The Secret Life of Bryan (5 page)

BOOK: The Secret Life of Bryan
6.95Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Really? I prefer to call it what it is.” Her eyes were serious, but her soft mouth still sported that teasing smile.

He wanted to lick it away. When this damn switcheroo was over, he just might. “Have you been prostituting long?”

“Actually, I’m fairly new.”

He hadn’t realized how tight his stomach felt until she answered. He’d dealt with a lot of ugly shit in his life, most recently in Visitation, North Carolina, where he helped to save Joe Winston’s ass. A woman and two kids had blindsided him then, ruining his plan to use Winston as bait to get the fugitive he wanted.

They’d found a soft side he hadn’t known he possessed. Now Shay did the same. It shouldn’t have mattered, but knowing she hadn’t been selling herself long filled him with immense relief.

It also made sense, because a woman like her couldn’t be easily ignored. If she’d been around long, Bruce would have already found her and brought her to the shelter.

And that thought really perturbed him.

Bruce wasn’t like him. Bruce was a hell of a lot nicer and therefore more susceptible to female wiles. She would have had Bruce wrapped around her little finger in no time.

With his own humorless smile, Bryan said, “I’m glad I happened along when I did, then.”

“Happened along? I had the feeling you were patrolling the area.”

“I watch out for trouble,” he told her. And for once, he gave the undiluted truth. He sought out criminals, brought them to justice—but usually with a nine-millimeter in hand. Not a Bible. “In this neighborhood, I can usually find it.”

Hell, he’d found her, hadn’t he?

“What kind of trouble?”

A few truths about her newly chosen profession wouldn’t hurt. It might even set her back on the straight and narrow, where she’d be safer. “Sometimes the women refuse help because they’re supporting a boyfriend’s habit, or children, and they figure they can’t make enough in a conventional job, not with their backgrounds.”

“Meaning?”

He shrugged. “They lack acceptable work experience and education.” He hoped she would disclose her own reasoning for being here, but she disappointed him.

“I like how you say that, how inoffensive it is. You go to great pains with your wording, don’t you?”

Bruce did—and Bruce had coached him on what to say. Bryan studied her. She didn’t squirm, didn’t pose or posture herself—just remained lounged back in that stiff little kitchen chair, at her leisure, perfectly comfortable with the conversation, with the situation, with him and with herself.

“Why would I want to insult or offend anyone?”

“I don’t know.” And then with a crooked grin: “You have the look of someone who normally wouldn’t care.”

That’s because normally he wouldn’t.

“But you’re actually pretty good at this.” She took another sip of tea. “So go on. Some of the women refuse your help…?”

Her prompt made him want to reach out and shake her. He wasn’t used to being led around verbally or otherwise. And he wasn’t comfortable giving control, even of a simple conversation, to someone else. Especially not a woman. Especially not a hooker. “They go back on the streets. Sometimes they end up hurt, beaten…”

He drew a breath. In this, at least, he and Bruce were alike. Neither of them could stomach brutality against women or children.

Their methods for dealing with it, though, varied by a mile. He told her Bruce’s method. “I try to watch out for them, see that they get help if they need it, when they need it. But it isn’t always possible. Some of the women’s pimps cause trouble. Sometimes I’m not there when I should be.”

Avoiding his gaze, her eyes on her teacup, Shay said, “A person can’t be everywhere at once.” Then her lashes lifted and she caught him with her innocent gaze. “I think you could use some assistance here.”

Didn’t he know it. Bruce left himself vulnerable far too many times. “That’s asking for the impossible. Most of society wants to write off this area and pretend the problems don’t exist. If they ignore it, it’ll go away. They’re not interested in finding solutions.”

Shay nodded, very introspective for the moment. Then she leaned forward, propping her elbows on the table. “You said I seem different from the other women here. Well, you’re certainly unlike any preacher I’ve ever met.”

Not good. Back up, Bryan. “Because I work in the field, instead of a church?”

“Working in the field,” she repeated. “I like that. But no, I meant because you don’t preach about the evils of the flesh.”

“No.” Their father preached, endlessly, on everything under the sun. He was good at it, both effective and entertaining. People who would normally doze in the pews would be alert and engrossed when his dad got started.

His sons didn’t seem to have the same charisma when it came to relating, though Bruce was certainly heads and tails ahead of Bryan, who, according to his dad, tried to communicate with grunts.

Bryan grinned, thinking of how his dad and Bruce always harassed him about his lack of social skills. Then he caught Shay watching him and pulled himself back to the present.

What was it Bruce always told him? Oh, yeah. In righteous tones, Bryan repeated, “These women won’t accept words, so instead I try to offer options. Maybe a few solutions.”

“Like what?”

Because he was familiar with Bruce’s operation, he could answer without hesitation. “Safety and physical comfort have to come before they can be spiritually content.”

Shay reached out and touched him, her fingertips light against his wrist.

Yeah, she was asking for it. But for the time being, he’d have to refuse her. He slowly pulled away.

“What happened to you, Bryan? Why aren’t you in a nice little church somewhere?”

If he hung out in a church, the roof would probably cave in. He snorted. “Why should I be?”

She raised a brow.

“Everyone deserves a safe place to go for spiritual guidance. It’s just that…”
Damn it, Bruce, I’m going to kick your ass when I see you.
He sighed, locked his jaw, and murmured, “I want to do more.”

She stared at him, her expression rapt. “Why here? Why this cause?”

Good question. Why couldn’t Bruce have taken in stray dogs, or assisted the elderly? Why did he have to enmesh himself in overly sexual floozies who all wanted to torment him, this one more than the others?

He drummed up the last speech Bruce had given him. “There’s a lot of misery in the world. But this is in my own backyard. I want to change things and I can’t do that from a safe distance in a safe little church, with safe people. To put out a fire, you have to get close to the flames.”

“That doesn’t mean you have to live in them.”

Damn. He’d told Bruce that exact thing many times, and always gotten the same answer. “Maybe not, but it’s difficult to survive in both worlds, the tidy little communities and the crumbling ones. It scares people on both sides. They’re afraid you’ll carry something back with you, that you’ll somehow spread a disease they won’t be able to run away from.”

Shay nibbled at her bottom lip before nodding. “I suppose you’re right. People fear things they don’t understand. Maybe if they were aware of how the problems originated, that no one chooses to be born into poverty, then maybe they wouldn’t fear it so much.”

Her forthright speech threw him. She sounded just like Bruce. “Maybe,” he said, conceding the possibility of truth in her words.

“It’s difficult to teach ethereal ideas like morality and pride when you have no electricity and no food on the table.”

He couldn’t remember the last time he’d had a lengthy, meaningful discussion with a woman. And damned if she didn’t have an uncanny insight into the obstacles Bruce faced every day.

“An awareness program is real low on the list of priorities, with so many other things to be done.”

“So what’s high on your list?”

He tried a smile that fell flat. “Right now, you are.”

Her eyes were big and soft, eating him up. Her hand slid up his wrist to his biceps. “Good.”

Again, Bryan leaned out of her reach. “Damn it, stop that.” Pointing a finger at her, he growled, “You need to understand a few things, lady.”

She held her hands up in the air. “I’ll behave. No reason to panic.”

A cynical smile curved his mouth. “Women don’t panic me, even pushy women like yourself. But I’ve got some questions for you, and we need to get started on them.”

“Sure. I’ll fix us something to eat while you grill me.”

He watched her rise from her seat, then became engrossed with the way her behind moved as she roamed the kitchen, opening cabinets and drawers, as if she’d lived in the safe house for an eternity. “I don’t intend to grill you. I just need some information.”

She bent into the refrigerator. “There’s cold chicken and potato salad. That sound okay to you?”

Distracted by her stance, which he considered a real money-shot, he said, “Yeah, sure. Whatever.”

“Good. It’ll be ready in a jiffy.” Then she peered over her shoulder. “Well? Fire away with the inquisition. I’m ready.”

She looked ready.
He decided to get the most pertinent questions out of the way. “When was the last time you were examined?”

She straightened out of the fridge, a little appalled, her cheeks heating. “Examined?” she asked on a whisper of sound.

Was there a better way to ask? If so, he didn’t know it. He wasn’t cut out for this sentimental, heart-to-heart crap. “Yeah. By a doctor.”

She blinked, and looked away from him.

Bryan persisted. “You know, to make sure you’re…healthy.” He’d almost said clean, but caught himself in time.

Turning her back, she asked, “Do I look ill to you?” She was so tall, she didn’t have to tiptoe or use Barb’s stepstool to reach the top shelf of the cabinets.

Bryan sighed. “You know that’s not what I mean.”

She pulled down two plates, cleared her throat, and said, “It wasn’t that long ago. I don’t have anything contagious.”

Now he felt like an asshole for asking, like he’d insulted her as well as embarrassed her. But hell, Bruce had it on the list.

Clasping the ends of the pen in both hands, he attempted to clarify
why
he’d asked. “There’s a woman—a doctor—who works with us. Dr. Eve Martin, from the clinic. She gives free examinations to the women.”

Shay jerked around with renewed interest. “You said Dr. Martin?”

“That’s right.” He frowned at her. “You know her?” If she did, then that had to mean she was from the area after all. Maybe Shay was an alias. But why?

She ducked her head and turned away again, then plopped two heaping servings of potato salad onto the plates. Instead of answering, she asked another question. “Why would I need to see a doctor?”

She made it harder than it had to be. “You’re not dumb. You know there’re a lot of health risks these days.”

“No problem with me. I’m always, uh, careful.”

The pen threatened to snap in his hands. “Still,” he insisted, trying not to growl, “if it’s been a while since you’ve been checked, I’d feel better if you let Dr. Martin look you over.”

“No.”

He straightened in his chair. “What do you mean, no?” Few people dared to refuse him. In the normal course of things, he wouldn’t accept a refusal. “Why the hell not?”

“I don’t want to, that’s why.”

His hand curled into a fist and an uncertain dread began. His voice was even lower when he said, “If there’s a problem, you can tell me. It’s nothing to be ashamed of. And hiding it won’t help.”

She turned to face him, her eyes wide.

He stared back, unblinking.

“There’s not a problem.”

Then why didn’t she want a free checkup? “I can get you a private appointment with Dr. Martin. No one else would have to know.”

Shay looked from his eyes to his mouth, and damn it, he knew exactly what she was thinking. She made him think it, too.

She blinked, focusing on his eyes again. “This is totally unnecessary. I really am a responsible person.”

He gave one sharp nod. “Great. Then you’ll agree to see the doctor.”

That uncanny stare held him again, as if she could do battle with a look. But he wasn’t a pushover like his brother; he wouldn’t be budged. Finally, she rolled her eyes in annoyance. “Oh, all right. But I don’t need an appointment. I’ll just go to the clinic on Saturday.”

Dr. Martin would let him know if there were any problems, and Saturday was only three days away. “Does that mean you’ll be staying with me…with us?”
Whoa, what a slip.

“If it won’t inconvenience anyone.”

When he’d started this sham, he hadn’t expected to really care about any of the day-to-day stuff. He’d figured on filling in, chatting when necessary, until he found the son of a bitch who was harassing his brother.

But he’d already developed an easy familiarity with the other women. They didn’t suspect him of being an impersonator, and he didn’t hassle them when they broke the minor rules his brother had set.

But this woman…it would be a mistake to get too close to her. He couldn’t treat her like he did the other ladies. Probably because she was so different, she got to him in a way no woman had since the death of his wife.

Actually, her effect was unique even beyond that. He’d loved Megan, and his grief, guilt and anger hadn’t abated enough with time. But never had he lusted after her like this. His need for Megan had been tempered with uncommon gentleness and an affection that had grown over time.

Shay, on the other hand, hit him like a tropical hurricane. Urgent. Instant. Even if her vocation didn’t put him off—and it did—he would never betray his brother’s trust by touching her.

“There’s plenty of room with six small bedrooms upstairs. Unfortunately, only two baths, one upstairs, and one down here.”

If anything, she looked intrigued by the idea of close company. “I don’t mind sharing.” She bit her bottom lip again. “What about you?”

He didn’t like it when she looked at him like that. Or rather, he liked it too much. “What about me?”

“How often will I get to see you?”

“I’ll be around. I use the room on the other side of the kitchen as an office when I’m here.”

Other books

Absolutely Almost by Lisa Graff
Unbound Pursuit by Lindsay McKenna
1941002110 (R) by Lynn Raye Harris
Cemetery Club by J. G. Faherty
Hero–Type by Barry Lyga
China Sea by David Poyer