Page 24

One to Keep Page 24

by Sophie Oak

She settled her head against his again. Stef held her and thought

about whether or not she would ever forgive him.

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Chapter Fifteen

Alexei sat up from the strangely comfortable cot as the door to the

station house came open and a large man with black hair and scars on

his face walked in, followed by the woman named Callie. The big

man had been the one who’d swept her out of the station earlier.

Alexei was confused. He’d thought the sheriff was her husband, but

the other man had kissed her passionately and spoken to her,

obviously concerned with her every comfort.

“Damn it, Zane.” The sheriff looked up from his mountain of

paperwork and scowled as the couple entered. “I thought you were

going to take care of her.”

“Yeah, well, Callie wanted to make sure the Russian prick got

fed.” Zane was holding a bag in his hand.

Alexei’s stomach growled as the heavenly scent hit him.

Callie slapped the big guy lightly on his chest. “Be nice.”

“I’m with Nate. He pulled a gun on you.”

“He pulled a gun on Jen,” Callie corrected. “The dead guy pulled

a gun on me, and then Alexei here saved me.”

She smiled and winked at him. Alexei’s heart softened further. It

had been so long since he’d had a moment’s softness. This Callie

woman had a soft heart. She practically glowed with forgiveness.

“I am filled with apologies.” Alexei couldn’t say it enough.

“Yeah, well, be glad you’re not filled with lead, buddy.” Zane

strode across the room and held the bag out. “If I’d been there, you

would be just as dead as your friend.”

“Zane Hollister!”

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The sheriff was leaning back in his chair, obviously enjoying the

show. “I told you he would have reacted exactly the way I did.”

Zane rounded on the pair. “No, I would have shot his ass.”

The sheriff’s eyes hooded, and he sat up, straightening his spine.

“I’m actually glad I didn’t, Zane. He’s…different than I would have

expected.”

Alexei listened in as the sheriff began to detail a bit of his own

past to the other man. He’d spent several hours talking to the sheriff, a tape recorder between them. The sheriff had taken copious notes, and

Alexei had been surprised to find that the man’s attitude shifted as he spoke.

He pulled the burger out of the bag. It was juicy and perfectly

American. Alexei bit into it and thought it might be the best bit of

food he’d ever tasted. When had he stopped enjoying the simple

pleasures of life?

“See,” Callie was saying, “he’s not unlike the two of you. If your

brother had been horribly murdered, you would have sought revenge.”

“I don’t have a brother,” Zane shot back with a stubborn edge to

his voice.

There was a moment of silence. It was filled with meaning as the

two men stared at each other as though speaking silently. Alexei

watched, fascinated, as Zane shook his head.

“Fine. But I don’t have to like him.” Zane turned on his boots and

strode back to the cell, coming within feet of Alexei. “Thank you for

saving our wife.”

Alexei felt his eyebrows rise. Maybe his English was worse than

he thought. “It was all I could to do. I could not harm the women.

They were innocent. It was not worth the revenge.”

“Well, I thank you for shooting your friend, anyway.”

Alexei searched his brain for the proper American words.

Americans always knew how to describe an asshole. “He was not

good friend. He was, how you say, a bag of douches.”

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The sheriff laughed outright, and Zane’s mouth tugged up. “At

least he has the lingo down.”

“He’s hell to understand, man. You should have been here.”

“Don’t make fun of him,” Callie chided. She took her place next

to Zane, her arm hooking around his waist. “Your English is very

good, Alexei. It’s way better than Nate’s Russian. And you barely

have an accent.”

Zane snorted, but Alexei didn’t take it as an insult. He swallowed

another heavenly bite of perfectly cooked burger. “I am thanking you

for the hospitality. This is good booger. Best booger I ever to eat.”

Zane glanced down at Callie. “Yeah, no accent at all, babe. It’s

like he came straight out of Iowa.”

The door to the station opened again, and a big, broad man with

reddish brown hair pounded in, brushing the snow off his coat and

brandishing a file folder like a weapon. He walked straight to the

sheriff’s desk and slapped it down. Caleb. Alexei wanted to shrink

back. He’d spent an afternoon on the ice with this man. He was a bit

gruff, but Alexei had admired how patient he’d been with the boys

they had taught. He’d admired much about the man. He rather wished

Caleb didn’t have to know what he’d done. Meeting Caleb had been

the first time in years and years that he’d come close to making a

friend.

Caleb didn’t look back at him. His eyes were firmly trained on the

sheriff. “Here you go. Do you know what that is?”

The sheriff didn’t appear to take exception to the other man’s

outraged tone. “I could give it a good guess, Doc, but I think you’re

going to tell me.”

“That’s my autopsy report,” the doctor said, slapping his hand

down on the file folder. “My second autopsy of the day. Second.”

The sheriff stifled a laugh. “And I appreciate your promptness.

Want to fill me in on this one?”

“You want a cause of death? Single GSW to the brainpan.

Although this guy seriously should have died from Hep C long ago.

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He’s covered in tats. Laura was right. Those Russian guys love their

tattoos.”

“He get most in prison,” Alexei said, getting up and moving to the

bars.

The doctor turned and stared at him. “Are they meaningful?”

Alexei didn’t like to think about what they meant. “Yes, they

detail his crimes and how many he murders. It is how you know what

a man is willing to do. He would have added to them for the killings

he do here. He talks about it on the way here.”

“This is a nice town, you know.” The doctor’s face was turning a

bit red, and he reminded Alexei of an angry bull waiting for his

chance to charge. “You assholes walk in here looking to do god

knows what, and you wreck everything. This is a nice place where

people give a shit about each other. I should not have to do autopsies.

I should not have to write out the way people died of unnatural causes here.”

“I am very sorry. I could not save other girl. She was dead

because I was…” Alexei let his eyes drift down.

Caleb stopped in front of the cell. “She died while you were out

with me and the Farley twins?” When Alexei didn’t answer he put a

hand on the bars. “What would you have done if you had been there?

Would she still be dead? Would
you have helped kill her?”

Alexei’s stomach churned at the thought. He’d been through the

scenario in his head a million times. It had kept him up all night. He’d played it through, and he still wasn’t sure what he would have done.

“Caleb, stop.” Callie crossed her arms and faced the doctor.

Caleb didn’t look at her, obviously preferring to expend his

intimidation on Alexei. Alexei forced himself to face the man he’d

briefly thought of as a friend. The doctor wasn’t close to being done

with him. “Why? Why should I stop? Why should I think he would

have saved that girl? He almost certainly helped get rid of her body.

Am I wrong?”

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The burger he’d wolfed down now threatened to come back up.

He could still feel the slight weight of her body in his arms. They had wrapped her in a tarp and taken her to an isolated part of the river. “I help him.”

“Yeah, I thought so. I had to perform an autopsy on a twenty-one-

year-old girl today. The sheriff and I had to talk to her mother. We

had to inform a mother that the child she carried in her womb is gone.

The child she loved and nurtured. The child who should have buried

her is gone from this earth.”

The doctor’s voice shook. His eyes had welled up in righteous

anger, and Alexei’s teared up in shame.

“I am sorry.” It was all Alexei could think to say.

“Yeah, I can see that. It won’t bring her back.” The doctor turned.

He pointed at the sheriff. “You get that asshole out of my town,

Nate.”

The sheriff spoke quietly, as though trying to placate the other

man. “The feds are coming for him. The roads are keeping them out

of here tonight, but they should make it by tomorrow night. Until

then, he’s going to be here.”

The doctor huffed and stormed out as quickly as he’d rushed in.

Callie’s big brown eyes stared at him sympathetically. “Please

forgive Caleb. He lost his wife a few years ago, and his family no

longer speaks to him. Once he was a very highly paid surgeon. Well, I

won’t tell you that story, but he’s got a lot of anger. Don’t take it

personally.”

“He is right.” Self-recrimination tasted bitter on his tongue. He

deserved whatever these feds gave him. He deserved whatever hell

waited on him.

A soft hand covered his own. He heard Zane curse, but Callie

simply tightened her fingers over his hand. “Tell me something,

Alexei, do you honestly believe that you would have stood there and

allowed this Ivan person to kill that girl?”

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He didn’t recognize himself anymore. And he had no idea what

the word honest meant in reference to his own life. He’d lived a lie for so long. “I don’t know.”

Her breath came out in a tiny sigh. “I do. I know you’ve been

through some bad things, but deep in your heart, you’re good and

worthy, and you can fix the things you’ve done wrong. You would

have stopped him. You would have saved her.”

Tears fell from his eyes. The room seemed oddly still. Only

Callie’s voice meant anything in that moment. “You do not know me.

How can you possibly know what I do?”

“Because you saved me.” She leaned down and placed a single

chaste kiss on the back of his hand. “Because you saved Jen. And

because you saved my baby.”

The men in the room gasped. Their deep, shocked voices were

one. “Callie?”

She smiled at Alexei before turning, opening her arms wide. She

nodded, her voice choked with emotion. “I just took a test this

morning. Three actually. I was going to tell you this evening. We’re

finally pregnant.”

The men crowded her, their arms forming walls around her. They

squeezed her tight, kissing and nuzzling her.

Alexei watched the scene. He no longer cared that theirs was

obviously an odd relationship. They loved, and it filled the room.

They loved, and it filled him with longing. He had absolutely no one

who would put their arms around him and shut the world out. He’d

given it up for the pursuit of revenge, and suddenly it seemed like a

terrible thing to have missed out on.

He let his head rest against the cold metal bars. He would

probably see a lot of metal bars in his future. An image of that pretty waitress slid across his mind. Holly. He would never have a chance to

date a nice woman like Holly. He would be lucky if he survived at all.

“Hey.” A gruff voice pulled him from his misery.

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He looked up, and Zane’s hand was out. It took him a moment to

realize what the other man was asking for.

“You are sure?” Alexei had to ask. It felt wrong to simply accept

that hand. The man should be sure.

“Yeah.”

Tentatively, Alexei put his hand in Zane’s. He wouldn’t have been

surprised if it had been a trick. He wouldn’t have been shocked if

Zane had used his hold to pull Alexei through the bars and bash his

skull against them. A part of him kind of wished he would do it, but

that large hand strongly pumped his own.

“Thank you. I don’t know why you did it, and I don’t care. You

saved our wife and our baby. I don’t think I can ever repay you for

that.”

Emotion choked Alexei. One good thing. He’d managed one good

thing. He would have to settle for that. He wasn’t sure if it would save his soul, but it began to make it feel lighter. “I am glad I do this.”

“I’m calling Logan.” The sheriff hadn’t taken his hands off his

wife. “I want to go home, Zane. I want to show our wife how well

we’re going to take care of her.” He kissed the top of her head and

walked to his desk.

Fifteen minutes later, they left, their arms around one another. The

lanky deputy took over.

“You okay in there?” Logan’s face was open and slightly curious.

He was young, so young, to have a badge on his chest.

Was he okay? Perhaps not, but he was more okay than he’d been

in years. His future looked bleak, but he had a chance to be something more than he’d become. He could not erase past mistakes, but maybe,

just maybe, he could find a way to earn forgiveness.

“Yes. I am good.”

The young man smiled. “All right, then. I’m the night shift. I’ll

probably fall asleep at some point in time. Just bang on the bars if you need something.”

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“Yes, I will bang the bars.” He wouldn’t need anything. He settled

himself on the cot, feeling lighter than he had in years. The oppressive sadness he’d felt was gone, only remnants clinging to remind him of

his past mistakes.

“Oh, and your cell phone’s been ringing. I know I’m not supposed

to, but did you need to talk to someone?”

It must be a mistake. Everyone he knew was either dead or half a

world away. It didn’t matter. He lay down on the cot and pulled the

covers up around his chest. “No. There is no one to call me. Ignore

this.”

Logan tipped his hat, a grin cu
rling his lips up. “Can do. I’m

really good at ignoring stuff. Only thing I’m better at is avoiding

work.”

The deputy sat down in his chair. He propped his feet on his desk

and leaned back. He tipped his hat over his face and was asleep in no

more than five minutes.

Alexei stared at the ceiling, the events of the day playing through

his mind, and a deep sense of relief spread through his body. Deep in

the night Alexei heard the cell phone buzzing from its place in the

small locker where the sheriff had placed all his personal items at the time of his booking. He ignored the sound. After a long while, he fell asleep and dreamed about what it would be like to have a best friend

and a wife. He dreamed about how it would feel to share a life.

* * * *

Jen woke and stretched, her limbs deliciously sore from repeated

and vigorous sexual encounters with the man she could only think of

after last night as her boyfriend. A smile stretched across her face.

He’d said it. He’d said I love you.

Oh, he’d looked a little terrified at the prospect, but he’d said it, and he hadn’t taken it back or tried to pretend like it was a friendly thing. No, he’d said it and held her and let her fall asleep in his arms

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and then promptly woke her up twice more in the night for some

rough sex.

She might need to take up yoga. Nell taught a class at the rec

center. Maybe limbering up would help her keep up with her old man.

She chided herself mentally. Never call him that. She couldn’t tease

him about their age difference.

A heavenly scent wafted into the room, and Jen opened her eyes

to discover she wasn’t alone.

“Whoa!” She pulled the covers up because she was looking at

someone she hadn’t expected.

“Good morning, Miss Jennifer.”

Mrs. Truss was a solidly built woman of roughly sixty-five years

with a very upper-crust British accent. She smiled down at Jen and

placed a mug of what smelled like coffee on the nightstand.

“Good morning.” Jen glanced around the room. It looked like Stef

had put up all the toys they had played with last night, but they were still in a dungeon. The woman’s grandmotherly smile and crisp white