Home > Who Will Save Your Soul_ And Other Dangerous Bedtime Stories(19)

Who Will Save Your Soul_ And Other Dangerous Bedtime Stories(19)
Author: Skye Warren

As soon as Stefano left I packed what I could into the trunk and left.

The carseat sits beside the bed, Ky kicking in his sleep, his little brow wrinkled. I touch my hand to his forehead, and it smooths out beneath my fingers.

Forcing myself out of the cot, I kneel in front of Ky and check his diaper. Not too wet, but I don’t like to leave him there because it gives him a rash. So I lay out the plastic mat onto the cat and pull the sleeping baby from his seat.

He wakes only briefly as I change him, his eyes cloudy with sleep. His small hand captures a lock of my hair, tugging until I gently pry his fingers apart.

“No pulling,” I whisper with a small smile.

He gives me a mystified look, as if he’s trying to understand.

“I love you,” I tell him.

He gives me a toothless grin.

My heart gives a kick. I bend down and press my lips to his soft forehead. When I pull back his eyes flutter closed. Before I even have the new diaper fastened he’s sound asleep.

I could bring him into the cot with me, but the padded carseat is probably more comfortable. And definitely more secure, once I buckle him in.

A muffled sound comes through the wall.

That must have been what woke me. It came again, along with a skip in my heartbeat, that universal recognition of distress, of danger, the intrinsic pull to soothe I didn’t even know I had before I became a mother.

I glance back at Ky, uncertain. Should I leave him?

He sleeps peacefully, with that completely lost expression, as if he’s far away in some baby dreamworld with unlimited milk and rainbows. I pick up the heavy seat by its handle.

The barred door to my cell lay open, just slightly, like a parent might do for a child, in case she called out in her sleep or got scared. But it isn’t me or Ky crying out out for help.

I slip into the hallway, a little unsteady on my feet, following the restless sounds to the cell next door. The barred door is also ajar and I take that as permission to enter. I only want to check on him—whoever it was, though she knew it was Finn.

Sheriff Finnegan Locke, sprawled on a cot, muttering in his sleep.

Most people look peaceful while sleeping, more relaxed than when they’re awake. He’s just the opposite. Earlier he wore a perpetual half-smile, as if the whole world amused him, when he could be bothered to care.

Now his forehead is furrowed, a low sound of distress coming from deep in his throat. The contrast startles me, distracting enough that I’m already at his bedside, setting the carseat on the floor, shushing Finn back to calm before I realize what I’m doing.

His skin feels clammy under my fingertips, his hair damp with sweat. His voice sounds raw, and I wonder how long he’s crying out, how often he does this at night. He quiets beneath my soothing touch, his movements slowing, his face smoothing out.

I don’t want to let the nightmares come back, so I keep running my fingers along his forehead, his temple, even the bristle of his jaw. I swallow hard, realizing that I enjoy this—touching him, comforting him. I don’t consider myself an overly nurturing person. I love Ky, but that’s the extent of my maternal side. Then again, the way I feel about Finn isn’t maternal. It’s something else, something just as deep and infinitely more scary.

My eyelids droop in sleepiness, and I force myself away from him.

I would have picked up the carseat, would have left the room, but my gaze lands on a grey felt blanket. I pull it over him, and the wind from the fabric ruffles a lock of dark hair across his forehead.

He stirs, blinking up at me with those soulful brown eyes. “Jessica?”

It’s the first time he’s spoken her name, and in that hoarse and sleep-thickened drawl, it may be the sexiest thing I’ve ever heard. Feeling as though I’ve been caught, I whisper, “Hey.”

His eyes sharpen, coming to alertness. “Are you okay? Is Ky—”

“Shh, no. We’re both fine. I just heard something.”

He glances at the sleeping baby, his expression relaxing a fraction. “I woke you up?”

“It’s okay. No big deal.”

“Shit.” Propped on one elbow, he runs a hand over his face. “Sorry.”

“I just heard you moving around in here and wanted to see if you were okay.”

“Yeah. Of course,” he says absently, like he knows it’s more than moving around. He’s the one who had to live his nightmare. “What about you? You need something? A drink of water?”

I shake my head no even though I do need something. How quickly he turned from his need to mine. It seems so ingrained in him, a habit now. Maybe it comes from serving people in his job, maybe from something else. Maybe from the accident, whatever that means.

I have needs aplenty, the need to talk to someone about Stefano, the need to get away from him once and for all, the need to make sure Ky would be safe a powerful ache. And springing from somewhere deep—a need to connect with another adult, more than just serving someone coffee at the diner or sharing a cute story about Ky with one of the other waitresses. A need to be with another person, a man, a need to be a woman.

Not something I’ve ever needed before but so very real right now.

I need to touch and be touched, to know that my worth isn’t down the drain alongside the rest of my sad little life in Tanglewood. But I can’t bother him with that. He’s my jailer and my caretaker, not my lover. He doesn’t need to be bothered with this, with me.

He catches my wrist as I move to leave, so quick I can only gasp.

“Stay,” he murmurs.

 

 

CHAPTER TEN

 


The prince came to a chamber of gold, where he saw upon a bed the fairest sight one ever beheld—a young princess who looked as if she had just fallen asleep.


Jessica


This was the part where I should leave. Where I should tell this man, who’s clearly good down to his bones, that I’m bad news. Where I ignore everything but survival, because that’s the only way I’ve survived this long. Instead he asks me to stay, and I do.

If Stefano were to find me here, if Finn were to confront him…

Regardless of what I want or wish for, the only thing I can do is run. The only thing I can trust is isolation. But what happens when people are together, really together, when they become intimate in a way beyond bodies hurting one another? I never knew, even though I should, and like a dense fog, it kept me apart.

But drunk on sleeplessness and a shimmering sense of wonder, I see things clearly. If I’m wrong, if I make a fool of myself with him, it would be okay. He would make it okay.

So there’s no way I can ignore his raw request for my company or the tremor in my own body that whispered—yes, I want that too, stay with me. No way I can leave now, not until morning.

“I’ll stay,” I say softly.

He curses softly. “No, you should go. I’m still half-asleep right now and my self-control isn’t what it should be. I’m about two seconds from acting inappropriately. I mean, really inappropriately.”

My nose scrunches. That would normally be enough to send me running, but the truth is that I wouldn’t mind inappropriate behavior right now.

Being desired feels a lot better than being afraid.

He blows out a breath, sitting up in the cot. “And I think most of all, the Town Council would really mind the dirty thoughts the Sheriff is currently having about his prisoner. Yeah, they would not appreciate that at all.”

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