Oliver took a sip of his coffee. He was running todayâs womenâs self-defense class with Bodie, and he had fifteen minutes before it was due to start.
Christ, he was glad Marble Protection had a commercial-grade coffee machine. He didnât want to think about how much heâd slept over the last week. It wasnât nearly enough.
Fortunately, his body didnât need much, but so many consecutive shit nights were starting to catch up with him.
The door to the kitchen opened and Kye walked in. âYou look like hell.â
Guess he looked how he felt then. âThanks.â
Kye folded his arms, leaning his hip on the kitchen counter. âOkay, give it to me straight. Whatâs going on? Ever since Tori told you about the wine incident, youâve been walking around this place like someone stabbed you in the thigh then ran over your cat.â
A stab wound to his thigh would probably have been less painful. âIâm fine. Iâve called a briefing with the team after my class to go over Toriâs most recent memory.â
Tori had told him about her dream that morning. About her being in the Army. Thinking she was working for a government organization.
She wasnât an enemy. Sheâd been duped.
âGood. I look forward to hearing about it. Now tell me about you.â
Clearly, âfineâ had not cut it. But he didnât feel like talking about himself, dammit.
Oliver studied his friend. Noting his set features and unyielding stance. The guy wasnât going to let this go. He scrubbed a hand over his face. âIâm angry.â
âAt yourself?â
âYes. I almost allowed a woman Iâd just met to drug me. A woman connected to Hylar. Imagine for a second that she had. That sheâd given me that drink with whatever the hell it contained. I would have either been killed or taken.â
The muscles in Kyeâs arms visibly tensed. âWould have been hell for everyone. I donât think Hylar would have killed you though. I think he would have taken you. And we would have found you.â
So much damn confidence in his friendâs voice. âThereâs no guarantee that you would have found me. And who knows what you would have had to do to get me back.â
âWhatever was necessary.â
Exactly. His team would have put themselves in the line of danger for him. After heâd been stupid enough to put himself in a compromised position to begin with.
Kye took a step forward. âYou werenât taken though. Tori didnât give you the drug. Youâre here. Sheâs here. And sheâs trying to help in whatever way she can.â
He knew all that. Didnât ease his frustration.
âWhatâs going on between you and Tori?â
âNothing.â
He wasnât even lying. Heâd barely spoken to the woman all week. Because he knew that if he did, heâd want her again.
Then this morningâs revelation. Suddenly, she wasnât the bad guy. He could have her. And he wanted her, dammit. But something was stopping him.
One of Kyeâs brows lifted. âBecause youâre pushing her away?â
âI canât get over the fact that I made myself so vulnerable.â
That wasnât Toriâs fault. It was entirely his.
Kye placed his hands on Oliverâs shoulders. âForgive yourself.â
Easier said than done.
Kye sighed. âThis new memory, the reason for todayâs meetingâ¦is it bad?â
âShe was in the Army, so Iâm going to get Wyatt to try and find her record.â He paused before adding the next part. âAlso, her best friend, Samantha, was a biomedical engineer. She worked for Hylar, thinking she was working for a government department.â
Kyeâs body went unnaturally still. âBiomedical engineer?â
Yeah, Kye was thinking the same thing Oliver was. That anything combining engineering principles with medicine and science should not be connected to Hylar. It was a recipe for disaster.
âThatâs how Tori got pulled into this,â Oliver continued. âI was a job that Hylar asked her to complete.â
Kye stood silent. A crease between his brows.
Oliver set his coffee on the counter. âI slept with someone connected to our enemy without realizing it. Gave her access to my home. Let her get close enough to hurt me. It just makes me think that maybe Hylarâs been right all along. Maybe letting people in, creating relationships and connections, is a weakness.â
âIs he still avoiding you?â Maya asked.
Tori bent over and touched her toes, feeling the stretch run through her calf muscles. âHeâs barely spoken two words to me. The man has calm and distant down pat.â
He could be the king of the damn club.
Maya pulled her right arm across her body, stretching her shoulder muscles. âHe probably just needs time.â
Tori had told Maya about each new memory sheâd regained. Mayaâs friendship had become something she relied on. Especially now, since she was the only person Tori could talk to.
âMaybe.â Or maybe Oliverâs just waiting for her to regain her full memory so he could have all the information before sending her away.
Tori straightened as Oliver and Bodie entered the space and went to stand in front of the class.
At least now she knew where sheâd learned to fight. It wasnât some underground fighting ring or through some sort of gang activity. Sheâd been in the Army. One small comfort.
The women in the room quieted as Bodie began explaining todayâs lessonâstriking the attacker with the palm. Bodie grabbed one of the rubber mannequins from the side of the room and placed it in front of Oliver.
Oliver demonstrated the correct striking technique. Even though he looked like he put very little behind the hit, the mannequinâs head flew backward, evidence of the strength Oliver possessed.
Tori hadnât seen Oliver fight before, but he looked like heâd be deadly. The man was all power.
When the demonstration was complete, one woman from each pair grabbed a mannequin.
Maya went first. Her strikes were light and a tad uncoordinated. Bodie walked over, positioned himself behind her and guided her hits. Theyâd already explained that it wasnât just the strike itself that was important. It was the footwork and body positioning too. Thatâs where the power came from.
When it was Toriâs turn, she positioned herself in front of the mannequin, shuffled her feet and hit it with her palmâhard. Just like with every other self-defense activity, this one felt familiar. Her body remembered what to do.
She positioned herself again. Foot shuffle, palm strike. She repeated the sequence a few times.
When she saw Oliver heading her way, she tried to ignore the quick acceleration of her heart rate. A week ago, and her heart would have been pounding in excitement at the sight of him coming toward her. Today, she felt more dread than anything else.
Just like Bodie had to Maya, Oliver stood behind her, turning her body. âYou need to be more side on.â
Tori sucked in a deep breath at the feel of his gentle but firm hands on her waist. It was the first time heâd touched her in a week. She felt it everywhere.
Oliver dropped his hands and stepped away.
Foot shuffle, palm strike.
Then his hands were back on her. Twisted her body farther to the side.
Tori attempted the sequence three more times. After each one, Oliver found something to correct.
Finally, she blew out a frustrated breath, dropping her hands. âI donât need your corrections. I know what Iâm doing.â She knew because her movements came to her instinctively.
Oliverâs gaze narrowed. âOkay.â He held his hands up in front of him. âGo.â
She frowned. âYou want me to strike your hands?â The man wasnât even wearing protection.
âYes. And I want you to put a hell of a lot more power into it than what you were just using.â
Irritation washed over Tori. A muscle ticked in her jaw. If he was trying to annoy her, he was succeeding. She positioned herself in front of him.
Foot shuffle, palm strike.
She paused, expecting to see him in some sort of pain. She hadnât hit him lightly.
He was completely fine. âAgain.â
Tori repeated the sequence. Then again. On each hit, Oliver let his hand stretch back a fraction, easing the pressure on her wrist.
He nodded. âNow harder.â
She did as he asked. Striking harder. Throwing more force into it.
It was ten more hits before he nodded, dropping his hands. âGood. Letâs add a left hook punch at the end.â
He wanted her to punch his hand? Still with no protection?
When he held his hands up, Tori quieted the questions in her head. If that was what he wanted, then thatâs what heâd get.
Shuffle, palm strike, punch.
Again, his hands gave way slightly on each contact, easing the impact.
Her breathing started to become labored, but Tori didnât stop.
âHarder, Tori. If you need to hit someone to survive, this isnât gonna cut it.â
She repeated the sequence again, harder. Ignoring her aching shoulders. âYou mean if I need to survive someone like you.â The words were spoken quietly enough that they only reached his ears.
âYes. Someone like me. But not me.â
Shuffle, palm strike, punch.
âYou never know. I might need to protect myself against you.â Her breathing was so labored, she only just got the words out.
The frustration and anger of the last weekâhell, the last monthâwelled in her chest.
âWhy would you need to protect yourself against me?â
She almost wanted to laugh at his question. Either that or cry. âFor the same reason youâve been keeping me at a distance.â Shuffle, palm strike, punch. âI might pose a threat to you and your friends. You might need to eliminate me.â
Sheâd told him about her last memory, hoping he would finally trust her again. Heâd given her no sign that anything had changed.
When Oliver didnât reply, Tori snuck a look in between hits. His brows were drawn together. âDo you think you pose a threat to me or my friends?â
âDoes it matter what I think? If you think Iâm a threat, maybe I am.â
She didnât think she was a threat. And her dream last night had confirmed it. She was just tired, and a week of being ignored was starting to wear on her.
âI donât think youâre a threat, Tori.â Could have fooled her. âIs there anything you havenât told me?â
Shuffle, palm strike, punch. âYes.â She was breathing heavily now. âMy mother died seven months ago. Cancer. And I feel like Iâve lost her all over again.â
Oliverâs hands dropped. Tori didnât realize in time, throwing the last punch and hitting him in the shoulder. His shoulder didnât give way like his hands had. It was like hitting a brick wall.
Tori squeaked at the sudden sharp pang to her wrist. Grabbing her wrist, she bent over. Breathing through the pain.
âDammit.â She felt the heat of Oliver as he moved to her side. âAre you okay?â
She nodded, tears prickling her eyes.
One of Oliverâs arms slid around her waist and the other wrapped behind her legs. Then he swept her off her feet and headed toward the hall. He continued to curse to himself, his body stiff with tension around her.
When they reached the office, he placed her gently on the couch and crouched in front of her. He pulled out his phone. âSage, are you free? Tori hurt her wrist and may need an x-ray.â
Tori shook her head. âI donât need an x-ray. Iâm fine.â
âYes, we can be at the hospital in ten minutes.â
Was the man ignoring her? âYou may be there in ten minutes. I wonât.â
âSage, hang on.â He lowered the phone from his ear. âTori, you need an x-ray.â
âI donât. It doesnât hurt enough to be a fracture or break.â
His eyes narrowed. âItâs safer to get it checked.â
âNo.â
Oliver looked about ready to blow up. âSage, are you able to come here and look at it first? Not sure if you can tell us if an x-ray is needed by doing a physical examâ¦?â There was a brief pause. âSee you soon.â Hanging up, he shoved his phone back into his pocket.
âI can wait here for Sage while you finish the class.â The lesson wasnât even halfway done.
Oliver shook his head. âKye and Eden are around somewhere. Bodie will grab one of them.â Oliver looked like he was going to say something else, then seemed to change his mind. âIâm gonna grab some ice.â
Once he stepped out of the room, Tori studied her wrist. It was slightly swollen and only hurt when she moved it.
Oliver didnât take long. When he returned, he crouched to his haunches in front of her again and pressed an ice pack wrapped in a towel around her wrist.
She expected him to drop her arm. He didnât. He continued to hold it. The heat of his body radiating off him into her.
âSage said it will likely need an x-ray but sheâs willing to look at it first.â
Tori nodded. If a doctor told her she needed one, there really wasnât much she could do.
âTell me about your mom.â
Tori stiffened, his soft words catching her off guard. One of his hands shifted to her leg, closing around her thigh just above the knee.
âThereâs not much to tell. Samantha and I met in the hospital when both our mothers had cancer. Her mother passed away a couple of years ago and my mom died seven months ago.â Tori swallowed the lump in her throat. âToday, Iâve been remembering bits and pieces about her. Her smile. Her voice. It sounds crazy to be grieving her loss when I barely remember her.â
Oliverâs hand tightened a fraction. âYou donât need to remember everything, to remember that you loved and lost.â
She swallowed again. âI remember how important she was to me. The hole in my life once she was gone.â She cast her eyes down, wanting to hide the pain she knew was all over her face.
She felt Oliverâs forehead touch hers. âIâm sorry.â His words were whispered, but they could have been shouted, she heard them so clearly.
Tori blinked back her tears. âThank you.â
Oliver touched his finger to her chin, tilting her head up. When she met his gaze, she saw both empathy and regret. âI wish youâd come to me last night. I know why you didnâtâ¦but I wish you had.â
She nodded, then looked away. She wished she had too.