Chapter 20 Charlie
CHARLIE
The hotel room was fine. That was the problem with it.
Fine mattress, fine blackout curtains, fine temperature.
No smell of cedar or woodsmoke. No mountains visible from the window, just the parking structure across the street and the particular orange wash of town light that makes the sky look like something left on too long.
I lay there until one in the morning running SEAS numbers in my head, which was what I did when I couldn’t sleep and couldn’t think about anything else without the thinking becoming something I wasn’t ready for.
Phase Two timelines. Acoustic calibration variables.
The question of whether the sensor array could handle the thermal differential in the Gulf Stream application we’d been considering before Richard had become the kind of problem that required full attention.
The numbers weren’t working. Not the math—the math was fine, the math was always fine.
But the numbers kept sliding off my brain and landing somewhere else, somewhere that was all mountain light and terrible eggs and the specific quiet of a man who had just made the hardest phone call of his life and sat with his hand on the phone afterward like he was deciding whether to pick it back up.
I got up. Put on my swimsuit. Took the elevator down to the pool level.
Water had always been the place I could think.
Not the lab, not the ocean, not the testing pools in San Diego with their controlled salinity and calibrated lighting.
Any water. The simple physics of it—the pressure equalization, the way sound changes underwater, the way your body has to stop performing and just float.
I’d done my best thinking in pools since I was twelve.
The pool was empty. The lights were on their overnight setting—blue-white, low, the kind that turns the water into something luminous and makes the world above the surface feel far away. I stood at the edge for a moment, then dove in.
I swam laps. Not thinking yet, just moving.
The pull of the water, the rhythm of the stroke, the precise moment of the turn at each wall.
My wrist and the tension in my shoulders loosened by degrees.
Twelve laps. Fourteen. The thing I was avoiding started to surface anyway, the way things always do when you stop running from them.
I was on lap sixteen when I heard the pool room door open.
My first thought was hotel staff. My second thought arrived before the first one finished, because I recognized the posture even in silhouette—the deliberate stillness of a man who’d been waiting to find this exact moment. The overhead light caught his face when he moved.
Richard.
He looked different than in the coffee shop.
The corporate composure was gone—the peacoat, the expensive shoes, the managed smile.
He was in dark clothing, his hair slightly wrong, and his eyes had the quality I’d clocked briefly in the coffee shop when his mask had slipped.
Not anger. Something that thought it was love.
“You need to come with me,” he said. Conversational. Like we were continuing a discussion we’d paused for lunch. “There’s a car outside. We can be in Denver in four hours, and by morning you’ll understand that what he’s been telling you about me isn’t—”
“No.”
He moved toward the pool edge. Not fast—measured, the way he did everything. “Charlotte. I found you in forty-eight hours. Pierce’s people couldn’t. That should tell you something about who understands you better.”
I pushed off the wall and swam for the far end.
Put the length of the pool between us. The water was an advantage—I knew that immediately with the clarity that comes from ten years of thinking about bodies in water.
He was in street clothes. I was in my element.
If I could stay in the pool, I had options.
“Get out of this hotel, Richard.” I kept my voice steady. My hands on the far wall, treading water. “Whatever you think is happening here—it’s not. It was never happening. There was nothing between us. There has never been anything between us.”
He crouched at the pool’s edge. Level with me now, his elbows on his knees.
“That’s what he’s made you think. Three years I supported your work.
Three years I protected you from people who wanted to strip the project for parts.
You think Pierce would have let you run SEAS if I hadn’t built it into something worth buying? ”
“You stole my patents. You buried my publications. You held my work hostage for a decade to keep me from leaving.” I was watching his hands, his weight distribution, the way his eyes kept tracking to the pool steps. “That’s not protection, Richard. That’s a cage.”
Something shifted in his face. The hurt hardening into something else. “Come out of the water.”
“No.”
He moved fast. Down the pool steps, fully clothed, the shock of the cold water registering on his face before his training told him to suppress it.
I was already moving—across the pool, diagonally, using the underwater current of his entry to tell me exactly where he was without looking.
I knew bodies in water. I knew how they panicked, how they grabbed, where the instinct went when the environment was wrong.
I dove under, felt his hand close on my ankle, twisted free the way I’d practiced in every certification course I’d ever taught.
But he was bigger and angrier and the pool wasn’t the ocean.
He had the walls. He had the shallows. He caught me at the far edge before I reached it—both hands on my shoulders, forcing me under, not long, just enough to make the point, just enough that I came up choking and grabbed the pool coping with both hands and heard myself making sounds that were fear and fury in equal measure.
“Charlotte.” His voice was ragged now. He was out of his element and he knew it. “Stop fighting me.”
I didn’t stop fighting him. I hooked my knee over the pool edge and pushed off his chest with both feet and he went back, arms windmilling, and I got halfway out of the water before his hand closed on my wrist—my left wrist, the wrong angle, all his weight pulling backward—the pain was white and sharp, and I heard something in the joint go wrong before he finally let go.
I got out. The pool deck was slippery and my wrist was wrong and Richard was already recovering, turning toward the steps, and I thought: I need five seconds. That’s all. Five seconds between us and I can get to the door and scream this hotel down.
The pool door opened.
Asher.
He took in the scene in one second. Less.
The kind of threat assessment that had once been military and was now bone-deep reflex.
His eyes went to me first—assessing, cataloging—and then to Richard in the pool, and then something happened in his face that I’d never seen before.
Not the CEO. Not the controlled mask. Something much older and more certain than either of those things.
He walked to the pool edge. Didn’t pause. Didn’t look at the water the way I’d seen him look at it on docks and in boats—that fractional hesitation, the thing he managed so completely that you’d miss it if you weren’t paying attention. He didn’t hesitate. He went in.
Richard turned toward the sound of the splash. I moved.
I got back in the water. Not because it was the sensible choice—because Richard was between Asher and the wall and Asher was still disoriented from the entry and I knew how to use a pool in a way neither of them did.
I came up beside Richard from his blind side and hooked my arm around his throat from behind, both legs wrapped around his waist, the hold from the diver rescue certification I’d run forty times.
Not a choke. A control. Enough to keep him occupied, enough to make him fight me instead of Asher, enough for the two or three seconds it took Asher to get his bearings and close the distance.
Richard grabbed for my injured wrist. I let go before he could use it against me and Asher was there, both hands on Richard’s collar, driving him hard into the pool wall.
The impact was definitive. Richard stopped moving with the sudden stillness of a man whose body had made a decision his pride hadn’t authorized.
Cortez appeared at the pool door. Then a hotel security guard. Then another. Asher held Richard against the wall until Cortez was in the water beside him and there were enough hands to make it unnecessary, and then he let go.
He turned and found me at the pool’s edge. I was out of the water, sitting on the deck, my wrist cradled against my chest. He was across the pool in four strokes. He got out and crouched in front of me, and his hands were shaking.
“Your wrist.”
“It’ll be fine.”
“You got back in the water.” His voice had a quality I couldn’t read. Not anger. Something that hadn’t decided what it was yet.
“You needed time to get your bearings. I had the angle.” I looked at him.
He was soaked, sitting on the pool deck in whatever he’d driven here in, which appeared to be the same clothes he’d worn all day.
He looked wrecked. He also looked like a man who’d gone into the water without thinking about it, which was the only thing in this entire terrible night that was making my chest do something I wasn’t ready to name. “You went in.”
He looked at the pool. At Richard, now being handled by Cortez and two hotel security staff at the far end. At the water, blue-white and still as if nothing had happened. “Yeah,” he said. “I did.”
The police arrived eleven minutes later.
Richard Sterling was arrested on the pool deck of the St. Regis Aspen, still dripping, while a junior officer read him his rights with the particular care of someone who understood that the man in handcuffs was going to have very expensive lawyers and every word needed to be correct.
Jax gave the primary statement. I sat against the wall with a hotel towel around my shoulders and my wrist in my lap and watched it happen and thought about what it meant that Asher Pierce, who had been afraid of the water since his best friend died in it, had gone in without pausing.
Without the fractional hesitation. Without anything between the decision and the action.
He sat next to me against the wall. Close. Not touching. Leaving the distance there, acknowledging it.
“I should have told you about the credit card,” he said. Quiet. To the middle distance, not to me. “Jax told me to get you off your regular cards the day after the coffee shop. I said I’d handle it. I didn’t handle it.”
I didn’t say it was OK. It wasn’t. But it was also not what I was thinking about right now, sitting on this wet floor with a wrist that needed imaging, watching Richard Sterling be led away by police. “You called Reid off. You kept your word.”
“I should have kept my word and gotten you off your cards. Those aren’t the same thing.”
He was right. He knew he was right. He wasn’t asking me to tell him it was OK.
He was just stating the truth out loud, which was new, and I noticed it the way I noticed everything he did these days—with the attention of a woman who was keeping a careful count of the ways a man was and was not changing.
Mia arrived at the same time as the paramedics. She had Asher’s name in her mouth before she’d cleared the door and then she saw me and stopped.
“Tell me the wrist is the worst of it,” she said.
“The wrist is the worst of it.”
She sat down on the other side of me. Asher on my left, Mia on my right. The water was still. Richard was gone. And I sat between the two people I trusted most in this hotel and let myself be grateful, which felt like something I’d been putting off for a very long time.