Read His to Protect: A Fireside Novel Online
Authors: Stacey Lynn
“Stop fidgeting,” I muttered, even though her nervousness was making it difficult not to laugh.
Next to me, Trina ran her hands down the sides of her skinny jeans, which were tucked into a pair of dark-brown boots. I’d rolled my eyes earlier, when she came downstairs dressed in jeans and boots and a simple, white, V-neck T-shirt, asking if we could stop by a mall and do some shopping for a better outfit.
Like my parents gave a shit what she wore.
And right now, dressed as simply as she was, she looked beautiful. Her blonde hair was braided down her back, and I knew it was more than just the nerves making her cheeks flush. She was excited at the same time.
And once again, I was fucking grateful that I could give her something to look forward to, something to help erase all the shit we’d gone through in the last twenty-four hours.
But I was even more thankful that she could at least be excited about something, knowing that just yesterday, her husband held a gun to her fucking head. I held her last night as she slept. I hadn’t slept for a single second, because I kept expecting nightmares to wake her and I wanted to be there to comfort her.
Other than the shock from Boomer being hurt, though, she seemed to be doing okay.
Or she was burying it in a deep pit of denial, and it was all going to overflow when she least expected it. Which meant that for the next few days, or weeks, I’d have to keep a closer eye on her.
Not that that was a hardship. She was beautiful and I wanted to look at her every day for the rest of my life. Which, surprisingly, wasn’t at that all scary to think about, considering that up until about six weeks ago, I was dead set on the idea of never getting married again.
Now, not only had I practically forced Trina to move in with me, I couldn’t wait to see my bling decorating her ring finger.
As if knowing what I was thinking, even though she’d think I was crazy for it, she brushed against my side.
I wrapped one arm low on her waist, loving the way she fit so perfectly next to me.
“I can’t help but be nervous,” she said, her voice just above a whisper, and tipped her head back.
I covered her hand with mine and scowled. “Stop thinking about it.”
“I can’t help it.”
“My parents are good people, Trina. They’re kind and they’re open. My dad is going to punch me in the shoulder, my mom is going to roll her eyes and hug me, fussing over the fact that I could have been hurt, and then she’s going to hug you and welcome you to the family.”
“They’re going to investigate what kind of crazy woman you’re connected to.”
I rolled my eyes to the ceiling and tugged her closer. “We’ll see.”
My foot began to tap impatiently. I was beginning to grow anxious, not about seeing my parents, but about proving Trina wrong.
When I called my parents last night, just to give them a heads-up once Tyson had reminded me that this disaster would probably hit the media at some point—and soon—after the shock wore off, all my mom said was, “You happy?”
When I told her yes, I could almost see her smile through the phone line before she said they’d be on the soonest flight out.
My eyes scanned the new crowd of people coming down the escalator toward the baggage claim. Being a head taller than everyone else had its perks in situations like this, and it didn’t take me long to spot my mom and dad on the escalator.
His full head of hair seemed grayer than it had just a few months ago, when I saw them last, but his amber eyes were the same. I watched as he placed his arm around my mom’s waist and pulled her to his hip in a way that was similar to how I was holding Trina.
His eyes scanned the area.
Like father, like son.
His chin lifted in acknowledgement when our eyes met, and I got Trina’s attention.
Gesturing with my index finger, I pointed to where my parents were and she rose to her toes. “They’re here.”
She turned to look for them, and I grinned as my dad began pushing his way through a small throng of people without appearing to be rude while doing so.
He just had that way about him, and at six foot two and over two hundred pounds, he was smaller than me now, but he still was not a guy to mess with. Years of being in the Army Reserve and working as a firefighter had made him a man no one wanted to mess with.
“My boy,” my mom said when she saw us. Immediately her hands framed my face and she pulled me to her. I inhaled the familiar scent of jasmine before her lips brushed against my cheek.
“Hey, Ma.”
She let go of my face and smiled. “What am I going to do with my boys?”
I rolled my eyes to the ceiling and nodded toward Trina.
“Ma, this is Trina.”
I didn’t have the time to introduce Trina to my mom before she threw her arms around Trina’s shoulders and she yanked her from my hold. “Oh, you poor thing! I can’t imagine everything you’ve gone through. Are you okay?”
My shoulder jerked back with the force of my dad’s punch and I lifted a hand to rub the sore spot. “What’s up, old man?”
I looked at Trina to see her eyes wide and amused.
I flashed her a wink and nodded toward my dad.
“Dad, Trina. Trina, this is my old man.”
“Old man, my ass,” he muttered and reached out to take Trina’s hand in his. My mom released Trina from her hug, but she was fussing over Trina like she was her very own long-lost daughter.
Trina’s eyes grew wider when my dad brushed his lips across her cheek, looked back at me, grinning, and said, “She tastes delicious. I can see why you like her.”
Trina’s face paled.
My mom slapped my dad on the back of his head.
He shrugged.
I threw my head back and laughed.
“See?” I pulled Trina into my arms when my dad left to go grab their luggage. “Told you they’d like you.”
“This is absurd,” Trina proclaimed as the door shut behind her. She unwrapped a scarlet scarf from her neck. Outside the door to my house, I could still hear shouts from reporters, and through the window, I could still see the flash of lights.
They’d been camped out for the last forty-eight hours, and if Trina hadn’t insisted that our new life continue as normal—meaning going back to work at the restaurant between visits to the vet to see Boomer, and spending some time with my parents before they left town this morning—I would have wanted to just keep her inside the house until the chaos died down.
It didn’t take long at all for Kevin’s death to become national news. The fact that the senator had flown in increased the media that descended on Latham Hills.
Blue and Tyson spoke to us immediately. Blue had pulled Trina off to our bedroom and told her how to handle it, based on what she’d gone through only months before.
The fact that Blue, formerly Gabriella Galecki, was seen in connection with Trina increased the attention on both women.
At least the madness had caused traffic to pick up at the restaurant, even though I knew it would be short-lived. The number of people who flocked to Fireside wanting to see an actual crime scene, even though it’d been cleaned up and the yellow tape had been removed, amazed me.
I was hoping that now that Kevin’s body had been transported back to Kentucky, interest in Trina would begin to die down, despite the speculation about why she’d been shacked up with another man since before Kevin died.
News that Kevin had been abusive had been released, and Senator Morgenson made several public statements denying any knowledge of his son’s behavior, saying that now, so soon after his death, was not the time to look into such matters. And while Trina had initially been maligned in the papers, the senator, surprisingly, had also fervently supported Trina, saying that if this news was true, he was deeply sorry for the way his son mistreated someone so special.
It’d been difficult for anyone to call her horrific names after such a public show of support, and I knew it wouldn’t have happened if Trina hadn’t had the courage to face both the senator and his wife when they showed up in town the night after we took my parents to dinner.
As I’d promised, my parents fell in love with Trina pretty much the moment we met at the airport. My mother continued to shower her with familial affection for their entire visit.
By the time they boarded a plane to Arizona, I figured my mom was already planning a bridal shower and picking out colors for a wedding that hadn’t been planned yet…but it’d happen.
It was only a matter of time.
For now, I still wanted to take care of Trina and get her through the fallout of Kevin’s death with as much ease as possible.
Even it if was three o’clock in the morning and reporters were camped out on my lawn.
“You doing okay?” I asked, and pulled her into my arms once she removed her coat and draped it over the side of my couch.
The last three days had seemed to go on forever. I was exhausted, but as soon as my hands brushed the skin at her back beneath her shirt, everything south of my waist perked up.
“Yeah. I’m good.”
“Kevin’s funeral is tomorrow.” I watched a deep line form between her eyes. A weight compressed my chest. “We can still head down there if you think you need that.”
I’d mentioned it several times and should already have known her answer, but a part of me thought she needed the closure. That maybe she needed to go back to Kentucky and say goodbye, now that she wasn’t fleeing out of fear.
But she still didn’t want to return unless she had to. “I don’t want to go.”
“You’ve been sleeping all night.”
She tilted her head to the side and frowned. “Is that a problem?”
“No. I just figured after the week you’ve had, after you started realizing the truth of everything that’s happened, you might not sleep so well.”
Her downturned lips turn upward. “Not sure how I can go to bed and not feel safe and protected from everything going on when your arms are around me and you’re holding me so tightly I fall asleep listening to your heart beat.”
And there it was.
I’d found a woman who trusted me implicitly, even when she slept. I’d fallen in love with a woman who not only loved me, but loved the life I’d built and the restaurant I wanted to grow. She not only loved it, she jumped right in, loving the work and the long, hard hours, right along with me.
After Mara left, I might not have admitted it, but I sometimes wondered if I’d ever find a woman—a good woman—who wanted to be with a man who owned a simple, local sports bar.
But just like Trina believed I could keep her safe and protected from everything that could harm her, I’d found a woman who, simply by being herself and all that she was—good, kind, pure, sexy as hell, and hilarious when she remembered she could tease people—had healed the parts of me Mara had wounded, and healed them so well there wasn’t even scar tissue left behind.
Just a fresh newness inside of me that I couldn’t wait to share with her.
Of its own accord, my finger drew a circle around her ring finger. Her tan line was still there, the faded mark of her former ring still visible. I couldn’t wait to cover it up with my own diamond.
It would no doubt be smaller than the one she’d had before, but I knew that she wouldn’t care.
“I know things moved fast for us,” I whispered against the top of her head, pulling her close to me, “and I hope this doesn’t scare the hell out of you, but I can’t wait until I can make you mine.”
Her soft laugh warmed my chest. “I’m already yours, Declan. Everything I am and everything I have is yours.” She tilted her head back, eyes sparkling with honesty and admiration.
I loved this woman.
I silenced her, pressing my lips to hers, and then I picked her up and carried her upstairs and into the bedroom, where I dropped her in the center of our bed. My body fell on top of her and her legs wrapped around my hips as I sank inside her, and I spent the next hour making love to the woman I knew would always be by my side.
We’d already experienced darkness and rough times, and now, hopefully, it would only be smooth sailing from here on out.
S
IX
M
ONTHS
L
ATER
I scanned the full, but not packed, restaurant, and smiled. The lunch rush was over, but it was a Friday afternoon, and in the last several months, there had hardly been an empty table. With spring break starting soon, and the spring air bringing freshness and the hope of new beginnings, the Fireside Grill was doing better than it ever had, according to Declan.
My grin stretched larger as I finished bussing a table and headed back to the kitchen.
Declan was where I always saw him.
At the grill, flipping burgers and barking orders to the other cooks.
There was never a dull moment.
Declan would give me the credit for his increase in business, due to all the hard work I’d put into the advertising and marketing for the restaurant.
Some days, if someone came in and their eyes got slightly hazy when they met me or saw Declan, I still worried that some of the attraction was from what happened in the alley months ago. Most days, when I was able to forget, I believed Declan.
He never lied to me.
He still looked at me as if I was the most important and treasured thing in his life. He was still a bit bossy, he was still overprotective, but I knew his protectiveness came from a place deep within a soft and loving heart.
Needless to say, the last several months had not only been busy, but some of the best in my life.
Shortly after the media attention died down, I had tried one day to think about going forward with my plan to live on my own and move into Blue’s apartment. I knew, based on the look Declan gave me, that he’d let me. He probably would even have encouraged me to do it, because he always seemed to be willing to do whatever made me happy.
But then I’d gone to bed with him, fell asleep with his strong, muscular arms surrounding me, and knew that I was never going to leave. I loved him too much to want to spend a moment away from him. And I realized that I could still grow, I could still be me, and I could do it in Declan’s house, even if moving in with him after the drama we’d had and the way we’d met seemed crazy to some.
I quit caring what people thought and said about me the moment my photos were splashed across newspapers and magazines nationwide.
No one knew the full story except for those who experienced it.
And their opinions were the only ones that mattered to me.
Fortunately, in the last several months, I had also found a great network of friends who I now considered family. The girls I’d met on that girls’ night so many months ago were now more like sisters I’d never had and always wanted.
We still drank too much on Margarita Thursdays. We still laughed loudly enough to disrupt the entire restaurant, and Suzanne still ogled Declan every moment she could. Fortunately, I’d also spent a lot of time around her husband and Paige’s, and was fully assured that her jesting and teasing was all in good fun.
My life was perfect.
It was that thought that had me moving straight to Declan. I waited while he plated several meals, his movements so sure and quick that he seemed to do it all at the same time, and then I rolled to my toes, pressed my hand to his shoulder, and kissed his cheek.
“I love you,” I whispered, before moving away.
He didn’t let me get far.
His arm snagged me around my waist and he held me against him, looking down at me with dark eyes and a full smile. “I love you, too. How’s it going out there?”
I grinned. “Busy.”
“You still up for a night off?”
My grin grew. Declan was taking me out to dinner tonight, downtown. I didn’t know the restaurant we were headed to, but I had seen the dress he bought for me to wear laid out on our bed this morning after I woke up. It was black, lacy and satiny, fit me perfectly, and I couldn’t wait to wear it.
I had also seen a pretty, red-velvet ring box in the drawer last week when I was putting away his laundry.
I knew that tonight was going to be special. Declan would make sure of it.
I couldn’t freaking wait.
“Yeah.” I sighed and my gaze softened when his eyes went glassy. “I can’t wait to see you tonight.”
All that muscle dressed up in a suit. I hadn’t yet seen him wear one. My thighs tightened at the thought…but I was thinking more about taking it off him later.
My phone began vibrating against me in my back pocket and made me jump out of his hold.
“I love you, Trina. More than I ever thought possible.”
“Love you, too,” I whispered, reaching into my back pocket for my phone while he leaned down and pressed his lips to mine.
Had the phone not vibrated in my hand, I might have forgotten I was getting a phone call.
Declan’s kisses still did it to me. They made me forget there was a world outside of just us.
“Hello?” I said as soon as I answered the phone. I was already so turned-on by the brief kiss from Declan that I hadn’t looked at my caller ID.
“Trina? Oh my God, Trina. I need your help. I need Aidan’s phone number.”
My heart immediately dropped to my toes when I heard Chelsea’s panicked voice coming through the phone.
“Chelsea? What is it?”
“I can’t. Oh my God. Trina. Aidan. Can you call him? Or Declan? It’s Derrick.”
She sobbed into the phone.
“Chelsea. Take a deep breath.” I looked at Declan and his brow was furrowed, tension already tightening his shoulders. “Tell me what’s going on.”
“It’s Derrick!” she cried, and I watched Declan’s head snap back. He’d heard her. “I’ve called the ambulance. But there’s been an accident. I need Aidan!”
“Oh my God,” I whispered and my eyes went wide at Declan’s expression. “Call Aidan, honey. He needs to get to—”
“Detroit General,” Chelsea supplied. “Oh shit, Trina. This is bad. It’s so bad.”
I already felt tears welling in my eyes. Not Derrick. “He’ll be okay, Chelsea. Tell me what happened.”
“Skateboarding accident. Right outside my house. I’m here with him. But Trina…I can’t. It’s so bad. I’m so scared.”
I tried to calm her with soothing tones as her words rambled on. I barely felt Declan’s hand on mine as he ushered me out of the kitchen and into his office. I saw his mouth moving as he spoke into the phone, but didn’t hear the words he said. I only hoped, as Chelsea described what she’d heard and what’d she seen, that Declan was talking to Aidan.
It sounded bad, and tears rolled down my cheeks.
He snapped the phone closed and looked directly at me.
“He’ll meet us there. As we were on the phone, he got a call from Shane’s mom, too.”
“Chelsea?” I said, trying to talk over her cries and her murmured words of comfort to Derrick’s friend, who was with her. “We’ve gotten a hold of Aidan. We’ll meet you at the hospital.”
As I spoke, I heard sirens through the phone.
“Okay. Okay, Trina. Thank you.”
“Take care of yourself, Chelsea.”
Another sob came through the phone. Voices echoed in the background.
“I have to go, Trina. They’re here.”
“We’ll be there soon.”
I didn’t know if she heard me. I just knew she’d hung up.
My eyes went to Declan’s and his hands came to my shoulders. “What happened?”
I shook my head, already feeling more tears in my eyes. “Skateboard accident on the hill outside Chelsea’s house. It sounds bad, Declan.”
“He’ll be okay.” He pulled me to his chest and hugged me. “He’ll be okay.”
I didn’t think the second statement was for me.
I figured he was more trying to reassure himself.
“We need to go,” I told him. His arms squeezed me tight before he let me go and I grabbed my purse.
I pulled the strap over my shoulder, entwined my fingers with Declan’s, and followed him out of the restaurant to his truck.
And then I prayed the entire way.
Because I knew…I knew that based on what Chelsea told me over the phone…it would take a miracle for Derrick to be okay.