Chapter 25
Hemlock
The way she flinched away from me makes my blood boil.
How could she ever think I'd lay a hand on her?
Then again, I did just leave her locked in a room with no fucking answers. She has to understand that I’m not the one who put her in the fucking room to begin with.
I press my head to the door, needing the coolness to spread all over my body. I feel like I'm on fire, like an inferno is growing inside of me and the fallout from the explosion is going to be catastrophic.
I can't tell what's fucking me up more. Is it the pain meds in my system, the shit they gave me for sedation? Is it the pain of them wearing off? Is it her? The idea that Ace may argue against letting her go?
Why keep her here in the first fucking place? It's not like she's going to run to the police, and, if she does, our operation is sanctioned by fucking ICE. Surely, Ace is experienced enough to keep the locals off our asses without ruining what we're doing here, but then again, my faith in him is running low today.
"We didn't hurt her," Ace says.
I spin, nearly losing my fucking balance, which makes me feel even weaker. I snarl at the man, but instead of fear entering his eyes as it does on most men I face, his lips simply form a flat line for a brief second before he pulls in a breath. It's very reminiscent of the way the principal used to respond to me when I was in elementary school and got caught doing something bad. He wanted to help, but he was also incredibly frustrated when I turned right back around and got into more trouble after we had a long discussion about my behavior.
"I told you she was going to be an issue."
The only thing that keeps me from beating his ass is the fact that he doesn't point his finger as if he has any authority over me.
"We need to know what she knows."
"She doesn't know anything," I growl.
"Because you've asked her every question we need an answer for?" he argues.
My upper lip curls into a snarl, sweat blooming on my forehead. I step in closer to the man, trying to decide if he's brave or foolish when he straightens the second we come chest to chest.
"I never would've allowed you to leave New Mexico if I had any inclination that you were going to come here and blow your cover on your very first fucking case, by falling in love with the first woman you had to work with."
"She's not the fucking assignment," I growl, unable to deny any other part of his accusation for some reason.
"She became part of the assignment because you made her a part of it," he argues. "You put her in this position, not anyone else."
"And you plan to keep her locked in a fucking room forever?"
He takes a step back, and I feel the relief of it instantly. Ace would be a formidable opponent when I'm in full-fighting shape. Right now? He'd probably be able to beat my ass with a hand tied behind his back. That realization doesn't sit well with me. How can I defend her if I can't even fight off the men who are least likely to hurt her?
"I plan to keep her as long as I need to in order to get the information I need."
It's a sound argument, one I'd probably agree to if it weren't for the connection I feel with the woman.
"Stay out of that fucking room," I snap as I sidestep him and begin the struggle back up the stairs.
I can tell he's waiting patiently for me to clear the top step before he makes the climb himself, probably because he's worried I'll fall back and roll over him. But when he comes out from the basement level, he detours toward the front door.
I have no idea what sort of position he's in with ICE and what their expectations are for him, but he's not my concern. At this point, even Tommy-fucking-Wilkinson isn't my concern. The woman locked away downstairs is the only thing I can think about right now. Hell, she's been the only thing I can think about for weeks, and if that doesn't prove Ace's point about the trouble I'm in, then I don't know what will.
Jericho is in the kitchen when I enter, and although I expect him to give me the same speech Ace just did downstairs, he remains quiet when I walk toward the refrigerator.
"Has she eaten anything?"
"She threw the peanut butter and jelly sandwich I made her on the floor. She was pissed, but then she picked it back up, put it on the plate, and smiled when she handed it back as she apologized for making a mess," he explains.
"She's afraid we're going to kill her," I mutter.
She didn't tell me as much, but I could see it in her eyes. I have no doubt she thinks I'm dangerous and probably worse than her drug-dealing ex-husband.
His silence makes my skin crawl. We aren't those types of men. She's innocent, despite her lack of being forthcoming about what she knows.
"It takes a certain type of man to keep doing this job, to always walk away from the people you form connections with," Jericho says, sounding more like a therapist than a man who was deep undercover with a notorious sex trafficker for the better part of a year. "It's not a hit to your character that you fell for her."
I open my mouth to deny what he's saying, but it just doesn't feel right. I feel something for Zara. Something I've never felt before. The difference in me should make me happy. I should be ecstatic that my heart isn't as cold and dead as I've always thought it was, but there's no reason to celebrate. He may not see the connection I formed with her as a problem, but I know it is.
I need this job. I need to have something to work toward, something that feeds the darkness in my soul because I don't know who I'll become without it.
"Humans are supposed to crave attention from others," he continues, his eyes cast downward on the beer sitting in front of him. "Being alone and isolated all the time isn't normal."
I know exactly what he's saying, but it was my everyday normal until now. I never had a problem with it, other than the urgency to hunt bad guys.
I can't even picture a life that would look different. I'm not a man who's going to work a nine-to-five and come home in the evenings to a warm meal. I don't want to start a garden and spend my time mowing fucking stripes in my yard. I have to do what I've been doing. I can't let myself want anything different from what I have because I'll just ruin it. It might seem like a good idea, and I'd enjoy the reprieve for a while, but it would never last.
The world needs me to have this job, and I never stuttered with the sacrifices I'm willing to make to help others, until now. I can't be that selfish. Being with her means not doing this, and that's just not an option. It's a hundred percent on me for fucking up, for trying to have something different, even when I knew it would cost me Cerberus.
"I'm going to keep an eye on the bar while you heal," Jericho says in a way that doesn't cut another wound into my skin.
I know it has to be done, but at least he's not taunting me about not being able to get the job done myself.
"We're still trying to figure out who knifed you, but it's very likely it wasn't even connected to Wilkinson."
I nod my head, knowing he's probably right.
I could've easily been stabbed at random by an angry man or someone who wanted to cause a diversion so they could do something else, only I didn't scream and make a scene like a lot of people probably would. There were no police sirens or an ambulance to draw attention away, but I do know I will never forget that man's face.
"Ace did mention having a forensic artist swing by so you can describe the guy and see if it's someone we recognize," Jericho says as he lifts his beer bottle, taking a swig before he stands from the table.
He drops the empty bottle in the trash before walking out of the room. As much as I claimed to like the silence before, I know I can't stay up here when she's so damn close to me. I have no clue how I'll ever be able to walk away from her. I ache when she's not around. My body knows she's somehow a part of me, and it knew on day one, long before she ever spoke or aimed that beautiful smile in my direction.
I know giving her up is going to leave a hole all the way through me, but I don't see any other way.