“Excuse me?”
“Coming up with bullshit. Talk to my mother about coffeepots. Now, what’s up?” he asked Avery.
“Nothing.”
“How long have I known you?”
“Look, it’s just . . .”
“Oh, for God’s sake,” Hope said impatiently, then spoke directly to Ryder. “Do you have a key?”
“Yeah.”
“If you don’t think Beckett would mind, can we go inside? We really shouldn’t discuss this in the stairwell.”
He nudged by her, pulled out his key ring.
“Want a beer?”
“No.” Avery folded her arms over her chest as she followed him inside.
“I’m getting a beer.” Making himself at home, Ryder switched on lights as he walked back to the kitchen. “Now, spill it.”
“Do you want me to tell him?” Hope suggested when Avery stayed silent.
“No.” She dragged a hand through her hair. “I have to. Okay, look, it’s about Sam Freemont.”
“That asshole?”
“Yeah, that asshole. I saw his car outside TTP this morning, before opening.”
Hope studied Ryder as Avery told the story. He didn’t react, just nodded, sipped at his beer. If you weren’t looking closely, she realized, you wouldn’t notice how tight his jaw got, how his eyes chilled.
She’d expected heat—a flash and boom—and found the ice more lethal.
“And I decided Hope was right,” Avery finished. “If—on the off chance, the slim chance I really think—anything happened, I couldn’t stand it. So we were going to tell Beckett.”
“Okay, we’ll take care of it.”
“You’re not going to go beat him up.” Now Avery pulled at her hair. “Not that he doesn’t deserve an ass-kicking for scaring her, but if you do that, she’ll only be more upset. And people are bound to hear about it, and talk about it. Talk about her. She’ll hate that.”
“He doesn’t care about any of that,” Hope observed. “He cares about kicking this jerk’s ass for scaring Clare. And I agree with him, on principle.”
“Common sense and a quick mind for bullshit. Not bad,” Ryder commented.
“In principle. What I’d worry about, and I don’t know this guy, but I’d worry that he’d take it out on Clare. That pounding on him might make the situation worse for her. So you’d have the satisfaction of making him pay, and risk her paying more.”
Ryder took a contemplative pull on his beer. “We’ll take care of it,” he repeated, “one way or the other.”
“Ryder—”
“Avery. You’re a good friend, and you did the right thing, the smart thing. Now you can stop worrying. We’ll look out for Clare.”
They would, Avery thought. Of course they would. “All right. If you get arrested for assault over this, I’ll get your bail.”
“Always good to know. Why don’t you send up a Warrior’s pizza.”
“Sure. Well, okay.”
He waited until they’d gone out to take out his phone. “Need you at Beck’s,” he told Owen. “No, I don’t care what you’re doing.”
He hung up, settled down to wait.
BECKETT JOGGED UP
the stairs, light on his feet. Damn good day, he decided—and a most excellent funeral. When Clare got home, she’d called the coffins gruesome little works of art, and he’d earned a very nice chicken dinner.
He decided he’d cap off the very good day with a little work, a little ESPN.
The minute he opened the door, he smelled the pizza.
“Jesus, make yourselves the fuck at home. Is that my beer?”
“It’s ours now. One slice left.” Ryder indicated the pizza box. “If you want it.”
“I had dinner at Clare’s. What’s going on?”
“Why don’t you sit down?” Owen suggested.
He did. “If something was wrong with Mom, you wouldn’t be having pizza and beer, but something’s wrong.”
“Here’s the deal. I found Avery and the brunette at your door earlier. After a little dancing around, Avery told me what she’d come to tell you. Sam Freemont talked himself into the bookstore this morning before Clare opened. He got pushy.”
Beckett’s eyes narrowed. “What do you mean, he got pushy? Be specific.”
“I wasn’t there, but according to Avery, when she looked in—spotted his car outside and decided to check—he had Clare pinned against the counter.”
Beckett got to his feet, slowly. “He put his hands on her?”
“He scared her,” Owen said. “Wouldn’t leave when she told him to leave, wouldn’t back off when she told him to back off. Then Avery pounded on the door, faked like she was calling me over, and he took off. Hold it!” he ordered when Beckett turned back toward the door. “Do you even know where he lives?”
He couldn’t think, not with the red haze in front and in back of his eyes.
“I found his address.” Owen tapped his phone. “But I don’t think going over there and smashing his face into bloody pulp is the best idea.”
“I do,” Ryder put in.
“You would. And if that’s what Beckett wants after we talk this through, well, majority rules, and I’m in.”
“Give me the fucking address.”
“I’ll give you the fucking address after you give me five minutes. If you kick his ass, he’s the type who’ll charge you with assault.”
“Avery said she’d make the bail.”
“Shut up, Ry. You’re not worried about that now because kicking his ass is what you want. Can’t blame you,” Owen added with a glint in his eye that belied the mild tone.
“But you’ll be in jail or facing charges, and Clare’s going to be more upset. The kids, too. He’s also the type—I’ve always hated that smug bastard—to take it out on Clare. Scare her again, or threaten her, or just badmouth her like he did to Darla back in the day.”
“Ry kicked his ass over that, didn’t he?” Beckett demanded.
“Yeah, but Darla didn’t have kids who’d end up hearing the kind of crap he might spread about their mother. You know that’s just the sort of thing he’d do.”
“And you expect me to do nothing?”
“I expect you to pay a visit to his daddy’s dealership tomorrow and have a talk with him. If you can’t intimidate that weasly son of a bitch, you’re no brother of mine. You scare him, maybe he stops this shit. If he doesn’t, since we—and the crew—will be looking out for Clare, we deal with him.”
“It’s the roundabout way of kicking his ass,” Ryder commented. “When there are witnesses.”
“If it comes to that, and we deal with him in public, or in front of people, he’s humiliated. Side benefit there.”
“Maybe.” Calmer now, Beckett picked up Owen’s half-finished beer. “Maybe.”
“You need to talk to Clare.”
Fury surged back. “Believe me, I’ll be talking to Clare. Why the hell didn’t she tell me this herself?”
“That’d be my first question,” Ryder agreed. “And I have to agree with what Owen said before you got here. She’s got to file a complaint or report or whatever with the town cops so they’ve got it on record. So do we talk to him or punch his face in?”
Beckett understood the “we,” though he’d be the one taking the action.
“Talk first, punch later.”
“Good. Get your own beer,” Owen said and took his back.
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
FOR THE SECOND TIME IN TWO DAYS, CLARE OPENED THE
door of the bookstore early. But this time she did it with a smile on her face.
“Hi. I just got in. It’ll be a couple minutes yet for coffee.”
“That’s not why I’m here.” Beckett shut the door behind him.
“Oh, something’s wrong.” Instinctively she reached for his hand. “Is there trouble at the inn?”
“No. I want to know why you didn’t tell me about Sam Freemont.”
Damn it, Avery. Resentment laced with irritation rolled in first. “It wasn’t something I wanted to talk about.”
She moved behind the counter. Maybe he didn’t want coffee, but she did. Plus it gave her both a little distance and something to do with her hands.
“You mean it wasn’t something you wanted to talk about with
me
.”
“Or at all. It was an uncomfortable situation. Dealing with the public means I deal with uncomfortable situations from time to time.”
“How many times do you have a customer trap you in here alone and put his hands on you?”
“I wasn’t trapped.” She refused to think of herself that way. Trapped or helpless. “And it was my own fault for opening the door in the first place.”
“Why the hell did you?”
Since she’d berated herself a dozen times since, the sharp, sharp question struck like a slap. She responded in kind. “Look, Beckett, it was knee-jerk. A customer at the door, and someone I knew.”
“Someone you know who’d already been coming on to you, annoying you.”
“Yes, and in hindsight I shouldn’t have let him in. You’d better believe I won’t make that mistake again. I made that clear to him, and to Avery. She shouldn’t have gone running to you about this. It’s my business.”
“Is that how it is? I’m supposed to stay out of your business?”
She let out a sound of impatience. “That’s not what I meant.”
“That’s what you said, and that’s how it strikes me, all the way through.”
She felt trapped again, this time by too much concern and what she judged as out-of-place anger.
“You’re blowing this way out of proportion.”
“I don’t think so. Anytime I want to give you a hand with something, I have to talk you into it.”
“I don’t want to take advantage of—”
“Why the hell not? We’re sleeping together—when we get the chance.”
“That doesn’t mean I want or expect you to deal with things I’m perfectly capable of dealing with myself. I appreciate your help, you know I do, but that doesn’t mean I’m going to start depending on you to take care of me.”
The beat of silence that followed tolled like a bell.
“Couples take care of each other, Clare, that’s what makes them a couple. And couples tell each other when something happens that scares them.”
“Really, Beckett, really. You’re making this a bigger deal than it is. Avery—”
“Don’t put this off on Avery. Did Freemont leave when you told him to leave?”
“No.”
“Did he stop touching you when you told him to knock it off?”
“He didn’t really—” Yes, he had, she admitted. Why compound stupidity with denial. “No. He won’t come in here again. He won’t be allowed. I told my staff.”
That cut, he realized. Just kept slicing. “You told your staff, but you didn’t tell me.”
“Oh, Beckett.” Frustrated, and with rising guilt she didn’t want to feel, she threw up her hands. “I just told them he’d been rude and obnoxious that morning, and was banned from the store. I didn’t give them chapter and verse. And you know, this really isn’t about you. It’s about me.”
“It’s about us. It’s about trust.”
“I trust you, of course I trust you. I guess, bottom line is I didn’t tell you because I knew you’d be upset and mad, and it would become this enormous thing. Now you are, and it is, which doesn’t change the fact Sam was a complete jerk, and I kicked him out of my store.”
“Could you have kicked him out if Avery hadn’t come to the door?”
“She did, so—”
“That doesn’t answer the question. You should be able to give me that much, Clare. You should be able to give yourself that much.”
It mortified her because she didn’t know, just wasn’t sure of the answer. “I think . . . I think the situation would have become more difficult and—and fraught, but—”
“Fraught.” Eyes on hers, he nodded slowly. “That’s a word for it.”
“I’d have gotten him to leave, Beckett. I always do.”
“Always?” Beckett laid his hands on the counter between them. “There’s another word. He’s done this before.”
“Not exactly this, no. He makes a pest of himself, and yes, it’s irritating and annoying—and maybe a little creepy, too. He’s just got this idea stuck in his head that if he keeps asking me out, I’ll just give in and go. Which is never going to happen.”
“Has he come to your house?”