Page 49 of The Two of Us


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Force of Nature

MAISEYYATES

Chapter 1

The puppy-dog eyes were a little much. Remington Lane—Remy to his friend; he only had the one—stared down at the most pathetic, beseeching expression he had ever seen in his life.

The eyes were pitiful, large and dewy. Their owner straight from the shelter by the looks of things and trying hard to tug on heartstrings Remy wasn’t even sure he had.

And then he noticed the dog.

The dog seemed unbothered; however, his one and only friend’s little sister, Lydia Clay, seemed terribly bothered, and tragic on top of it, standing in his doorway on the verge of begging.

“I couldn’t leave him in the shelter, not after I saw who he had belonged to,” she said, the emotion in her large eyes intensifying as she gazed up at him.

Thehein question was the most sorry heap of bones Remy had ever seen. An ancient-looking cow dog that had neither bark nor bite.

He felt pained by what he expected to come next. Lydia was doing her best tolookpained.

“Who did he belong to?” he asked, already sure he knew the answer and not liking it one bit.

“Your dad. He was your dad’s dog, Remy.”

Lydia might as well have hauled off and punched him in the gut. Because if there was one thing Remy didn’t care about, it was his dad. Well, if there were two things he didn’t care about, it was his dad and where the man’s soul had ended up after his demise.

Hunter Lane,gone too late, quite honestly.

“Of course that was my dad’s dog. He looks halfway to death’s door, and like no one has ever bothered to take an interest in him.” Remy did his best to steel himself against any sympathy the dog’s fate might arouse within him.

Lydia looked up at him, pleading now, her hands clasped at the center of her chest.

Lordy. He did not have time for this. But if there was one thing he did care about, it was the Clay family. How could he not?

His own family was, well, the technical term was . . . a shit show.

His dad had been an evil drunk, and his mom had been too busy spreading herself around town to pay any mind to her only son. Remy had spent his childhood going back and forth between the room his mother rented over the bar in town, and squatting in a bedroom in his dad’s barely habitable ranch house.

The Clay family had been his real family. They had practically raised him. They had taken care of him. They were . . . good people in a world that had left Remy uncertain whether anyone could be trusted.

But the problem with good people was that they were too soft. Lydia was a perfect example. Remy and Lydia’s older brother, Matthew, had been friends ever since sixth grade. Lydia had been an irritating fourth-grader back then, wandering around with her blond hair up in an absurd ponytail, saving baby birds, snakes, and any other critters who crossed her path. Some would argue that many of them didn’t even need saving; they had just encountered an overenthusiastic child with a savior complex.

He had in fact tried to argue that point with her on a couple of occasions, but most especially when she had brought a raccoon home from an abandoned nest when she was seventeen years old. That fat-ass raccoon was still alive, and—in spite of Lydia’sbest efforts to return it to the wild—living in her house, and eating better than most people.

Remy resented it.

The trouble was, he couldn’t quite resent Lydia. However much he might want to.

She was sweet and good, and there were too few things in this world that were sweet and good besides.

She was the real deal in a way he’d never been, that was for damn sure. His version of good was not causing harm. He’d gone out of his way to make a life that was self-contained and didn’t cause any trouble. He tried to build more than he broke—that was his goal.

As a rancher, he tried to take care of his animals and honor their use—yes, he ranched beef, but he took the duties of his work seriously and to heart. As a programmer he tried to combine the useful and the entertaining—as a kid he’d been fascinated by the way things were put together.

Whether it was an engine in a car or the invisible building blocks of the video games he played at the Clay house, he always wanted to know how things worked and why.

Maybe it was a side effect of being a kid in a house that he couldn’t make heads or tails of, but whatever the reason, that fascination had taken him places. He wasn’t saving the world or anything like that, but he hoped his personal scales would balance in the end.

Lydia wasn’t just neutral though. She wasn’t balancing scales.