Because youโre mine. Let another man touch you, Jules,
and youโll find out just how easily I can take a manโs life as I can save one.
Joshโs words played on a loop in my head like a beautiful, terrifying broken record. Four days later, and Iโve yet to find the pause button.
Even now, as I tapped away at my computer at LHAC, I sensed the whisper of Joshโs declaration against my skin.
Our conversation had ended after that. Weโd returned to the wedding, my heart a vigorous drum in my chest, my blood electric in my veins. It was like heโd wanted to engrave his words in my mind, and heโd succeeded.
What are you so afraid of, Red?
Everything.
Iโd always been the good-time girl, the one who stuck to casual flings and pushed guys away before they got too close. Scared that if they looked too closely, they would see the real me, and the real me wouldnโt be enough.
It hadnโt been enough for my mom or Max. Sometimes, it wasnโt enough even for me.
But Josh had seen the worst of me,ย assumedย the worst of me, and he still wanted to stay. It was enough to induce that most dangerous of emotions: hope.
Heโs seenย mostย of the worst of you,ย a taunting voice whispered in my head.
He didnโt know about my past or the things Iโd done for money. He never would. Not if I could help it.
โJules.โ
I jumped, my heart thundering, before I relaxed. โHey, Barbs.โ
The receptionist leaned against my cubicle and tapped the computer screen. โTime to go, hun. The office is closed.โ
I looked around, shocked to see the office had, in fact, emptied. I hadnโt even noticed the others leave.
โRight.โ I rubbed a hand over my face. God, I was out of it. โLet me just close everything out first.โ
โNo particular rush on my end.โ She eyed me with a speculative expression. โI was surprised Josh didnโt come in today to celebrate the Bower case. Itโs his day off too.โ
Weโd successfully cleared Terence Bowerโs criminal record, and we found out that morning that heโd landed a job that would tide the family over while his wife recovered. It was a big win for us, but even though Iโd worked on the case since I started at LHAC, I couldnโt summon much excitement.
I was too busy worrying over my life to celebrate someone elseโs, no matter how happy I was for them.
Still, my stomach fluttered at the sound of Joshโs name. โDonโt know why. Youโll have to ask him.โ I saved the document I was working on and logged off.
โHmm. I thought you would know, since youโre friendly and all.โ A mischievous gleam lit up Barbsโs eyes. โYou two would make a great-looking couple.โ
โWould we?โ My cheeks heated, but I kept my voice even. โI imagine Iโd carry most of the weight in that situation.โ
Her body shook with laughter. โSee, youโre what that boy needs. Heโs surrounded by too manyย yesย people. All the
women fawning over him and not questioning a single thing he says or does.โ She shook her head. โHe needs someone to keep him on his toes. Too bad youโre not interestedโฆare you?โ
She leaned forward, and I finally understood why the clinic staff called her the office matchmaker.
โGood night, Barbs,โ I said pointedly, earning myself another laugh.
โGโnight, hun. Weโll talk later.โ She winked before returning to her desk.
I packed up my belongings. Itย wasย odd that Josh didnโt come in, but maybe he was catching up on rest. Heโd been working overtime at the hospital to make up for the days heโd missed when he was in Eldorra. I hadnโt seen him since we returned to D.C., and Iโd been hesitant to text him.
After the way we left things, it seemed wrong for our first post-wedding interaction to be anything but face to face.
I also hadnโt figured out how to respond to his implicit request to change our arrangement, so there was that.
My phone rang, dragging me out of my chaotic thoughts.
I was so distracted I answered it without checking the caller ID first. โHello?โ
โMay I speak with Jules Miller, please?โ an unfamiliar female voice asked.
I froze at the use of my old name. I was tempted to tell them they had the wrong number, but curiosity overwhelmed my sense of self-preservation.
โSpeaking.โ I clutched the phone tighter to my ear.
โMs. Miller, Iโm calling from Whittlesburg Hospital. Itโs about Adeline Miller.โ Her voice gentled. โIโm afraid I have some sad news.โ
My stomach spiraled into free fall.ย No.
I knew what she was going to say before she said it.
โIโm sorry to tell you that Mrs. Miller died this afternoonโฆโ
I barely heard the rest of her words through the roar in my ears.
Adeline Miller. My mom.
My mom was dead.