In Too Deep (Grayton Series Book 4) (14 page)

BOOK: In Too Deep (Grayton Series Book 4)
4.64Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“What do you say we go have some pizza and you tell us all about your trip?” Missy suggested.

“Augh.” Reagan surprised them by rolling his eyes. “I’m kind of pizza’d out. How about a burger at Bayside?”

Roman smiled and nodded. “I could use a burger. If we can drive your car.” He smiled when she nodded. Her narrow driveway could only fit one car at a time, so he quickly backed his sedan up and parked it on the street then pulled out the classic and waited while Missy and Reagan loaded up.

“Oh,” Reagan said as he pulled out of the driveway. “Your brother came by today.”

Roman slammed on the breaks a little too quickly. “My…” He turned and looked at Reagan, then glanced at Missy, who had turned pale. “What did he look like? When?” He shook his head.

“He was here, sitting in an old truck when I got home.” Reagan shrugged his shoulders. “He looked like a surfer. You know, Mom, the one we saw on that ad in your magazine.”

Roman turned to Missy. “I don’t know how he found me. I haven’t told him anything.”

He watched her close her eyes and sigh. “It was bound to happen, sooner or later.” When she looked at him again, he could see the fear in her eyes.

“He must have Lo-jacked my phone.” He chuckled. “You know how he is.” He brushed a hand down her shoulder. When she jumped, he pulled the car into park and pulled her closer. “Missy, I swear, you’re still safe here.”

“Why wouldn’t she be? Is your brother a bad guy?” Reagan asked from the back seat.

“Oh.” Missy covered her mouth with her hand and spun around. “No, honey. Cole is wonderful. He’s….” She looked at Roman for a moment. “He’s our relative.” She sighed. “Maybe we can tell you the story over a burger?” she asked after hearing Roman’s stomach growl loudly. He shrugged his shoulders.

“The brownies were my lunch,” he said.

Missy smiled. He could see that the smile didn’t reach her eyes and feared that she was once more thinking of running. Even with everything she’d built here, he knew she wouldn’t hesitate to pick up and leave if it meant keeping Reagan safe.

He drove slowly towards Bayside Burgers down the coastal highway, enjoying the warm air coming off the Gulf. He’d flipped on the radio to the oldies station, which only seemed natural in a classic car.

When the news bulletin came on mentioning something about a hurricane, he pulled over and turned it up so they could listen.


Gulf coast states are preparing to be hit by Tropical Storm Donna, which is set to make landfall between Southeastern Louisiana and the Florida Panhandle around midday Thursday. The National Hurricane Center has issued warnings stretching from…”

He reached over and turned the radio down.

“Well?” He turned to Missy. “What is your plan for hurricanes?”

She chuckled. “Tie everything down and wait them out. Half of the time it’s not nearly as bad as they’ve predicted.” She shrugged. “We’ve waited out a few since being here.” She glanced at Reagan and smiled. “Now we’ve got the new roof and clean gutters.” She looked at him and nodded. “Thanks to you, the house should be ready.”

He could tell she was nervous and knew she wanted to say more, but not in front of Reagan. Pulling the car back onto the highway, he drove faster to the burger joint.

When they got there, he pulled Missy aside. “I’ll be right in. I have a…. call to make.” She frowned but nodded then went in the diner with Reagan.

Pulling out his phone, he decided to send a text to Cole instead since he didn’t feel like arguing with his brother at the moment.

-
Heard you stopped by. Thanks for not sticking around. Give her some time. She’s warming up to the idea of coming home soon. R

When he walked in, he slid into the booth next to Missy and glanced down at the menu, not really feeling hungry anymore. Still, he ordered a burger and waited for her to make the next move.

Finally, after a few minutes of silence, she leaned forward and took Reagan’s hand. “Cole is my brother.” She sighed. “My adopted brother. I have three adopted brothers and one sister.” She looked to him for just a moment. “Roman is one of them as well.”

“But,” Reagan said, shaking his head, sending his dark hair flying. “If you two are brother and sister…”

“Adopted. Your mother came into the family when she was… your age.” He looked at her and smiled when she nodded. “I was almost a year older.” He smiled and reached across the table to take the kid’s other hand. “We had both come from bad situations.” He looked to her to take over.

“I was raised by some pretty crazy people.” She closed her eyes for a brief moment. “This wonderful woman, an angel really—her name was Lilly—she helped me escape the prison I had been born and raised in and brought me to live with the Graytons.” She nodded to Roman. “I lived there until someone tracked me down and threatened me. Then I ran away.” She looked off, out towards the window.

“What about you?” Reagan turned to him after a moment of silence.

“Me?” He blinked and dropped the kid’s hand.

“Sure, did Lilly help you escape too?”

He sighed. “No, not really. Yes, she was the one who brought me to live with my new family.”

“Did you escape a prison, too?” he asked.

Shaking his head, he reached over and took Missy’s hand in his. He wouldn’t have the power to recount his story without feeling her strength.

“I had a different kind of prison. My real father”—he swallowed the foul taste in his mouth that always came with the thought of the evil man—“was a boxer. He was the kind of man that took his anger out on his son all the time. When I was seven, my father lost a match and when he got home, decided to take his frustration out on me. I ended up in the hospital for two weeks. Then Lilly came and took me away.” He hadn’t realized tears were streaming down his face until Missy reached over and wiped them away gently with her fingers.

“Roman’s the one that taught me how to box in junior high. There was a group of girls that were dead set on picking on me.” She smiled at him. “Then, in gym class one day, I showed them what I could do with the punching bag and they never bothered me again.” She squeezed his hand.

Roman turned to Reagan. “That’s why I started Spring Haven Home for kids, where we grew up. I wanted to help other kids who had come from bad situations.”

Reagan leaned forward. “What do you do there?”

“We help kids, give them everything they need. A place to stay until they can find a new family, teaching them to read and write.” He looked to Missy and smiled. “Teaching them to defend themselves.”

“Can I come and see it sometime?” Reagan asked.

Roman’s smile fell away and he felt his heart jump. Then he looked over at Missy. “If it’s okay with your mother.”

***

Missy felt tears build up behind her eyes and had to look out the window once more. She was saved from answering when their burgers arrived. She could hardly swallow a bite of her meal through the lump in her throat.

She wanted more than anything to go home. To allow Reagan to know her family. To visit Roman’s home for kids. But she knew the risks. She’d been locked in the compound more than once and knew what would happen if they ever got their hands on Reagan.

History was full of psycho religious cults; lives lost, families separated, children being sacrificed. No, she’d come too far to protect herself and Reagan against this.

As they drove the stretch of road back to her small home, she began to organize a plan in her mind. Pain stabbed at her heart when she thought about leaving Carrabelle, but at this point, it was the only way to protect her son.

The next day, she started bright and early. Before Roman was up, she had packed two bags and hidden them in the trunk of her car.

They were busy preparing the store for the upcoming storm, but during her break, she drove to the bank and pulled out all of her money and shoved it in the trunk of the car in a bag. It wasn’t much, since most of what she had had been put back into the store.

Just the thought of leaving everything she’d built had her heart breaking a little more, but fear was overwhelming.

They had spent the evening at home, locking everything down for the storm that was set to hit them the next day.

As she lay in bed with Roman that night, she knew it would be their last together. She’d tried to fool herself into thinking it could work out with him—living here, hiding from her family, both of them. But, if Cole could find them so easily—she closed her mind to the thought of what else could happen.

Rolling over, she decided to make the most of her last night with him. When she started kissing him, his hands moved up into her hair, pulling her closer. She trailed her fingers over his chest, enjoying the play of muscles and taut skin.

Her legs held him down, pinned to the bed, as she ran her mouth down over his chest where her fingers had just been. His fingers dug into her shoulders, holding her to him. She smiled when she heard him groan her name.

When she gently pulled his shorts down his hips, he cupped her elbows and brought her back up to him. Then he was rolling and pinning her to the bed.

“What do you think you’re doing?” He almost growled it.

For a moment, her heart refused to beat. Then he smiled down at her. “You’re torture won’t work on me tonight.”

She released the breath she’d been holding. Then he was kissing her, causing her breath to hitch for different reasons. He gently removed her nightshirt and then her sleeping shorts. When she lay underneath him totally naked, he pulled back and looked down at her.

She sat up and took his face in her hands, kissing him like it was her last time. She poured every ounce of emotion into the kiss. Her skin heated next to his and she pulled him closer until, finally, he filled her completely. Dual moans echoed in the room as their bodies moved against one another.

Finally, she threw her head back and felt herself slide. He stiffened above her and she opened her eyes to watch him in pure delight.

When he lay down beside her, his fingers running over her skin, he whispered, “Beautiful.” Then he broke her heart further by saying, “I love you.” He looked deep into her eyes and said it again.

Tears streamed down her face and when he leaned closer to wipe them away, she took his face in her hands and whispered, “I love you too. I always have. I always will.”

Chapter Fourteen

 

 

T
he rain started early that next morning. Roman stood outside on the front porch, drinking his coffee and watching the sky grow darker. Missy’s words played over and over again in his mind. She’d told him that she’d loved him. Always had. He’d never been happier than at that moment.

He heard the front door open and close and turned as Missy stepped out, fully dressed.

“Going somewhere?” He’d yet to pull on anything more than shorts and a T-shirt.

She nodded. “I’m going to take Reagan really quick to the shop. I want to get a few more things before the storm hits.”

He smiled. “I can do that.” He pulled her closer, feeling her tense slightly.

“No.” She shook her head. “I promised him I’d take him.” She smiled and then leaned down and kissed him until he forgot what they’d been talking about. “It shouldn’t take too long.” She smiled and then turned away.

“The storm’s set to hit in a few hours,” he called after her. She nodded and waved as she walked down the walkway towards her car. His was still parked in the street from the other night. He watched the pair drive away and waved as they headed towards the store.

He’d spent many hours waiting out a hurricane since living along the coast. Most were just tropical storms, but some had been pretty bad. Donna had not progressed to something locals feared. At least not yet. If he’d learned one thing living along the coast, it was to always be prepared.

Walking inside, he locked the front door and made sure everything was far from the windows. He changed his clothes and then walked around the outside of the house, shielding himself from the wind and rain with an umbrella.

An hour later, Missy and Reagan had yet to return, and he was starting to freak out. Pulling his keys out, he jumped in his car and drove the few blocks to the store. When he saw her car parked out front, he sighed with relief.

However, when he entered the store, he quickly realized that they weren’t there. He rushed around the small place, calling their names over and over again.

Just as he was about to call the police, Missy rushed in the front door, soaking wet.

“I can’t find Reagan!” Tears were streaming down her face as her breath hitched out.

“What?” He rushed to her, taking her shoulders into his hands. She was freezing cold to the touch. “What happened?” he asked, pulling her closer.

“I…” She cried into his chest. “He’s mad at me and he ran off.”

“What?” He pulled her back, looking into her eyes. “Why is he mad?”

“I…” She closed her eyes. “I told him that we are leaving.”

He felt his fingers tighten on her shoulders. “Going where?” he said with clenched teeth. He knew the answer wasn’t Spring Haven when she looked up at him. “You’re running again?” he growled out.

Other books

Storm Surge by Rhoades, J.D.
The Bane Chronicles 1: What Really Happened in Peru by Cassandra Clare, Sarah Rees Brennan
Abigail by Malcolm Macdonald
Knight's Dawn by Kim Hunter
The Demon's Bride by Beverley, Jo
Cracks in the Sidewalk by Crosby, Bette Lee
Kakadu Calling by Jane Christophersen