“Afterward, I had to steal the will for safekeeping. The last few months, I’ve been ensuring the safety of all the allies he made. I thought you were safe for the time being, but I’ve underestimated the speed at which your stepmother moves.”
Aiden stared at the floor. His heavy breaths echoed in his ears. “She’s fooling the other families, too.”
“She’s good at it. We all thought she was just in for the luxurious lifestyle.”
How could they have guessed?Aiden observed his stepmother at the funeral. Her pained eyes, the deep lines against her skin, and a body strained from stress all pointed to anxiety toward her family’s future.Her stress was real.
“Of course, I looked into your mother’s murder,” Celia continued. “I was curious to see if the woman had had her sights on your family, while your mother still lived. Rest assured—she actually didn’t have a hand in the raid.”
Celia’s voice faded. Aiden’s heart quickened, and his ears screeched in pain. The raining of bullets pounded against his entire body and the walls of the house.Walls?He looked around.
The house was shrinking.
The windows loomed, and any moment, he could see a car pulling up with a band of men holding guns. Blood would splatter everywhere. A body would slam into his. A pain would bloom from his leg. A body slouched over him and pressed him into the ground. He gasped for air and the limbs of the corpse caged him inside. A dead hand froze around his wrist. Blood would seep into the floor and stain for eternity.
The thick scent of iron curled around his nose and possessed every inch of his body.
“Celia, you need to stop.”
Brendan’s voice cut through the fogginess of his sweat. Aiden had fallen to his knees and hopelessly looked up to see Brendan pulling on Celia’s arm. “You’re making him panic.”
Celia took one glance at Aiden, while he desperately tried to blink the sweat from his eyes. Or was it tears? Aiden couldn’t tell, but his body froze like glaciers and burned like wildfire at the same time.
Her eyes widened. “Ah. That’s why he never spoke about what happened,” she tutted. “You take care of him then. I’ve made plans.”
Her shoes clicked against the floor.
Brendan reached down. “I got you.” His arms looped around Aiden’s body and helped him to a stool. Aiden’s breaths still came up short, and flashes of his mother’s tightly gripped hand around his own blinked in and out. Water ran. A chilling towel wrapped around his burning neck. Brendan grabbed Aiden’s hands, and as Brendan’s living one came to his view, his mother’s dead hand faded.
Brendan spoke to him, but he couldn’t quite make out the words. The cold towel against his neck chilled the heat of his memories. The recognition that he wasn’t alone in a gigantic house with a woman that slit his brother’s throat finally calmed him to breathe quieter, steadier, and slower.
“I’m so sorry,” he croaked. His head sunk into his hand. “I’m so sorry for doing this to you.”
“Don’t apologize.”
Aiden shook his head and squeezed his eyes tight. Warm tears streamed down his face. “It’s my fault this time—it’s actually my fault. You wouldn’t be in danger if it weren’t for me.”
“I’m in danger because I took a photo of you and put it everywhere.”
“You shouldn’t have to be in danger because of that.” Aiden heaved. The sob broke clean of his body, and he collapsed against the countertop, crying. In the back of his mind, the throbbing physical pain of his interrogation demanded his attention, but the despair of guilt gripped his soul and sunk him into a heavy darkness that left him breathless.
Brendan was in danger because of him and nothing else.
“Aiden.” Brendan’s hand brushed his cheek. He turned and raised his eyes without protest. Brendan’s thumb accepted each tear that fell from his eyes. Brendan smiled—the honest, unhidden smile that Aiden fell in love with first. “Thank you for saving my life.”
Aiden shook his head. “I caused this.”
“No,Icaused this. You saved me.”
The kiss of Brendan’s touch fluttered like butterfly wings, his fingers patiently wiping tears from the corners of Aiden's eyes. His concern shone in his blue eyes, and Aiden knew Brendan only saw him, only cared about him, and only thought of him even with all the madness in their lives.
He never thought it possible—to feel safe, despite the knowing danger. However, in the well-lit kitchen of a mysterious woman’s house, Aiden felt time fold around them. The lights filled the kitchen with a gentle, peaceful glow. His heart slowed comfortably. He closed his eyes, concentrating on the hum of a refrigerator.
Exhaustion washed over him. The buzzing physical pain nipped at his skin, and he looked up just as Brendan asked, “May I patch you up?”
He nodded.
Brendan grabbed the first aid kit Celia left on the counter, dabbed antibacterial ointment on a cotton ball, and reached out his hand.