Epilogue 2 #3
What to say? We’d actually talked about lying over a few drinks and a puzzle once.
It was all about having a moral compass.
She’d laughed when I’d eventually admitted that the time I’d headed over to her dad’s new house to pick up some power tools, we’d also taken his plane out for a spin.
It’d been on a day Kiera and I’d had a lot to do, so I’d omitted the fun parts.
It was a bit of a mindfuck. I’d never really cared enough before to make the distinction between work and private—where lies were concerned.
I was up front about the fact that I couldn’t share much about assignments, but with Kiera, I wanted to be as honest as I could.
I made more of an effort with her. I wanted to.
Except, with my past, with what I did for a living, I wasn’t budging on security.
Operators in general lived with bigger targets on our backs.
That was just how it was. And she didn’t get it yet.
She was hung up on the money. The cost of things.
I suppressed a sigh and typed a quick reply—for now.
I’d have to handle the potential fight with her later, somewhere between tonight and six to eight weeks. That was the delivery window for everything I’d ordered.
Fuck yeah, my hellcat nurse. We’ll celebrate tonight. On my way home. Gotta drop off the van first.
I reached the van and unlocked it, and I helped the guy get the door off his utility cart.
“All right, man. Take care,” the guy said.
“You too.” Gripping the top of the door, I opened the back of the van and—kinda fucking froze at the sight of Kiera. But how? While the seats in the far back faced the other direction, she must’ve ducked down the whole goddamn way out to Fairfax.
She smirked, didn’t look surprised for shit, and put away her sudoku magazine before she flashed her palms. “Please don’t shoot—I’m an American.”
Jesus. Too soon for stowaway jokes.
“Heh.”
Her smirk widened, and she climbed down and held a hand over her belly. “Hi, baby. How did the dentist appointment go?”
I squinted and swallowed. Was I in the doghouse tonight or what?
She hopped up and kissed my cheek. “Nice door. Was this the one that was on sale?”
Uh…
“And please think twice before you answer,” she advised. “I’d rather fight with the truth between us than be sung a lullaby of lies.”
Yeah, that made sense, and now I felt like shit. But, uh… “Did you just come up with that?”
“No, I worked on it for about fifty minutes while you were at the dentist.”
And the hits kept coming. Fuck. Okay, time to wise up.
“One more thing,” she added. “I know you’re in cahoots with Dad. He and I talked, and it’s possible I’ve been slightly unreasonable about the security budget. You want us to be safe, especially if you’re not around. I’m sorry I couldn’t see your side of things right away.”
Then she said something like that, in the middle of an argument in which she was 100% right to be pissed…? I kinda needed her to be okay with her alleged sausage fingers so I could propose like fucking yesterday.
I cleared my throat and got a better grip on the door so I could place it in the van.
“I’m sorry too. I should’ve told you the truth from the beginning.
So, uh…here it is. You’re right. I want you and our boy to be safe.
I won’t budge on it. I won’t get a cheaper option because you’re more comfortable with it either.
” I grunted as I pushed the door between the seats.
It was a heavy motherfucker. Jesus Christ. “And yeah, it’s possible I went to your old man for advice. ”
Once or twice or six times.
Once the door was in, I glanced back at her, finding her smiling slightly and squinting due to the sun. And maybe the timing wasn’t great, but fucking hell, she was beautiful. The sun, the smile, the little belly she was rubbing absently, her dark hair bobbing in the wind like a wave in a lake.
“You don’t look angry,” I noted.
She let out a soft laugh. “I’m not. I’m pregnant, James. I get angry when you eat the last nachos, not when you do silly things like lie to my face.”
I grinned and gathered her in my arms, and she smiled up at me.
Sometimes when I looked at her, I was at a loss for words. A year into our relationship, I could still wake up in the morning and feel the newness of it all. Happiness, having someone who cared for me like Kiera did, dreams, a kid on the way, all of it.
“I really am sorry,” I murmured.
“And it really is okay,” she murmured back. “You did warn me that this is new to you and there might be…I think you called them hiccups.”
I nodded minutely and cupped her cheek. I was totally focused on what she was saying, but it was impossible to ignore the growing baby bump trapped between us. It worked like a daily magnet for my hands, my mouth, and my attention.
I’ll see you soon, little guy. I’ll do my best, okay?
“I’ll still make it up to you.” I dipped down and kissed her. “For instance, can I get you nachos with extra guacamole?”
“Oh God, yes,” she groaned.
I chuckled under my breath and rubbed our noses together. “I love you.”
“I love you too.” She kissed me quickly. “Take me home, pilot.”
“Yes, ma’am.” I ushered her to the passenger’s side and helped her up. “My little stowaway.”
She grinned and flipped her hair over her shoulder. “Seriously. Can I just point out that I’ve successfully hidden from you twice now? You might wanna reflect on that before you go risk your life again.”
What the fresh fuck.
I stared at her.
Did she just…
Holy shit.
The damn mouth on her.
Oh, and she laughed. She laughed hard.
I shut the door and stalked around the van, wondering how I could get my revenge for such a hateful remark. Really, it was hate speech.
There was only one way to make this right.
I was gonna finish the puzzle we were working on by myself, and I was gonna eat all her fucking nachos.
Or half of them, at least.
Some of them.
I’d think about it.
Operator Hyatt and Nurse Kiera will return as secondary characters in future Hillcroft books.