Blood Ties (37 page)

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Authors: J.D. Nixon

BOOK: Blood Ties
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“Yes ma’am. Clear as glass,” he said, his tone bordering on insolent. They exchanged an icy stare, sheer dislike in her eyes. He returned it twice over. She let it go, although I knew that she had made a mental note of his attitude.

She turned back to me. “Tessie, I’ll be in touch. To take your mind off this shitarse day you've had, you go home and get Jake to fuck you so hard that you scream. And not just once. Make him get it up it a couple of times. You won’t even be able to remember your own name afterwards, let alone what you’ve been through. Always works for me.”

It was excellent advice, but I was cringing with embarrassment yet again about how blunt she was being in front of the two men. I didn’t want them thinking about me being intimate with Jake. I didn’t dare look at either of them, sensing that they were both eyeing me speculatively, Bum overtly, the Sarge more discreetly. They were probably wondering how Jake was going to go about such an energetic activity with such an injured woman.

The Inspector spoke again and we all jumped to attention. “Come on, Bum! Move your arse. I want to get back to fucking civilisation before they get the banjos out. A high-maintenance pretty boy like you isn’t going to last long out here in
Survivor
-land surrounded by sex-starved mouth-breathers.”

“We have shops here you know, ma’am,” I reminded her. “We even have a school. It’s hardly
Survivor
territory.”

She snorted with scorn and they jumped into their unmarked and sped off into the night back to Big Town.

“Let’s take my old bomb home,” I said to the Sarge. “Then you can pick up the patrol car.” I stopped suddenly in alarm and he ran into the back of me, grabbing my arms to stop me stumbling forward. “My keys! I don’t know where they are! I dropped them earlier.”

“I have them,” he said, rummaging in his pocket. “I’ll drive.”

“Thanks Sarge.” Painfully slow, I climbed up into the passenger seat and we drove off as well.

“I need a shower after being with the Inspector for so long,” he confessed in a rare moment of openness. “She made everything I did and said seem so sordid, like my life goal was trying to get you into bed with me.” He glanced over, obviously feeling awkward. “I hope you don’t think . . .”

“No, of course not, Sarge.” I reassured. “You’re engaged.” And as if any man would be interested in seducing me, considering my current appearance. “But that’s just her way. She’s very protective of me.”

“I’ve noticed,” he replied dryly.

We drove in silence for a while. “Where did you learn to fight like that?” he asked, screeching to a sudden halt to let a mother duck and her four little ducklings cross the highway. I smiled as best I could as I watched the little family safely reach the shelter of the other side of the road and ignored the Sarge’s question, hoping he’d forget that he’d asked, distracted by the cute scene.

He didn’t and asked me again when we started driving. “Where did you learn to fight so well?”

“From a little emotion called desperation,” I said lightly.

“Bullshit,” he said mildly, shaking his head. “You’re a lot tougher than you pretend to be and a lot more modest than you ought to be.”

“That sounds like confusing big city talk to me. I’m just a simple country girl, trying to do her job and get by.”

He snorted rudely. We drove in silence again for a while. “You don’t like to give in to the Bycrafts, do you?”

“Not normally, but I’m prepared to give in to Jakey now and then. It stops him feeling emasculated.”

He sighed with frustration. “You’re not going to talk to me about any of this seriously, are you?”

“Nope,” I admitted. “I’ve just been grilled for hours and I’m done with being serious for the day. I want some food, some painkillers and some good loving, that’s all, and maybe not even in that order.”

“I don’t have any painkillers on me and I’m too afraid of the Inspector to even dare to offer you good loving, but I can pick up some food if you like.” He threw me his quick smile. “Feel like Chinese takeaway?”

“Takeaway? That doesn’t sound healthy enough for you, Sarge,” I teased wearily.

“Tess, tonight I’d happily eat three deep-fried triple bacon and cheese burgers if it made you feel better.” The expression on his face was too far from light-hearted for me to return, so I busied myself studying my nails. Despite my shower, there was still dried blood embedded under them.

“I’m sure you’d regret eating those, but thanks for the offer anyway. Jakey said he’d make something for me. You’re welcome to join us,” I said into my lap, quietly polite, hoping he’d decline. I’d had enough of him for one day.

“I better not. I don’t think he’s too keen on me at the moment. I just arranged the arrest of four of his relatives.”

Another silence.

“Tess?”

“Hmm?”

“When we arrested Red Bycraft, he had his shirt off.”

I knew what he was going to say and continued to sit silently.

“He has a tattoo.”

“He has a lot of tattoos,” I said with no emotion.

“This one’s on his stomach. It’s unbelievably obscene. A man who is the spitting image of Bycraft himself seems to be raping a woman while he stabs her in the chest with one hand and strangles her with the other.”

I glanced out the window at the darkness and crossed my arms defensively. I saw my own face reflected back at me in the glass. I stared at myself sadly.

“Tess, the woman looks exactly like you.” In the window reflection his eyes were on me, eyebrows furrowed. “And she’s smiling while he does it.” He shook his head in disgust. “
Smiling
, for God’s sake!”

I didn’t speak for a while. “I know,” I sighed. “He’s taunted me with it enough times.”

“That kind of obsession is incredibly disturbing.”

A humourless laugh erupted from me. “Don’t worry, Sarge. You’ll be safe. He’s not interested in you.”

And that was the last thing I said to him before he pulled into my driveway. I jumped out as soon as possible. He walked over to the patrol car and drove off while I made my slow way up the stairs. He honked the horn, but I was too tired to wave back at him.

I went into the lounge room to give Dad, who had returned and was watching the news, a kiss and followed my nose to the kitchen where Jake was cooking. It was an activity for him that involved much swearing, misreading of the recipe and more dirty pots, pans and utensils than could ever possibly be warranted by the end product. But damn, he looked hot while he did it! He was wearing Nana Fuller’s huge frilly flowered apron to protect his white t-shirt from the tomato sauce he was making for the pasta. When I silently entered the kitchen he was leaning down, his elbows on the messy bench, frowning in puzzlement over one of my food-splattered cookbooks, his cute butt sticking out, a smear of tomato paste across his cheek.

I went up behind him, squeezed his butt and then hugged him tightly, moulding my body against his, nuzzling his neck. “I love to see a man cooking in my kitchen. It’s so sexy,” I murmured in his ear.

He turned around smiling and moved to kiss me, then remembered at the last second that he couldn’t. He made a sad face. “I never realised that I’d miss kissing you so much, Tessie. Damn those Bycrafts,” he said with a sad smile as I reached up to wipe the paste off his face. He kissed me on the forehead instead and turned back to his recipe.

It was lucky I arrived when I did because he was about to add a bunch of coriander to the pasta sauce instead of the flat-leaf parsley that the recipe called for, even though I’d told him at least twenty times about the differences between the two herbs. After teasing him mercilessly, I went outside to my herb garden to snip some parsley for him. It was a beautiful night, clear and warm, the jasmine that grew wild up the side of the house redolent with perfume, the sky bright with stars. I had to admit that the marvellous night sky was something I’d missed a lot when I’d moved to the city. You just couldn’t see the stars properly in the glare of the city’s lights.

I took a minute to breathe in the calm darkness, a moment of peace, to remind myself that I was still alive, still fighting. For now at least. I looked up at the stars, identifying the Southern Cross, Alpha and Beta Centauri and bright Venus, the planet of love. I hoped there would be love for me tonight and much love into the future. And I hoped I would be here to experience it. I moved over to my well-tended herb garden and was leaning over the raised garden bed, when a large shape rustled near me. I shrieked in fright, dropping my secateurs and startling my sleeping chickens, who clucked loudly in alarm. The shape pounded away down the side of the house. I was enraged beyond belief.


Piss off, Denny Bycraft!
” I screamed after him as he ran off. “Stop bloody spying on me!”

Jake ran out to see what the matter was and found me standing in the yard, my hands covering my face, trying to control myself, on the verge of tears again, my heart thumping.
I don’t cry
, I reminded myself, my old mantra from since I was a kid.
I don’t cry
.

He clutched me to him. “What’s wrong, baby doll?”

I took a deep breath and gave him a fake watery smile. “I’m fine, Jakey. It was only Denny. He startled me, that’s all.”

“Shit! Of all the nights to come here, he had to pick tonight.” He hugged me tightly. “He only wanted to see for himself that you were okay, you know that.”

“I know, but I’m a bit fragile at the moment. I don’t need any extra adrenaline in my life,” I laughed weakly.

“You don’t need Bycrafts in your life, is what you mean to say, isn’t it?” He sounded as bitter as I’d ever heard him.

I looked up at him. He looked down at me. He was very serious for once. So was I.

“I really need one Bycraft in my life, that’s all. The rest can rot in hell.”

“This is my family we’re talking about, Tessie.”

“This is my life we’re talking about, Jakey.”

We searched each other’s eyes for a long time in the luminosity from the backyard spotlights. Then he sighed and let me go. And once again we avoided the most important and sticky question between us – how could a Bycraft and a Fuller ever possibly have a long-term, loving relationship? I had no doubt at all that we loved each other sincerely and deeply, but it was still an intractable, and maybe even unanswerable, question. There was too much history, too much bad feeling between the two families.

“Which is the parsley again?” he asked lightly, changing the subject. “I thought I’d memorised the herb garden last time you lectured me on where everything was, but there we go – we almost ended up with Asian-flavoured spag bog.”

“That would have been interesting,” I commented, equally light, leaning over to retrieve my secateurs and cut a bunch of parsley for him. “I never know what I’m going to get for dinner when I set you loose in the kitchen.”

“I’m not that bad, babe,” he pouted, his arm around my shoulder, the parsley in his hand, gently but determinedly leading me back to the bright light of the kitchen.

I let myself be led, I let myself be fed, I took the painkillers Jake gave me, I let Dad wash up, I let Jake lead me to the bathroom to brush my teeth and then to my bedroom where he undressed me and undressed himself. We lay on my bed, naked, face-to-face, our eyes locked together. I made him turn the light off because I didn’t want him to look at my damaged face a second longer.

“I want to kiss you, Tessie, but I’m afraid to,” he whispered. “I don’t want to hurt you.” He tenderly kissed my cheek and my earlobe.

“Lower,” I demanded. He kissed my chin and my neck and my shoulders.

“Lower,” I demanded. He kissed my collar blades and my breasts.

“Lower,” I demanded. He kissed my stomach and my bruised hips.

“Lower,” I demanded. He moved down even lower.

“Is this where you want me to kiss you, baby doll?” he asked, gently pushing my bruised thighs apart and flicking out his tongue.

“Oh God! Yes!” I gasped. “Yes, that’s the place, Jakey.”

And I couldn’t think or talk for a while. And when he had finished down there and my body was throbbing with unadulterated satisfaction, he pushed himself inside me and I wasn’t able to think or talk again, heading for another heavenly experience at his expert hands. Afterwards, we slept for a couple of hours in each other’s arms until I woke him up and made him do it to me all over again, my eyes rolling back in my head with complete and absolute pleasure. My bones and my brain felt like jelly when we’d finished.

We slept for the rest of the night, entwined, blissful, exhausted. And the last thought in my mind before I gave into sleep was that Fiona had been right – good loving was the antidote to all the horrible things in the world. I had been afraid I was going to have nightmares about Red Bycraft tonight, but his brother Jake had driven all of them away with his unconditional love, and that seemed very fitting to me. I closed my eyes and fell asleep quickly, safe in his arms.

 

 

 

Chapter 19

 

 

 

When I woke up, feeling fantastic as I always did after a night with Jake, he was already gone. In return for staying the night with me, he’d agreed to pull a double shift today and had to be at the prison ready for the six AM morning shift changeover.
Poor baby
, I thought. I’d worked him hard last night. He’d be shattered by the time he finally got to bed this evening.

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