I twist around, my heart thundering in my chest as a hooded figure steps out of the next stall. Smoke billows into the air as he drops a cigarette to the ground and grinds it out on the cement.
The overhead light swings back and forth in the breeze, casting him in shadow every few moments.
âWhoâ?â
But I stop as he slips off the hood of his jacket, and I see Terrance Holcomb turn to face me. Rain has darkened his sweatshirt and glistens across his face as he looks me up and down.
No.
I didnât hear bikes approach. There are no vehicles outside. He arrived undetected.
He snuck in here.
Quickly, I glance around for anyone else and take a step back, toward the exit.
âWe didnât invite you on the property,â I bite out. âNo one wants to see you here.â
âThereâs no one here except you, though,â he says, eerily calm. âYouâre all alone, right?â
Keeping my eyes locked on him, I reach over and pull a rake off the wall that I can see hanging there out of the corner of my eye while slowly reaching behind me to pull my phone out of my back pocket. His eyes are fixed on my weapon.
He chuckles, stepping toward me as I step back. âAt least itâs not a shotgun,â he jokes, and I remember Kaleb and Noah, armed and rushing to the pond to get me away from this guy all those months ago. âItâs cute how they try to protect you.â
âThey donât have to.â I squeeze the long handle. âLeave.â
âWhat if I came just to talk to you?â
âBy lurking in our stable on a dark, rainy night?â
Yeah. This isnât a social visit. He either saw the Van der Bergâs in town without me and seized his opportunity, or heâs been here, waiting for them to leave.
I retreat another step, his boot crawling heel to toe and approaching.
âKaleb is going to be charged over the damage he did to those bikes last November,â he says.
I press the power button on my phone and try to swipe in my security pattern behind my back, listening for the small click over the rain that tells me itâs unlocked.
âAnd yet, youâre here and not the sheriff,â I point out.
I try a few more times, my fingers shaking, but I finally hear the click.
âIâll say it was an accident,â he tells me. âIâll take his side and back him up.â
âWhat makes you think I care?â I tap the screen where I know my phone icon is located.
Terrance grins knowingly. âEveryone saw you two in town today,â he replies. âIt was really a no-brainer. Women love assholes, especially the quiet ones. He was always going to have you, even if just a piece.â
My chest is too heavy to breathe. He tries to close the distance between us, and I retreat, the rain growing heavier outside the door behind me.
âYou sponsor me, and I will not pursue him,â Terrance proposes. âIâll get the sheriff and my team to back off, and you and he can live happily ever after.â
âYou have a sponsor.â
âI had a sponsor,â he retorts. âThey pulled their support when Kaleb destroyed the bikes.â
I cock my head, leveling my eyes on him. Kaleb caused some damage, so he lost his sponsor? Really?
He shrugs, knowing Iâm not buying it. âAnd they got wind of some other things, too,â he admits.
I nod. Yeah. Like his clubhouse, maybe. Or any one of a million shady things Iâm sure heâs up to, because heâs a sleazebag. A reputable business doesnât want him representing them.
Kaleb may be finedâheâll definitely have to pay damagesâbut heâs not getting arrested.
âSo what do you say?â he asks.
I hold his eyes.
He doesnât want to hear no. He came up here when he knew Iâd be alone, because heâs prepared to coerce me.
Will he leave if I lie and agree?
A ring pierces the air, my phone vibrating in my hand, and my heart stops.
He bolts for me, and I throw the rake at him before spinning around and dashing for the house. I splash through puddles, rain pummeling my head, the storm heavier now, and I donât look behind me as I cry out and race through the open bay doors, into the dark shop, and up the steps to the house.
Swinging the door open, I barrel inside and answer the phone, seeing Jakeâs name on the screen.
I hold it up to my ear but see a dark form in the kitchen and stop, dropping my hand.
My lungs empty.
âHello?â I hear my uncle on the other end of the phone.
But I look around, my attention only on the two other men in the kitchen whom I donât know. I canât get a good look at them in the dim light.
âHello?â Jake calls out again.
âGet out!â I shout, more to alert Jake than order the strange guys.
My stomach churns, and I circle the island, pushing pots and pans at them to keep them back. Why would he bring back-up? What is he planning?
I donât want them to know someone is on the phone or theyâll take it. I stick it in my pocket, leaving it connected.
Terrance charges in the same way I came, breathing hard and his blue eyes look at me, almost amused. I stare at the three of them.
âJust think about it,â he presses. âYouâll control the purse strings, meaning youâll control me and my racing. Iâm good for other things, too⦠when you want.â
I shake my head. He thinks thatâs where this is going? Iâll support his endeavors, because Iâm a pathetic, rich little orphan who needs some love?
âIâm not romantic.â He gazes at me, determination on his face. âI wonât be faithful. But Iâll be at your beck and call. You can push me around all you want. Donât you want to be the one on top now?â
A boy toy is what heâs proposing? Someone to use for affection without any romantic hassles. Without getting my heart invested.
In exchange, all I have to do is pay him.
âYouâre thinking about it, arenât you?â he croons.
But I straighten, never more disgusted. I know what perfect feels like. I donât want anything less.
âIâm thinking you remind me of my father.â I grab a knife out of the butcher block. âPeople like you hurt the soul.â
âTiernan de Haasââ
âIâm a Van der Berg,â I growl, correcting him and launching the knife.
He dives out of the way, shielding himself, and I pluck out two more and throw those, as well, the guys stumbling into the living room.
I donât waste time. I run back into the shop, keeping the lights off and the bay doors open.
âGet her!â I hear Holcomb shout.
My heart leaps into my throat, and I go to make a run for it, but think better of it.
If I can just get them out of the houseâ¦
Slipping behind the wardrobe in the shop Iâd painted months ago, I freeze, tucking my arms in tight, so they donât see me.
Footfalls hit the small set of stairs, and I hear shuffling on the cement floor of the shop.
âShe canât go far!â Holcomb shouts. âGet her the fuck back here!â
I see one of the guys dash outside, and I pull myself in tighter, afraid heâll see me.
But then heâs gone, and the lights in the shop turns on, the other two moving around.
What does he think heâs going to accomplish? I guess if he gets what he wants then he wins. If not, I canât prove he did any more than scare me. He hasnât laid a hand on me yet.
I put my palm over my mouth to silence my breathing.
âTake the bikes,â Holcomb grits out. âThey owe us.â
âWhat about her?â
âIâm gonna fuck that bitch, just as soon as I send her crazy-ass boyfriend to jail,â he fires back. âDumb cunt is going on my wall.â
His wall. The scoreboard Jake warned me about. Jesusâ¦
âYou sure thereâs not a warrant out for us?â the guy asks instead. âI saw Jake in town earlier, heading into the station with Kaleb and Noah.â
âThey canât prove that fire was us.â Tools shift, cabinets open, and something slams shut. âAnd if I canât find the fucking keys again, Iâm burning down the stable this time, with the horses inside.â
My hands go cold as realization hits me. Fire.
Keys.
Jake was right. Someone started that fire in the barn. They couldnât make it out with the bikes they intended to steal that night, so they started a fire, instead.
âThis is getting out of hand,â the other guy tells him. âWe almost died trying to get up here and back down last winter. What if that fire had spread? They couldâve gotten killed.â His tone grows harder. âThereâs no help up here if they needed it!â
âI know.â Terrance chuckles. âThatâs the beauty of it.â
I peer around the corner, seeing him searching the worktables and desk. The other guy faces away from me, but I see he has a dark buzz cut and rings on his fingers.
Terrance spins around to look at him, and I dive back behind the armoire, spotting my bow on the tables behind me. Thunder cracks outside, and I grab it, picking it up quietly.
âSo what would you rather do?â Holcomb asks him. âJoin the Army like your dad wants you to, or you wanna race? Iâm getting us our bikes and a new sponsor, and Iâm not leaving without them!â
I stick a few arrows into the back of my jeans and load another one into the bow.
âSheâs writing me a check, and thenâmaybeâIâll leave,â he says. âAfter I turn her inside out, but you donât need to stick around for that part.â
Kaleb, where are you?
The bowstring creaks, and I wince, waiting to see if they noticed the sound.
âOr you can stick around for that part, too, but me first,â he adds.
I blow out a silent breath, pinch the arrow between my fingers, and get ready.
âHere!â he bursts out, and I hear keys jingle. âSee if that works.â
The bikes fire to life, and I realize they found the keys to the finished projects Jake is about to ship off. I donât know where the third guy is, and a trickle of sweat glides down my back.
Just leave. Take the bikes and go. Please.
Just leave.
âWe wonât get away with this,â the other man says.
âWe will,â Terrance retorts. âThey were lost in the fire.â
âWhat fire?â
I hear laughing, and I pause, letting his plan sink in.
Holcomb is going to threaten me when he finds me. I know Kaleb wonât get into any serious trouble for some damage to their property, so his attempt at blackmail failed.
So Plan B is, if I donât comply, write him a check, and give him whatever else he wants from me. Heâs going to take everything. Heâs going to set another fire.
And he has two witnesses with him who will vouch he was anywhere else but here tonight. Theyâll make off with the bikes, and the fire department will never get here in time.
I swallow down the bile.
Jake, Kaleb, and Noah built this place. This is Kalebâs home. The only place he feels good outside of the fishing cabin.
I almost stop and reach into my pocket for my phone again. I could call the police.
But by the time I tried to alert them, Terrance Holcomb would be on me. And by the time they traced the call, heâd be done.
Shooting out from behind the armoire, I pull the bow string, drawing back my arrow, and shoot quick and sure, grazing the other guyâs shoulder.
He flies back, falling to the ground as the arrow stabs the wall behind him, and Terrance darts away, out of the area, stunned.
I round them, making my way for the steps of the house again and load another arrow, aiming for Holcomb and shooting fast.
I just want them to run. Just go!
He flies out of the way, crashing to the ground and shattering my end table into pieces in the process.
They scramble to their feet, the other guy staring at me wide-eyed like he suddenly realizes he made a mistake.
But they donât run. Holcomb charges for me, and I scream.
Fuck!
I dart inside the house and lock the door, racing through the living room and up the stairs. Iâll lock myself in my room, call the police, and if I have to, Iâll escape off the balcony. I wanted to stop him from burning down the place, but not at the risk of him hurting me.
Heâs fucking insane.
I stumble on the stairs, my shin slamming against a step. I cry out, but then a couple of pounds hit the door downstairs, and I hear wood splinter as it flies open, hitting the refrigerator.
I stop breathing.
Climbing to my feet, I dig in my heels and run to the second floor, hearing footfalls on the stairs behind me. I bypass my door and keep going, tearing up Kalebâs stairs and swinging the door closed behind me, locking it. I back away from the door, pulling out another arrow, but I trip over my shoe and fall to the ground, catching myself on my hands.
Scurrying farther away, I nock the arrow, hearing his steps ascend the stairs, and I pull back the bowstring as he kicks open the door.
I fire.
His shoulder jerks backward, and I hop to my feet, plucking the last arrow out of my jeans.
But before I can fit it, I watch as he stumbles, sways, and falls to his knees, the arrow pierced through his right shoulder.
I exhale, my lungs and stomach screaming.
More sounds hit the stairs, and I draw back the last arrow, seeing his friend fill the doorway.
His worried, dark eyes fall from me to Holcomb lying on the floor.
I point the arrow at him, and he straightens, holding out his hands in defense.
âThe Army sounding like a better idea yet?â I growl.
He nods, and I jerk my chin, telling him to beat it.
He casts one more look at his friend and then bolts, his footsteps disappearing down the stairs.
Terrance grunts, his face twisted in pain as he tries to rise, and I see his sweatshirt soaked with blood.
I shoot out my foot, kicking him to the ground. He lands on the end of the arrow sticking out of his back and howls as I point my last one at him.
I need to call the cops, but Iâm not taking my weapon off him yet.
âFuck,â he cries, gritting his teeth.
He rolls onto his hands and knees and then climbs to his feet. I scramble back, about to shoot him again, but he stumbles out of the room and leans into the wall, descending the staircase. I donât fucking care if he gets away, as long as he leaves.
I follow him, watching as he hits the floor again, crawling for the staircase. His hands give out underneath him, and he falls, sliding down the stairs and screaming at the arrow in his shoulder.
âTiernan!â Noah calls from the living room. âTiernan, answer me now!â
âHere!â I call.
Holcomb spills down the rest of the stairs, and I hold the bow and arrow, seeing Kaleb rush for me, taking my face in his hands.
Noah takes the weapon from me, and I hear the front door swing open again.
âJesus Christ,â Jake snaps, taking in the scene.
âStay down,â Noah orders Holcomb, planting his boot on his back and pushing him to the floor. âOr Iâll show you how we handle an injury like that up here without an ambulance.â
Kaleb stares into my eyes, breathing a mile a minute before jerking me in and pressing his lips hard to my forehead.
âAre you okay?â Jake asks, rushing up to us.
I nod, my heart still hammering. âIâm fine.â
I think. I donât know, everything hurts, but I canât tell what exactly.
I pull away, looking at Jake glance between Holcomb and me. âTiernan, Iâm sorry,â he says. âYouâre okay? Really?â
âFine.â
âI didnât think.â His hand goes to his head. âWe shouldnât have left you alone.â
âYou heard the call?â I ask.
âYeah.â He smiles weakly. âWe sped here the whole way.â
I knew theyâd come.
âYouâre sure youâre fine? He didnâtâ¦try anything?â
âHe tried a lot.â I donât know if I want to laugh at how miserably he failed or cry at how relieved I am. âIâm perfectly fine, though.â
Holcomb groans on the floor, and Jake shoots him a scowl, taking out his phone as he walks away. âIâm calling Benson.â
The sheriff. And since they visited him once tonight, and Kaleb is still here, then I guess no oneâs pressing charges like Terrance threatened.
âHey, you didnât miss, at least?â Noah tries to joke.
I feign a laugh. âIt was at close-range.â
He smiles. Then he presses his foot down harder, grinding his boot into Holcombâs back. âMotherfucker,â he taunts. âYou just made my day.â
Yeah. Kaleb might be in the clear, but Holcomb just took his place with the sheriff.
I look up at Kaleb.
But heâs not looking at me anymore.
He stands a few feet away, looking over at my suitcase by the door. His eyes turn to me, suddenly hard.
I swallow through the tightness in my throat.
âWere there others?â Jake asks as he comes back in the room.
It takes a moment to tear my eyes away from Kaleb.
Finally, I nod. âThere were. They scattered. I didnât recognize them. I can describe one of them, though.â
Kaleb walks outside with his father to check the property, and I sit down on the stairs with Noah, resting my head in my hands for minutes and minutes to try to calm down.
After a while, the sheriff arrives, the ambulance not far behind, and they load up Holcomb on the stretcher while Benson takes my statement. I tell them about the fire last winter and Holcombâs confession when he didnât know I was listening, and he tells us they passed his car on the road on the way up here. They guess he parked off somewhere quiet, so he could come onto the property undetected.
Kaleb and Jake come back in, Kaleb staring at me the whole time from across the room like heâs scared and sorry, but his distance is scarier. Why wonât he come over to me?
Heâs so far away all of a sudden. Every once in a while, his eyes go to my suitcase.
The cops and ambulance finally leave, and Noah heads outside to secure the stable and check the animals, while Jake stands on the porch, finishing up with Benson.
I walk into the kitchen, seeing Kaleb sitting in the dark at the table. His elbows rest on his knees as he leans forward, bows his head, and locks his hands together.
He raises his eyes, looking at me.
Reality comes crashing back in.
I donât know what I expected, I guess. Obviously, I didnât ask for Holcomb to show up here, but maybe when Kaleb rushed in, took my face in his hands, and saw what couldâve happened, heâd realize that he wanted a life with me.
That he wanted to live instead of hiding inside himself.
Instead, he saw my suitcase and shut down, because he thinks Iâm like his mother, and that Iâm abandoning him. Heâs being betrayed, but what he doesnât realize is itâs not abandonment when youâre an adult. Itâs called leaving, and he has it in his power to stop me.
Tonight couldâve gone so much worse. Doesnât he realize that?
âThe baby isnât his,â Noah whispers behind me. âDad was able to squeeze the doctor for info. Cici got pregnant last August. Kaleb was at the fishing cabin the entire month. He didnât show up until the beginning of September.â
That first night we met.
âHolcomb?â I guess.
âThatâs what weâre thinking, too.â
Holcomb is the father. He and Cici were together at the bar on my birthday. She was fucking with us today.
I stare at Kaleb, a horrible feeling falling over me instead of relief, though. Heâs not going to fight for me. He wonât write to me. He wonât sign.
Heâll never talk to me.
Heâll never communicate with his children if he has any.
He loves everyone in this house, but he wonât even tell us.
Something crushes my chest, and tears pool as I gaze at him.
âTiernan!â a woman yells outside. âOh, my God!â
I blink.
âIs Tiernan here?â I hear Miraiâs voice as she pummels up the steps on the porch.
Jake says something I canât hear and then she shouts, âGet out of my way!â
Mirai?
Tears stream down my face, and I spin around, seeing her run into the house, lock eyes with me, and drop her handbag, rushing over.
She wraps her arms around me, and I pause a moment and then⦠I crush her to me, holding her so tightly she probably canât breathe.
I hold back the sobs, but I canât hide the tears. I didnât realize Iâd missed her until now. I squeeze her so hard, everything hitting me at once.
âWhat the hell happened?â she asks.
I release her, drying my eyes. âItâs okay. Iâm fine.â
âYouâre not fine,â she shouts, and I can see Jake walking back into the house behind her. âYouâre bleeding!â
She turns my face to inspect my cheek, and I touch it, pulling my hand away to see a little blood. I mustâve scraped it somewhere in all the running.
I hug her again, her long, dark hair soft like designer shampoo can do and smelling like a spa. Memories wash over me.
I pull away to look at her. She looks like I used to. Iâd forgotten how manicured I once was. Her nails, her make-up, her hairâ¦
âHow did you get here?â I ask. âI thought I was picking you up at the airport.â
âI got an earlier connection and rented a car,â she explains, still inspecting my body to make sure Iâm okay. âI had a weird feeling you were going to try to keep me from here or something.â
Very astute, actually.
I look around, seeing Noah and Jake staring, Kaleb still silent in the kitchen.
âLetâs go back outside,â I tell her.
âTiernanâ¦â Jake says as I pass, but I ignore him.
I grab my jacket, Miraiâs handbag, and hand it to her as I take her back out to her car, which still sits running with the headlights on. She mustâve bolted from it when she saw Bensonâs cop car. She mightâve even passed the ambulance on her way up here, too.
âIs that him?â She looks behind us as I take her back down the steps. âYour uncle?â
âJust come on.â I slip on my jacket.
I should introduce her. We should all sit down and talk.
But I canât do this. I need to get my head straight before I decide what she needs to know and doesnât, and too much has happened in the last twelve hours, I havenât even processed it myself. I need to send her off, deal with Kaleb, and then deal with her.
âI need you to go to a motel in town,â I tell her, stopping at the car. âIâll come to you in a bit. Iâll meet you there.â
âWhat?â she blurts out. âNo!â
âPlease?â I plead, gazing into her brown eyes with those warm flecks of amber. âI need to do something here. Please. Donât worry.â
âTiernan,â she starts.
But someone approaches, and I look over, seeing Kaleb open the carâs back door, set my suitcase inside, and close it again.
I freeze.
I watch as he moves to the passengerâs side front door and open it for me, meeting my eyes.
And suddenly, Mirai isnât here. Jake and Noah arenât watching from the porch, and I canât feel the rain thatâs turned lighter now, hitting my head.
Heâs helping me leave.
Heâs telling me to leave.
I stare at him, my eyes burning, but Iâm too shocked to cry. Heâs drawing a line. The line I was afraid to draw earlier when I packed. I didnât want to leave.
I just thought Iâd give us some space.
Or maybe I hoped heâd find me gone and come after me.
Heâs telling me to go, though. He would rather me leave than ever have to say anything to me.
I hold his beautiful green eyes, seeing the emotion behind that he tries to hide, but as I try to search for what to say to solve thisâto save usâthere are no words left.
Maybe words were never really the problem. Actions speak louder, donât they say?
And his are loud and clear.
I climb into the car, as if on auto-pilot, quickly closing the door, my insides knotting and twisting, because the idea of leaving isnât real. This canât be happening.
This isnât happening.
âKaleb,â I hear Noah bark.
Mirai rounds the car, hopping into the driverâs side and putting the car in reverse.
âTiernan!â Jake bellows, and I see him pounding down the steps out of the corner of my eye.
âNo!â Noah yells.
Jake slams his hand on the hood of the car, staring at us through the windshield. âStop!â
âJust go,â I tell her, turning my head away so Kaleb canât see the tears. âPleaseâ¦. please just go.â
She locks the doors, slams on the gas, and I bury my face in my hands until weâre deep, down the dark highway, away from the house, and I canât see his face again.