I call back Murph at the shop and put him in charge of operations indefinitely. Then I order a taxi to pick me up from Daniâs. I have the driver make a stop by my bank, where I withdraw enough cash to live on for a month, then I tell him to get on Pacific Coast Highway and drive north until I say to stop.
âHow you gonna pay, lady?â
I throw a wad of cash onto the passenger seat. He counts it, whistles, and turns the radio to a soft rock station.
I lie down on the back seat of the sedan and stare at the roof, replaying every moment in my memory as the miles fly by, hearing Callumâs words from the day we met in my head as if he were right here whispering them into my ear.
âI have a proposition for you.â
âI want you to marry me.â
âLetâs just say I find you interesting.â
When I let out a frustrated yell, the driver turns up the volume on the stereo, but otherwise ignores me.
Money buys a lot of leeway for bad behavior.
As Iâm sure my lying, manipulative, scoundrel of a husband knows all too well.
Iâm hurt, yes. Iâm in shock, yes. And almost all of me hates him.
But thereâs a part of meâa small, stupid partâthat doesnât.
Iâm going to spend the next month beating that stupid part of me to death.
When the sun is setting, I finally sit up in the back seat and take a look around. âWhere are we?â
The driver says over his shoulder, âMontecito. Rich people heaven. Prince Harry and Meghan Markle live here. Oprah too.â
Okay. Why not?
âIs there a Four Seasons Hotel?â
âYep. Big one.â
âGood. Take me there.â
Iâve never stayed in a five-star hotel in my life, but today I discovered the man I married is an evil mastermind, so Iâm thinking I deserve a nice long vacation.
The first few days are rough. Emotionally rough, that is. Not physically rough, because the hotel is the most beautiful place Iâve stayed in my entire life.
The suite is bright, spacious, and overlooks the ocean. Housekeeping places hand-made chocolates on my pillow with the turn-down service every night. The bed is huge and the linens are decadent, and I think I could spend the rest of my days here, if only to hide.
Itâs not the days that are the worst, however.
Itâs the nights.
I lie wide awake in that giant sumptuous bed staring at the ceiling, wondering why I canât hate Callum. I want to hate him. But I donât.
It makes no sense.
I check in with the shop every day to see whatâs happening there. The answer is always ânothing.â Callum hasnât gone in looking for me. Itâs business as usual.
By the end of the week, Iâve cycled through the five stages of grief about a dozen times and have settled on anger. Denial is useless, bargaining wonât do any good, and acceptance is out of the question. Iâm probably depressed, but am too pissed off to admit it.
I have more questions than answers, which I hate.
Overthinkers are tortured by unanswered questions. Itâs our own personal version of hell.
When I canât stand being cooped up in the suite any longer, I head down to the pool, where I float on my back and stare listlessly at the clouds as the occasional tear leaks from the corner of my eye like some Victorian heiress with a wasting illness sent off to recuperate away from polite society.
On day six, I realize with a jolt of horror that I miss him.
A bottle of rosé consumed poolside takes care of that.
On day seven, I decide that Iâll use the millions my deceitful spouse gave me to open a shelter for stray cats. Iâll live in the back, avoiding humanity, until I grow old and die, whereupon the cats will eat my shriveled corpse, allowing me to exist inside my furry friends for eternity.
On day eight, realizing my state of mind has dangerously deteriorated if Iâm dreaming of being ingested by cats, I call around to local therapists.
Day nine is when I see the man in black.
Iâm sprawled on a lounge chair by the pool. Itâs late in the afternoon. Iâve been drinking Mai Tais since ten oâclock in the morning, so at first, Iâm not sure itâs him because things are a little fuzzy. From my peripheral vision, I spot a figure in black leaning casually against the wall of the cocktail shack, one foot kicked up against it.
My brain sends me a ping of alarm. I ignore it at first, but then do a double-take and look closer.
Cowboy boots, leather jacket, mirrored shades. Check.
Arms folded over a massive chest. Check.
Palpable air of danger. Check.
Itâs interesting how, even standing still, he exudes violence.
I suppose itâs all the Mai Tais that make it interesting rather than terrifying, but Iâll take it.
We stare at each other across the distance until I decide to go see what he wants. Standing, I wrap a towel around my waist. Then I pick up my drink and walk over to him.
He doesnât move a muscle as I approach.
Even with sunglasses on, I can tell how good-looking this guy is. His dark wavy hair brushes his shoulders. His angular jaw is covered in scruff. Tattoos decorate his knuckles. He could be a movie star, except for that aggressive, dangerous energy of his that suggests something more along the lines of contract killer.
Stopping in front of him, I say, âHi.â
His lips curve into a smile. âHullo, lass.â
Heâs Irish? God, thatâs hot. Stop gawking at him, heâs probably here to murder you.
âCould you please take off your sunglasses? Iâd hate to be strangled and thrown off a cliff by a guy wearing sunglasses. It seems so impersonal.â
He chuckles, surprising me. He removes his mirrored aviators and gazes at me with a pair of gorgeous dark eyes that remind me of Callumâs. They have the same piercing sharpness, a way of looking through you as if they can see straight down into your soul.
âHi. Iâm Emery. But you already know that.â
âI do. Pleased to meet you. And Iâm not here to throw you off a cliff, so you can rest easy.â
âAre you the detective Callum has had spying on me?â
He curls his upper lip. âDetective? Bloody hell. Do I look like Iâm on a police payroll?â
âActually, no. You do not. I apologize. I wasnât trying to be insulting.â
He chuckles again. For such a big, intimidating guy, his tendency to do that is pretty disarming.
âHow many of those cocktails have you had, lass?â
âAbout forty-seven, but itâs still early. Who are you?â
âThe nameâs Killian. Killian Black.â
When he doesnât reveal anything more, I say, âThatâs it?â
âThatâs it.â
âI have to apologize again, Killian, but youâre kind of irritating.â
He presses his lips together to keep from laughing out loud. Dark eyes sparkling, he says, âCallum was right. You are a handful.â
âI donât want to talk about him. I want to talk about you. You were at the grand opening of ValUBooks a while back, werenât you? And standing outside again the other day?â
âAye.â
âWhy?â
âTo make sure you were all right, lass.â
I make a face at him and sip my Mai Tai.
Clearly amused by my state of gentle intoxication, he says, âIâve been watching over you every time your manâs had to go away on business for years now.â
âHeâs not my man. And back up. Years?â
âAye.â
Oh fuck. Thatâs right. I saw this guy at my fatherâs funeral.
âWait, what do you mean watching over me?â
The humor fades from his gaze, and his smile dies. âMaking sure youâre safe.â
Despite the heat of the day, a chill washes over my skin. âWhy wouldnât I be safe?â
âBecause life is full of unexpected dangers.â
âVery true, but not an answer to my question.â
âThatâs all the answer youâll get.â
I was wrong. Heâs not kind of irritating, heâs extremely irritating. I demand, âAre you a hitman?â
âNo. But if youâre asking if I kill people, then yes. Sometimes. Not if I can avoid it, but when necessary, itâs part of the job.â
âWhatâs the job?â
A hint of humor creeps back into his eyes. âSaving the world.â
âAh, yes. Saving the world! So youâre one of those good bad guys Callum thinks he is. Or was it a bad good guy? Morally ambiguous? I canât remember, I was traumatized at the time, but my point is thatâ¦â
Something occurs to me that makes me stop and gape at him in horror. âOh God. Does Callum kill people too? Did I marry a murderer?â
âCallum doesnât kill people. Heâs on the administrative side of things. And murderer sounds a bit judgmental, donât you think?â
âNo, I donât think. When you kill people, youâre a murderer. Like, by default.â
âOr maybe youâre a social engineer. Or a vigilante, righting the scales of justice. Or a man who chooses to do unsavory things for the greater good.â
I say flatly, âThatâs called rationalizing.â
Killian shrugs. âEither way. Murderer brings to mind images of a rampaging sociopath with no self-control running around with a chainsaw.â
âUh-huh. And youâre a sociopath with excellent self-control, is that it?â
He grins. âPrecisely.â
I look down at my empty drink and sigh. âIâm gonna need another one of these.â
âListen to me, lass. Iâve got something important to say.â
I peer at him suspiciously.
Gazing straight into my eyes, he says, âCallum loves you.â
âOh, for fuckâs sake, he does not.â
âHe does. Iâve known the man for years, and he absolutely does.â
âNo. He lied to me. He manipulated me. He set me up!â
âHis methods might be unorthodox, butâ¦â Killian shrugs again. âLove is madness.â
For a killer, heâs awfully nonchalant. I might bash this empty glass against his nice straight nose and break it. âI notice youâre wearing a wedding ring. What would your wife do if you did to her what Callum did to me?â
This time when he smiles, it transforms his face. Light beams from it, as if heâs lit from within. âAh, my sweet Juliet,â he says softly. âSheâd probably chop off a body part of little importance. A pinky toe, maybe. But sheâd soon forgive me.â
âSheâd forgive you,â I repeat doubtfully.
âHow could she not?â He makes spokesmodel hands at himself. âIâm me.â
âYou sound exactly like Callum. Smug overload and cockiness galore.â
âThank you.â
âIt wasnât a compliment.â
Still smiling, Killian pushes off the wall, puts his sunglasses back on, and gazes down at me from behind them. Bright sunlight glints off the mirrored lenses, blinding me.
âIâve kept him away for over a week now, lass, to give you some time to think things over, but I canât keep him away any longer. Heâs going bloody mad. I came to let you know that heâll soon be darkening your doorstep.â
The thought of seeing Callum again makes my stomach tighten and my breath catch. âThen Iâm packing up and leaving.â
âThereâs nowhere on earth you could run that I couldnât find you.â
He says that as a matter of fact, without a trace of his former cockiness. For whatever reason, I believe him.
âHave it out with him. Make him beg if it makes you feel better. But donât leave him hanging. Donât punish him with silence. Despite what you think, that man worships you. Youâd do well to give him a chance.â
He turns to go, but then turns back. âOh, and I left you something in your suite. Something that might make your decision about him a little easier.â
I say crossly, âHowâd you get into my suite?â
Ignoring that, he withdraws from a pocket inside his jacket the passport I stole from Callumâs dresser. Waving it at me, he says, âI took this back too. Sticky fingers youâve got there, little book lover. That might come in handy if you decide to join the cause.â
âWhat cause?â
âYour man will tell you if you ask him to.â He turns and ambles away, disappearing around the corner of the cocktail shack.
âHey! Wait!â
I run after him, but stop in my tracks when I round the corner and discover that Killian has vanished into thin air.