Read A Reason to Believe Online
Authors: Diana Copland
The TV show came after the first three tours.
Aidan’s been managing me from the beginning, and
trying to keep me out of trouble.” Kiernan gave
him a small smile.
“What, like you’re some sort of delinquent?”
Matt teased.
Kiernan’s grin ripened. “No, but it’s where the
story about Seattle comes in. I’ve tried really hard
not to be a burden to her. She’s been so amazing
all of this time.” He grimaced self-consciously.
“Problem is I’ve made some bad choices.”
“Bad choices?”
“In men.”
“Ah.”
“Mmm.” Kiernan looked down at the floor. “My
first real boyfriend turned out to be a user. He said
he wanted to help manage the tours, and I
convinced Aidan to let him. He waited until all of
the deposits for the venues had been made to the
bank and then cleaned out the account and
disappeared. The one after him could be perfectly
charming, until he’d had too much to drink. Then
he liked to use me for a punching bag.” He looked
amused, even though Matt couldn’t imagine why.
“Aidan went after him with a steak knife and told
him if he ever came near me again, she’d give him
unanesthetized sex reassignment surgery.”
“Good for her.”
Kiernan shot him quick smile. “The one after
him was a completely decent guy, he just…
couldn’t deal.” He shrugged negligently, but Matt
saw he wasn’t as casual about it as he wanted to
appear.
“Couldn’t deal with…?” he prodded.
“Me. With this thing I do. With what I am, who I
am. It was all just too weird for him.” His eyes
were mild, but Matt could see he’d been hurt.
“And then there was the one in Seattle. He
tipped off the press where I was, what floor I was
staying on, and the fact that he was doing me. He
managed to secure a deal with a tabloid for a five-
figure sum if he could manage to maneuver me in
front of a window and provide their photographer
and his zoom lens compromising photos.” His eyes
shifted to Matt, the expression in them surprisingly
untroubled. “They were very compromising. He
earned his money.”
“The son of a bitch,” Matt muttered, infuriated
and disgusted.
“Yeah. And poor Aidan has been there through
all of it, cleaning up each of my messes, putting me
back together again every time someone has
broken my heart. She says for a medium with
connections on the other side, they tell me
appallingly little about these losers before I sleep
with them. She has a point. She’s also told me
more than once I have no business falling in love,
because I’m lousy at it.” He sent Matt a hooded
look. “So, that’s why Seattle is a sore spot.”
“I still don’t get why she looked at me.” Matt
found Kiernan attractive and was drawn to him in
a way he hadn’t been to anyone in a long time. But
he thought he’d done a pretty good job of hiding it.
There was no mistaking the humor sparkling in
Kiernan’s eyes as they looked at him. “She knows
me. And she’s trying to remind me what’s
happened when I’ve been attracted to people in the
past.”
Matt wasn’t sure what he should say. His pulse
sped even as Kiernan continued to study him
impassively, a small smile curving his full lips.
“Kiernan,” he managed finally. “I…” He
stopped, at a loss.
“Relax, Matt. I didn’t say it to make you
uncomfortable. I’m merely trying to explain why
Aidan looked at you the way she did. It isn’t you.
She knows I like you, and she’s trying to remind
me these things tend to end badly.” He stood and
gave Matt a fond glance. “Don’t let it keep you up.
I won’t jump you in your sleep. Not that I’m not
tempted, mind you. I do find you…” his eyes
moved over Matt’s face, feature by feature, “…
really attractive. And I refuse to apologize for it.
But I can also tell you’ve got stuff you’re dealing
with. I can respect it enough not to press. Too
much.” He winked at Matt before he turned and left
the room.
Chapter Seven
Sheila turned up at his house the next morning,
pink-cheeked and bright-eyed and unwilling to be
put off any longer. She was also clearly delighted
to find Aidan and Kiernan Fitzpatrick there. Matt
couldn’t exactly order her out, though the thought
did cross his mind as he watched her pull off her
gloves and introduce herself to his houseguests.
The prospect of explaining everything to her later
made him tired just thinking about it.
When he entered his kitchen after dressing, the
women were plotting ways of getting the siblings
back into their hotel. Since it looked as if the
airport wouldn’t reopen any time soon, they were
discussing other possible options. Matt knew they
couldn’t stay indefinitely, and he tried to ignore the
ache in the center of his chest at the thought of
never seeing Kiernan again.
“There’s always the train,” Sheila said. “Or the
bus. I’m sure they’re running.”
“The train, I think.” Aidan wrote something
briskly on a note pad. “At least that way we might
be able to get a private berth.”
Kiernan ignored them as he made his way
through a bowl of Frosted Flakes. His hair was a
bird’s nest of cowlicks, his jaw dark with stubble,
and he was still wearing his flannel pajama
bottoms and the irreverent T-shirt. His eyes
widened when he saw Matt and he whistled softly.
“Wow, look at you,” he said with a dimpled
grin.
Matt flushed and checked to make sure his shirt
was tucked in all the way around and his tie was
straight. He’d pulled one of his good suits out of a
dry cleaner bag. If he was about to get canned, he
didn’t want to be dressed like a bum. He’d even
briefly considered his blues, but thought it might be
overkill. Already wearing his shoulder harness
with his service revolver safely strapped in, he set
his badge on the counter, ready to tuck in the
pocket of his jacket when he donned it.
He could feel eyes following him as he poured
himself a cup of coffee.
“A gun and everything,” Kiernan teased. “Very
impressive.”
Matt shot him a quelling look over his shoulder,
but Kiernan didn’t look intimidated.
“You look very nice,” Sheila said. “Very
professional.”
“He looks hot,” Kiernan said, still grinning.
Sheila looked between them with ill-concealed
delight.
Wonderful. Just what he needed, Sheila on a
mission.
Kiernan leaned back in his chair. “But then, I’ve
always had a thing for a man in a suit. The gun is
just icing.”
“I doubt Branson will care much how I look,”
Matt said dryly.
Kiernan’s expression was impish. “Straight,
huh?”
Sheila laughed. “Oh, he’s straight, all right. And
not particularly bright. Matt’s the best he has, and
he’s had him riding a desk for over a year.”
“That’s enough, Sheila.” Matt slipped into his
jacket, dropping his shield into the hidden pocket.
“They’re not interested in my employment woes.”
“I am,” Kiernan countered. “Why’s he had you
riding a desk?”
“It doesn’t matter.” Matt picked up the long
wool overcoat and shoved his arms into the
sleeves, buttoning it closed.
“It matters to me,” Kiernan persisted.
Matt ignored him as he found black leather
gloves in the pocket and pulled them on.
Finally Sheila leaned toward him. “He’s got
issues with how Matt conducts his personal life,”
she whispered.
Matt sent her an ominous look, but she wasn’t
cowed.
“Ah,” Kiernan said. “He’s a homophobic
asshole.”
“Precisely.” Sheila smirked into her cup.
Matt headed toward the door, then hesitated, his
eyes on Kiernan. “I…um. I need to go.”
“I figured.” Kiernan replied.
Matt still didn’t leave. “It’s been—interesting.”
Kiernan laughed, straight white teeth shining.
“Yeah, I’ll bet.”
Matt fidgeted, ignoring Sheila’s amused
expression. “If you get tickets out, and I don’t get
to see you before…” He stopped. “Well, I…it was
nice to meet you.”
Kiernan’s eyes warmed. “You too, Matthew,”
he murmured, and the soft intimacy of his voice
filled Matt with a surge of longing. “You’ve got
my number still. I hope you’ll use it.”
Matt felt his cheeks heat even as he studied the
handsome face. After another few moments, he
excused himself and went out through the door.
During the extremely slow drive to the station,
in spite of his best efforts, Matt’s mind kept going
back to tousled black hair and sleepy eyes. He
didn’t want Kiernan to leave and fervently hoped
the trains wouldn’t be running and the buses would
be stranded in the terminal. He and Aidan could
stay at the house for a few more days. Maybe that
would give him time to figure out what it was he
was feeling. As the traffic crawled, Matt
constructed a detailed fantasy involving the curling
black mass of hair against the white of a cotton
pillowcase, blue eyes half-lidded with arousal
instead of sleep. He wondered what the compact
body might feel like beneath his, a leg riding high
on his bare hip, an answering hardness pressed
against his own.
From the moment Kiernan had admitted he was
attracted to Matt, his own feelings had been
impossible to ignore. He felt things in his body,
longings he hadn’t had since Brad died, and the
voice in his head that had reminded him of his
bereavement was strangely silent.
Sheila would be thrilled to know his libido had
reappeared. She’d been trying to get him to go out
for months.
“You need to meet people,” she’d said one
memorable Friday night. “Go to a club, pick
someone up. Get laid, for Christ’s sakes. Brad
died, Matt. You didn’t.”
At the time, he’d been so angry at her they
hadn’t spoken for two weeks, their longest
estrangement ever. Now he was no longer angry,
but he doubted it would matter. By the time he got
done with Branson, Kiernan would probably be on
his way out of town.
When he arrived he found the detective’s squad
room mostly deserted. Eddie wasn’t at his desk,
Matt noted with a twinge of disappointment. The
only man in the large room glanced up and looked
away pointedly. Dale Conrad had never liked him,
so Matt wasn’t surprised. Matt squared his
shoulders and straightened before walking
resolutely to the back of the room. He was at least
five inches taller than Conrad, and he had no
problem reminding the self-conscious man of it.
He might be queer, but he was a tall queer. He
paused before Branson’s office door and glanced
through the glass. The room was empty, and he
looked at his watch. It was eight-fifty-eight. He
hesitated before turning back.
“Any idea where Branson is?” Matt asked the
top of Conrad’s head. “I’m supposed to meet him
here at nine…”
Conrad shoved back from his desk, his chair
legs dragging loudly on the floor. “It’s not my day
to watch him,” he snarled without looking up. He
scooped up the file he’d been working on and
stalked out of the room.
“You’re a prick, Conrad,” Matt said, loudly
enough that his voice carried through the door after
him. Left alone, he scowled and settled into one of
the chairs outside Branson’s office.
He crossed his ankle over his knee, bouncing his
foot in irritation. Branson had ordered him to
present himself at nine, but apparently felt no need
to adhere to the schedule himself. Matt checked his
watch every few minutes, growing more irritated
as time passed. Nine-fifteen came and went, and
nine-thirty. By quarter to ten he was actively
considering walking out the door when he heard
the elevator slide open out in the hall. Male voices
drifted to him through the quiet building and he
straightened in the chair. His heart sank when
Branson strode purposefully around the corner. He