Authors: Calista Fox
He appeared to give this some thought.
“You have a choice, Kyle. I love you as a friend,” I told him in a heartfelt tone. “And I'm eternally grateful for all you've done. But you're not bound by sacred oath here. To tell you the truth, it'd probably be best if youâ”
“No,” he said with conviction in his voice, his gaze locking with mine. “It wouldn't be best if I just walked away. Because
I
want to protect you, too. If Dane can't be here, if Amano has secret-society business to deal with ⦠I can be here. For you. And for your baby.”
I saw this for what it wasâKyle's defining moment. A decision that could be the one to give him a bit more purpose in life or ⦠one that could be detrimental.
I understood the pros and cons, the reward versus the challengeâor, rather, the danger.
“Kyle, you need to be absolutely certain.”
“I'm here, aren't I? I just spent the night in jail, didn't I? I nearly sent us over the edge of a canyon that plunges forty-five hundred feet, right?”
“Put like that,” I said with a crooked brow, “you might want to seek your own mental health counseling. I think you're nuts.”
He laughed, albeit gruffly. “Certifiable, without doubt. Then again ⦠It's not like I had anything better to do last night but hang out with newlyweds and their brand-new baby. Guess I'm cursed.”
I'd sent several items to Meg and Sean from their gift registry but hadn't yet made it to see them. I'd stuck close to the retreat of late, in the event Amano called and there was a chance to see Dane.
“I need to visit them,” I confessed. “Unfortunately, Meg will likely figure out I'm pregnant because I'll be all googly-eyed over the baby and asking a million questions about what to expect when you're expecting.”
“Yeah, that could be a problem. Anyway, they're sort of into the whole family unit thing at the moment, so you have time to make it up to them.”
“I suppose.” I stared at him a few seconds longer, a tormenting thought gnawing at me. Finally, I asked, “Do you really believe you're cursed?”
“No.” He set aside the hand towel and said, “Since we're stuck here in paradise, I'm going for a swim.”
“You don't have trunks,” I mentioned over the sting of guilt I couldn't shake.
“So?”
I frowned. “That guard tower is manned, and there are guys patrolling these ten acres.”
“Not my problem. They don't have to look, now do they?” He sauntered off.
Above obsessing over Kyle's angst and unwavering sense of duty, I prayed Eleanor Conaway would buy us swimwear. Given the latest disaster and my new criminal record, Dane had enough to contend with to put his blood pressure in the red zone without knowing Kyle was skinny-dipping in the pool fifty feet from me.
Yeah. That'd make for fun conversation.
Â
Kyle and I wore new jeans and shirts and were in the middle of a Wii bowling tournament when Amano arrived. Sauntering in behind him was Dane, his gait evened out now that his leg had fully healed and he no longer needed the walking cane.
My heart swelled. Kyle scowled beside me.
Dane did not look pleasedâand I was sure I knew why. Amano had told him everything, the details no doubt relayed by Mr. Conaway after he'd left us.
I wrapped my arms around Dane's neck, despite his tense, broody appearance. “I've missed you.”
He was dressed all in black, and my fingers instantly itched to unbutton his shirt so I could touch him.
Holding me tight, he said, “This isn't getting any better, Ari. Not any safer, not any saner.”
“Kyle and I are okay. And we
are
safer. This place is more secure than Fort Knox. Now that you're here, it's perfect.”
He kissed my temple. “You find the silver lining in everything, don't you?”
“I love you.”
With a low groan, he said, “I love you, too. Which is why I'm so damn pissed off.”
“Wait'll you see your car.” Kyle just couldn't resist.
I unraveled from Dane and said, “We had a little trouble and had to take the McLaren off-road.” To Amano, I explained, “I can tell you where to find it, if the Forest Service hasn't towed it away already.”
“Seriously, a sweet ride.” Kyle poked a bit harder. “But you'll likely need a new undercarriage. Definitely a new paint job. Tires are pretty much shot to shit now, too.”
I could feel Dane's temper flare. I placed a palm on his chest and said, “We're really very sorry. It was necessary.”
“I don't give a damn about the car, Ari. I'm pissed off that you were in danger again.” His gaze shifted to Kyle. “I'm sorry you were involved. But ⦠thank you for taking care of her.”
“I'm getting good at this James Bond stuff,” Kyle said with a cocky grin. I suspected the split lip and bruised jaw made him feel tougher, more rugged. To Amano, he added, “Maybe you should teach me some bodyguard moves. Since I'm the one here with Ari.”
“That won't be necessary,” the stoic Amano said. “I'm here now. And will be until this is over.”
Latching on to that segue, I asked Dane, “Any progress?”
“We'll talk later.” He took my hand and led me out of the room. “Which suite is ours?”
I directed him down the long corridor. “I only get you for the night, don't I?”
He didn't say anything, just closed the door behind us. I turned to him. Wound my arms around him again.
“It's hell not being with you,” he whispered in my ear. I heard his torment, his quiet fury. “I steal a few hours, then Kyle gets you the rest of the time. I turn my back and you're in danger. I'm livid, Ari. So worried about you. And so ready to just say fuck it all andâ”
“No.” I pulled away and stared up at him. “You can't quit now. Not after everything we've all been through. Not when you're so very close to finishing this, Dane.”
He stepped around me. Raked a hand through his hair. “This isn't getting any easier. In fact, it's much more convoluted. These last two members ⦠They're in deep, Ari. This goes beyond tax evasion and blowing up the Lux. They've manipulated the global network the society uses and they'll be the catalyst for another massive recessionâwhile
they
prosper. Creating all of that influence, wielding all of that power ⦠To achieve that level of supremacy has required them to leave plenty of casualties in their wake.”
I sank onto the mattress. “Are you saying they â¦
murder
people to get their way?”
“Whatever it takes,” he said with a sharp edge to his low voice. “That's how these people operate. You saw what they did to the Lux. Every one of my employeesâmy
wife
âcould have been inside that building when it exploded. Did they care? No. Because to them, they're above reproach. Untraceable, untouchable.”
“But
you're
tracing them, touching them. Helping to send them to prison.”
He paced along the bench that ran the width of the bed. “At what cost?” he mumbled, agitated. “You could have been killed, Ari.
Again
.”
I wrung my hands a moment, understanding how this tore at him. But there was so much at stake. He couldn't walk away from this now.
“Look,” I told him. “I won't sit here and lie to you, say I haven't been terrifiedâterrorized. But what you're doing is too significant to turn your back on. Especially at this point. After all you've invested in bringing these guys down, after all we've suffered. You
have
to see this through. No matter what. These people must be stopped, Dane.”
He drew up short and stared at me. “It's not worth the risk, not worth putting your life in jeopardy.”
“Yes, it is.” I stood and crossed to him. My palms splayed over his hard pectoral ledge and I gazed up at him unwaveringly. “I'm one person, when countless others suffer because of what the society has been allowed to get away with. You could have died. Amano, too. Easing up on them now is
not
the answer.”
“And what about Kyle? His life is in danger, too, Ari. Now that they know about him.”
My hands dropped to my sides. “I asked him to reconsider. To disassociate himself from me. Go back to his safe life.”
With a grunt, Dane said, “Let me guess. He told you not a chance in hell.”
“Pretty much.”
“Fool,” Dane hissed out. Then he whirled around, stalked over to the sliding glass doors, and glared out at the waterfall. “I should have never hired him at the hotel. Goddamn it.”
“Maybe, but that was my fault, remember?”
“And how the hell would you ever look me in the eye again if anything happened to him? How would you ever forgive me?” he quietly demanded.
I really hadn't considered all of this. It'd been such a roller-coaster ride for us all, so many ups and downs, that I tried to catch my breath before the next potentially devastating hurdle came our way, not really giving such deep thought to the consequences of our actions.
“I can tell him to leave,” I said. “I can tell him we're not friends anymore, that I don't need him or want him around. He won't buy it, though. He'll stick, Dane. He's already proven that.”
“So I'm supposed to accept what might happen to him as
his
choice? The way I'm supposed to accept the same with you?”
“Yes.”
I didn't like the implication of that one word for Kyle, myself, or our baby. But given the circumstancesâthe real and impossible-to-hide-from reality of the situationâand the fact that Dane, Amano, Kyle, and I had committed to that reality and knew what we were in for ⦠I'd be a hypocrite to say the blame for anything going awry landed anywhere other than at the feet of those who chose this path. That meant
all
of us. Kyle and me included.
Unfortunately, the baby didn't have a say in the matter. And no, I certainly never intended to be careless with my life, thereby putting our child's life in danger. But this had started long before I became pregnantâlong before I'd learned I was pregnant. It wasn't something I could extricate myself from now that I did know.
This was about our family. Other people as well. There were a lot of lives at risk, so much at stake, if we didn't continue on this path. More so than if we put a halt to this in an effort to save ourselves.
I joined Dane at the doors and wrapped my arms around his waist. “There's no turning back, because this is what needs to be done. You said yourself that this is bigger than what happened at the Luxâone of the world's premier luxury hotels. That's a huge statement. Yet, Dane ⦠Though you won't be able to forgive yourself if anything happens to me, you won't be able to forgive yourself, either, if you give up on this in an attempt to keep me out of harm's way.”
His hands covered mine and he squeezed them.
I continued. “That day when you almost killed Vale ⦠You had every right to be furious, and I know it wasn't just about the secret society. It was about me. That he'd hurt me. You were completely enraged. Then you tried to convince me you weren't the bad guy. I had to walk away from you because everything surrounding you was too dark, too dangerous, too sinister. But it's never been your fault. That was why I came back. Because I realized you were right. You're
not
the bad guy.”
He released my hands and turned to face me. Brushing strands of hair from my cheek, he said, “The worst part about this is that I want you too muchâ
need
you too muchâto do what you did with Kyle. To tell you to leave.”
“Doesn't matter. You could tell me. I won't go. I lost you the first time after Vale and it was pure torture. When I thought you were deadâ¦?” Tears pricked my eyes. “I honestly had to find something to live forâa reason to not want to be dead myself. Everything about our life together wasâ
is
âthat reason, Dane.”
His emerald eyes clouded. His jaw set in a hard line. “I don't know if I could do it, Ari. If the tables were turned. I don't know if I could find a reason toâ”
“You would,” I interjected. “But you won't have to, because I'm going to be just fine. I'm going to stay here and not venture out without Amano or Kyle. I will do everything I have to in order to be safe. You have to trust in that. And trust Kyle the way you do Amano. He's been strong and loyal. He's committed to being by my side.”
“A little too much,” Dane said in a dour tone. Then added, “But you're right. And I do trust him. Believe me, he'd need stitches if I thought he'd purposely put you in a hazardous situation.”
“He didn't. It was a trap, Dane. And I was very, very lucky he was there with me to help me out of it.”
Dane pulled me close. “You must have been so scared.”
“Petrified.” I shuddered at the thought of those hairpin turns and the helicopter looming on the horizon. But I said, “We might not come up with the savviest or classiest ways out of a messâthe way you wouldâbut we manage.”
“Drunk and disorderly conduct,” he said with a half snort. “My wife, the town rowdy. I'll have to do something about burying your mug shot before it hits the Internet.”
“Kyle's, too.”
Dane was quiet a moment, then conceded. “Kyle's, too.”
I snuggled closer. “Are you done being upset? Pissed? Worried? All of the above?”
“Not a chance.”
“Hmm. That's too bad.” I tugged the shirt hem from the waist of his dress pants and slid my hands under the material. His abs flexed beneath my touch. I grinned.
“You really don't know how to keep yourself out of trouble, do you, Mrs. Bax?”
My stomach flipped. “I like all your references to me being your wife.”