Wย here did I even start?
Everyone at home knew what had happened at the gas station, even my family. Not because Iโd told them myself. No, theyโd been like every other person in Coeur dโAlene. Theyโd read about the shooting in the newspaper.
Tiff included. Sheโd been pissed as hell at me for not telling her myself. But the only people Iโd spoken to were in the sheriffโs department: the captain and the deputy heโd put in charge of the investigation.
The idea of explaining it all made my gut churn. Part of me wanted to sweep Lyla off this counter, load her into my truck and drive her home, spend the rest of the night worshiping her body. But she deserved to know the whole truth. She deserved to know why I had to go home and face whatever fate was waiting.
She deserved to know why I was walking away.
โYou asked me a while ago if Iโve ever shot someone.โ Lyla nodded. โTwice, you said.โ
โIโll tell you about it. But I also know what happened at the hotel. With Eloise. With Winn. If youโd ratherโโ
โIโd like to know.โ
So sheโd know. Sheโd hear it from my lips.
โAbout two weeks before I came to Quincy, I was out on a run one morning. It was probably five. Dark. Quiet. On days when Iโm not working, I try to go for a run or hit the gym.โ
โTo stay in shape for work?โ
I lifted a shoulder. โPartly. And if Iโm being totally honest, the early morning workouts were a good excuse to avoid Tiff.โ
โTiff is your ex?โ
โYeah. Sheโs a good woman. But things between us have been rough for a while.โ Rather than talk, it had been easier to just avoid her. Thereโd been no urgent need to just be in her company, not like there was with Lyla.
So Iโd find excuses to avoid the house. Iโd take extra shifts. Iโd go fishing or hiking. And the mornings when I wasnโt working, Iโd go for a long run, making sure to stay gone long enough that sheโd have already left for work by the time I returned home.
It wasnโt shocking that Tiff had left.
What surprised me most was how long sheโd stayed.
Though maybe if I hadnโt been such a fucking coward, avoiding my girlfriend, I wouldnโt have been at that gas station.
โHow long were you together?โ Lyla asked. โThree years.โ
โOh.โ Lyla stiffened. Maybe from jealousy. Maybe from fear that I was using her to get over an ex.
โI cared for Tiff, like I said, sheโs a good woman. But I never loved her, not the way she loved me. And I should have called it off sooner. We werenโt good together.โ
Tiff had moved in with me a year ago, and Iโd known within two months that it had been a mistake.
โShe doesnโt understand why Iโd rather spend my days in the mountains than working in an office job with the department so I could keep an eight-to-five schedule. She loves getting dressed up and going out on Friday nights while Iโm content to stay home and read a book. We are just very different people. And she hates that Iโve kept trying to find Cormac after all these years. She thinks I should let it go.โ
Lyla looked up, waiting until our eyes locked. Then she gave me a small smile. No words, just a smile. She understood. She knew why I needed to find Cormac.
Closure. Vengeance. Justice.
Lyla would never ask me to stop, would she? โSo you were out for a run,โ she said.
โI was out for a run.โ Maybe I should quit running. S*x with Lyla seemed like a much better alternative for cardio.
โThereโs a gas station about five miles from my place. Itโs small. So old that the pumps donโt have credit card readers. Itโs not in the best area of town, but I met the owner years ago. He had an older model Ford Ranger for sale. Cormac bought it for his oldest when she turned sixteen. I went with him to pick it up so he could surprise her for her birthday.โ
Iโd never forget the way sheโd shrieked for joy when Cormac had given her the keys to that old truck.
After sheโd died, Iโd been the person to sell that pickup. It had been one of the worst days of my life.
โThe man haggled with Cormac for twenty minutes before they agreed on a price. Meanwhile, I spent those twenty minutes inside the gas station, picking out candy for the twins.โ
Elsie had been all about the chocolate. Hadley, anything cinnamon.
โI met the guyโs wife while I was shopping. She was working the cash register. Never in my life have I met a person who could fill five minutes with so many words. She and her husband had owned the gas station for fifteen years. Their daughter had just dropped out of college and was working there too. She was a Scorpio, and an only child to parents whoโd moved to Idaho from Atlanta. She was allergic to shellfish and had a thyroid condition. By the time I walked out the door, I had her whole life story.โ
Lyla leaned her head on my shoulder again. She fit so perfectly against me it made talking easier. Not easy, but easier. โYou liked her.โ
โImmediately. A few days later, when I got up early for a run, I headed that direction. Itโs been my route for years now. Some mornings, sheโs working. Other times, itโs her husband or her daughter, Celeste.โ
Celeste wasnโt chatty like her mother. She wasnโt as cheerful either, especially at five in the morning. But she was a nice person. And after years of running to that gas station, Iโd learned plenty about her too. Like the reason why sheโd dropped out of college.
It wasnโt that Celeste hadnโt enjoyed school. Sheโd quit to help her parents run the business after her fatherโs second heart attack.
โSheโd been working more often than not. Her dadโs health was on the decline. Normally, that time of day, I was the only person in the store. The day of the shooting, I was against the back wall, hidden from the front door by display shelves. Iโd just picked out a bottle of water from the cooler when I heard the door open. Then this guy started screaming at Celeste to give him the money from the cash register.โ
โShe got robbed?โ โThat was the plan.โ โYou stopped him?โ
The way she spoke made me seem like a hero. But I was no heroโjust a guy out for a run who happened to know how to handle a gun.
โI sneaked up behind him. He was young, too young to be holding a gun. He had it pointed right at Celesteโs face. She was trembling, trying to take the money from the register while he kept yelling at her. Every time he screamed, she flinched and dropped more money on the floor.โ
His shouting was the only reason I managed to get close. He was cursing and calling her names every time she dropped something. When she bent down to pick up the cash, he yelled even louder for her to keep her hands up.
โCeleste saw me coming. She glanced over his shoulder, and when he followed her gaze, he spun around. By then, I was close enough to tackle him. The gun went off, but the bullet only hit a wall.โ
Lyla exhaled deeply. โAnd Celeste?โ
โUnharmed,โ I replied. โPhysically.โ
Emotionally and financially, who knew how sheโd recover? Before I came to Montana, Iโd heard the gas station had closed down. According to Google, it was listed for sale. I wasnโt sure if anyone would buy it, especially not in that neighborhood. But for Celeste and her parentsโ sake, I hoped it would sell.
โI took the gun from him and tucked it into the waistband of my pants. Then I told Celeste to call 9-1-1.โ
Every time I replay that morning in my mind, I still canโt figure out when things went so wrong. How I missed the shout from outside until it was too late.
โThe guy wasnโt alone,โ I told Lyla. โThere were two of them. One to come inside. The other to drive. I was still on a knee, holding the first guy down, when the door flew open. His friend from outside must have noticed something was wrong, and he came in with his own gun, aimed for Celeste. I just . . . reacted.โ
One moment, that guyโs gun was tucked against my spine. The next, it was in my hands.
โI shot the other guy in the chest, and he just droppedโโI snapped my fingersโโlike that. The gun he had wasnโt even loaded.โ
โBut you couldnโt have known that. You did what you thought was best.โ
No, Iโd reacted solely on training and instinct. Not a lot of thought had gone into my reaction. โHeโs alive.โ
Lyla sat straight. โHe lived?โ
โI missed his heart. It was an odd angle from where I was on the floor. The bullet went through his chest and into his spine. Heโll spend the rest of his life in a wheelchair as a quadriplegic.โ
Paralyzed from the neck down.
โHeโs sixteen, Lyla. He was the other guyโs younger brother. And I stole any chance he has at a normal life.โ
โYou made the right choice,โ she said.
โDid I?โ If it had been right, everything else had gone wrong. โThe kidsโ parents have a lawyer. Theyโre planning on suing me or the sheriffโs department or Celeste. Hell, maybe theyโll sue us all. Itโs a fucking cluster.โ
Lyla scoffed. โThey want to sue you? Thatโs bullshit. What were you supposed to do? Let them rob Celeste? Shoot her? Shoot you?โ
โI donโt know.โ I sighed. โBut Iโm being investigated.โ
โWhat?โ Lyla jumped off the counter, turning to face me with her eyes wide and jaw slackened. โYouโre kidding.โ
โWish I was, Blue.โ
โI donโt understand. How is this your fault?โ She began pacing, her path the same as mine earlier.
โMy boss is a captain who wants to become undersheriff.โ โOkay,โ she drawled. โWhat does that mean?โ
โHe needs deputies who donโt make waves.โ And I did nothing but churn the waters.
โThe captain loved Cormac. Itโs the reason I didnโt lose my badge after all that shit that happened with Brandon. Cormac went to bat for me and the captain helped smooth it out.โ
โBut then Cormac . . .โ Lyla didnโt need to finish that sentence.
Cormac went off the goddamn rails. โThings between me and the captain have been strained ever since. When he looks at me, he sees Cormacโs best friend. Cormacโs partner. He sees the trust he shouldnโt have given. Itโs strange. We both hate Cormac for what he did. Youโd think that would bring us together. But itโs been the opposite.โ
With Cormac gone, I was the only guy for the captain to blame.
โI havenโt exactly been the most reliable deputy,โ I admitted. โIf I got wind of a lead on Cormac, Iโd drop everything and take off, usually without giving any notice. Iโve used every minute of vacation time. Iโve got no sick
days left. So I wasnโt on great terms to begin with. Then the shooting happened.โ
โHe canโt blame you for that, Vance.โ
โNo, he blames me for the trouble that came afterward.โ The media attention. The potential lawsuits.
My temper.
โWhen I got the news that the kid was paralyzed, I didnโt exactly take it well. I was at the station. Captain called me into his office. Told me to take a few days off. So I went to grab a few things from my locker. Another deputy was in there. Made a comment about me being trigger happy.โ
โAsshole,โ Lyla muttered.
โThatโs what I said. Then I broke his nose.โ
โOoh.โ She winced. โIโm guessing that didnโt go over well with your boss.โ
โInstead of a few days off, he told me to take a break until the investigation for the shooting is over. Iโm not officially fired. I still have my badge. But Iโm not welcome either.โ
Lyla stopped pacing, planting her hands on her hips. โYou did what you had to do.โ
Any other cop would have done the same thing, regardless if they were on duty or out for a run. Thereโd been no way to know that the kidโs gun had been empty. โBut I still regret pulling the trigger.โ
โSo what happens now?โ
โI wait for the outcome of the investigation,โ I said. โMore than likely, Iโll be cleared. But if the captain wants me gone, heโll find a way to make that happen. Either by sitting me at a desk, knowing Iโd hate every minute of it. Or by making some excuse to let me go, like heโs downsizing the department.โ
โThen heโs an asshole too,โ she muttered. She wasnโt wrong. โWhat if that family sues you?โ
โWith any luck, that wonโt happen. But if it does, I hire a lawyer. Go from there.โ
Iโd fight for my reputation. For my name.
Lylaโs molars ground together so hard I could hear them clenching.
Then with a huff, she started pacing again. โThis is a fucking mess.โ Yes. Yes, it was.
And now she knew why I had to go back to Idaho.
โItโs not fair.โ She threw an arm in the air, her anger palpable. Fuck, but I liked that. That sheโd get wound up on my behalf.
Tiff hadnโt. Not once. Sheโd been upset, worried. But never angry. Lyla had a right to be angry. And goddamn it, so did I.
For weeks, Iโd kept it hidden. Iโd lashed out once, in that locker room, and it had basically cost me my job. So Iโd kept it in. Iโd tucked those feelings away. Iโd refused to talk about the shooting because I was angry.
Or I had been. Something about the fury on Lylaโs face, her seething, made a lot of my frustration fade. She gave me the outlet I hadnโt realized Iโd desperately needed.
โCome here, Blue.โ
She kept pacing. โYour captain should be standing behind you. Singing your praises.โ
โTo be fair, the asshole I punched, the other deputy? Itโs his son.โ Lyla giggled. It came so freely she slapped a hand over her mouth.
I chuckled. How was it we could finish this conversation in laughter? Fuck, but I was going to miss her.
โThank you.โ
She dropped her hand from her mouth and shrugged. โI didnโt do anything.โ
โYou did.โ
She didnโt even realize how much she meant to me, did she? How much I appreciated her standing in my corner?
โI hate how this happened, Lyla. I hate that Cormac hurt you and thatโs why I came to Quincy. But Iโm also glad I came here. Iย neededย to come here.โ
To find her.
Lyla changed course, walking over to stand between my knees. Then she rose up on her toes, taking my face in her hands to kiss my lower lip. โIโm glad you came too. Youโll find him. I know it.โ
I wasnโt talking about Cormac, but I didnโt correct her. Because that felt too much like a goodbye.
So I kissed her instead.
And tomorrow, Iโd say goodbye.
Tomorrow, Iโd tell her it was time for me to go home.