Chapter 13

“You’re becoming a repeat customer,” Lenny, the

repairman who’d previously replaced my broken window, said with a wry grin.

He’d just finished fixing the broken back door, which ended up being an

entirely new back door. Placing the bill on the TV, he started past me with his

toolbox in hand. “I’m glad to see you’re okay, though. I heard about it on the

late evening news last night. This town is getting crazy. All the violence

coming in from the city.”

I smiled faintly as I followed him to the front door. “Thank

you for coming out on such short notice. I really appreciate it.”

“No problem,” he replied, stepping outside. “If you need

anything else, you know to call me.”

“Thanks.” I closed the door, sighing.

Turning around, I eyed the freshly plastered wall behind the

dining room table. Lenny had also covered the two bullet holes. All I needed to

do was match up the paint and then it would be like nothing had ever happened.

Last night felt like forever ago.

I’d spent the bulk of the night sitting in the ER, getting

checked out and then answering a thousand and one police questions. Come to

find out, the shooter had a name—Charles Bakerton. Didn’t sound like a

homicidal maniac’s name, but Charles was still alive. I hadn’t killed him with

the well-placed vase of death swing. I was relieved to hear that. I didn’t want

to know what it felt like to kill someone.

Through the endless hours that had crept into early morning,

Colton had remained beside me, mostly silent and very pissed-off looking. Those

blue eyes were practically on fire. We didn’t get a chance to talk, nothing

other than the basics before he was called out. Surprisingly, Roxy and Reece

had showed up at the hospital and had driven me home. That was…weird.

I was so lucky. Everyone kept telling me that. I had looked

a lot worse than I was. Not even a concussion, and the crack upside the head

hadn’t even required stitches. A fistful of ibuprofen had taken care of that

ache and the rest of the minor pains.

I could’ve died last night, so yeah, I was really lucky.

Moving to the couch, I started to pick up the remote when

there was a knock on my front door. My stomach dropped. Placing the remote

down, I went to the front window first. Totally learned my lesson last night. I

peered out the front window.

It was Colton.

“Oh my, wow,” I

murmured, settling back on my bare feet. I didn’t let my head race into fantasy

land. Him showing up after what went down last night wasn’t a surprise. In a

daze, I slowly walked to the door and opened it.

His hands were planted on each side of the doorframe and he was

leaning in. Blue eyes met mine. “Abby.”

Somehow I plastered a smile on my face, and I had a feeling

it was a crazy looking smile. “Hi, Colton!” The enthusiasm was a bit much, but

I couldn’t tone it down. “How are you—?”

“Don’t do that,” he cut in, and I felt my creeper smile

wobble and then fade. “After what happened yesterday, don’t pretend with me.”

Well then.

He lowered his hands. “We need to talk.”

We did. I stepped aside, pressing my lips together. “Come

in.”

Colton closed the door behind him, but instead of walking to

the couch, he stopped in front of me. My breath caught as he clasped the sides

of my face in a gentle grasp. His intense gaze swept over me. “How are you

feeling?”

“I’m okay. Really.” I forced a less weird smile. “Thanks for

asking.”

The skin around his eyes tensed. “I wanted to get over here

earlier.”

It was then when I realized he was wearing the same clothes

from last night. Needless to say, he probably had a lot of…cop things going on.

“It’s okay. I—”

“It’s not okay. It fucking killed me not to be over here.

Fuck.” He dropped his hands and ran one through his hair as he stepped back.

“Seeing you last night, with blood on your face—fuck,” he cursed again, looking

away. “Damn, I said I would protect you. I didn’t.”

“What?” I blinked. “You couldn’t have known that was going

to happen. Even Detective Hart had said he figured the shooter would’ve run

after his friend or whatever was found dead. That’s not your fault.”

The look on his face said he wasn’t so sure of that. “He

followed you to your house and he hit you with a gun. You could’ve died, Abby.

I—”

“Colton,” I tried again. “I’m serious. It wasn’t your fault.

Okay? And you didn’t have to come over here to check on me. I’m okay.

You’ve…you’ve done enough. You got your brother and Roxy to take me home and—”

“I’ve done enough? Obviously, I haven’t done enough.” His

gaze found its way back to mine. “I need to make a couple of things clear. When

you left Mona’s last night, you were upset. I get that. You just saw me walk

out with Nicole and you left before I could say a single thing to you. Don’t

pretend like you didn’t see that.”

“Okay. You, um,

seemed busy.” I swallowed, taking a step back. “So that…that’s your ex-fiancée?

She’s gorgeous.”

“Yeah, she is.” His brows knitted as he stared down at me.

“You know, I was hoping I would hear from you. I figured after Sunday, I was

going to leave the ball in your court.”

He had? Had he given that message through man code? I wasn’t

good at reading man code.

“Obviously, you need to work through some issues and I was

hoping that you would let me help you with that,” he continued. “I’m impatient

though. I was planning on calling you last night, but my brother does this

thing every week at his place—game night. It’s stupid, but fun. I thought I’d

swing by his place for about an hour and then call you.”

I didn’t know what to say about any of that, but I wasn’t

going to stand here like I was mute. I had a voice and I was going to use it.

“But you were at Mona’s, with Nicole.”

“I was,” he said, a muscle flexing along his jaw. “I met her

there on the way to Reece’s. When we broke up, there was a watch that my

grandfather had given me before he passed away. One night at her place, I had

taken it off and I never found it after that. Nicole finally found it.”

Lowering his one hand to the pocket of his denim jeans, he fished out a gold

watch that looked like it cost a pretty penny. “She wanted to talk. That’s why

we were in Jax’s office.”

I stared at the watch and then watched him place it back in

his pocket. Part of me felt like an idiot, but how would anyone really react in

this situation? “What did she want?”

Colton didn’t lie. “She misses me. That’s what she wanted to

talk about.”

Sucking in a sharp breath, I schooled my expression blank.

“Okay.”

His eyes narrowed. “Is that all you have to say about that?”

The frustration rose again, rushing over my skin like an

army of fiery ants. If last night had taught me anything, it was that I wasn’t

a coward. I was a survivor. I really found my voice then. “What do you

want me to say, Colton? How do I respond to that? I’m not mad that she misses

you. You probably miss her too. You were together for a long time, but…” My

words started to fade, and while there was a part of me that just wanted to

show him the door and retreat, I refused to do it. “But we just reconnected and

I don’t know where our relationship is going. And you know what? Yes. I don’t

have the greatest confidence in myself right now. I haven’t seriously dated

anyone besides Kevin, and the last four years have been a really long dry

spell. And I know that’s not the greatest issue to have, but whatever. I like

you.”

I’d blurted those last three words out and then I couldn’t

take them back. “I really like you, Colton. I’ve always liked you, but

I’m going to be honest. I’m going to suck at this whole dating thing and I’m

going to have moments when I doubt why you’re here. And it doesn’t help when

your ex-fiancée looks like a Sports Illustrated model. I shouldn’t

have run from the bar. That was stupid, but guess what, I’m probably going to

do a lot of stupid things. That’s just the beginning.”

His lips started to twitch.

My eyes narrowed. “You think this is funny?”

“No.” His eyes said he was lying. “Not at all.”

“Uh-huh.” I folded my arms across my chest and parroted back

what he’d said earlier. “Is that all you have to say about that?”

“No. That’s not all.” His lips did curve up at the corners

then. “I don’t think less of you because you don’t see what I see, what I know,

when I look at you. That’s the issue I’m more than willing to work with. You

get that?”

I nodded as I pressed my lips together.

“I like you, really like you,” he repeated, and that hope in

my chest sparked into a wildfire. “I’ve always liked you, too. And

yeah, Nicole is great looking, but she’s not the person I’m standing in front

of and she’s not the person who gets me hard when I think of her. And she isn’t

the person I almost lost last night. That’s you, sweetheart, all you.”

Warmth invaded my cheeks. Oh…oh wow.

“I can tell you where this relationship is going. Or at

least where I hope it is. We’re going to spend more time together. We’re going

to really get to know each other, and I’m going to chip away at that low

confidence shit until you see what I see,” he said, and a shiver curled along

the base of my spine in response to his steely determination.

My breath caught as he took a step forward and lifted his

hands, gently holding my cheeks once more. “I want this to work,” he said, his

voice low. “Because like I said before, I believe in second chances and I don’t

believe in coincidences. There was a reason why you and I reconnected, and I

don’t want to pass that up. And we almost lost that last night, so really,

we’re working on a third chance. I want this to work.”

“I…I want this to work too.” My heart was thumping like a

steel drum.

“Then we are on the same page.”

“We are,” I whispered.

“Good.”

Then he kissed me, and in the back of my head, I realized we

were still standing just inside the foyer, but I didn’t care. His kiss started

off sweet and tender, but I wanted more. So did he. My hands found their way to

his chest, and I could feel his heart beating just as fast as mine.

I broke the kiss, breathing heavily. “Do you want to stay?”

“Hell yeah, but if I…if I do, I’m not leaving tonight.” His

thumbs dragged over my cheeks. “And if I don’t leave tonight, I’m going to be

upstairs and I’m going to want to be in that bed and in between those pretty

thighs of yours. If you don’t want that or you’re not up to it because of last

night, let me know now. I can wait, but either way, I’m not letting go of you

tonight.”

“I’m fine.” There wasn’t a moment of hesitation. “I

want that.”

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