
The Thorntons Book 5: Someone to Watch Over Me
Auteur
Iris Morland
Lezers
183K
Hoofdstukken
21
Chapter 1
Blood, sand, heat. It smells of copper and he canāt see anything in front of him. He shouts, hoping heās not the only survivor, and he hears a groan through all of the noise. He wonders if his eardrum is blown from the blast.
He follows the noise. Itās instinctual at this point. He wonders if he imagined it when he canāt find the source of the sound. Then: he sees something. He kneels next to his comrade, gently turning him over. He doesnāt know if his friend is dead. When he hears him choke and gasp, he realizes heās alive.
But given the wound in his belly, he will be dead within minutes.
He tries to get his friend up, get him help. He canāt die out here when theyāre going home in a week. Not like this. His friend has a new baby girl and his wife needs himā
Another blast rocks him. He collapses onto the sand, hits his head on something hard and painful, and it all goes black.
* * *
Seth Thornton barely caught the scream in his throat as he woke up. Thrashing under the too-heavy bedcovers, he sat up, gasping for breath. He could taste the sand and blood on his tongue, even though heād been in Fair Haven, Washington, for a year now. After his third tour as a Marine, heād finally earned inactive duty.
Except that inactive duty had meant that Seth had no idea what to do with his life now. Who was he, if not a soldier? He knew war; he knew guns; he knew death and he knew victory. But mostly, he knew loneliness, and it was like a pall he couldnāt overcome. Even with his twin sister, Lizzie, getting married and having a baby, even knowing he could do whatever he wanted with his life now, it wasnāt enough.
He blew out a breath. āIām turning into a total sap,ā he muttered as he got up. After taking a quick shower and getting dressed, he made himself a cup of black coffeeāhis usual breakfastāand after heād downed the mug, he decided to get some fresh air.
It was better than sitting in that apartment and reminiscing about his best friendās death.
Outside, it was an obnoxiously beautiful day. June in Washington State heralded the end of the rainy season, and the sun shone so cheerily that Seth scowled up at the sky. What did the sun have to be so fucking happy about?
It didnāt help that he had nightmares more often than not. When he could sleep, the memories crept up on him, taking over his dreams, until heād wake up even more exhausted than when heād gone to sleep. Lizzie had stopped asking about the dark circles under his eyes because he tended to snap at her, but he saw the worry in his twin sisterās expression
You canāt keep going on like this, sheād said just a week prior. Nobody can.
He would, because he didnāt have a choice.
Right then, Seth heard a woman swearing. Very colorfully, in fact. Intrigued, he rounded the corner to see an overstuffed armchair seemingly hanging in midair, the only evidence of human involvement being the slender ankles and feet standing on the concrete. The woman swore again as the chair began to tip onto the ground.
Seth grabbed the chair just in time. It was heavier than it looked. Grunting, he was about to ask which apartment the woman lived in when he was arrested by a face that he couldnāt forget.
Rose DiMarco. The woman heād met outside The Fainting Goat, the most popular bar in town. Those wide blue eyes, that pert little nose. The dark brown hair tipped with blue.
She stared at him in surprise. āYou.ā
āYou,ā he drawled. āHow have you been, princess?ā
That pert little nose wrinkled. She tried to lift the chair away from his hold, but he had at least a foot on her and a whole lot more muscle.
āHow about you tell me which apartment is yours, unless you want to stand out here all day?ā
Rose hesitated before sighing. āItās number 115. Just right around the corner here.ā
Sethās eyebrows shot up, but he bit his tongue in time. It just so happened he lived in number 117āright next door.
What a fascinating coincidence.
They maneuvered around the corner and into the apartment, setting the chair down with a thud in the mostly bare living room. Seth took in the boxesāmost labeled BOOKSāand then he took in Rose herself.
Her long hair was in a braid down her back, her cheeks flushed. He told himself she was flushed from the exertion, not from him, but it amused him that she not only remembered him, but that sheād reacted to his presence so decidedly.
Heād seen her outside The Fainting Goat fending off some asshole, and when said asshole had grabbed her, Seth had come to her rescue. Except that Rose had taken issue with his interference, and Seth had wondered where the hell this beautiful, fiery woman had come from. He hadnāt seen her in a month, no matter how many times he went to The Fainting Goat. Heād almost wondered if heād dreamed her.
Now here she was. His new neighbor.
A smile tipped up his lips, and when she saw it, she put her hands on her hips.
āThank you for your help,ā she said in a prissy voice, ābut that was my biggest piece of furniture.ā
āSo youāre saying I should leave?ā Now he was definitely amused.
āNot in so many words.ā
āAre you always this kind to people who help you?ā
She opened her mouth and closed it, looking very much like sheād like to stick out her tongue at him. Instead, she decided to turn around and say nothing.
Seth followed her to a hatchback outside. He wondered how sheād gotten that chair in her car in the first place. He saw boxes and more boxes, along with random odds and ends: pillows, blankets, picture frames. Except that the picture frames held no pictures in them, and her pillows and blankets and lamps and everything else were as nondescript as Rose was colorful.
He picked up two boxes, and when she looked like sheād balk, he just raised an eyebrow.
By the time heād helped her get everything out of her car, her apartment looked slightly less depressing. He noticed she had no bed to speak of. Would she sleep on the chair? On her floor?
He suddenly wanted to know everything about her. What kind of a woman carts five boxes of books and no bed to a new apartment? No pictures, no knickknacks. He hadnāt seen boxes labeled clothes or shoes or jewelry like his sister Lizzie had had when sheād moved in.
āIs there a moving van coming?ā he asked, intrigued.
Rose looked up from the box sheād begun to unpack. āA van? No. This is it.ā
āAre you getting a bed later today?ā
She wouldnāt look at him as she began to stack books. āNo, Iām not.ā
Well, that said plenty. But at her warning look, he decided not to push his luck. He started to help her unpack her books, glancing at the spines as they started to shelve them in a tiny bookshelf that wouldnāt hold even half of her collection.
Jane Austen, Charlotte BrontĆ«, Elizabeth Gaskell, John Keats, Shakespeare, Virginia Woolf, Charles Dickensāso many books, most of which had clearly been read over and over again. Some were falling apart, barely glued together. When he took out a copy of Frankenstein, the cover fell off entirely.
āOh, poor guy. This one has been through a lot.ā Rose took the book from him, smiling.
That smile burst something inside him. Something hot, something dangerous. Something that felt exactly like longing. He caught his breath and forced himself to look away before he got burned.
After theyād shelved as many books as they could, Rose stood up, wiping her hands on her shorts. āDo you want something to drink?ā
She didnāt wait for his reply. She returned with two glasses of water and handed one to Seth, which he took gratefully. And he realized, with an inward start, that helping Rose DiMarco move in had made him forget this morningās nightmare.
At the thought of her last name, something itched in the back of his mind. He knew that name, didnāt he? He looked at her more closely, trying to find a clue, but all he saw were those bright blue eyes, like the lake on a sunny day. Heād never seen eyes like hers. As he gazed at her, he watched as a blush climbed up her cheeks.
So she wasnāt as indifferent toward him as she pretended to be. That only heightened his attraction. His blood thrummed.
But then something fearful flickered in her eyes, and she looked away. He recognized that look all too well: heād seen it in the eyes of his men when they were facing down death. Heād seen it in his own face.
But what did Rose have to be afraid of?
* * *
Rose DiMarco, in all of her twenty-seven years, had never encountered a man as stubborn as Seth Thornton.
Yes, this was the second time sheād met him. No, she didnāt really know him. Yes, she had thought about him more often than she cared to admit after heād saved her from Rich, one of her ex-boyfriend Johnny Porterās cronies.
Sheād moved to Fair Haven to escapeāand to escape from men who wanted to use her for their own gains and pleasure.
She recognized desire in menās gazes. She was no stranger to those heated looks, those looks of anticipation. It was rather like having a large predator spot you and decide to hunt you down. Running only made them want to hunt you more.
Rose had no intention of being the gazelle to Sethās lion.
He looks more like a panther, she thought as she looked at him out of the corner of her eye. All muscle and darkness. And those blue-green eyes. Like turquoise.
A dog barked from her bedroom. Rose jumped, feeling foolish. Sheād left her German shepherd, Callie, in her bedroom while sheād been moving in, forgetting her when Seth Thornton had appeared. Guilt assailed her as she went to let Callie out of her tiny bedroom.
Callie was all black, and small for a German shepherd. Rose had gotten her from the shelter three years ago, and Callie had proven herself a worthy companion and guard ever since. Rose had needed a large dog to keep people at bay; Callie had fit the bill perfectly, even though she was more likely to demand belly rubs than take a bite out of some villain.
Callie woofed, her tail wagging. She followed Rose into the living room, going alert when she scented Seth. She sniffed him. Rose couldnāt help but notice that Seth allowed the dog to smell him without moving. Most people tended to reach for dogs without considering the consequences.
āThis is Callie,ā Rose said.
Seth waited another moment until Callie had completed a thorough sniffing. Deciding that Seth wasnāt a threat, she sat on her haunches, watching him with her dark eyes. Sometimes Rose wondered how much Callie perceived in people.
Seth kneeled down, and when Callie wagged her tail, he began to stroke her silky dark head. Callie woofed in pleasure, her tail wagging harder. A smile spread across his face.
āPretty dog,ā he murmured. He gave her one last pat before rising. āIs that it?ā
āIs what it?ā
His smile widened. āIs that everything you needed out of your car?ā
āOh!ā Rose barely stifled a blush. āYes, thank you. You donāt need to stay.ā She winced and, feeling foolish, decided to focus on unpacking the few things she had.
But what could she do with blankets and pillows without a mattress? She hadnāt lied when sheād said she didnāt have a mattress being delivered anytime soon. Her brother, Heath, had said heād buy her whatever she needed, but sheād declined. Sheād taken care of herself for this long; she didnāt need anyoneās charity. Although, if she thought about how she could barely afford this apartment, she knew her pride would only last so long. She had agreed to borrow his car for the move, but that had been the extent of the charity sheād been willing to accept.
She tossed a blanket, annoyed with herself, and she heard Seth grunt a laugh.
āWhat did that blanket do to you, princess?ā
She almost growled. āWill you stop calling me that?ā She moved past him to go into the kitchen to getā¦something. More water? Maybe Iāll just hide in a cabinet until he finally leaves.
Callie sensed her sudden tension and pressed her wet nose against her palm. Rose stroked along Callieās spine absentmindedly.
āAre you stalking me?ā she blurted. At his raised eyebrow, she added, āBecause isnāt it kind of weird that you keep showing up to help me? What do you want from me anyway?ā
His lips twitched. āItās a small town.ā
āItās not that small.ā
āTrue. I havenāt seen you in a month. Usually people run into each other more often than that.ā
Thatās because Iāve been avoiding you. Sheād seen him at The Fainting Goat, where she worked as a waitress. Every time sheād seen him at a booth or at the bar, sheād somehow sneaked into the back or persuaded a coworker to get his order.
She hated people helping her. Treating her like a princess. Princesses were kept in towers, hidden away, waiting to be rescued. Rose refused to wait to be rescued, because she knew all too well youād be waiting for the rest of your life.
āWere you looking for me?ā She wanted to sound accusatory; instead, she sounded breathy.
āI wanted to know if youād gotten rid of your stalker. Did you?ā His eyes darkened ever so slightly. āDid that asshole leave you alone?ā
āFor now.ā
When he looked like he wanted to ask more questions, she shook her head. āI still donāt get why youāre at my apartment complex at all.ā A frisson of fear coursed through her. Had her instincts been wrong again? Was Seth no different from Johnny?
Ice coated her veins at the mere thought.
But Seth only laughed. āNothing like that.ā He pointed over his shoulder. āIām in 117.ā
āWait. You live here?ā
āGenerally more than one person lives in an apartment complex, yes.ā
āYouāre my neighbor.ā
āSo it would seem.ā
She blushed scarlet, and then when he stepped closer to her, she blushed even redder.
āI think youāre the one stalking me,ā he said in a low voice that made her blood simmer. āAlthough I canāt say that I dislike the idea.ā
She wondered if he would kiss her. She wondered if this was what it felt like to be a gazelle when a lion spotted you. Yet the question begged to be askedādid she want to be caught this time?
She swallowed. She couldnāt tear her gaze away from his. With his height, his dark brown hair, his chiseled jaw, and those bulging arms, she would have to be deaf and blind not to notice how attractive he was. A faint beard darkened his face, although he probably had a five-oāclock shadow every evening despite shaving in the morning. She couldnāt help but notice the cleft in his chin, and the way his upper lip curved. All of him seemed hard, unyielding. Ruthless. A white scar cut along his left cheek, and he had smaller scars on his arms and his hands.
Callie barked, the moment shattered. Rose jumped away and tugged at her braid. She felt dizzy. She wished Seth would leave so she could find her equilibrium again.
āLet me take you out for drinks,ā Seth said suddenly.
She almost laughed. She hadnāt gone out for drinksāgone on a dateāin years. An eternity. Rose wasnāt the dating type. That was for women who didnāt wake up terrified of the memories, the past, the ghosts who would never let her go. Dating was for women who werenāt scared of every man they encountered.
Dating was for women who didnāt see danger around every corner.
āI canāt. Iām busy.ā It was a lame excuse, but it was all she could come up with. Normally she could tell guys no more smoothly, but Seth was something else entirely.
She expected annoyance, but Seth just said, āOne drink, then. Itās not marriage. You donāt even have to pay for it.ā
That made her laugh. āI hope not. Isnāt the guy always supposed to pay?ā
āNow youāre being archaic.ā
She laughed, and when his eyes crinkled, her heart did that annoying little flutter in her chest. It was on the tip of her tongue to say yes when her front door opened.
āRose, hey, I thought youād like some coffee,ā her brother, Heath, said. When he saw Seth Thornton standing in her living room, he stopped in his tracks.
The trio all stared at each other. Rose suddenly felt like sheād been caught doing something naughty, and based on Heathās irritated expression, sheād have to explain that nothing had happened.
If only my brother wouldnāt treat me like a child.
Sethās eyes widened. Then: āYouāre his sister.ā
āYes. Did you not realize that?ā She was confused now.
Seth shook his head. āDiMarco. Of course. I shouldāve known.ā
Heath pressed one of the cups of coffee into her hand before asking in a deceptively casual tone, āSo, how do you two know each other?ā
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