Authors: R.L. Mathewson
wandering the earth. On the other hand, if even one of them had contacted him, he would
have been able to end this a long time ago. Then again, for all he knew they could be stuck
where they’d died, unable to let go.
"Bitch!"
"No, you're the bitch!" the airhead twins argued as his head started to pound. "Ask him.
He’ll tell you!" she said, gesturing to him.
Tristan just barely bit back his groan. They'd been too busy bitch slapping each other to
even notice him and he'd hoped it stayed that way.
"You know if he could see us that he'd totally want me, right?" the brunette said as she
fluffed her blood caked hair back. They stood behind Marty, watching him.
The blonde snorted. "He can see us and he was totally checking out my girls," she said as
she made a show of adjusting her breasts and winked at him, making him cringe.
"Nah ah!" the brunette said.
"Yeah, because when we were arguing over whether my text messaging and fixing my
makeup while I was driving or all those cars going the wrong way on the highway was the
reason we crashed, he muttered that we should win the Darwin Award."
"You mean we're going to win something?" the brunette asked, practically jumping up
and down.
"Totally!"
As the dead women suddenly rushed him, he promised all kinds of revenge on Shayne,
starting with cancelling the porn channel.
Chapter
16
"I'm going home," she announced as she stood up and collected her things.
"Don't care," Tristan said and she just barely stopped herself from throwing her stapler at
his head.
All day she'd been forced to put up with his surly attitude. Now she was more than ready
to call it a night. If she’d thought he'd been an asshole before, she'd been dead wrong.
Today he'd redefined the term asshole. Today she couldn't wait to get the hell away from
him. Today.....
Today he broke her heart.
All day she’d waited and hoped to see a glimmer of the Tristan that she loved, but he
never showed up. Instead, she had to deal with this jerk that either ignored her or snapped
at her. Several times she was forced to leave the office and hide out in the bathroom to calm
down before she did something completely stupid like cry.
She loved him so much and she hated him for it. She didn’t want to feel this way
about him, never had, but she couldn’t help it. Being in love with Tristan felt natural, right
and the other day when she’d been in his arms she’d felt whole for the first time in her life.
She wanted to be with him, needed to be with him, but that was never going to happen.
At least one thing was clear.
She couldn't keep doing this. As much as she wanted to work in this department,
and with her father before he retired, she just couldn't. She couldn't come in day after day
and pretend that seeing him and being near him wasn't killing her. She just couldn't keep
doing this and, as soon as she had her degree, she would start sending out her resume and
hopefully she'd find something far away so that she could move on with her life and forget
about him.
Who the hell was she trying to kid? She'd never be able to forget about Tristan Black. At
least she'd be able to put some space between them and give her broken heart a chance to
mend and finally move on.
She’d just reached the door when someone knocked. Ignoring Tristan's muttered, yet
colorful, curse, she opened the door to find Rosemary standing in the doorway wearing
what could only be described as a complacent smile on her face.
"Detective Black, Hank would like a word with you," she said, making everything in
Marty go still.
Oh no........
Somehow between work and Tristan's attitude she'd forgotten all about her father and the
likelihood that he would find out about everything that had transpired over the weekend.
Well, not everything, but he sure as hell would find out about Tristan being shoved out of
his house, aroused and naked as well as Tristan's little announcement at the bar.
This was bad, very bad. She needed to speak with her father first and calm him down
before he spoke to Tristan. Hell, she hadn't been this nervous since she’d crashed her
father's truck back in high school. If she was this anxious, she couldn't imagine how nervous
Tristan must be. It was his ass on the line after all. Maybe she should talk to him before she
spoke to her father, to reassure him that everything was going to be okay. Her father was an
intimidating man after all, and had scared off more guys than she could count. She needed
to handle this before things got out of hand and-
"Tell him that I'll be right there," Tristan said, standing up and grabbing a file before
heading to the door, looking calm and relaxed.
"Your father would like to speak with you as well," Rosemary added before she walked
away.
Marty stepped in front of the door, blocking it. "Maybe you should let me talk to my
father first."
"It's not necessary," Tristan said, gesturing for her to go.
"Not necessary?" she repeated, dumbfounded. "It's very necessary. The man is going to
be pissed."
Tristan merely shrugged as he somehow managed to get her out of the office. He stepped
past her and headed towards her father's office. She followed after him, feeling the eyes of
everyone in the pit watching her. She really wasn't looking forward to this. In fact, she’d
planned on speaking with her father about everything over lunch at his favorite pizza shop.
She would have explained everything and, if that failed, she would have begged her father
to stay out of it and let her handle things. Unfortunately for Tristan, she'd worked through
lunch and obviously missed a golden opportunity, because her father was about to kill him.
"Have a seat," her father said tightly when they walked into his office.
With a sense of doom, she did just that. This was so wrong. She was in her twenties and
she should be beyond this, but apparently she was a wimp.
"I need to speak with you, Hank," Tristan said, getting to the point. On behalf of the
butterflies in her stomach she could have kissed the man, but she quickly reminded herself
that was what got them into this situation in the first place.
"What do you have?" Hank asked, sighing heavily as he held out his hand for the file in
Tristan's hand.
"It might not be anything," Tristan said, handing over the file before taking the seat next
to hers.
"But you don't think so," Hank said, opening the file.
"No, I think all the cases are connected," Tristan said, leaning back in his chair and
looking relaxed while she sat there trying not to fidget. "If you'll look over my notes, you'll
see that all fifty-eight of the women I've selected for this were last seen near restaurant
supply stores or high class restaurants."
"How far back does this go?" Hank asked, dropping his gaze to the folder.
"Twenty-two years."
"No bodies?" Hank asked as he continued to look over Tristan's notes.
"No, and not one of them has been seen since. No calls, letters, or sightings."
"Have you contacted the detectives on these cases?"
"Yes."
"And?"
Tristan ran a hand through his neatly combed hair, sighing heavily. "They have no new
leads and they don't have the manpower to look into this."
"Neither do we," Hank said with real regret in his tone. "We're backed up as it is,
Tristan."
"My main focus is on my cases, Hank, but I really think this deserves some attention as
well."
Hank nodded as he closed the file and handed it back to Tristan. "Just make sure that
you don't fall behind. Let me know if you find anything that we can use."
Tristan took the file back, not looking all that surprised, she noticed. "What did you need
to talk to us about, Hank?" Tristan asked casually with absolutely no fear as he met her
father's gaze head on.
"You're not meeting the requirements of our agreement," her father said, surprising her.
She couldn't help but sag a little in relief that she wasn't about to get chewed out in front of
Tristan. It also meant that she could still speak to her father about everything. She didn't
want him hearing about what happened from someone else. She wasn't a child and had no
plans of trying to hide what happened from her father or lying about it. It was just a little
awkward talking to her father about what happened. She doubted many people eagerly
spoke to their parents about their sexual escapades.
"I've been cleared medically," Tristan pointed out.
"Yes," Hank said, sighing as he picked up a clipboard and looked it over. "You do realize
that I'm not buying this bullshit sign off, right?" he asked, looking up to meet Tristan's eyes
and she could have sworn her father looked amused.
"They signed off, Hank. That's all that's required for me to return back to work," Tristan
pointed out, still holding her father's gaze.
"Uh huh, care to tell me how they went from suggesting extending light duty as well as
physical therapy and hinting at the need for a second surgery one day and the next signing
you off and repeatedly stating in your file that you didn't need to go back there ever again?"
"The miracle of modern science," Tristan said with a straight face as she struggled not to
smile.
"Then explain why they stated several times that if you have any further problems that
you should be seen, but by someone else? In fact, they went as far as to attach the contact
information for fifty other doctors. Now why do you think they did that?" Hank asked as he
leaned back in his chair, studying Tristan.
The corner of Tristan's lips twitched, but he said nothing. Finally her father sighed
heavily as he ran his hands down his face. "You may have gotten out of the medical
requirements, but you still need to complete your therapy sessions before I can release you
from medical," Hank pointed out.
Tristan's lips pressed into a firm line at that announcement. "I did the required therapy,"
he said evenly.
Hank shrugged. "You have more."
"You can't do that," Tristan said, sounding pissed.
"Yes, I can," her father said without any hesitation. "You will complete the group therapy
sessions before you’ll be allowed to resume the rest of your duties," her father said and she
just barely stopped herself from pointing out that he already had when her father's gaze
shifted to her. "And you will start doing the job you were hired for or I'm going to have to
let you go until you get your degree."
"W-what?" she asked, a little more than stunned. "I have been doing my job."
"No, you haven't. You were hired to type, but he's been doing his own typing," Hank
said, gesturing lazily to Tristan. "You were also hired to drive him, but again, he's been
doing that. If you can't do your job, Marty, then I'm afraid that I'm going to have to let you
go."
She’d just bought a new car. Well, new to her, to anyone else it was an overpriced piece
of crap, but it got her from point A to point B and back so she was happy. If he fired her,
she wouldn't have money to pay for her insurance, gas, her phone, or anything for that
matter. She'd have to dip into her savings and she didn't want to do that since it meant that
she'd have to put off getting her independence for a while longer.
If she lost this job she'd have to take another dead-end minimum wage job and she could
not afford to do that. She needed this job. If she lost it maybe she could-
"She is doing her job," Tristan said, shocking the ever-living hell out of her. She'd
expected him to agree with Hank that she wasn't doing her job so that he could finally get
rid of her. "She's created a more efficient database, making it easier to put in information
and cutting down half the time needed for paperwork. She's very efficient and works fast,
Hank. I think it would be a waste of her talents if you didn't put her in the secretary pool so
that she could help the rest of the department," he said casually while she sat there
simmering.
That sneaky son of a bi-
"She already has a job," Hank said with a long-suffering sigh. "She's supposed to be your
assistant right now."
Tristan shrugged. "I don't need an assistant."
"That's too bad, because you've got one," Hank said firmly as he leveled a hard look on
both of them. "I don't know what's going on here and I don't care. I need you released from
medical-"
"I would be if you didn't impose this bullshit on me," Tristan said, cutting her father off.
"I did what was required by the Department and I should be back at full status and we both
know it. Making me go to group therapy is asinine, Hank. I don't need it or have a
problem."
"You don't think so?" her father mused, looking amused for some godforsaken reason.