Knox
โYou look like shit,โ Nash rasped.
The lights were on low in the room. My brother was propped up in his hospital bed, chest bare to reveal bandages and gauze
over his left shoulder.
Machines beeped, screens glowed. He looked pale. Vulnerable.
My hands clenched into fists at my sides.
โI could say the same about you,โ I said, rounding the bed slowly to sink into the chair by the dark window.
โLooks worse than it is.โ His voice was barely a whisper.
I rested my elbows on my knees and tried to look relaxed. But inside, a rage simmered in my gut. Someone had tried to end Nashโs life. You didnโt mess with a Morgan and walk away from it.
โSome asshole tried to kill you tonight.โ
โYou mad someone almost beat you to it?โ โThey know who did it?โ I asked.
The corner of his mouth lifted as if it were too much effort to smile. โWhy? You gonna get him back?โ
โYou almost died, Nash. Grave said you came this close to bleeding out before the ambulance got there.โ The truth of it had bile rising in my throat. โItโs gonna take more than a couple of bullets and a wrestling match to
end me,โ he assured me.
I ran my palms over my knees. Back and forth, trying to tamp down the anger. The need to break something.
โNaomi was here.โ Even as I said it, I didnโt know why. Maybe just saying her name out loud made everything feel a little more bearable.
โOf course she was. She thinks Iโm hot.โ
โI donโt care how many bullet holes youโve got in you. Iโm moving on that,โ I told him.
Nashโs sigh was closer to a wheeze. โAbout damn time. Quicker you screw it up, the quicker I can swoop in and be the good guy.โ
โFuck off, dick.โ
โHey, whoโs the one in the hospital bed, asshole? Iโm a damn hero.
Women canโt resist a hero with bullet holes.โ
The hero in question winced when he shifted in the bed, his hand reaching for the tray then falling back to the mattress.
I rose and poured the water bottle into the waiting cup. โYeah, well, maybe you should stay in here out of my way for a couple of days. Give me a shot at fucking it all up.โ
I pushed the cup and straw to the edge of the tray and watched him reach for it with his good arm. Beads of sweat appeared on his forehead, and his hand shook as his fingers closed around the plastic.
Iโd never seen him like this. Iโd seen him every other way. Hungover, wrung out from the flu bug of 1996, exhausted after pouring his heart out in the homecoming football game his senior year. But Iโd never seen him look weak.
Another nurse pulled back the curtain with an apologetic smile. โJust checking the fluids,โ he said.
Nash gave him a thumbs-up, and we lapsed into silence while the nurse busied himself with IVs. My brother was hooked to a half dozen machines in the ICU. And Iโd gone years with barely speaking to him.
โHowโs your pain?โ the nurse asked. โFine. Practically non-existent.โ
His answer was too quick. His mouth too tight. My brother had played the second half of that homecoming game with a broken wrist. Because he might be the nice brother, the good brother. But he didnโt like showing weakness any more than I did.
โHeโs in it,โ I tattled to the nurse.
โDonโt listen to him,โ Nash insisted. But he couldnโt hide the grimace when he shifted on the mattress.
โA bullet just ripped its way through your torso, chief. You donโt have to be in pain to heal,โ he said.
โYeah. You do,โ he countered. โPain is what tells you youโre alive. You numb that, and how do you know youโre still here?โ
โShe thinks weโre both idiots,โ I said when the nurse left.
Nash gave a wheeze followed by a wracking cough that looked like it was going to tear him apart before collapsing back on the bed. I watched the green spikes on his heart rate monitor slowly settle. โWho?โ he said, finally.
โNaomi.โ
โWhy would Naomi think Iโm an idiot?โ he asked wearily. โTold her why things are the way they are.โ
โShe wasnโt impressed with your Robin Hood routine or my manly independence?โ
โNot even a little. She may have made a few points.โ โAbout what?โ
โAbout how she thought it was over a woman. Not money.โ
Nashโs head was slowly lolling to the side, his eyelids getting heavier. โSo love is worth a family feud but a few million isnโt?โ
โThat was the gist of it.โ โCanโt say sheโs wrong.โ
โThen why the fuck didnโt you just suck it up and make it right?โ I snapped.
Nashโs smile was a ghost. His eyes were closed. โYouโre the big brother. And you were the one trying to make me beholden to you by shoving cash down my throat.โ
โThe only reason Iโm not kicking your ass right now is youโre attached to too many machines.โ
He gave me a weak middle finger.
โJesus,โ I grumbled. โI didnโt want you to be beholden or whatever the fuck to me. Weโre family. Weโre brothers. One of us wins, we both win.โ It also meant if one of us lost, we both did. And that was what the last few years had been. A loss.
Fuck. I hated losing.
โDidnโt want the money,โ he said, his words slurring. โWanted to build things on my own.โ
โYou couldโve put it away for retirement or some shit,โ I complained. The same old cocktail of feelings was trying to rise in me. Rejection. Failure. Righteous fury. โYou deserved some good. After the shit we went through, then Liza J losing Pop. You deserved more than a cop salary from some shitty town.โ
โOurย shitty town,โ he corrected. โMade it ours. You in your way. Me in mine.โ
Maybe he was right. But that didnโt matter. What did matter was the fact that if he would have taken the cash, he wouldnโt be here in this hospital room. My little brother would be making a difference some other way. Without toeing the line. Without paying the price.
โShould have kept the money. If you had, you wouldnโt be lying here like roadkill.โ
Nash shook his head slowly against the pillow. โI was always gonna be the good guy.โ
โShut up and go to sleep,โ I told him.
โWe went through some shit. But I always had my big brother. Always knew I could count on you. Didnโt need your money on top of that.โ
Nashโs shoulders sagged. Sleep took him under its spell, leaving me to sit in silent vigil.
THE AUTOMATIC DOORS OPENED,ย spilling me and a cloud of air conditioning into the humidity of the breaking dawn. Iโd stayed by Nashโs bedside, letting my rage simmer. Knowing what came next.
I wanted to punch a hole through the buildingโs facade. I wanted to bring a tidal wave of retribution down on the person responsible.
Idly, I picked up one of the smooth rocks from a flower bed and ran my fingers over it, wanting to send it flying. To break something on the outside instead of feeling all the cracks on the inside.
โI wouldnโt do that if I were you.โ
I closed my fingers around the rock and squeezed. โWhat are you doing here, Lucy?โ
Lucian leaned against the limestone column just beyond the hospital entrance, the end of a cigarette glowing brighter as he sucked in a drag.
He only allowed himself one cigarette a day. I guess this counted. โWhat do you think Iโm doing?โ
โHolding up the building? Hitting on s*xy surgeons?โ
He flicked ash to the ground, eyes locked on me. โHow is he?โ
I thought of the pain, the exhaustion. The side of my brother Iโd never seen before. โOkay. Or at least heโs gonna be.โ
โWho did it?โ The cool, dispassionate tone didnโt fool me.
We were down to business now. Lucian may not have been blood, but he was a Morgan in every way that counted. And he wanted justice as badly as I did.
โCops donโt know. Grave said the car was stolen. Nash hasnโt given them a description of the suspect yet.โ
โDoes he remember what happened?โ
I shrugged and squinted up at the sky that was turning pink and purple as the sun worked its way off the horizon. โI donโt know, man. He was pretty fucked up on anesthesia and whatever they put in his IV.โ
โIโll start digging,โ Lucian assured me.
โLet me know what you find. Iโm not getting cut out of this.โ
โOf course not.โ He studied me for a beat. โYou look like shit. You should get some sleep.โ
โPeople keep telling me that.โ
Lucian, on the other hand, looked like heโd just walked out of the board room in a slick suit sans tie.
โMaybe you should listen,โ he said.
โHe almost died, Luce. After I was an asshole to him, he almost bled out in a fucking ditch.โ
Lucian stubbed out his cigarette in the concrete ashtray. โWeโll make it right.โ
I nodded. I knew we would. This wouldnโt stand. And the man whoโd put a bullet in my brother would pay.
โAnd youโll make the rest of it right too,โ he said, words clipped. โYou both wasted enough fucking time. Itโs done now.โ Only Lucian Rollins could make a statement like that and will it into reality.
I thought of Naomiโs proclamation. Maybe we had been idiots wasting time we thought weโd had. โItโs done,โ I agreed.
โGood. I was tired of my childhood best friends acting like they were still children.โ
โIs that why you came back?โ
His expression darkened. โOne of the reasons.โ
โOne of those other reasons have anything to do with a pretty little librarian who hates your guts?โ
He sighed, absently patting his pockets. โAlready had your one,โ I reminded him.
โFuck,โ he muttered. It was as flustered as he allowed himself to get.
I had the temper. Nash had the good nature. And Lucian had the self- control of a fucking monk.
โWhatever happened with you two anyway?โ I asked, enjoying the distraction of his discomfort.
โYour brother is in an ICU bed,โ Lucian said. โThatโs the only reason Iโm not knocking your teeth out right now.โ
As close as weโd all been, the one thing Lucian never shared was what made Sloane hate him. Up until last night, Iโd thought the feeling was mutual. But Iโd seen his face when he saw her, when she walked away. I didnโt know much about feelings, but whatever was written all over his face didnโt look like hate to me.
โYou probably donโt even remember how to throw a punch,โ I teased. โAll those conference room negotiations. You just sic your lawyers on people instead of delivering a nice right cross to the face. Bet itโs less satisfying.โ
โYou can take the boy out of Knockemout but you canโt take the Knockemout out of the boy,โ he said.
I hoped it was true. โAppreciate you beinโ here.โ
He nodded. โIโll stay with him until Liza comes back in.โ โThatโd be good,โ I said.
We stood in silence, legs braced as the sun rose, adding gold to the pink and purple. A new day had officially begun. A lot of things were gonna change, and I was keyed up to make it all happen.
โGet some sleep.โ Lucian dug into his pocket and tossed me his keys. โTake my car.โ
I caught them midair and hit the unlock button. A shiny Jaguar blinked its headlights at me from a primo parking spot.
โAlways did have good taste.โ โSome things never change.โ But some things had to.
โIโll see you later, man.โ
He nodded. And then I surprised the hell out of us both by wrapping him in a hard one-armed hug.
โMissed you, brother.โ