Authors: Aliyah Burke
Maverick sat in his hotel room waiting for his pizza to
arrive. He’d gone to the base and worked out for a while before
coming back and centering his focus so he could have a
fighting chance. His parents had called him ten times and he’d
ignored them each and every occasion.
He was stretched out on his bed and the image of
Tempest’s face played before his mind. The look of pain and
abandonment that filled its dark beauty every time she looked
at him killed him. Then he considered how much pride it had
when she looked at her son. Correction,
their
son. Rolling over
onto his belly, he groaned, “I don’t know how to make this
right.”
A knock at his door momentarily snapped him out of his
self-pity. Grabbing money from his wallet, he opened the door
and froze. Standing before him wasn’t the pizza delivery
person. It was someone whom he’d hoped he’d get to know.
Maverick stood there staring into mirror images of his
own dark eyes. On the other side of the door was his son.
Finally face to face with him, Maverick was speechless.
“Are you just going to stare at me or invite me in?” the
young man asked.
Silent, Maverick swung the door open wider in
invitation. His son flowed past him, dressed in a nice suit; and
once he was in the middle of the room, he spun around and put
his eyes on an older version of himself.
“Please, sit down,” Maverick offered as he gestured to a
chair.
The man shook his head, sending his longer hair flying
about his face. “No, I can’t stay. I got your address from where
you shoved it in the door. I just wanted to ask you to your face
if what you told my mom today was true or not.”
“It was. I never knew about you. And if I had I would’ve
been there.” Maverick sat down in another chair and placed his
elbows on his thighs. “Can I ask you something?”
“What?”
“What is your name?”
“My name is Dakota, Dakota Falcon
Burnell
. And you?
What’s yours?”
Maverick felt the sting of tears in his eyes. Blinking them
back, he smiled as he said, “James
Chayton
Lonetree
.”
I can’t
believe she named him after me.
“I know this has to be hard for
you, I can’t imagine what your mother told you about me.”
“Don’t talk bad about my mother.” A sliver of warning
filled his tone.
“I’m sorry; I don’t mean for it to sound like that. I’m not
talking bad about her. I just don’t know what she has told you
about me.” Maverick watched the struggle of a young man
who desperately wanted to know his father and one who felt
betrayed by him.
“All she said was that you never came. She didn’t
slander you, at least not to my face. Do you know what it was
like for her?” he questioned.
“I don’t have any idea,” Maverick admitted.
Fists clenching, Dakota took a step forward before
stopping and visually relaxing his body. “Why did you come
down here?”
“I was told to come here in a vision,” he told his son as
he prepared himself for the scoff of disbelief.
Dakota narrowed his eyes but nodded, he knew about
vision quests. It was a part of his heritage. “Okay. And what
are you going to do now? You’re upsetting my mom by being
here.”
“I’m going to do my damnedest to make up for what
I’ve done to the both of you in the past.” Maverick stood as
there was a knock at the door. He opened it to find the pizza
guy. Taking the food; he paid for it and closed the door behind
him. “Are you sure you don’t want some?”
“Nope. I have a date.” The first smile Maverick had seen
out of Dakota crossed his face, making his eyes sparkle like
black diamonds.
“You have your mother’s smile,” Maverick blurted out
before he could stop himself. As the smile faded, Maverick
insisted. “I mean it. Your mom had that smile when I knew her
back in the town we grew up in. It didn’t appear on her face
often; but when it did, it was like the sun bursting through the
clouds.”
“Did you love her? Is that why you slept with her?”
Dakota asked.
“I don’t know if it was love, but I had strong feelings for
her,” Maverick answered honestly.
“She loved you. I remember her telling me how much in
love with you she was. How up until I was born, she would
imagine that you would come looking for her; you would
sweep her up and take her away to somewhere safe. The way
she talked about you it was like you were a knight in shinning
armor. But when you didn’t come, she felt deserted.” Dakota
straightened the sleeve on his suit.
“I overheard her and Bertha talking one day when I was
a teen about how horrible the birth had been. How she almost
died and wouldn’t be able to have any more children. But she
never held it against me. My mom loved me from the very
beginning. I don’t want her to feel like that again.”
Maverick easily read between the lines. “I don’t want to
hurt her, or you. I hope you can believe that.”
I can’t believe she
had such a hard time of giving birth, and to know she can’t have any
more children and the one she had wasn’t under preferable
circumstances. What did I do to you, Tempest?
“Time will tell,” Dakota said emotionlessly. “I have to
go.”
“Thank you, for coming to see me. I want to get to know
you; can we go out for dinner or something like that?”
Maverick stood, wrote something on a piece of paper, and
walked to the door. “Call me if you make a decision; it’s my
cell and I have it on 24/7.”
“We’ll see.” At the door, Dakota turned to the man
beside him. “Well, um, well, goodbye.” Finally he just reached
out his hand to Maverick.
“Goodbye, Dakota. Come back anytime.” Maverick
wanted to hug his son, but would graciously settle for a
handshake.
Sure strides carried the young man down the hall
without a backward glance and out of sight. Maverick closed
the door once he could no longer see his son. This time when
he was alone in the room, he allowed the tears to fall.
He cried for the twenty-one years that had been stolen
from him and his family. He cried over what he put Tempest
through and he cried because he was making progress in
getting to know his child.
Around seven-thirty that night, Maverick showered and
dressed to go to the bar. He had to find a way to get through
the protective barrier Tempest had around her. Not just her
heart, but every inch of her was protected.
Luckily for him, motorcycles were easier to park than
other vehicles. If he’d believed the place was busy last night,
then tonight was off the charts. As he opened the door and
stepped inside, his observant gaze took in all the men and
women having a great time.
Moving through the throng of people, Maverick sidled
up to the bar. He noticed the women around him watched him
with open curiosity and plenty invitations. In the past, he
might have flirted with any or all of them, for that was the kind
of man he’d been. But now, all he wanted was the rich,
dappled-brown eyes of Tempest on him. And that woman was
serving some guys near him.
The man closest to Maverick was talking to her. He
narrowed his eyes but held his peace. He’d wanted her before
he’d even known who she was; and now that he knew she was
the mother of his child…well, that made him even more
possessive.
“I’m just saying, babe, that a wet T-shirt contest would
bring in a bunch of customers. Especially if
you
were in it,” the
man said.
Maverick didn’t like the direction this was going. He
took in her attire. She wore a pair of snug-fitting leather pants
that hung around her full hips and a fuchsia tee that showed
off a bit of her belly; not much, but enough to attract attention
to the smooth walnut-colored skin. Her hair fell around her
face, framing it gently.
Tempest shook her head. “No, thanks. I don’t want to
have that. And I definitely wouldn’t be competing.”
The man licked his lips and leered. “How’s about you
put on a private show for me and my boys here?” He reached
across the bar to grab her wrist.
Maverick growled low in his throat. Tempest was his.
Astonished at that revelation, he hesitated for a moment.
When
did she become mine?
There was no time for him to dwell on that, for the
uncouth man holding her refused to let her go when she
tugged. Maverick stood and intervened. His eyes were alive
with black flames.
Stepping between two of the friends, Maverick reached
out and gripped the third man’s wrist, applying enough
pressure to get him to let go of Tempest. “It’s not polite to grab
women,” he warned in a lethal voice.
“Let go of me, man!” the man snapped. “This has
nothing to do with you!”
Tempest stood there and watched Maverick come to her
rescue. She’d known the second he’d sat down at the bar, but
the men she’d been serving had been taking up her attention.
Now he was the one to save her from that clammy touch.
“I think you need to apologize to her,” Maverick
continued as if the man hadn’t said a thing.
“I’m not apologizing to her. I was just joking.” The man
tugged harder again, but to no avail. He wasn’t getting free.
Tightening his grip on the wrist, Maverick suggested in
a low voice, “
I
think you need to apologize to the lady.”
“Ouch, you are hurting me. She’s just a bartender. What
the hell do you care, man?” The question came as tears filled
that man’s eyes.
His two friends did nothing to help him, obviously not
wishing to tackle the large man who had intervened on the
bartender’s behalf. The bar had begun to fall silent as everyone
watched bouncers approach the tall Native American who had
interceded on Tempest’s behalf. Maverick pulled the man up,
dropping his wrist and holding onto his shoulder.
“That
bartender
is the mother of my child.” The words
were delivered crystal clear and just about everyone heard him,
especially the staff. “Now apologize.” It was a command.
The man did just that. “I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to
offend you,” he blurted out.
Maverick cut his eyes over to Tempest who nodded
slightly at the man. Then he released his grip on him and
allowed him to drop heavily back to his seat. The man rubbed
his shoulder and glared at Maverick. The bouncers tapped the
men on the shoulders and escorted all three of them out.
“Come here,” Maverick ordered Tempest.