Chapter Six
~ Daniel ~
I shifted uncomfortably on the McKenzie family couch, the ancient springs digging into my back like they had a personal vendetta against law enforcement.
Hetty McKenzie hovered over me with the determined focus of a battlefield medic, her fingers prodding at the bandage on my forehead with more force than necessary.
I bit back a wince, refusing to give her the satisfaction. Three days in this house, and I was already going stir-crazy, trapped between four walls with a woman who clearly wanted me gone and her son who clearly didn't.
"You're healing nicely," Hetty said, though her tone suggested she found this fact mildly disappointing. "Doctor Miller says those stitches can come out in another few days."
"I appreciate all you've done," I replied, the polite words automatic but hollow. What I appreciated was Harlow's gentle concern, his quiet presence in the room, his eyes that followed me with an innocent hunger he couldn't quite disguise.
Speaking of Harlow, he stood in the doorway, filling the frame with those broad shoulders, watching our interaction with careful, calculating eyes. For someone everyone in town dismissed as "simple," he missed absolutely nothing.
"Ma, do you need help with anything?" His deep voice sent an involuntary shiver down my spine.
Hetty's head snapped up, her hands stilling on my bandage. "No, honey. Why don't you go check on those fence posts in the north pasture? Your father mentioned they needed mending."
I watched the conflict play across Harlow's face—the desire to stay versus the lifetime of obedience to his mother's commands. Our eyes met briefly, and I tried to communicate without words: I'm not going anywhere. Not really. Not for long.
"Yes, Ma," he finally said, his reluctant gaze lingering on me for one more heartbeat before he turned and disappeared from the doorway.
The moment he was gone, I felt the shift in Hetty's demeanor like a drop in barometric pressure before a storm.
Her movements became more abrupt, her mouth pinched tight at the corners.
She finished securing the fresh bandage with quick, efficient movements, then sat back on the coffee table facing me, hands folded primly in her lap.
My eyes drifted past her to the mantel above the fireplace, lined with family photos in mismatched frames. Even from this distance, I could pick out Harlow in each one.
As a towheaded child of perhaps five, already a head taller than his classmates in what looked like a school play. As a teenager, hunched awkwardly in a family portrait as if trying to make himself smaller, though he still dwarfed his mother and stood eye-to-eye with his father.
A more recent photo showed him holding a blue ribbon at what appeared to be the county fair, his smile shy but genuine, standing beside what must have been a prize-winning animal.
In every image, the same story: a gentle giant, physically imposing but somehow always positioned slightly behind others, as if apologizing for the space he occupied.
"Deputy Latham." Hetty's voice snapped my attention back to her. She glanced nervously at the doorway where Harlow had disappeared, then leaned forward, dropping her voice to a near-whisper. "You need to understand something."
The intensity in her expression put me instantly on alert. I straightened up, ignoring the protest from my ribs.
"My Harlow is... slow." She said the word with the careful delicacy of someone handling broken glass. "He has no idea about the desire between adults."
A muscle twitched in my jaw, heat rising in my chest so rapidly I had to take a measured breath before responding.
The familiar anger that always simmered just below my surface threatened to boil over—not at her, exactly, but at the world that had conspired to make this woman believe her own son was incapable of normal human emotions.
"With all due respect, ma'am," I said, my voice quiet but firm, "you're wrong about your son."
Hetty's eyes widened, her hands freezing mid-gesture as if I'd slapped her.
"Harlow might process things differently," I continued, holding her gaze steadily, "but he's still a man. He has desires just like any man."
The color drained from her face, then rushed back in a tide of crimson. "You don't understand," she insisted, her voice taking on a desperate edge. "He doesn't comprehend the... the physical aspects. He's innocent that way. Always has been."
I leaned forward, closing some of the distance between us, making sure she couldn't escape my words. "Mrs. McKenzie, I've spent my career reading people. It's what keeps me alive. And I can tell you with absolute certainty that your son understands far more than you give him credit for."
"That's impossible," she whispered, but doubt had crept into her voice. "He's never shown interest in... in that."
I thought about the way Harlow's pupils had dilated when our hands touched, how his breathing had quickened when I stood close to him, how carefully he'd carried me through that storm, as if I were something precious he couldn't bear to damage.
"Maybe he's never had the chance," I suggested, softer now but no less certain. "Or maybe he's never felt safe enough to show it."
Hetty's shock transformed into something harder, her motherly concern crystallizing into defensive anger. "What exactly are you implying, Deputy?"
"I'm not implying anything," I said, straightening up despite the pain in my ribs. "I'm stating facts. Your son is a grown man with a grown man's feelings. Treating him like he's incapable of them doesn't protect him—it isolates him."
She stood abruptly, smoothing down her apron with shaking hands. "I think you should rest now," she said, her voice tight with barely controlled emotion. "Doctor Miller was very clear about limiting excitement during your recovery."
I watched her retreat toward the kitchen, her shoulders rigid with indignation.
As her footsteps faded, I turned my attention back to the photos on the mantel, particularly the most recent one of Harlow.
In it, he stood slightly apart from the rest of his family, not because they had positioned him that way, but because he had positioned himself—a silent acknowledgment of the invisible barrier that had always existed between him and the world.
A barrier I fully intended to break through.
I settled back against the couch cushions, a small, satisfied smile playing at the corners of my mouth.
Hetty McKenzie thought she was protecting her son from the big bad world and all its complicated desires.
She had no idea that the desires were already there, already taking root and growing stronger with every glance, every touch, every moment we shared in this storm-battered house.
And she had absolutely no idea what I was willing to do to claim what I wanted. What I needed. What was already mine.
Over the next three days, I watched Hetty McKenzie orchestrate a ballet of separation between her son and me that would have impressed military strategists. The woman had a gift for tactical maneuvering that rivaled some of my academy instructors.
Every meal, every medication schedule, every mundane household task was precisely calibrated to ensure Harlow and I were never alone together for more than thirty seconds.
I maintained my polite smile through it all, thanking her for her "thoughtful care" while mentally cataloging every move in this chess game she didn't realize I was also playing.
Breakfast became my first daily lesson in Hetty's tactics.
She'd serve me at precisely 7:15 each morning, exactly fifteen minutes after Harlow had finished his own meal and headed out for early chores.
I'd catch the lingering warmth of his coffee mug, sometimes positioned directly across from where I sat—the only tangible evidence he'd been there at all.
"Such a shame you just missed Harlow," Hetty would say, her expression carefully neutral as she poured my coffee. "He's always been an early riser. Gets that from his father."
I'd nod and thank her for the food, swallowing both the too-sweet coffee and my frustration in equal measure.
On the second morning, I deliberately woke earlier, making my way downstairs at 6:45.
I caught a glimpse of Harlow at the kitchen table, his massive frame making the sturdy wooden chair look like doll furniture.
Our eyes met for one electric moment before Hetty materialized between us as if summoned by some maternal alarm system.
"Deputy! You're up early," she exclaimed, her voice falsely bright. "Harlow, didn't you say the tractor was making that strange noise again? Better check it before your father gets back."
I watched the conflict play across Harlow's face—that same struggle between his own desires and a lifetime of obedience. His eyes found mine again, a silent apology in their depths as he pushed back from the table.
"Yes, Ma," he said quietly, then to me with a nod, "Morning, Deputy."
Just two words, but the deep rumble of his voice sent a current of warmth through my chest. Before I could respond, he was gone, the screen door closing behind him with a soft whack that felt like punctuation on Hetty's victory.
When I was alone, I tested the limits of my healing body.
In the privacy of the guest room, I'd drop to the floor for push-ups, gritting my teeth against the protest from my ribs.
Ten on the first day. Fifteen on the second.
Twenty on the third. Each small increase a testament to my returning strength and my refusal to remain an invalid.
I checked my stitches in the bathroom mirror, prodding at the healing wound with impatient fingers, calculating how much longer I'd be trapped in this house of strategic interruptions.