Deliverance (The Maverick Defense #1)

Home > Contemporary > Deliverance (The Maverick Defense #1) > Page 3
Deliverance (The Maverick Defense #1) Page 3

by L A Cotton


  “Dad …” I scrubbed a hand over my eyes. “Dad thought it would be better if I stayed away,” I admitted with bitterness. “The one fucking time he came to visit me inside and that’s what he had to say.” I waved my bottle in the air and sank onto the hood of my Camaro. “He knew I was getting out and thought it would be better for everyone if I stayed away.” The same sinking feeling hit me as I remembered him saying those words like it was yesterday.

  Mikey glared at me. “He never said he’d visited you.”

  I shook my head with sadness. “No, I don’t suppose he did.” I took another pull on my bottle and leveled my gaze. “So for once in my fucking life, I did what I was told. By the time I got news about his heart attack, it was too late.”

  “You left me to pick up the pieces while you fucked off God knows where with your buddy,” he barked.

  I reared back. “My buddy, as you put it, was my cellie. He saved me when I got out and has saved my life on more than one occasion. I was hardly living it up.”

  “Yeah, well, with you gone, I was left to look after Mom and Joy.” He jerked back, as though he hadn’t intended to say that. His eyes focused on something behind me.

  “What about Joy?”

  “Nothing,” he muttered unable to meet my glare.

  “No, tell me. I saw her at the diner earlier. Why the fuck is she still here? She was meant to be long gone. She promised me.”

  “You broke her heart, Dawson,” he spat out in distaste. “Ripped her in two. I witnessed the whole thing and picked up the pieces.”

  “I … I thought she had left. She was supposed to leave.”

  “Yeah, well, shit happens and plans change,” he said evasively.

  “Why’s she still working at the diner?”

  Mikey pushed a hand through his hair again, and I knew he was hiding something. “You’ve been gone. A lot’s happened.”

  “Like what?” I demanded and crossed my arms over my chest.

  He shrugged, which pissed me off. “Not my story to tell.”

  Both of us stood and glared at each other, but he didn’t elaborate. He was always a stubborn ass, and I knew I wouldn’t get any more out of him.

  After a minute longer, he asked, “Where have you been anyway?”

  “Working with Lex. Middle East, Africa, all the usual glamorous hotspots.”

  “You’ve changed.”

  No shit. “It would seem everything has,” I drawled, my voice filled with sarcasm.

  “Your size for a start. You’re like a brick shithouse now.” His eyes widened taking me in.

  “There’s not a lot to do for fun inside and, besides, it comes in handy for the line of work we’re in.”

  “Who do you work for?” He looked genuinely interested, and I realized that neither of us knew much about the other anymore. We used to be so close and knew everything about each other. I missed that.

  “Maverick Defense. Lex’s dad owns it, and Lex, his brother, Aidan, and I work for him, along with the rest of the team.”

  “Dangerous?”

  I shrugged because it was all I’d known for a long time. “Dangerous enough.”

  I was immune to it now. We had seen many things I wished we hadn’t, but you soon became blind to it all. The silence stretched on, and we watched each other. Guys didn’t go in for all the bullshit that girls did, talking about their feelings and shit. Mikey got it off his chest and let me know how pissed off he was, and now, it was out in the open, done and dusted. I couldn’t blame him. To him, it would seem as though I had taken off and left him to pick up the pieces. But at the time, I didn’t see any other way. Dad had made it clear that nothing was left for me in Chancing. Including Joy.

  If I’d known what it had done to Joy, would I have stayed away? No fucking way. I would have been back for her as soon as I had been released just like I’d promised. At some point, I needed to see her and find out what the hell happened.

  “Come on, Lex has got the chairs out and I’ve got plenty of beers.” Mikey’s voice broke through my thoughts.

  “Sure.” I pushed off the Camaro with a silent promise I would drive her soon.

  I started to follow Mikey out of the garage when he stopped and turned to me. “Dawson?”

  “Yeah?” I flicked off the lights and started to close the door. His hand rested on my shoulder, and I gave him a quizzical look.

  “I’m glad you came home. I missed you,” he said, his voice thick with emotion.

  My arm wrapped around his shoulder. “Me too,” I admitted and then both of us dropped our arms and pretended nothing had happened, that we hadn’t shared out first brotherly moment in years. And I had missed him. There were too many times when I just wanted to talk to him—about Mom and Dad, about the old days to find out what was going on with him. I didn’t know why whenever I called we never talked about those things. We always stuck to safe topics; it made it easier to pretend I had done the right thing. Maybe I felt guilty because I’d left him behind, or maybe, I really thought he was better off without me in his life.

  Out in the yard, Lex sat in a lawn chair, his long legs stretched out in front of him and a fresh beer resting on his thigh. “About time.” He rolled his eyes with a hint of playfulness. “You’re both playing catch up.”

  Lex leaned forward and took a beer from the cooler, tossing it to Mikey before grabbing another one for me, and we all settled down in the chairs for the night. But my thoughts were still with my ‘67 Camaro SS and the memories it held.

  “What the fuck do you think you’re doing, Joy?”

  My whole body flinched at Donnie’s harsh words, and I turned slowly, my heart weighing heavy in my chest.

  “I didn’t expect to see you this morning.” It came out barely a whisper.

  Angry eyes pinned me to the spot as Donnie raked in my appearance. The fitted black dress hung close to my curves, but it wasn’t sexy. Today wasn’t about keeping up appearances—about appeasing Donnie—it was about Mikey and his family’s loss. About Dawson’s loss.

  Dawson.

  He was back.

  The person I’d forced myself to forget. The guy I’d given my heart to only to have it handed back in an irreparable state. Back in town.

  He’s not supposed to be back.

  Panic rushed up into my throat, and I gulped hard trying my best to sound calm. “It’s Beth Spencer’s funeral today. Mikey’s been a good friend, Don, and the town loved that woman. I want to pay my respects.”

  Donnie tensed, the thick vein throbbing underneath his jaw. He didn’t like my relationship with Mikey, but it was the one thing I’d asked … no, begged him to let me keep. Mikey was my one last tether to reality. To a past my heart refused to wholly forget. Besides, Donnie knew he wasn’t a threat. I think the power-hungry side of him got some sick kick out of me running to a Spencer brother; just not the one I used to dream would come back and save me.

  Another wave of panic crashed over me. Did Donnie know Dawson was back in town? Little went unnoticed by him. Was that why he didn’t want me to attend? I wanted to be there. Beth’s death had hit the town hard. She was one of the last good things about Chancing. A real matriarchal figure. When we had been younger, she’d treated me as one of her own. Been the mother I never had. But if Donnie knew, maybe it was for the best I stayed away.

  “Come here, Joy.” Donnie’s tone was firm but laced with a softness that called to me or, at least, to the darker parts of me.

  I walked into his outstretched arms and let him envelop me into his vise-like grip.

  “I know what day it is, baby. The service is at eleven. I’ve ordered flowers.”

  Hope filled my chest, replacing some of the dread that had rushed in when I’d heard his voice.

  “I’ll be back later. I can stop by and make you feel good, real good,” his voice drawled and the hope splintered into shreds.

  “I want to be there, Donnie. I want to pay my respects.”

  Please let me go and pay my
respects, the unspoken plea lingered on my tongue.

  “Baby.” He tipped my chin up forcing me to look him in the eye. “You don’t want to go and get yourself all worked up. Take the day off. Go visit the girls. Go shopping or paint your nails or something and dress up real sexy for me later. I’ll stop by and you can make me feel good. I’ll bring something with me. Would that make you happy?”

  He knew.

  Donnie knew Dawson was back in town, and when I thought my life couldn’t get any more screwed up, it just did.

  “Didn’t expect to see you around here today.” Sherri peered over my shoulder and glanced around the street before ushering me inside. The door clicked shut behind us.

  “Donnie thought it would be better if I didn’t go to the funeral.”

  A bitter sound escaped her glossed lips and she said, “And what do you think, darl?”

  I dropped my head, guilt stabbing at my heart. Sherri knew me better than anyone did. The parts I wanted her to know, at least.

  “Of course, I wanted to go. It’s Mikey and Da-” The air rushed from my lungs. It had been happening every time I thought about Dawson being here. Back in Chancing.

  Sherri stopped abruptly and I almost slammed into her back. She turned slowly, sadness gleaming in her eyes. “I know.”

  “What do you mean you know?” I stuttered.

  “Dawson, he’s back. The whole damn town is talking about it.”

  “Shit,” I cursed under my breath.

  Not that I was surprised. Everyone knew everyone else’s business in a place like Chancing.

  “Have you seen him?” Her eyes widened as she waited for me to respond, and slowly, I nodded my head. “He was at Hank’s. I thought I was seeing a mirage.”

  Reaching out for my hand, Sherri wrapped her soft fingers around mine and motioned down the hallway. “Come on, darlin’. It might only be just past ten, but I think we need a drink.”

  I followed behind her with nervous energy tumbling in my stomach. Was this really happening? I knew that it was because I’d seen Dawson with my own eyes. Felt the feelings come rushing back to the surface. Feelings I had no right to feel anymore. And then I’d watched his eyes spark with recognition. Witnessed the confusion as it spread across his tanned face as he pieced together that I worked at Hank’s.

  “Here.” Sherri pressed a glass into my hand. I hadn’t even realized we had reached the kitchen. But since laying eyes on him, I’d been in some kind of daze.

  It really was him.

  “So he came back. You think he came for Beth’s funeral?”

  I swallowed a large mouthful of whiskey and nodded. “What other reason could there be? He left, Sherri, and never looked back. What else could he possibly have come back to Chancing for?”

  Sherri looked at me as if I’d grown a third eye. “Really? You’re pulling this crap with me? He didn’t leave and never look back. He told you to live your life. To get the hell out of Chancing and make something of yourself. He thought you were off dancing your way to success in California. He didn’t just-”

  I slammed the glass down on the counter and heaved a big sigh. “Just stop, okay. He left me, Sherri. He wouldn’t let me visit, he didn’t write, he. Just. Left. I can’t go there. Not now, not after everything. I’m with Donnie now. It’s better this way.”

  Liar.

  Sherri muttered something under her breath just as one of the girls from Shakers came barreling into the room.

  “I fucking hate this gig.”

  “Watch your mouth, Lyla.” Sherri shot me a look that said it was too early to deal with this kind of thing. “What’s happened now?”

  “It’s that fat fuck thinking he can stick his dick wherever the hell he wants.”

  I flinched at her honesty. Even after spending a lot of time around Donnie’s girls, I still wasn’t comfortable with their lifestyles. My lifestyle.

  “Patrick?”

  Lyla drank down a glass of water before turning to face us. “Who else? He’s a pig. Donnie promised me high-end clients, not a fat fuck like him. Shit, sorry Joy, it’s just, ugh, he makes my skin crawl.”

  I didn’t reply. What was there to say? Just because I was with Donnie, it didn’t mean I had any say in what went on here or at Shakers.

  “Patrick pays well. He’s one of Donnie’s most trusted business associates. Don’t do anything stupid, Lyla,” Sherri warned.

  Lyla flicked her long blond hair off one shoulder and exhaled. “You’re right. I just don’t appreciate him thinking he can stick it anywhere. But I guess he’s better than Steve is. Paula said she caught something from him last month.”

  Sherri laughed, but I couldn’t see the funny side. It was sad, really, that Lyla made it all sound so normal.

  “Who else is in?” Sherri asked, helping herself to an apple from the bowl on the counter.

  “Paula, Rachel, and the new girl.” Lyla flashed Sherri a look that I didn’t understand.

  “What’s wrong with the new girl?”

  Lyla dropped her head. Sherri continued to peel the skin off her apple as she said, “She’s young, Joy. Too young. But Donnie brought her here and told me to prepare her. There isn’t much I can do.”

  I straightened off the counter, letting adrenaline drive my words. “How young, Sherri?”

  “Joy, leave it. You know we can’t do anything. I’ll take her under my wing, show her the ropes, protect her as much as I can, but Donnie handpicked her.”

  I bet he did, I thought as acid burned up my esophagus.

  “How young?” I refused to back down, anger coursing through me.

  “Seventeen.”

  “Fuck.”

  “Yeah, that’s what we said.”

  Disgust swiftly replaced my anger. I knew Donnie was sick and twisted. He’d proved that to me on more than one occasion but a seventeen-year-old? That was an all-time new low even for Donnie DeLuca.

  “What the hell is he thinking?”

  “She’s pretty, Joy, a real looker. You know what guys are like. They get off on that just-got-out-of-high-school look. They’ll be lining up for her.”

  “Christ, Sherri. She’s still a child.”

  “Not in this town. Kids grow up too quickly in a place like Chancing. Hell, you know that better than anyone, Joy. Don’t make this a reason to stir shit with Donnie. He won’t back down. You know what he’s like what he sets his sights on something.”

  Oh, I knew—I was living proof.

  And it had destroyed me.

  Slumping back against the counter, I said, “I need another drink.”

  One drink turned into two, and two turned into three. We spent the rest of the day getting high in the living space of the run-down house Sherri operated Donnie’s business from. Girls came and went, and men did the same; it was an endless cycle of filth and desperation. But I was too stoned to care.

  “So.” Sherri handed me the joint, and I took another hit letting the smoke fill my lungs and seep through my veins. “What was it like seeing him again?”

  I exhaled, blowing out rings of smoke. “Shit, Sherri. Did you have to go there again?”

  “What?” she gasped feigning shock.

  “It was too much all at once. The memories, the pain, the guilt, the heartache. Seeing his face again … I’d dreamed of that for so long, but I literally felt ripped open. I couldn’t breathe.” A tear slid down my face.

  “Geez.”

  “Yeah, geez.” I tipped my head back against the wall and closed my eyes. Dawson’s face filled my mind. His intense blue eyes, chiseled jaw, and slightly imperfect nose.

  It had been a little over three years since I last saw Dawson, and although he looked the same, he was different. I couldn’t quite put my finger on it. It was more than just the handful of scars marring his skin, the silvery line running on the underside of his jaw, and the two puckered blemishes in his hairline. Whatever he’d been doing while he had been away had left him with physical marks, but I also felt the chang
e in him—his presence.

  Four years ago, Dawson Spencer would have walked over hot coals for me. For his friends. He was that guy; the dependable, protective guy everyone wanted in their lives. And he was mine.

  But that was then, and this was now.

  And now, I belonged to Donnie DeLuca.

  The morning of the funeral, I woke at five am. What the fuck is up with that? Especially as it had been a late one the night before. Mikey, Lex, and I had sat out back on rickety lawn chairs and drank a shitload of beer. Mikey kept Lex entertained with stories of the trouble we’d gotten into in high school. Most of it had been kids’ stuff, but Mikey and I had endured our fair share of slaps from our mom. Fortunately, for us, she had rarely told our father. Geary Spencer had a tendency to be a bit heavy handed if you were standing too close the moment his temper broke. Unlucky for me, I took after him in that respect. He always said my temper would get me in trouble one day … and he was right. It had on more than one occasion.

  Most of Mikey’s stories involved me, him, and my best friend growing up, Donnie DeLuca. We’d been tight back then; it was always Donnie and me. Mikey was brought in when we needed a third man or a lookout. He was up for anything then. Far as I knew that all ended, like many things, the night I was arrested.

  Rolling over in bed, I sat up, swinging my feet around to land on the floor. My head felt better than it should considering how much we had to drink and how late we’d stayed up. I’m pretty sure Mikey nodded off at one point in his chair, despite how uncomfortable it was.

  Down in the kitchen, I made a slice of toast and started the coffee, anything to keep from thinking about the day ahead. I’d tried not to think about it since I got the terse phone call from Mikey to say I needed to come home. As bad as it was, my first thought after I’d digested the news of Mom’s death was that I would have an excuse to find out how Joy was. Anytime I’d spoken to Mikey—which hadn’t been all that often—I’d been too uncomfortable to ask. Or maybe I didn’t want to hear how she’d left Chancing for college and was doing so much better without me. I had asked him to look out for her, so I figured he would have had some contact with her. Never in a million years did I think she’d still be here. Although I’d hoped I would see her, I didn’t expect to.

 

‹ Prev