Rhapsody (The Teplo Trilogy #2) (32 page)

BOOK: Rhapsody (The Teplo Trilogy #2)
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And then there Tristan was with all of his perfection and talent, giving her so much more than she thought she deserved. And there she was with a scar on her leg, a rod in her bone, and a limp she couldn't hide.
He
didn't make her feel inadequate. She already felt that way. Even now, when she should know better, she still felt inadequate. Taking his words personally and reading more into them than he meant when he said things like she was
just a ballerina
was so easy…because she still felt that way. Inferior. Not good enough.

He was larger than life to her—compassionate, sexy as sin, talented, selfless, commanding, and powerful—so many different things that awed her. He made her feel beautiful, hopeful, but he couldn't make her feel like she was good enough, strong enough, or deserving enough. And he'd tried to make her see it. God, he'd tried to convince her. Every time he touched her, or made love to her, he'd tried.
You're beautiful. You're perfect.
You're so fucking brave.
So many different ways he'd tried to show her, to tell her.

But she had to believe it herself, too. And she couldn't really believe that he could see her as deserving, as his equal, when she couldn't see it herself. And thus far, she hadn't been able to see it. She'd come close, but at the first obstacle today, she'd buckled. She'd let herself believe all over again that she was just a ballerina. She'd let herself believe that he believed it, too.

Was she still a ballerina?

Did she even want that anymore?

If she could choose tomorrow to dance again, would she?

She didn't know, but she was absolutely certain of one thing: If she had to choose between dancing and what she felt for Tristan, she'd choose him every time. She'd always choose him. So why was she running now?

She knew that answer, too. She was hurt, angry, and he made no sense to her. He'd shut her out, lied to her, and it bothered her. Even if he did view her as an equal, as someone who could take care of herself, he'd made this decision without her and that hurt. She felt as if…she wasn't sure how to put it honestly. She'd told him so many times how much it bothered her to have her right to decide taken away from her.

He knew that, but he'd still made this choice for her anyway. And when he said things like
you're just a ballerina,
believing he really felt that way was so easy because
she
didn't know who she was. She hadn't known in a year. But this wasn't only about her, was it? This was about him and his issues as much as it was about her and her issues.

He'd lost his parents in the worst way imaginable. He'd seen things that still haunted him, done things that tormented him. Just as she saw and processed things through the filter of her own experiences, so did he. And his experiences told him that he'd get her hurt like he thought he'd gotten his parents killed. She could understand why he felt that way, but she didn't agree. He was a fighter, a cop. Whether he worked for the DEA or for someone else, his life would always be dangerous in some way. He couldn't send her away every time something went wrong or he got scared. And she couldn't let him.

Going away wouldn't solve their problems. It wouldn't show him that he could do this without her getting caught in the crossfire. And it wouldn't prove to herself that she was enough for someone like him.

"Hey, Dad?" she called, her decision made. She couldn't go back to Oregon with him. She couldn't leave without telling Tristan how she felt.

"Yeah?" He appeared in the doorway a few minutes later.

"You know I love you, right?" She turned to him, biting her bottom lip.

"I knew I was going to regret telling you the truth," her dad sighed. "I knew it."

 

 

An hour after beginning his search, Tristan found what he was looking for tucked away in hip-high weeds behind the back of an abandoned warehouse: an old storm drain that probably hadn't been used since the district went defunct two years before. The drain was in the perfect location—within walking distance of the club, but far enough away that no one would even consider that it might open up beneath
Teplo
. It was hidden from view behind a warehouse, and in an area where no one paid any attention to who came and went or what they did while there.

No one would ever even notice the drain. Hell,
he
wouldn't have noticed if he hadn't been actively searching for exactly that sort of thing. The opening appeared almost like an outdoor entrance to the warehouse, and was well hidden. Until you noticed the inexplicable army of tire-tracks and footprints, anyway. And the dried blood splatters. There weren't many of them, but Tristan a puddle wasn't necessary for Forensics to work their magic. The drip trail was obvious.

He snapped a series of photographs before slipping the camera into his pocket and pulling out his phone. He'd told Jason he wasn't giving him three days, but he wasn't stupid enough to go in without back up, either.

He wanted to. God, he wanted to so fucking badly, he wasn't sure how he kept himself from doing it. But if this was their access point—and the blood stains made him certain he wasn't wrong on that point—he couldn't risk it. He'd made a promise to Lillian he had no intention of breaking. He wasn't going to get himself killed doing this, and going in there alone would be suicide.

He flipped the phone open, his hand hovering over the power button.

A polite cough from across the lot stalled him in his tracks.

 

 

"Tristan didn't show," Davis stated, looking around as everyone filed out of the War Room with their marching orders in hand.

"No, sir," Jason said.

"And Kincaid?"

"At the club still, sir." Jason hadn't been able to avoid filling Davis in on Tristan's AWOL status. He needed to know where Kincaid was and why in case anything went wrong. He'd been surprisingly calm about the news. Jason suspected that was because they were finally closing in. A few more hours and they were done. Anton, Paulo, and every guard in the place would be in jail. Manufacturing, distribution, suspicion of murder, racketeering, conspiracy to commit kidnapping. Even if they couldn't find evidence to support the murder charges, RICO applied now that they could prove Francisco had his people stationed inside
Teplo
. Vetrov wasn't walking away. Jason almost wanted to thank the bastard for ordering Lillian's kidnapping since it had ensured his downfall. Almost.

"No word on Riley?"

"His cell is off and the Rover is still at the penthouse." The Viper was missing though. And that did them no good at all if he had gone after Vetrov. The Viper wasn't Lo-Jacked.

"Son of a bitch," Davis swore. "You found that other entrance yet?"

"Simon and his team were going through the maps when I left them." There were three different types of sewer installations in this city and they were all mapped out. D.P.W. didn't have them available online yet and Simon had spent half the day trying to find someone to bring the damn things over. Jason had no clue if they'd find what they were looking for yet, but he was positive it was there. Malachi sure as hell hadn't been trying to get Lillian into that storage room.

If they had the manpower, he'd have every agent he could find out there combing the area, but that wasn't possible. There were access entrances everywhere in this city. If Vetrov noticed an army prowling through the area looking for something, the jig would be up. Any time they'd managed to secure by keeping DEA involvement out of Malachi's arrest would be gone, and they really needed time to ensure they wiped out Vetrov's supply.

He just didn't know how much they had.

"Do you want me to pull Tristan off this case or not, Ames?" Davis asked. "It's your call."

"Does it matter at this point, sir? If we don't get the arrest warrants soon, he's going in with or without approval. Whether you pull him from this case now or wait until it's over and deal with him then, he's still going in there. We both knew threatening him wouldn't slow him down any to begin with." It'd been worth a shot though. Fruitless attempt, of course, and Tristan would likely be losing his badge when this was over, but he doubted Tristan gave anything resembling a fuck about that.

Where the hell was he?

Jason didn’t like that he hadn't shown up at
Teplo
yet. He'd suspected Kincaid to call as soon as the debriefing started to tell him that Tristan was there already. Instead, Kincaid had checked in twice to inform him that Tristan was MIA, but that Lillian had returned to her house with an older man.

"True," Davis said. "Hell. Remind me why we used Miss Maddox last night?"

"It made more sense than trying to get one of ours prepped to go in. Vetrov's people were jumpy enough already." The justification sounded thin even to him. Didn't make it any less true though. Lillian had already been in the club, knew the guards, the atmosphere, and what to watch for. She had a believable excuse for being there since Tristan had her marched off in handcuffs on phony drug charges, an eye for detail, and Jason had known full well she wasn't going to sit by and do nothing. He'd seen the look in her eyes as he sat across from her at the dinner table. She was as stubborn and bullheaded as Tristan.

"She had a team to back her up. The risk was minimal," he finished. It had been safer to send her in when they could protect her than to risk her trying to do it on her own. If Malachi really had been waiting for a chance to grab her, her slipping in without them watching over her would have ended in utter disaster. And she would have tried it sooner or later.

Christ, she and Tristan really were a match made in heaven.

And God save the world from the both of them if Tristan still had a badge once this was all over.

"Right," Davis sighed. "It always is until it isn't. Does her father know?"

"I believe so." He couldn't think of anyone else Tristan would trust with her safety.

"Is he going to give us a problem?"

"Doubtful. His daughter can be very persuasive."

She'd already worked more than a few miracles where Tristan was concerned, and he was impossible. If she could soften him as much as she had in a matter of weeks, there was no way she wouldn't be able to do the same for Mayor Daniel Maddox who, by everything Jason had been able to discern about him, was known to be a reasonable man with a deep love for his only child. Still…

"I'll assume any and all responsibility should it be necessary, sir."

No one on his team would take heat for any of this. He'd made the decision to involve Lillian. He'd been the one to demand she not tell her father. He'd made the decision to get her involved further last night. Any consequences fell on his shoulders, no one else's. He hadn't even given Tristan much of a choice.

"I'd like to have a chat with this little ballerina," Davis mused, temporarily ignoring that particular elephant. "She's got everyone in an uproar." He shook his head in amusement. "I'd almost feel sorry for Riley if he weren't such a pain in my ass. I'm looking forward to the day he isn't my fucking problem anymore."

"Me too, sir." Jason was too tired to feel sorry for his friend today. It was about time someone else had a try at keeping his ass in line. As soon as this was over, he intended to hand that honor over to Lillian with a smile on his face. Hell, he'd even do a jig once Tristan hit the door. They just had to find the pain in the ass first and convince him to wait. Three hours. He just had to wait three fucking hours.

BOOK: Rhapsody (The Teplo Trilogy #2)
12.83Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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