: Chapter 16
Monster Among the Roses
A day after our matchmaking endeavors, Isobel and I officially claimed the library shelving project complete. I had wanted to call everyone into the room immediately and show it off, even though most of the staff had stopped by periodically to follow our progress, anyway. But Isobel wanted everything cleaned and all the books shelved before our âgrand opening.â
So while I removed the drop cloths and ladders and tools, Isobel dusted and began to vacuum. When it came time to shelve the books, our great debate about how to organize them started.
âThis is where I had the mysteries before,â Isobel started, narrowing her eyes as if daring me to disagree.
I just grinned, ready to play. âBut this is a darker corner. Donât you think mysteries should be in the darkest, most mysterious part of the room? And romances belong by the light, since theyâre, you know, light and full of love with happy endings and stuff.â
She blinked at me as if Iâd lost my mind. âYou have the strangest logic Iâve ever heard.â
With a wink, I chuckled. âBut you like my idea, donât you?â
Scowling a moment longer, she chased it with a huff before she bit her lip and gazed around the room. âOkay, fine. The romances should go by the windows. But the mysteries need to be on the bookshelf covering the hidden door, and the horror novels can go in the darker corner.â
My mouth fell open before I pointed and said, âEven better. Perfect.â
So we got to work, carrying piles of books from the center of the room where some had been stored for the building project to their respective areas. After five minutes, I noticed a pair of eyes peeking around the opening of the library watching us.
I had no idea how long Kit had been there, but our mundane book carrying had clearly fascinated him.
âHi, Kit,â I said good-naturedly. âWhy donât you come help us?â
Isobel paused what she was doing and turned to see the boy. When he realized her attention was on him, he gasped and disappeared.
âThat does it,â I muttered, setting down the stack I was holding and charging after him.
âOh, leave him be,â Isobel called. âSeriously. Shaw! What the heck are you doing?â
I held up a finger. âIâll be right back.â
Then I raced from the room and reached the boy before he could make it to the kitchen. âHey!â I caught him by the back of the shirt, pulling him to a stop.
I winced when he stumbled off balance from the abruptness and almost fell. Shit, I hoped no one had seen that. But when he looked up at me with big, scared eyes, my reason for chasing him down resurfaced.
âWhyâd you run off?â I asked, shaking my head cluelessly.
He peered down the hall as if looking for signs of Isobel before turning back to me and whispering, âShe looked at me.â
âYeah.â I nodded before giving him a wink. âAnd you didnât turn to stone. Thatâs a good sign, isnât it?â
Considering that a moment, he finally gave a slow nod. âYeah. I guess.â
âHere.â I grasped his hand and urged him to follow me back toward the library. âJust meet her. Sheâs actually very nice.â
âButââ
âTrust me, kid,â I told him, looking him straight in the eye. âI wouldnât let anything bad happen to you.â
He gulped audibly before whispering, âYou swear?â
âOn my life.â
After giving me a nod, he followed me willingly but hesitantly back to the library, but as soon as we hit the doorway, he pressed himself to my hip and hugged my leg.
âI found us some more help,â I announced to Isobel, grinning as if a trembling, scared child wasnât clinging to me for dear life.
Isobel sent me a reprimanding glance, silently commanding me to stop torturing the poor child.
I ignored it. âIsobel, this is Kit. Kit, Miss Isobel Nash.â
Kit peeled his face from my thigh and slowly turned his attention to her.
She smiled at him, even though her lips trembled. She had her hair pulled back and face on full display. I knew it took everything she had to keep from hiding her scars from him, but I think we both realized he had to see them openly before he could combat his fear of them.
âHey, Kit,â she said. âAre you really here to help? Because I have some important rare books I need put on this shelf over there, and I need someone special to do it.â
The muscles in Kitâs body relaxed fractionally; I felt every one of them because he seemed to have them all plastered against me. âIâ¦I guess,â he mumbled.
Isobelâs face brightened. She looked more beautiful than Iâd ever seen her before. âGreat,â she said, âthese books are super important to me. Theyâre first edition fairy tales with hand-drawn pictures. Theyâre really good pictures, too.â She began to gather an armful of crumbling old books. âDid you know, in some of the original versions of Cinderella, the wicked stepsisters cut off parts of their feet to fit them into the glass slipper?â
Kit perked to attention and stopped holding my leg entirely. âReally?â
âYep. And they have pictures of it. Itâs really gory and bloody.â
âSweet.â The kid bounded away from me, hurrying toward Isobel as she opened the book on the top of her pile and started to flip through pages.
âHere it is.â She knelt down next to him.
Kitâs eyes grew wide as he stared. âGross,â he cooed in absolute awe.
Isobel glanced up at me and grinned. âAnd, ooh, you should see the picture of the woodcutter cutting open the stomach of the big bad wolf in Little Red Riding Hood.â She flipped a few more pages until they came to the one she was looking for.
âAwesome.â Kit seemed to vibrate with excitement as he asked, âAre there any more?â
âWell.â Isobel bit her lip before her eyes sparkled. âYes. They have one of the witch burning in Hansel and Gretel just after Gretel pushed her into the stove.â
As she began to flip pages, Kit glanced up to study her face. âDid it hurt a lot?â he asked, sympathy clogging his voice. âWhen you burned in the fire?â
Isobel slowly stopped flipping pages. She turned to look at him before admitting, âIt was the worst pain of my life.â
Kit nodded slowly, his eyes large but full of understanding. âDo you think my dad and your mom hurt a lot when they died?â
Shit. I hadnât meant for things to take this turn. Iâd only wanted the boy to stop treating her like a monster. But he was suddenly taking it somewhere I wasnât sure Isobel could handle going. I started toward them, to stop the kid, even drag him away from her if I had to. But Isobel lifted her hand in my direction, asking me to stop as she kept her attention on Kit.
âI think it hurt, yes,â she admitted, her throat working through what had to be a difficult swallow. Then her chin lifted a fraction of an inch. âBut then I think it stopped and was over quickly. For me, the pain lasted for months and months, because I survived. For them, it was only for a few moments. Thatâs the only consolation I can give myself when I think of them. At least their pain stopped.â
The kid watched her a moment longer before his head slowly moved up and down. âI think youâre right,â he agreed.
I drew out a long, relieved breath, glad the moment hadnât ended as awfully as I had feared it might. Just as I set my hand against my heart and finished blowing out a breath, Mrs. Pan appeared in the library.
âKit! There you are. Iâve been looking all over for you, child. Itâs time toâ¦â Her words trailed off when she realized who was sitting next to her son. She blinked once, then twice. Suddenly, she flushed and began to stutter, âIâ¦Iâm so sorry, Miss Nash. Is he bothering you? I canââ
âNo, no,â Isobel rushed to assure her, setting the book aside and pushing to her feet before brushing off her knees. âWe were just looking at pictures in some old fairy tales.â
âTheyâre so cool, Mom. You should see what the wicked stepsisters did to their feet to fit into Cinderellaâs slipper.â
âIâ¦wellâ¦â Mrs. Pan shook her head and flushed before she seemed to remember why sheâd originally come into the room, looking for him. âI will later, darling. For now, we need to get you down to the school and enrolled into third grade.â
âOh man, really, Mom? Already? But summer break just started.â
âIâm afraid so. Then weâll need to go shopping for school supplies and new shoes after that.â
âCan we get ice cream too?â the kid begged, a natural negotiator.
His mother squinted as if she had to think it through before saying, âMaybe.â
To Kit, I guessed that meant absolutely.
âYes!â He fisted the air and started toward his mom, only to jerk to a halt and turn back to Isobel. âThank you for showing me your book, Miss Isobel. Do you think I could come back later to look at more pictures and help you put the books back on the shelves?â
I swear Isobelâs bottom lip trembled before she gave a slow nod and smiled, her eyes glassy and emotional. âIâd like that very much,â she said, her voice so hoarse she nearly whispered the words.
âCool.â Kit leapt forward and gave her a hug.
Mrs. Pan turned slightly to the side so she could discreetly wipe the corner of her eye, while the kid pulled away from Isobel, calling, âSee you later.â Then he remembered to wave my way. âBye, Shaw.â
âSee you later, kid.â
And then he was gone, racing from the room at full bore.
âKit!â his mother cried after him, chasing him into the hall. âDonât run in the house.â
As their pounding footsteps faded from the room, I risked a glance toward the woman standing there, still staring at the doorway as if overcome.
âYou okay?â I asked, edging closer to her.
She blinked, coming out of her daze, and looked up at me. âWhat?â Then she shook her head. âI mean, yes, of course.â A smile bloomed across her face. âDid you see him hug me?â
âI did.â
She touched the side of her waist as if she could still feel the pressure of him squeezing her. âHe smelled like bologna,â she murmured distractedly.
I chuckled, moving even closer to her. âTypical kid smell, I bet.â
She nodded, her hand moving to the side of her arm. âYeah. Probably.â She looked up at me again. âHe didnât seem afraid of me at all by the end there, did he?â
I shook my head. âNot at all.â
Another smile lit her face. âThat was pretty amazing.â
Youâre amazing, I wanted to say.
I stayed next to her, waiting, not sure what to do but remaining nearby in case she neededâ¦well, anything.
âI guess we should get back to shelving these books,â she murmured, sounding as if she were still a little lost.
She knelt and gathered the heaping pile sheâd set down in order to go through the fairy tale books with Kit, and tried to stand with them in her arms.
âHere, let me help.â I reached out, but she shook her head.
âNo, Iâve got it.â And she tried to stand again, but I was still attempting to relieve her of them.
We were both determined, and it kind of caused a collision in which we bumped into each other and lost our footing. The books in her arms went flying, we tripped over another pile sitting nearby, and to the floor we went.
âShit!â I cursed, landing on top of her, face-first, while plastering her back to the floor with a full impression of the woman under me, breasts, hips, thighs, legs. âIâm sorry. Oh God, Iâm so sorry. Shit. Are you okay? Isobel?â
I sat up, the feel of her breasts smashed into my chest following me.
When I looked down at her, she blinked but didnât move or speak. She just stared up at the ceiling and curled her hands up against her collarbone.
I sat next to her and hovered over her. âAre you okay?â I repeated, fearing the worst.
She started to nod, making a stray piece of hair that had come out of her ponytail fall into her face, a few strands tangling with her overlong eyelashes.
Unconsciously, I brushed them from her eyes, asking, âAre you sure? Youâre not talking.â
âIâmââ She gasped when the tips of my fingers traced lightly over her scar while I was sweeping her hair aside.
âWhat?â I asked immediately, starting to freak out. âYou are hurt, arenât you? Where?â
âNo,â she said, shaking her head. âNo, Iâm notâIâm not hurt. Itâs just⦠youâ¦â
âWhat?â I demanded, ready to rush her to a hospital if I had to.
âYou touched my scars,â she breathed. Then she blinked up into my eyes. âNo one ever does that.â
My mouth fell open before I said, âOh, God. Iâm sorry. I didnât realize they were that tender. I didnât mean to hurt you.â
She let out a small laugh and began to sit up. âYou misunderstand. It didnât hurt. I donât feel much of anything there anymore since the nerve endings were damaged. It was justâ¦weird that someone voluntarily touched them.â
I watched her wipe another piece of hair from her face. âA good weird or bad weird?â I finally dared to ask.
She paused then nodded. âA good weird.â
The way she said it made me wonder if it might hurt her feelings when people purposely avoided the scars. Of course, making fun of them and degrading her for them would be upsetting to her, but maybe pretending they werenât there was another form of condemnation in her book? Maybe she just wanted people to accept them.
I began to reach out without thinking, only to stop myself a few inches from her face. âI mean,â I said, shaking my head in apology. âIs it okay if Iâ¦?â The words fell gently from my lips.
Isobel blinked wide surprised eyes before she slowly nodded her head up and down. âO-okay. I guess. If youâre curious.â
I swear, we both held our breaths as I slowly reached out. As soon as my fingers made contact, we released the air in tandem.
âItâs not as bad as it used to be,â she told me. âI had a lot of laser surgery, a compression mask, massage therapy. But itâs the best they could get. My dad spared no expense.â
âDid it hurt?â I asked. âI mean, all the surgeries and work they did.â
She shrugged, which Iâm sure meant yes.
I smiled. For the haughty, pampered snob Iâd taken her for the first day weâd met, Isobel was actually quite modest.
âI have this itching urge to say it really doesnât look that bad, because honestly, you still have all your hair, your ears arenât like hanging half down your neck and the skin isnât really that discolored. Thereâs some bumps but no major craters or anything.â I looked into her wide, watchful eyes. âBut I have a feeling that would be the wrong thing to say, wouldnât it?â
She nodded her head. âIt really would.â
I nodded as well. âThen I wonât say it. But honestly, it doesnât dominate what I see when I look at you. Sometimes, Iâll even forget you have them. And Iâll turn and look at you, and theyâll surprise me all over again.â My grin turned playful. âYou hear that, scars?â I told them. âI know you like to hog all the attention away from my girl here, but I gotta tell you, sheâs still prettier than you are ugly.â And then I leaned in and kissed her cheek, pressing my lips directly against scar tissue.
Damn, she always smelled so good. I think roses were my new aphrodisiac.
But I didnât get long to enjoy this up-close-and-personal experience of her. She gasped again, and jerked against me, reminding me Iâd just freaking put my mouth on her.
Oh, shit. Iâd just kissed Isobel. On the cheek, but stillâ¦
Eyes wide, I pulled back and gaped into her face, realizing she looked as stunned as I felt. âIâ¦Iâm sorry,â I gushed. âI donât know what I was thinking.â Oh, God. What the hell had I just done? âAre you going to tell your dad?â
She stared at me and pressed her hand to the scar as if Iâd just slapped her instead of kissed her. And then I had to wonder if I had. What if some of the shit Iâd just blurted came out all wrong and upset her instead of made her feel better?
Shit, oh, shit, oh, shit. Iâd fucked up epically, hadnât I?
She pushed to her feet to stand above me, still holding her hand to her cheek and staring at me as if Iâd just plunged a knife into her back. Then she murmured, âOf course I wonât tell him,â and she rushed from the room.