Authors: Eden Butler
“They aren’t trust worthy, right?”
“Mollie, they’re criminals.” He steps closer, whispering. “They’re felons and they can’t know about the case.”
“They won’t. They’re family, Vaughn. If my dad tells them to protect me, they will. They’ve done it since I was a kid. Besides, you don’t know anything about the case and here you are, shadowing me.”
With a slow shake of his head, the honest, vulnerable Mollie from seconds ago disappears. He understands. He knows that she is frustrated, that him touching her, leading her on for months has begun to break her down. It’s been brewing for two days and the entire time she hasn’t smiled once. More than anything, he hates that. He misses that smile.
Mollie disappears into the bathroom and Vaughn tries not to rub his palms into his eyes, doesn’t want her gawking friends to know that they have argued. Instead he turns, gives the table a wave and waits for her.
Maybe getting Vaughn drunk will keep his eyes off her.
No,
Mollie thinks, staring into her empty glass,
that would probably only keep him more paranoid.
She hasn’t felt so stifled, so confined since she left her mother’s home. No matter what she does—joking with Autumn and Sayo, reminiscing about their two a.m. naked skinny dip they managed in the university lake sophomore year, plotting with Layla about her next evil plan to humiliate Donovan, Vaughn’s eyes follow her.
A month ago, she would have loved his gaze on her; wanted it desperately. But since that night on the sofa, since he called out his ex-wife’s name, Mollie has felt uncomfortable in her own skin. It isn’t him, not exactly. It isn’t’ the way he smells or how he won’t let her be more than ten feet from him that has her desperate to get away. It is the idea that all this time, all these months, she has held a ridiculous torch lit by an artificial flame. It isn’t real, not any of it; not the attention he paid her at the Dash, not how eager he’d been to give her his number at the match before regionals, not even his willingness to find out details about her burglary. It was all part of some larger scheme, a plan that had her father sleeping with one eye open and made her a direct target of his enemies.
Vaughn’s rejection stung the sharpest. He had felt too good, tasted too right, hovering over her, the thick planes of his body and the musky tang of his skin moving over her like a drug, making her reason flee. Now he watches her and though she knows it is his job, though she knows that it is done to protect her, Mollie’s greatest swell of disappointment comes in the knowledge that he’d never allow himself to see her as more than a mission.
So she wants to escape, like she had when her mother tried convincing her that a convent might suit her. She misses her freedom, she misses relaxing in her apartment with no one’s judgments filling her ears if she ate Rocky Road at two a.m. or stayed up until five to catch the latest “Doctor Who” episode.
“What’s going on between you two?” Layla’s voice is low and her best friend is subtle, stretching around so that Vaughn’s hawk-like eyes can’t make out her question.
“We’re just hanging out.” She downs the rest of Layla’s forgotten, warm beer.
“I call bullshit.”
“Ditto,” Sayo says, bumping Layla’s knee to squat between Mollie and Layla. “This thing?” She nods at Mollie and then at Vaughn who chats with Declan and Autumn at the other end of the table. “That is so not someone you’re into.”
“Whatever. I’m just a little stressed out by all the shit that’s being going on.” Mollie looks between her friends’ disbelieving expressions. “I am. I don’t know if all of this has anything to do with my dad or if it’s all a coincidence.”
“Sweetie, don’t be stupid. Of course it’s not a coincidence.” Layla rolls up the corner of a napkin into a ball and flings it at Donovan. She smiles when it lands on the top of his head and he doesn’t notice.
“How you’re acting now? That is not how you were when you met him.” Sayo hands Layla another napkin ball and they all watch it descend onto Donovan’s crown.
“Yeah, well, I know him a little better.” Mollie doesn’t like not telling her friends the truth; the deception burns in her stomach like a bad burrito.
“Uh huh. Right.” When Layla’s third napkin ball flings against Donovan’s neck and he whips around to glare at her, the blonde’s gaze swings to Sayo, still crouched between them. “All I’m saying is that something is up.”
That burn increases and Mollie wants desperately to give her friends something—a small morsel that will ease the pain festering in her gut. A quick glance over her shoulder and she spots Vaughn and Autumn, who is sitting on Declan’s lap, deep into conversation.
“Pinkies?” Mollie’s finger extends and her friends immediately copy her. They grip fingers, shake once and she takes a breath. “I can’t say what’s going on, but my dad hired him.” She gives her head a small tilt in Vaughn’s direction and her friends nod, understanding.
“Wait. How long ago?” Sayo asks, her voice lowering.
“From the beginning.” Mollie sighs at her friends’ immediate, horrified reactions. “Yeah. He’s not interested. Not… not really.”
Layla’s eyes slip to her left and she pulls Sayo up, grabs Mollie by the elbow. “Who wants another round?” she asks the table, dragging both her friends toward the bar before anyone can answer. “He was watching us,” she tells Mollie as they recline against the wooden counter. She waves her hand to the harried-looking barmaid before she and Sayo stand in front of Mollie, blocking Vaughn’s view of her. “Now. What do you mean, ‘not really’?”
Mollie has no desire to recount the quick, sleep-induced grinding she and Vaughn participated in the other night, but her friends are staring, they are expecting, and she knows she has to tell them something. “He kissed me, but he didn’t mean it.”
“What do… oh, sorry,” Layla says, bumping into a guy at the end of the bar. “What do you mean he didn’t mean it?”
Mollie shrugs, reaches into her pocket to pull out some cash, only to have Layla slide her credit card toward the barmaid. “He was having a nightmare. He… he thought I was someone else.”
“What the hell…”
“Sayo, please.” She feels her face flame and moves aside when Layla grabs the pitcher of beer. “I don’t want to talk about it.”
Layla and Sayo exchange a look, make a poor effort in hiding that look from Mollie, but neither one of them pry any further.
“Distract him, will you? I need a break.”
She doesn’t have to see their reactions to know they have agreed. She doesn’t have to watch them descend on Vaughn at the table, concealing her at the bar as they bombard him with questions. It’s something the four girls have always done for each other and she knows she’ll have at least ten minutes to herself thanks to how chatty her friends are.
“You trying to ditch someone?” Mollie hears, turning toward a tall guy with brown hair nursing a Budweiser.
She is about to brush him off, ignore him completely, but when she looks at his face, sees the rugged set of his nose—broken at least once—and his full bottom lip, Mollie’s intended rudeness is forgotten.
“Something like that.”
The guy moves next to her, rests his back against the counter before extending his hand to her. “Jimmy.” His handshake is firm, a bit on the aggressive side, but Mollie isn’t put off by him. In fact, she is drawn to his strength, latent in his hands.
“Nice to meet you.” She might be attracted to this guy, to his strength, but Mollie isn’t stupid. He is a stranger. No way is he getting her name.
Jimmy nods toward the table and smiles when Layla’s laugh carries over the noise of the crowd. “Your girls are pros, yeah?”
Mollie nods. “We’ve been doing this a long time.”
“Can I buy you a drink?” His eyes are hazel with small flecks of green around the edges and Mollie likes how easy his smile is, how he seems so comfortable in his own skin. She thinks about saying yes. She thinks that it would be easy to take this guy up on any offers he may serve her, but then her gaze wanders to Vaughn’s hard scowl and the way he holds his hands in fists on top of the table.
She doesn’t want to see this; knows that if she lingers too long on his fierce expression, she’ll be tempted to further ignite his temper. Jimmy would just be a pawn in that game and Mollie doesn’t like playing with anyone. Especially not cute, friendly guys with stunning hazel eyes.
“I’m good.” She nods to the barmaid wanting something a bit stronger than a beer and next to her Jimmy motions for a shot as well.
“To pissing off assholes.” Jimmy taps his small glass to Mollie’s and they both down the shot. It burns, all the way down, but she likes the sting, likes that for just a second it distracts her from the complications of her life.
“Have another one,” Jimmy says, motioning again to the barmaid, but before her glass is refilled she smells a familiar tang of musky soap and closes her eyes, knowing that what happens next will not be pleasant.
“No, I think she’s done for the night.”
From the corner of her eye, Mollie sees Jimmy’s smile; the gesture is pleased, and she gets the feeling that he expected Vaughn’s possessive reaction. He turns slowly, that full bottom lip stretching with his grin. “You her daddy or something?” Jimmy asks Vaughn, stepping up, nose to nose to him.
“Nope, but I do spank her every once in a while.”
Mollie cringes at Vaughn’s lie and she notices Jimmy’s smile falters, only slightly. Behind Vaughn’s wide shoulders, Declan and Donovan approach with her friends trailing behind them.
“Yeah?” Jimmy says, not flinching in the least when Vaughn stretches his neck, pops it twice. “Not tonight you won’t.”
“You think so, asshole?” Vaughn squeezes Jimmy’s collar between his fingers, jerking him once. “You think some scrawny fucker like you is gonna take off with her?”
“I’m not the one she was avoiding, jackass.” Jimmy pushes Vaughn, but the Marine’s body doesn’t move an inch.
“Take it outside,” they hear, Mollie assumes it’s from the manager stepping out of his office behind the bar.
“We’re cool.” Jimmy’s hands fly up, and Declan manages to pull Vaughn back. Before he steps away, Jimmy nods to Mollie, that smile still present, still wide and tempting. “You sure I can’t give you a ride, darlin’? I’d be more than happy to.”
Mollie swallows, knows her face is bright red when Jimmy licks that fat bottom lip, his intention evident in the low slink of his eyes down her body.
“Fuck off,” Vaughn tells him, tugging Mollie behind him. And the guy leaves, laughing as he weaves around the staring crowd.
“Alright then, mate?” Declan asks Vaughn, tapping him once on the shoulder.
“Yeah.” But he doesn’t look alright. Vaughn doesn’t look anything but lethal and Mollie steps back, away from his hard glare, away from the quick pulse of his neck as Autumn grabs her elbow and steers her back toward the table.
“You want another drink?” Autumn lifts the pitcher, grabs an empty cup, but stops short when Vaughn grips Mollie’s hand.
“Sorry, but we’re gone.” He offers her friends a stare, once again adopting that professional, Marine bearing she’s come to recognize. “Thanks for the beer,” he tells Declan when the Irishman approaches as though he might stop him.
“I don’t want—”
“We’re gone.” Vaughn reiterates his insistence by pulling Mollie away from the table and the confused expressions on her friends’ faces.
Mollie doesn’t like silence. She doesn’t like the eerie quiet that usually means trouble. When she was a kid, that silence usually followed the crunch of boots, the kicking in of doors, cops crashing doors to disturb what passed for normalcy in her life.
The ride back to the hotel has been that sort of quiet—the awkward air of anger wafting thick between them, the heady ache of humiliation she felt when her friends watched Vaughn pulling her away, as though she was a disobedient child. Right now, she hates Vaughn Winchester. She hates the way he has assumed so much about her, right from their first meeting. He thinks he knows her. He likes to assume. And tonight, he thought she had been talking to some random as a means to make him jealous. She’d seen it in the hard glare he gave them both, in the possessive way he antagonized Jimmy.