Chapter Twelve
~ Liam ~
The bed in the guest room was barely wide enough to lie on my back with my arms folded, which was fine, because I’d spent the last hour not moving.
I kept expecting my body to rebel and roll over, but it was like I’d become part of the furniture: a bundle of nerves and cold feet pressed into cedar-scented sheets, a single fixed point in the dark.
The ceiling was nothing to look at. Plain, unfinished, split by the seam where the house had been expanded, or maybe just settled unevenly over a century of snowpack and sun.
But I stared at it anyway, counted out the old nail heads, tracked the silvered lines of glue where the insulation had peeled away in some ancient repair.
Underneath all that, the house ran its own pulse: pipes ticking as the heater cycled off, a faint creak in the joist every time the wind tried the window.
From two rooms down, I could hear the baby monitor, the green LED winking into the hallway, even though Emilio was down for the count and not likely to scream until sunrise.
I ran the numbers in my head, the same way I always did when there was nothing left to control. I listed all the reasons it made sense for Hooper to keep to his own room tonight, all the evidence that this—whatever “this” was—would be better for everybody if it stayed inside the lines.
One: We’d just made it legal twelve hours ago and neither of us had the bandwidth to run a victory lap.
Two: We’d be idiots to risk waking the baby, who had demonstrated a clear willingness to nap only if the rest of the house remained absolutely motionless.
Three: There was still the question of what to call it, this thing between us, and if it was going to combust, it should at least be in a room with better soundproofing than these single-ply walls.
I told myself it was better this way. That it was good—maybe necessary—to let the dust settle before we did something irreversible. I’d spent years on the run from the consequences of impulsive decisions; it was almost noble to be careful now.
But after a while, the logic went flat, the way light bulbs do when you stare at them too long in the dark. The more I tried to reason myself out of wanting, the more the wanting pressed in at the edges, crawling up my legs and under my shirt, raw and insistent and as inevitable as sunrise.
By the time I gave in, the house was deep in its own midnight. I listened for the baby, for the sound of movement down the hall, for anything that might signal a better reason to stay put. There was nothing—just the wind and the slow, viscous sound of my own breathing.
I swung my feet out from under the blanket and hissed as the cold bit at my toes.
The floor was rough, unfinished, and sent a warning up the arch of my foot with every step.
I moved slow, feeling my way to the door, hand flat on the wall to keep from tripping over the duffel or the crooked baseboard.
The hallway was black except for the thin bar of moonlight that ran along the carpet, aiming straight for the far end of the house. Emilio’s door was closed to a finger-width crack, the baby monitor’s glow just visible inside, steady as a heart rate. I paused there, listened, heard nothing.
The house was holding its breath.
At the end of the hall, Hooper’s door was open—not much, just enough to say “not sleeping” even if he was, just enough to show that he wasn’t the kind of man who needed to lock things out.
The light from the window cut through the gap, a wedge of pure white that fell across the warped boards and glared off the metal of the doorknob.
I hovered for a second, weighing the situation. If he was awake, he’d hear me before I even made the hinge squeak. If he was out cold, it would take a lot more than my sock-footed shuffle to wake him.
The idea of turning back occurred to me, and I gave it a full five seconds of honest effort. But then the cold started working its way up from my toes to my knees, and the thought of returning to that small, empty bed felt like defeat.
I touched the door with two fingers, pushed it open slow. The light inside was faint, moon only, blue and thin as water, but my eyes had already adjusted.
The room smelled like machine oil, cedar, and something deep and animal that I recognized from the kitchen, the porch, the way Hooper’s jacket had smelled when he held the baby to his chest.
He was asleep, or doing a good imitation.
The blanket had slid off one shoulder, leaving the bare arm splayed across the sheets, elbow bent at a perfect right angle, knuckles resting just above the mattress.
His hair was short enough that it barely cast a shadow, but the line of his jaw picked up every available angle and made it sharp.
The rest of him was lost under the blanket, but I could see the rise and fall of his chest, slow and even. The left hand—his dominant—was curled into a loose fist, and the gold band caught the light every time his wrist shifted against the fabric.
I stood at the foot of the bed for longer than was necessary, hands at my sides, trying to decide if I was cold or just nervous. The sleep shirt I’d scrounged from the laundry hung too big at the sleeves, and I could feel the draft at the hem, a thin chill that made my skin go tight.
It would have been easy to make a noise. To clear my throat, or call his name, or even just move in a way that would telegraph my intentions. But instead I stood there, stock-still, a silhouette in someone else’s room, and waited for something to happen.
Nothing did. So I took a step forward, then another, then reached out and touched his arm, just above the wrist. His skin was warm, the heat of it a shock against my hand.
I waited, then gave him a gentle shake.
Hooper’s eyes opened. There was no period of confusion, no transition from asleep to awake—just a switch flicking over, and all of a sudden, every muscle in his body was present and accounted for.
He looked at me, not surprised. He just waited, letting the room fill with the fact of me standing there.
I kept my hand on his arm, maybe for stability, maybe just so I wouldn’t lose my nerve.
“Can’t sleep?” he asked, his voice low and unhurried.
I shook my head, and the movement felt strange, like I was underwater. “It’s cold.”
He glanced at the window, then back at me. “It’s always cold here.”
I nodded. Then, finally, I asked, “Can I stay?”
He didn’t answer right away. Instead, he slid his hand over mine, the gold band scraping lightly against my knuckles. He squeezed, not tight, but firm enough that I felt it in the bones.
Then he moved over, making space, and pulled back the blanket.
I let myself crawl in beside him, the warmth of the sheets immediate and overwhelming. I lay on my side, knees drawn up, and listened to his breathing, steady and close.
For a while, neither of us moved. The moon slid across the ceiling in slow increments, and the house made its ancient, patient noises.
Then, just as I was starting to drift, Hooper put his arm around me, pulled me tight, and held me there.
I let him.
I let the cold fade, and the house fade, and the rest of the world with it.
I must have drifted. I don’t remember the transition, only the sudden, bone-deep certainty that something was about to happen. A subtle shift in the air, or maybe just the way my own breath seemed to be coming from somewhere outside my body.
It was like dreaming about falling and then actually falling—there was no warning, no linear path from one state to the next.
One second I was curled up on the edge of the mattress, the next I was airless, then on my back with two hundred forty-five pounds of ex-military muscle pinning me to the bed.
I made a noise, or thought I did, but it was gone before it made it past my throat. Hooper had an arm across my chest and a hand at my jaw, big and blunt-fingered and so warm it was like a fever. The other hand had a lock on my left wrist, flattened to the sheet at ear level.
His face was over mine, close enough that I could see the stubble shadow where the light from the window hit his chin, the quick dilation of his pupils as he realized it was me and not some threat.
The grip on my jaw shifted, thumb moving to the side of my throat, not quite squeezing, but letting me know, in no uncertain terms, that he could if he needed to.
I flailed, but not with any real commitment—a half-hearted knee-up that he neutralized with his own leg, locking me in place at the hip. The move was efficient, practiced. The same way he’d handled the baby bottles, or the damn bread knife in the kitchen, or a live grenade in some other life.
The restraint wasn’t frightening, not really. It was electrifying.
I slapped at the hand on my throat—open palm, quick and flat—the way you do when you’re telling someone to ease up, or when you want them to know you’re not a threat, but you’re also not backing down. The signal was clear: I could call this off, if I wanted.
Hooper’s response was instant. He loosened the pressure, just a fraction, and then said my name. Just my name, nothing else, but in a tone I’d never heard before—low, almost hoarse, but with a steady undercurrent of command.
“Liam.”
The sound of it landed with such force that I almost missed the next part: the release of my wrist, the hand shifting from my jaw to the side of my face, the soft drag of his thumb over my cheekbone.
His own breath was ragged now, each inhale just slightly behind the last, like he was recalibrating in real time.
He reached over to the nightstand and flicked the lamp. The world went from blue to gold, and for a second I was blinded, the afterimage of him burned onto the back of my eyelids.
When my vision came back, he was looking straight at me—six inches away, maybe less—his eyes narrowed not in anger, but in focus. Reading me. Waiting for a sign.
I tried to laugh, but it came out as a cough. “You always wake up like that?”