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Chapter no 3 – A PINT-SIZED CRIMINAL

Things We Never Got Over (Knockemout, #1)

Naomi

โ€œWhat room are you in?โ€ Knox asked. I realized we were already back at the motel.

โ€œWhy?โ€ I asked with suspicion.

He exhaled slowly as if I were on his last nerve. โ€œSo I can drop you at your door.โ€

Oh. โ€œNine.โ€

โ€œYou leave your door open?โ€ he asked a second later, his mouth tight.

โ€œYeah. Thatโ€™s the way itโ€™s done on Long Island,โ€ I deadpanned. โ€œItโ€™s how we show our neighbors we trust them.โ€

He gave me another one of those long, frowny looks.

โ€œNo. Of course I didnโ€™t leave it open. I closed and locked it.โ€ He pointed toward number nine.

My door was ajar. โ€œOh.โ€

He put the truck in park where it sat in the middle of the lot with more force than necessary. โ€œStay here.โ€

I blinked as he climbed out and stalked toward my room.

My weary eyes were drawn to the view of those worn jeans clinging to a spectacular butt as he stalked toward my door. Hypnotized for a few of his long strides, it took me a hot minute to remember exactly what Iโ€™d left in that room and how very much I didnโ€™t want Knox, of all people, to see it.

โ€œWait!โ€ I jumped out of the truck and ran after him, but he didnโ€™t stop, didnโ€™t even slow down.

I turned on the speed in a last-ditch effort and jumped in front of him.

He walked right into the hand I held up.

โ€œGet your ass out of my way, Naomi,โ€ he ordered.

When I didnโ€™t comply, he brought a hand to my stomach and walked me backward until I was standing in front of Room 8.

I didnโ€™t know what it said about me that I really liked his hand there. โ€œYou donโ€™t have to go in there,โ€ I insisted. โ€œIโ€™m sure itโ€™s just housekeeping.โ€

โ€œThis place look like it has housekeeping?โ€

He had a point. The motel looked like it should give out tetanus shots instead of mini bottles of shampoo.

โ€œStay,โ€ he said again, then stalked back to my open door.

โ€œShit,โ€ I whispered when he shoved it open. I lasted all of two seconds before following him inside.

The room had been unappealing, to say the least, when Iโ€™d checked in less than an hour ago.

The orange and brown wallpaper was peeling in long strips. The carpet was a dark green that felt like it was made out of the scrubby side of a dish sponge. The bathroom fixtures were Pepto Bismol pink, and the shower was missing several tiles.

But it was the only option within twenty miles, and Iโ€™d figured I could rough it for a night or two. Besides, Iโ€™d thought at the time, how bad could it be?

Apparently pretty freaking bad. Between the time Iโ€™d checked in, stowed my suitcase, plugged in my laptop, and left to meet Tina, someone had broken in and ransacked the room.

My suitcase was upended on the floor, some of its contents strewn all over the carpet.

The dresser drawers were pulled out, closet doors left open.

My laptop was missing. So was the zippered pouch of cash Iโ€™d hidden in my suitcase.

โ€œSuckerโ€ was scrawled across the bathroom vanity mirror in my favorite lipstick. Ironically, the thing I didnโ€™t want my grumpy Viking to see, the thing that was worth more than whatever else had been stolen, was still there in a crumpled heap in the corner.

Worst of all, the perpetrator was sitting on the bed, dirty sneakers tangled in a clump of sheets. She was watching a natural disaster movie. I

wasnโ€™t good at guessing ages, but I put her solidly in the Child/Pre-Teen category.

โ€œHey, Way,โ€ Knox said grimly.

The girlโ€™s blue eyes flitted away from the screen to land on him before returning to the TV. โ€œHey, Knox.โ€

It was a small town. Of course the town grump and the child felon knew each other.

โ€œOkay, look,โ€ I said, side-stepping Knox to stand in front of the thing in the corner that I really didnโ€™t want to explain. โ€œI donโ€™t know if child labor laws are different in Virginia. But I asked for an extra pillow, not to be robbed by a pint-sized criminal.โ€

The girl spared me a glance.

โ€œWhereโ€™s your mom?โ€ Knox asked, ignoring me. Another shrug. โ€œGone,โ€ she said. โ€œWhoโ€™s your friend?โ€ โ€œThatโ€™d be your Aunt Naomi.โ€

She didnโ€™t look impressed. I, on the other hand, probably looked like Iโ€™d just been shot out of a cannon toward a brick wall.

โ€œAunt?โ€ I repeated, shaking my head in hopes that it would fix my hearing. Another wilted flower petal fell out of what was left of my updo and flitted to the floor.

โ€œThought you were dead,โ€ the girl said, studying me with vague interest. โ€œNice hair.โ€

โ€œAunt?โ€ I said again.

Knox turned to me. โ€œWaylay is Tinaโ€™s kid,โ€ Knox explained slowly. โ€œTina?โ€ I parroted on a croak.

โ€œLooks like your sister helped herself to your stuff,โ€ he observed. โ€œSaid most of it was shit,โ€ the girl said.

I blinked rapidly. Not only had my sister stolen my car, sheโ€™d also broken into my hotel room, ransacked it, and left behind the niece I didnโ€™t know existed.

โ€œShe okay?โ€ Waylay asked, not taking her eyes off the tornado that returned to the screen.

โ€œSheโ€ was probably me. And I was most definitely not okay.

I grabbed a pillow off the bed. โ€œWill you two please excuse me?โ€ I squeaked.

Without waiting for an answer, I hauled ass out the door into the hot Virginia sunshine. Birds were chirping. Two motorcycles drove by, their

engines a deafening roar. Across the street, an older couple climbed out of a pickup truck and headed into the diner for breakfast.

How could things have the audacity to look so normal when my entire life had just imploded?

I held the pillow to my face and let loose the scream that had been building.

Thoughts flew through my brain like a turbo-charged spin cycle. Warner was right. People didnโ€™t change. My sister was still a terrible human being, and I was still naรฏve enough to fall for her lies. My car was gone along with my purse and my laptop. Not to mention the money Iโ€™d brought for Tina. As of last night, I had no job. I wasnโ€™t on my way to Paris, which had been the plan a mere twenty-four hours ago. My family and friends thought Iโ€™d lost my damn mind. My favorite lipstick had been ruined on a bathroom mirror. And I had a niece whose entire childhood Iโ€™d missed out on.

I sucked in another breath and let out one final scream for good measure before lowering the pillow.

โ€œOkay. You can figure this out. You can fix this.โ€ โ€œAbout done with your pep talk?โ€

I whirled around and found Knox leaning against the door frame, tattooed arms crossed over his broad chest.

โ€œYep,โ€ I said, squaring my shoulders. โ€œHow old is she?โ€ โ€œEleven.โ€

Nodding, I shoved the pillow at him and marched back into the room. โ€œSo, Waylay,โ€ I began.

There was a family resemblance in the upturned nose, the dimple in the chin. She had the same colt-like legs her mother and I had at that age.

โ€œSo, Aunt Naomi.โ€

โ€œDid your mom say when sheโ€™d be back?โ€ โ€œNope.โ€

โ€œWhere do you and your mom live, honey?โ€ I asked.

Maybe Tina was there now, going through her haul, figuring out what was worth keeping and what she wanted to ruin just for the fun of it.

โ€œOver in Hillside Acres,โ€ she answered, looking around me to get a better view of the tornado tossing up cows on the screen.

โ€œNeed a minute,โ€ Knox announced and nodded toward the door.

I had all the damn time in the world apparently. All the time and not a single clue what to do. No next step. No to-do list quantifying and

organizing my world into nice, neat line items. Just a crisis on top of a hot mess on top of a dumpster fire.

โ€œSure,โ€ I said, sounding only mildly hysterical.

He waited until I passed him before stepping out after me. When I stopped, he kept walking toward the faded soda machine outside the front office.

โ€œYou seriously want me to buy you a soda right now?โ€ I asked, flummoxed.

โ€œNo. Iโ€™m trying to get out of earshot of the kid who doesnโ€™t realize sheโ€™s been abandoned,โ€ he snapped.

I followed him. โ€œMaybe Tinaโ€™s coming back,โ€ I said.

He stopped and turned to face me. โ€œWay says Tina didnโ€™t tell her anything. Just that she had something to take care of and sheโ€™d be gone a long time.โ€

A long time? What the hell was a long time in Tina time? A weekend?

A week? A month?

โ€œOh my God. My parents.โ€ This was going to devastate them. As if what Iโ€™d done yesterday wasnโ€™t upsetting enough. Iโ€™d managed to assure them last night on a highway in Pennsylvania that I was fine and definitely not going through some kind of mid-life crisis. And Iโ€™d made them promise not to change their plans for me. Theyโ€™d left for their three-week Mediterranean cruise this morning. The first big, international vacation theyโ€™d ever taken together.

I didnโ€™t want my problems or Tinaโ€™s disaster ruining it.

โ€œWhat do you intend to do with that kid in there?โ€ Knox nodded toward the open door.

โ€œWhat do you mean?โ€

โ€œNaomi, when the cops find out Tinaโ€™s gone and left Waylay behind, itโ€™s straight into foster care.โ€

I shook my head. โ€œIโ€™m her closest living relative who isnโ€™t a criminal. Iโ€™m responsible for her.โ€ Just like all of Tinaโ€™s other messes until weโ€™d turned eighteen.

He gave me a long, hard look. โ€œJust like that?โ€

โ€œSheโ€™s family.โ€ Besides. It wasnโ€™t like I had a whole lot going on at the moment. I was basically adrift. For the first time in my entire life, I didnโ€™t have a plan.

And that scared the crap out of me.

โ€œFamily,โ€ he snorted as if my reasoning wasnโ€™t sound.

โ€œListen. Thank you, Knox, for all of the shouting and the rides and the coffee. But as you can see, Iโ€™ve got a situation to handle. So itโ€™s probably best for you to go on back to whatever cave you crawled out of this morning.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m not goinโ€™ anywhere.โ€

We were back to glaring at each other, the silence charged. This time he broke first.

โ€œQuit stallinโ€™, Daisy. What are you gonna do?โ€ โ€œDaisy?โ€

He reached up and plucked a flower petal out of my hair with two fingers.

I batted his hand away and took a step back so I could think. โ€œOkay. First I need toโ€ฆโ€ Definitely not call my parents. And I didnโ€™t really want to get the police involvedโ€”againโ€”if I didnโ€™t have to. What if Tina showed up in an hour? Maybe the first thing I needed to do was get more coffee.

โ€œCall the damn cops and report the break-in and the child abandonment,โ€ Knox said.

โ€œSheโ€™s myย sister. Besides, what if she shows up in an hour?โ€

โ€œShe stole your car and abandoned her kid. That doesnโ€™t earn a fucking pass.โ€

The tattooed, grouchy bear of a man was right. I really didnโ€™t like that about him.

โ€œArgh! Fine. Okay. Let me think. Can I borrow your phone?โ€ He stood there staring at me, unmoving.

โ€œFor Peteโ€™s sake. Iโ€™m not going to steal it. I just need to make a quick call.โ€

On a long-suffering sigh, he reached into his pocket and pulled out his phone.

โ€œThank you,โ€ I said pointedly, then stomped back into my motel room. Waylay was still watching her movie, now with her hands stacked behind her head.

I dug through my suitcase to find a notebook and went back outside. โ€œYou keep a notebook of phone numbers with you?โ€

Knox was peering over my shoulder. I shushed him and dialed.

โ€œThe hell do you want?โ€

My sisterโ€™s voice always managed to make me cringe inwardly. โ€œAn explanation for starters,โ€ I snapped. โ€œWhere are you?โ€

โ€œWhere are you?โ€ she mimicked me in a high-pitched Muppet voice that Iโ€™d always hated.

I heard a prolonged exhale.

โ€œAre youย smokingย in my car?โ€ โ€œLooks like itโ€™s my car now.โ€

โ€œYou know what? Forget the car. We have bigger things to discuss. You have aย daughter! A daughter you abandoned in a motel room.โ€

โ€œGot shit to do. Canโ€™t have a kid holding me back for the next while. Got something big in the works. Why ya think I named her Waylay? Figured she could hang out with her Aunt Goody Two-Shoes till I get back.โ€

I was so mad I could only sputter.

Knox snatched the phone from my ear. โ€œYou listen and you listen good, Tina. Youโ€™ve got exactly thirty minutes to get back here, or Iโ€™m callinโ€™ the damn cops.โ€

I watched as his face got harder, his jaw tighter, showing off little hollows under his cheekbones. His eyes went so cold I shivered.

โ€œAs always, youโ€™re a real fuckinโ€™ idiot,โ€ he said. โ€œJust remember, next time you get picked up by the cops, youโ€™ll have warrants. That means your stupid ass will be sittinโ€™ behind bars, and I donโ€™t see anyone rushinโ€™ to bail you out.โ€

He paused for a moment and then said, โ€œYeah. Fuck you too.โ€ He swore again and lowered his phone.

โ€œHow exactly do you and my sister know each other?โ€ I wondered out loud.

โ€œTinaโ€™s been a pain in everyoneโ€™s ass since she blew into town a year ago. Always lookinโ€™ for an easy buck. Tried a couple of slip and fall schemes on some of the local businesses, including your pal Justice. Every time she gets a little money in her pocket, sheโ€™s rip-roarinโ€™ drunk and wreaking havoc all over town. Petty shit. Vandalism.โ€

Yeah, that sounded like my sister.

โ€œWhat did she say?โ€ I asked, not really wanting the answer.

โ€œSaid she doesnโ€™t give a shit if we call the cops. Sheโ€™s not cominโ€™ back.โ€ โ€œDid she say that?โ€ Iโ€™d always wanted kids. But not like this. Not jumping in one step shy of puberty when the formative years were already

gone.

โ€œSaid sheโ€™d be back when she felt like it,โ€ he said, thumbing through his phone.

Some things never changed. My sister had always made her own rules. As an infant, sheโ€™d slept all day and stayed up all night. As a toddler, she was kicked out of three daycares for biting. And once we hit school age, well, it was a whole new ballgame of rebellion.

โ€œWhat are you doing?โ€ I asked Knox as he brought the phone back up to his ear.

โ€œLast thing I want to,โ€ he drawled.

โ€œBuying tickets to the ballet?โ€ I hypothesized.

He didnโ€™t answer, just strode into the parking lot with rigid shoulders. I couldnโ€™t hear exactly what he was saying, but there were a lot ofย fuck yous andย kiss my asses.

I added โ€œphone etiquetteโ€ to the growing list of things Knox Morgan was bad at.

He returned looking even angrier. Ignoring me, he produced a wallet and fished out a few bills, then fed them into the soda machine.

โ€œWhat do you want?โ€ he muttered. โ€œUh. Water, please.โ€

He punched the buttons harder than I thought necessary. And a bottle of water and two Yellow Lightnings fell out onto the ground.

โ€œHere.โ€ He shoved the water at me and headed back to the room. โ€œUh. Thanks?โ€ I called after him.

I debated for about thirty seconds whether or not I should just start walking until I found a new reality that was less terrible. But it was just a mental exercise. There was no way I could walk away. I had a new responsibility. And with that responsibility would come some sense of purpose. Probably.

I returned to my room and found Knox examining the lock on the door. โ€œNo finesse,โ€ he complained.

โ€œTold her she shouldโ€™ve picked it,โ€ Waylay said, cracking open her soda.

โ€œItโ€™s barely eight in the morning, and you gave her a soda,โ€ I hissed at Knox as I resumed my sentry stance in front of the mound in the corner.

He looked at me, then beyond me. Nervously I spread my arms and tried to block his view.

โ€œThat some kind of tablecloth?โ€ he asked, peering past me.

โ€œWedding dress,โ€ Waylay announced. โ€œMom said it was ugly as hell.โ€

โ€œYeah, well, Tina wouldnโ€™t know good taste if it hit her over the head with a Birkin bag,โ€ I said, feeling defensive.

โ€œDoes that dress mean I have an uncle out there somewhere?โ€ she asked, nodding at the pile of lace and underskirt that had once made me feel like a fairy princess but now only made me feel like a fool.

โ€œNo,โ€ I said firmly.

Knoxโ€™s eyebrows raised fractionally. โ€œYou just decided to take a wedding dress on a road trip?โ€

โ€œI really donโ€™t see how this is any of your business,โ€ I told him.

โ€œHairโ€™s done up like she was going someplace fancy,โ€ Waylay mused, eyeing me.

โ€œSure looks that way, Way,โ€ Knox agreed, crossing his arms over his chest and looking amused.

I did not like the two of them ganging up against me.

โ€œLetโ€™s worry less about my hair and a dress than what weโ€™re going to do next,โ€ I suggested. โ€œWaylay, did your mom say anything about where she was going?โ€

The girlโ€™s eyes zeroed back on the screen. Her slim shoulders shrugged. โ€œDunno. Just said I was your problem now.โ€

I didnโ€™t know what to say to that. Thankfully I didnโ€™t have to answer because a brisk knock had all three of us looking at the open door.

The man standing in it made me suck in a little breath. Knockemout sure grew them hot. He was dressed in a spotless dark blue uniform with a very shiny badge. There was a nice layer of stubble accentuating a strong jaw. His shoulders and chest were broad, hips and waist tapered. His hair was close to blond. There was something familiar about his eyes.

โ€œKnox,โ€ he said.

โ€œNash.โ€ His tone was as cold as his eyes. โ€œHey, Way,โ€ the newcomer said.

Waylay gave the man a head nod. โ€œChief.โ€ His eyes came to me.

โ€œYou called the police?โ€ I squeaked at Knox. My sister was a terrible person, and I was definitely going to let her know that. But calling the police felt soย final.

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