Chapter Thirty-One

KNOX

Iwas on the phone with my lawyer when the driveway alarm beeped. Opening my laptop, I flipped to the camera that covered the drive.

A fucking Black Rock cruiser. When would this guy give up?

“Got a visitor, I'm going to have to call you back.”

“Don't worry about it, Knox. I'll call you when I've got something together.”

I disconnected and stood, beating Lily and Adam to the door. It was early, almost time to leave to take Adam into preschool. I knew normalcy was important, but I didn't like the idea of taking him to preschool.

My instincts told me to hold Adam and Lily close, to guard them against any threat.

So many balls in the air, most of them a threat to Lily and Adam in one way or another. I couldn't let my feelings cloud my logic. That would only put them in more danger.

I was still tempted to bar the door and keep everyone out, including Deputy Dave. Unfortunately, Lily was more civilized than me.

“It's Dave,” she said unnecessarily, reaching for the handle. I shut down my need to stop her, instead standing behind her with my hand on her shoulder, marking my territory. If I couldn't do it in a more primitive way, I'd settle for this.

Lily swung open the door to reveal Dave holding a bag from the town's doughnut shop, the white paper stained with splotches of grease, the scent of fresh donuts drifting in the door. Out of nowhere, Adam raced to join us, skidding to a stop and yelping with delight at the sight of the doughnut bag.

“Are those for us?” Before Deputy Dave could answer, Adam screeched again and snatched the bag from his hands, darting for the kitchen.

Lily exclaimed in a familiar, exasperated tone, “Adam! I'm so sorry, Dave. Do you want to come in, have some coffee?”

I almost felt sorry for the guy, watching the way his face fell as whatever plan he'd concocted was torn to shreds by Adam's donut theft and my proprietary hand on Lily's shoulder.

My pity dissolved as Dave's forlorn expression melted into something darker. Eyes hard, he stared at my fingers where they touched Lily. I pulled her into the shelter of my body, resisting the urge to shove her behind me.

She wouldn't appreciate that level of protection, and Dave wasn't enough of a danger to justify it. That didn't mean I wasn't ready to act if I needed to.

Lily stepped back a little, holding the door open. “Dave? Did you want to come in for coffee?”

“I don't think so,” he spat out, trying to glare at me and ending up looking squinty.

“Didn't take you long, did it? Do you know how many months I've been working on her?

Close to a fucking year. She's got her legs crossed so tight nobody gets in there.

I'm not surprised they had to adopt Adam.

She's so fucking frigid she's ice cold.”

I was in motion before the last of his words registered.

Swinging Lily behind me, I lunged, my fingers sinking into the collar of Deputy Dave's uniform shirt as I tossed him out the door, catching him with a roundhouse punch on his way.

He landed in a heap, blood dripping from the corner of his mouth.

So much for not letting feelings cloud my logic.

“Get the fuck out,” I said. “Unless you have a legal reason to be here you aren't welcome on Lily's property. Got me?”

Dave's eyes overflowed with bitter venom. He said nothing, wobbling to his feet, backing up before he turned and headed for his cruiser. Behind me, Lily breathed, “Knox, what have you done?”

Without turning around, my eyes on the cruiser backing out of the drive, I said, “Nobody talks about you like that. Ever.”

“But he's a deputy. You could get in trouble—”

“I'd like to see him try.”

She wasn't wrong, and I knew it.

I'd hit a cop without justifiable provocation. Any man—hell, any woman—would understand why I'd thrown a punch and tossed him out of the house. That didn't mean I wouldn't have a problem if he pressed charges.

Deputy Dave was exactly the kind of douche who would press charges over a punch he knew he fucking had coming.

I ushered Lily back into the house, closing and locking the door behind me.

We had Adam's birth certificate. My lawyer was working on getting a copy of the certificate on file with the state, as well as putting together whatever legal papers we'd need to get the surrogate to relinquish any claim to Adam, once we paid LeAnne Gates to tell us who she was.

It was time to get out of Black Rock. I dug my phone out of my pocket to call Cooper. He answered with a rushed, “Good timing. I was about to call.”

“What happened?”

“Tsepov walked. Twenty minutes ago. His lawyer convinced the judge he isn't a flight risk, got the judge to grant bail, and he's out. We had men on him, but he lost them. You three need to move.”

“Perfect timing because I just punched out the local cop.”

“Fuck, Knox. What did he do, talk shit about your girlfriend? Griffen said he wanted a piece of her.”

“No comment.”

I expected a scathing retort, but Cooper laughed. “I'll send the plane.”

Thinking quickly, I said, “Find a strip near Hanover, New Hampshire. Worst case we can go out of Logan in Boston, but if you can find someplace near Hanover, that would be better.”

“Hanover? Got it.”

“Tomorrow. We'll want to spend the night.”

Hanover was the best option for so many reasons. We couldn't leave New England without seeing Lily's parents now that we'd found those letters, and Lily's parents' house was the last place Deputy Dave would look for us. As far as he knew, Lily hadn't spoken to them in years.

“Keep me posted,” Cooper said and hung up.

Lily's eyes were wide with panic. “Hanover?” she asked, her voice wobbling, thin and uncertain.

“Hanover,” I said. “Hanover, and then Atlanta. You want to see them before we leave, don't you?”

If she didn't, I’d call Cooper back, and we’d change our plans. Lily had been through enough. If she wasn’t ready, we’d wait.

She sagged against me. “I do. I do, so much. I’m just— I’m scared. What if—”

I slid my arms around her. The hits kept coming. Everything she’d learned about Trey, her fears for Adam, the letters from her mother, Deputy Dave’s harsh words after she’d considered him a friend. So much I couldn’t shield her from.

“The longer you put it off, the harder it will be. If it doesn’t go well, we're out of there, okay? I promise.”

She nodded, her forehead brushing my chest. “Tsepov got out of jail?”

“We knew that might happen.”

“I know. We're mostly packed. Any idea how long we'll be gone?”

How to answer that question? I could take the easy way out—shrug and say a week or two. Or, I could lay it out, tell her how I felt and let the chips fall.

I put my hands on her shoulders. “Do you want to come back?”

Lily's mouth opened to answer, but nothing came out. I pushed my advantage.

“I want you and Adam to come to Atlanta. I want you and Adam with me, in my house, but if that's too much, I can find you a place. Between Jacob's building and Charlie, I'll find you a place.”

“You want us with you?” Her question was barely more than a whisper.

“If it's up to me I'd say bring everything you can pack, hire someone to do the rest, put the house on the market, and don't come back.”

Light bloomed in Lily's eyes. “How can you be so sure?”

I brushed her cloud of curls back from her face, cupping her chin in my hand and dropping a soft kiss on her mouth.

“I just am. I've waited my entire life to feel the way I feel about you, Lily.

If you want to slow things down, I can wait.

We need to get out of town for now, but if you're not ready to leave Black Rock yet—”

“I am. I am. I just—I didn't want to assume—I didn't know if you—”

“I do. More than anything.” Straightening, I focused on what had to get done.

“We can leave the Land Rover here. I'll have someone drive it down to Atlanta later.

I have to return my rental anyway, so pack as much as you think will fit in the back.

We'll take that with us, load it on the plane, and whatever's left we'll have packed up and moved down later when the rest of this is settled.”

Lily stepped back and nodded. “I can do that. How fast do we have to move? I already put some things aside, organized what we might want now versus later, but if we have the whole SUV…”

I knew what she meant. The SUV I'd rented was massive. We could fit a soccer team in that thing. Lily had set aside bags suitable for a commercial flight, but she could take a lot more than that between the SUV and our plane.

“It's about five hours to Hanover. I think we should try to leave by lunch. Does that work?”

“That works. I'm on it.”

“Lily,” I called out. She stopped and turned, already distracted with everything she had to do in the next few hours. “I don't think Dave is going to press charges. If he comes back, tell him you don't know where I went.”

“Where are you going?”

“Nowhere without you, but he won't know that.”

Shadows moved through Lily's eyes. I waited for her to object, to ask for an explanation. Anything. Instead, she said, “Okay.”

She turned on her heel, then stopped abruptly and threw herself into my arms, planting a kiss on my mouth. As soon as the warmth of her lips left mine, she was gone, flying up the stairs.

I didn't know what I'd done to earn such trust, but I'd do everything I could to deserve it.

I was moving too fast. Cooper would go ape shit if I moved Lily into my house. I didn't fucking care. I'd told her the truth. I'd waited my entire life to feel this way. Maybe things would change, maybe they wouldn't, but I wasn't going into this assuming it would fall apart.

I wanted Lily.

I wanted Adam.

I'd give her space if that's what she needed. As long as she was mine.

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