His Obsession Next Door (In the Line of Duty) (19 page)

BOOK: His Obsession Next Door (In the Line of Duty)
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Cole fisted the bed sheets. “I love her, Jack.”

Jack smiled and smacked him on the shoulder. “Well, now, there you go. It looks like you do know what you’re doing, after all.” He pushed back in his chair. “And it’s about fucking time you realized it.”

Confused by his reactions, Cole said, “What, you’re not pissed because instead of taking care of Brandon’s kid sister, I’ve been disloyal and sleeping with her?”

“Is that all you think you’ve been doing?” Jack inquired with one raised eyebrow.

Cole exhaled slowly, his head hurting, but not from the accident. He exchanged a look with his friend and wondered where this conversation was going. “What are you getting at?”

“You haven’t been sleeping with her, pal. You’ve been falling for her. Hell, I think you’ve always loved her anyway. You have this twisted sense of loyalty to Brandon.”

“Twisted? I owe that man so much, Jack. You have no idea.”

“Cole, did you ever stop to think maybe on some level Brandon knew you always loved Gemma and maybe this was his way of driving you two together?”

Cole went quiet for a moment, then angled his head. “Have you been taking shrink classes, pal?”

Jack laughed and toyed with his dog tags. “No, but I’ve been to enough of them to know how this all works.” He got quiet for a moment, like he was thinking about his own demons, before saying, “I know Brandon asked you to watch over her, but she’s a strong, independent woman. Maybe she’s not in need of your protection.”

Cole went quiet and considered the last month he’d spent with her and how she made him feel something other than loss and sadness. He’d thought about how much he loved having her in his life, how strong and independent she was and how he loved the normalcy of sitting down to a meal after a workday. He loved how they laughed and how they shared the good days and the bad.

His mind went back to the time at her clinic, to when that little girl was there picking out a puppy with her parents. Cole’s heart hitched, because he wanted a family like that of his own. And he wanted it with Gemma.

If Brandon could see her now, he’d see how self-sufficient and courageous she was. He’d see the amazing woman she’d turned out to be, a woman who’d stayed by Cole’s side when he needed her and was not only capable of taking care of herself, but was capable of taking care of him too. Brandon would be damn proud of the woman she’d become. And maybe, just maybe, Jack was right and she didn’t need his protection. Maybe she only needed his love.

Cole buried his face in his hands and by small degrees his body tightened. “Oh fuck.”

“What?”

“I totally screwed everything up.”

Jack’s bark of laughter echoed in the room. “Well, now, that wouldn’t surprise me one little bit. But don’t worry, pal. Gemma came when I called her, so she might not hate you as much as you think.”

Cole closed his eyes and muttered curses of frustration under his breath as his mind raced, trying to figure out what he could do or say to make it right between them. “I need to figure out a way to fix this.”

Chapter Eleven

Armed with hot coffee and breakfast burritos from her favorite café, Gemma made her way back to Cole’s condo. She’d learned so much about the tortured soldier when he fled from her parents’ apartment two nights ago. Even more last evening when he’d laid there in his bed mumbling in his sleep. He’d unconsciously reached out to her as he fought his innermost demons. As she held him in her arms it had become glaringly apparent he’d never gotten over the loss of his best friend, never learned to let go.

Cole was the toughest guy she knew and instead of grieving after Brandon’s death, he kept soldiering on. He’d buried his feelings behind some protective barrier that needed to come tumbling down before those destructive emotions ate him up inside. Deep in her heart Gemma knew Cole loved her, of that she was certain, but there was no way he could go forward until he learned to let go of the past. And she was just the girl to help him.

Armed with a plan, she climbed his stairs, but when she reached his front door and was about to twist the knob the door flung open and she found herself standing face to face with Cole.

Dark, tormented eyes met hers. “Gemma,” he murmured.

Worry moved into her stomach as she took in his pallor. “Should you be up so soon?”

He touched the back of his head. “I’m okay. The swelling is down.” He paused for a second and his voice dropped an octave when he said, “We need to talk.”

Gemma exhaled slowly. “I know.”

“About the other night,” he began, getting right to the point. “I never meant—”

“Yes, you did,” she said, cutting him off. “At the time, when you said you were sorry you ever touched me, you meant every word of it.”

Deep sadness moved over his face and he fisted his hair. “I fucked this up, didn’t I?”

She held up the brown paper bag and a tray holding two cups of coffee. “Do you think we can eat these in the car?”

He gave her a perplexed frown and rolled one shoulder. “I guess. If you want to.”

“I want to take you somewhere.”

“Where?”

Instead of telling him, for fear he might flat out refuse, she turned from him. “Come on.”

Favoring his sore leg, Cole followed her down the steps and across the street. Once he was seated next to her in the car, she handed him his coffee and burrito.

He dug into his food like a man starved, and Gemma flicked on the radio before digging into her own. She maneuvered through city traffic, then shot Cole a glance as she pulled onto the highway. She drove for a long time and silence hung heavy, until she pulled off on the exit leading to her childhood ranch.

Cole frowned, and shifted uncomfortably in the seat beside her. “Where are you taking me?”

“Somewhere I should have taken you a long time ago. But I’d been so caught up in my own needs, I hadn’t stopped to consider yours.”

“What are you talking about?”

Instead of answering, Gemma pulled her car into the long, winding driveway leading to the ranch. She felt tension move through his body.

His jaw clenched and his shoulders stiffened. “I don’t want to be here.”

She turned to face him, and touched his arm. “I know you don’t, but will you do this for me?”

He scrubbed his face. “That’s hitting low, because you know I’d do anything for you.”

“And I’d do anything for you, which is why you need to come with me.” She parked her car and climbed from the seat. Fishing her old house key from her purse, she made her way to the front door. Cole sat in the car for a second longer and she wondered if he’d come. But then he opened his door and met her on the stairs.

He looked at his feet. “I don’t think—”

“I do. Come on,” she said. “No one is here but us. My folks are still in the city.”

She pushed the door open and grabbed his hand before he could escape. Once inside the empty house, she immediately led Cole to Brandon’s room. It had been redone since he’d lived here, but the essence of Brandon was still alive and impregnated in every object.

Cole sucked in a sharp breath and gripped his dog tags. “Why are you doing this?”

“Come sit.” She led him to the bed. When he sank into the cushy mattress, she perched beside him and shimmied close, offering her support because he was going to need it. “I want to talk about Brandon.” She grabbed the photo album off the bookshelf and the smell of old paper hit her when she peeled it open.

She pointed to one of the photos and smiled up at Cole. “Remember this day?”

Cole narrowed his eyes as he looked at the picture of him and Brandon riding a roller coaster when the fair had come to town. “What I remember about that day is you eating too much junk food and getting sick,” he said.

She pulled a face. “Yeah, I still can’t eat cotton candy to this day. How about these?” She redirected his attention as she flipped through the pages, showing him pictures of Brandon and Cole through the years. They spent a long time looking through the album, and when they came to the end she pointed to the picture of Cole and Brandon fishing, a small smile tugged at Cole’s mouth.

“You like this one?” she asked.

“What I remember about that day is Brandon chasing you with a fish and you running home screaming bloody murder.”

She cut him a sharp glance. “That was gross, Cole.”

Cole laughed. “He sure caught shit that day.”

“Yeah, well, he never got into that much trouble. Not when he always had you backing him up.”

As soon as the words left her mouth, his smile dissolved and raw emotions passed over his eyes. He pressed his palms to his forehead. “Oh, Jesus, Gemma. Jesus. Jesus. Jesus.”

He slipped off the mattress and sank to his knees. She could hear his breathing change, see his body begin to shake. Gemma climbed from the bed and stood before him. She ran soothing fingers though his hair.

“It’s okay, Cole. Let it out,” she said, knowing how hard it was for him to allow himself to come undone. “Sometimes we have to fall apart before we can begin to put the pieces together again.”

He reached out to her and pulled her to him, his hands wrapping around her waist as he buried his face in her stomach.

His breath was hot on her skin and she could feel his heart thundering. “I miss him so fucking much,” he said, his voice rough with emotion.

Tears filled Gemma’s eyes. “I know you do. We all do.”

“He saved me, Gemma. When I was a kid, my father was a cruel bastard. Brandon gave me a place to stay and a family to love. Don’t you see, he saved me?”

She dropped to her knees in front of him and cupped his cheeks. “You saved him too. He was a shy kid, and when you came into his life it saved him in so many ways.”

Cole’s breath came quicker as he brushed his thumb over her tears. “He asked me to take care of you, Gemma, and I thought I failed him—”

“You didn’t fail him.” Her gaze moved over his face. “If my brother treasured you enough to put me in your hands, don’t you think he treasured you enough to let you put me in your heart too?”

Cole blinked and she saw love shining in his eyes when they met hers. Her heart flipped in her chest, everything inside her reaching out to him. “I know,” he said. “I came to terms with that earlier today.”

Her breath caught. “You did?”

“Yeah, when you showed up at my door, I was on my way to find you to tell you how much I loved you and how much I wanted to be with you. But then I thought I’d lost you. I couldn’t take losing you too, Gems.”

“You didn’t lose me.” Her stomach soared with joy and more tears fell. “But before we can build a future together you have to come to terms with Brandon’s death and learn to let go.” She touched the back of her neck. “Healing takes time, and you’ve never given yourself that.”

He rested his elbows on his knees and shook his head. “I don’t want to forget.”

“Letting go isn’t the same as forgetting. My tattoo is a symbol of comfort. It helps me remember, but it also helps me let go of the pain of loss.”

She grabbed his dog tags and placed them in his hands. “That’s what these are going to do for you. When you hold them, I want you to remember Brandon, but then I want you to exhale and when you breathe out, let the pain of loss go with it. It’s what he would have wanted.”

After a long moment of silence, Cole exhaled slowly, and she could almost feel the wall he’d built around his heart come tumbling down.

“He was a great man and a great soldier.”

“Yes, he was.” She breathed out slowly and said, “And I bet he’s looking down at you right now and calling you a dumbass for the way you’ve been acting.”

He grinned but his voice was shaky when he said, “When did you get so damn smart?”

With Cole finally opening himself up to her, reaching out to her emotionally, she said, “When you were off fighting a war and I was home waiting for you to come back to me.”

He nodded, like he understood. “I guess we have a lot of time to make up for.”

Gemma’s thoughts went back to the day she seduced him in the barn. “Ten years to be exact.”

He shook his head, and for the umpteenth time, went on to explain, “Jesus, Gemma, you were a kid.”

“And I’m not anymore.”

He drew her to him and held her for a long time, and she could feel his shoulders relax, the weight of the world no longer bearing down on them. They stayed together like that for a long, long time. Gemma remained silent, letting Cole come to terms with what he needed to do. The time ticked by and she listened to his breathing settle and his heart rate return to normal.

Cole finally broke the quiet and asked, “What did I ever do to get so lucky to have you in my life?”

“Well I could stay here and list off all the times you came to my rescue when we were younger, or…” She let her voice trail off, stood and reached for him.

“Or what?”

“Come with me.”

Cole stood. “Where are you taking me now?”

They exited the house and Gemma led him to the barn at the back of the homestead. She pulled open the doors and the scent of hay filled her senses, bringing her back to her childhood.

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