t like that I constantly look over my shoulder watching for the knife going into my back, and I hate that the men I meet are soft, posturing fools who have no idea what hard work truly is. Seriously, I stopped dating because if one more man touched me with those soft, manicured hands, I would throw up. Disgusting. I need a man with hands that are tough and roughed up from real work, not from tapping on a computer all day or texting.”

  He shifted and tried not to growl as he said, “I get the point. Can we not talk about the men you’ve been dating? I know I can’t expect you to be celibate, but I’d like to pretend that you are. Otherwise, I will have to start sharing some of my dating experiences, too.”

  “Point taken,” she murmured with a mild shudder.

  “You were saying...” he prompted her, and she rediscovered her original point.

  “I guess all I’m trying to say is, there is a lot about the city that I don’t like, but mostly what I hate is that you’re not there with me.”

  Trace spooned her in stunned silence, his mind stuttering on her statement. Had she just admitted that she missed and needed him? She turned in his arms and he felt her gaze in the darkness. “If I asked you to go to Los Angeles with me, would you?” she asked, the vulnerability in her tone slicing at him.

  He desperately wanted to give her anything she wanted, but he wouldn’t lie to her, not even to spare her feelings. “Los Angeles is no place for me. I would be lost in a place like that,” he said quietly. “My home is here and always has been. This is where I find my joy.”

  And he realized it was true. Alaska, with its savage beauty, was stamped on his soul, and that would never change. “I would give you anything you ask, anything that was in my power to give, but I can’t give you that.”

  “How do you know if you’ve never been there?” she asked, almost desperately. “Wouldn’t you be willing to give it a try for me?”

  He felt like a jerk for denying her, but he could see the writing on the wall. “I need wide-open spaces, and the concrete jungle like Los Angeles would kill me. Or I’d end up killing someone else. We would end up tearing each other apart because I would be so desperate to leave and you would be desperate for me to stay.”

  She didn’t deny his reasoning. Perhaps she knew he was right. But her grip tightened on him and she buried her face against his chest. “So basically we’re back to square one. I won’t stay. You won’t go.”

  He held her close and closed his eyes. Yeah, back to square one. And square one sucked. “At least we have now. Let’s not waste a single moment.” She nodded and he felt something wet drop on his chest. Her tears burned his heart and he wished he could have been the one to give her everything she needed and wanted. God, he’d never truly stopped loving Delainey, and he realized he probably never would.

  CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE

  TRACE HAD JUST finished his second day of shooting when Miranda showed up on the location in her Range Rover. Delainey and Miranda shared a smile as Miranda trudged past the crew toward him, and Trace was happy to see the two former best friends had begun to build a bridge to one another again. But he was curious as to why his sister would show up on location. “What’s up, sis?” he asked, concerned. “Is everything okay?”

  “No. I wish that it were. I know you said that you were going to do it, but I think we’re running out of time and so I did it for you,” she answered gravely, and he knew immediately what she was talking about before she even explained. “I called Social Services and told them about Mom and Dad’s situation. I hope you’re not mad that I jumped the gun, but I’m afraid that if we wait any longer she’s going to die in that house.”

  Trace frowned, not because he was mad at his sister but because she was right. The production had eclipsed his life in more ways than one, and the situation with his parents had slipped his mind. He rubbed at his brows, sighing. “I’m sorry. I should’ve remembered to call. What did you say to them?”

  “The truth. I told them I wanted to file a report of hoarding and illegal marijuana cultivation.”

  Trace stared. “You told them about the pot? Why did you do that? You know Dad can go to jail for this.”

  “I know but they’re going to find out anyway and something has to give. We’ve been trying to get him to quit for years and he refuses. You said yourself that he’s just being selfish. And I feel that we have to do what is right for Mom, seeing as he can’t or won’t.”

  Trace pushed his hand through his hair, frustrated. “I understand that, but I really wish you wouldn’t have mentioned the marijuana. The investigation is going to go from Social Services to police services. There’s a big difference between the two, and I don’t think you realize what that will entail for this family.”

  “Trace, you agreed with me that this had to stop. You were supposed to make the call.” She glanced around, her gaze settling on the film crew before continuing. “Listen, I know that you’re busy with this shoot, but our parents’ lives are at stake.”

  “I’m not disagreeing with you. I just wish you would’ve left the marijuana out of it. We could have let Dad know that they were coming and he could’ve—”

  “Hidden his stash?” Miranda finished for him, growing angry. “Hiding the problem isn’t going to fix it. If he needs to suffer the consequence of growing an illegal garden, then that’s what needs to happen. He has to take some of his own advice. Remember when he used to tell us to face the music when we’d screwed up? Well, it’s time for him to do exactly that.”

  What could he say? Miranda was right, but having the police involved was going to complicate things far more than she realized. “Well, it’s done now,” he said. “Don’t be surprised when we get a call from jail because our father’s been arrested on
felony cultivation charges.”

  “Maybe they’ll just give him a warning,” she said hopefully. “I mean technically he’s a first-time offender. I doubt they throw the book at people who have no prior criminal record.”

  “Are you willing to leverage our father’s future on that hope?”

  “I guess I’ll have to. Anyway, I just wanted to give you a heads-up. Also, I think it’s time for you to call Wade. Frankly, I don’t think he’ll listen to me. He thinks I’m being overly dramatic.”

  “To be fair, so did I.” Trace had had no inkling that things were as bad as they were. It’d been hard to fathom, but now that he’d seen the truth of things, he wasn’t about to let it slide and he knew his older brother would want to know. “But you’re right. If it comes from me he’ll probably take it more seriously.”

  “I’ll try not to be offended as long as you can get him here. I know the next step is going to be a doozy. Having all hands on deck is going to be necessary to make it through.”

  “Wade has his own issues about coming home,” Trace reminded Miranda. Wade had dealt with Simone’s death and their father’s marijuana dealing by leaving the state and never returning. But Trace was confident that his older brother would come back if they really needed him. However, he also knew it wouldn’t be easy. “It’ll be a struggle to get him on the plane, but I’ll do my best.”

  Miranda smiled with relief and he realized he’d been putting too much on her shoulders these past two years. If Wade was guilty of running away from his problems, Trace had been equally at fault. “Listen, I’m sorry I overreacted to the news. You’re right. Dad has to own up to what he’s been doing. We’ve been tiptoeing around the situation for too long. I guess it’s time for a Sinclair intervention.”

  “Oh, goody. Can’t wait. Should I bring popcorn?” Miranda asked wryly. “Hey, on a separate note, how are things going with you and Delainey?”

 

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