Home > Her Cowboy Prince(27)

Her Cowboy Prince(27)
Author: Madeline Ash

He said nothing. Just stood watching her coldly.

“This is about Jonah.”

He flinched at his best friend’s name, raising one arm to half-cover his chest. A second later, he hurled it back to his side. “What is about him?”

“You’re angry at me for hurting Kris—just like you’re angry at yourself for lying to Jonah. You don’t think you deserve to be forgiven, so you don’t intend to forgive me either.”

His fingers started tapping a fast beat against his leg. “He’s got nothing to do with this.”

“Haven’t you been friends for like, twenty years?”

His jaw slid. His fingers kept tapping.

When she’d first moved to Sage Haven, she’d met Tommy with Jonah by his side. Kris had later explained that Jonah had moved next door as a boy and gravitated to Tommy immediately out of the three brothers. Strange, since Jonah was literally the sweetest person in existence—and Tommy had always been on the cold side of reserved. Despite their differences, the friendship went both ways.

At least, it had until recently.

“Have you contacted him?” she asked, despite knowing that he hadn’t. “He’ll be worried sick.”

Tommy made a sound of derisive disbelief.

“He would’ve been worried sick within an hour of you leaving the Haven,” she snapped. “Unlike me, he didn’t secretly know the truth this whole time. Discovering his oldest friend is a prince won’t have been easy to get his head around—but you’ve left him to process it on his own without even calling?”

“He doesn’t want to hear from me. He told me to fuck off.” Tommy’s expression was haunted. “He’s never said that to anyone—despite far too many people who’ve deserved it.”

“He was hurt and confused. That’s what people say. Here’s some news. In order to apologize, you have to actually talk to him.”

His lip curled. “Says you.”

“I actively didn’t want Kris to know I was here. I still behaved like an asshole, but I did it on purpose.”

“You think you know what’s best for me?” His tone was scathing.

“No,” she answered. “But I have some thoughts on what isn’t—and from recent experience, I can tell you that blocking out a friend is never for the best.”

“I’m sure he’s fine.”

“That’s funny.” Absently, she adjusted her phone on the table beside her. Slid it a little closer in Tommy’s direction. “Because I know he’s not.”

A trap, those words, that bound his interest completely. Eyes flickering, he moved closer. “You’ve spoken to him.”

“It’s Jonah.” She pulled a face. “He’s an angel in a cowboy’s body. When he rings, I answer.”

“How often does he ring?” Tommy’s voice caught.

She pretended not to notice. “Wouldn’t you like to know.”

He took a step closer, laying his palms flat on the table. His fingers rapped against the grain as he asked, “How is he?”

“Worried sick. I told you.”

Tommy didn’t move, but his presence seemed to snarl in warning. “You know what I’m asking,” he said, deathly quiet.

“He’s safe,” she said. “Just working.”

Tommy stared her down. A silent command for more without the indignity of begging.

She stared back, pulse spiking just a little.

“How often do you talk to him?” he ground out.

“He calls me every Friday morning while he makes breakfast,” she said, and at the flash in his eyes, added, “Don’t look at me like it’s another of my secrets. It’s not just me. Mark and Kris have called him. He’s our friend, too.”

He turned his face away. “He calls you every . . .” He trailed off, whipping back around to stare at her. “Today’s Friday.”

Late afternoon in Kiraly meant in Mountain Daylight Time—

Frankie’s phone started to ring. Tommy recoiled as if it had breathed fire.

“Always so punctual.” She gestured to it. “You want to answer?”

He ran a hand up his throat and backed toward the door.

“I’ll take that as a no,” she said, reaching for the phone. Then she hesitated. “Loudspeaker?”

The look he gave her would have withered a weaker spine.

“I’ll take that as a yes.” She answered the call and put it on loudspeaker. “Morning, Jones.”

“Hey, Frankie!”

Tommy’s cheeks flooded red—and an instant later, the map-room door slammed shut behind him.

Swiping up her phone, she switched off the speaker and brought it to her ear. Okay, so she’d ambushed Tommy, but he needed the support of his oldest friend and it seemed a guilt trip might be the only way to make him act. His brothers were too wary to push him. It was always careful with Tommy or make sure he doesn’t stress. Well, she wasn’t blinded by protectiveness. She cared about Tommy—more than she or Tommy would be comfortable with her letting on—and she could see his steel in those shadows.

She wouldn’t be careful, and she’d make him stress.

Then he might remember he could protect himself.

 

 

Kris stood at the window of the small green sitting room, one hand gripping the curtain tie-back, the other in his front pocket. He’d spent the afternoon posing as Mark, maintaining positive relations with industry. He’d eaten butter-soft biscuits with a billionaire entrepreneur and discussed the future of assistive technology; he’d drunk tea with a robotics engineer and discussed the future of AI and job automation; and he’d shared a sneaky scotch with a biotechnician and discussed cellular agriculture and the future of sustainable food.

He’d squinted through most of it. The scrunched-up look of a man trying to spot something familiar in a wave of blinding light.

Now, he gazed down at Frankie in the rear courtyard and his future had never looked clearer.

Staff were bustling, stacking packs and bagged tents in a neat row, while Frankie addressed a small group of assembled guards. She appeared sharp-shouldered and in control in her purple jeans and green tank, and her team’s attention on her didn’t waver.

She was the woman who’d lied while protecting him—who’d denied him, then cried over him. He’d never—like, an actual Frankie tear . . . right on his thumb. One look at the devastation on her face and he’d known there was no going back to friendship, not from here.

His breathing grew strange as he watched her, like there was a latch in his throat that kept slipping in and out of position, nudged by something inside him that was figuring out how to get loose.

She’d suppressed her desire because he was her prince. We’re incompatibility’s greatest achievement, she’d told him. You’re literally going to be king.

Not without her, he wasn’t.

The laces on her black boots were half-undone. A typical, insignificant detail, but every time she moved, he winced a little, fearing she’d trip. It was stupid. She’d lived a carelessly laced life without him and managed to keep herself upright, but that didn’t stop him wanting to march down there, kneel at her feet, and tie her into safety.

Hot Books
» House of Earth and Blood (Crescent City #1)
» A Kingdom of Flesh and Fire
» From Blood and Ash (Blood And Ash #1)
» A Million Kisses in Your Lifetime
» Deviant King (Royal Elite #1)
» Den of Vipers
» House of Sky and Breath (Crescent City #2)
» The Queen of Nothing (The Folk of the Air #
» Sweet Temptation
» The Sweetest Oblivion (Made #1)
» Chasing Cassandra (The Ravenels #6)
» Wreck & Ruin
» Steel Princess (Royal Elite #2)
» Twisted Hate (Twisted #3)
» The Play (Briar U Book 3)