She watched him walk down the short hall and turn into the bedroom on the right. They were in a fortress, but someone else was taking her place. Someone else was making her kill.
That didn’t make her feel any better.
Adam dreamed the same dream again that night.
He’d been having the dream ever since seeing the picture of the man who told him to buy lilies for Rowan. At the flower stand by the ocean he’d thought something was familiar about the stranger, but he didn’t know what or why.
It always started with the flowers. Adam wanted to buy roses. The man wanted him to buy lilies.
In the dream Adam said no, Rowan didn’t like lilies. She broke lilies and got mad. He didn’t want to buy them for her.
“She likes lilies, she just doesn’t know it,” the man said, his voice sounding odd, through a fog.
Adam shook his head back and forth. Then, as happens in dreams, he was no longer at the flower stand but sitting on Rowan’s deck watching the sunset. Rowan was happy and smiling. She was holding a thick green stalk with a white calla lily on the top.
He frowned at her. “You hate lilies.”
“No, I just didn’t know how pretty they were.”
He listened to the waves break and run up the shore. It was soothing.
And then he would wake up and have to go to the bathroom.
He had the dream every night, and sometimes more than once. But he always woke up and felt like he was forgetting something, something very, very important.
“Stupid,” he said to himself. “You’re just a stupid kid.”
CHAPTER 22
Rowan lamented the fact that she wasn’t good with relationships. She was angry with John about the safe house, but understood its necessity. She’d tried to explain this in the car, but she hadn’t seemed to do a good job.
He’d made no attempt to come to her room last night.
Of course, he was in full protection mode, leaving the cabin every hour to prowl like a cat through the wilderness for ten minutes before coming back.
She’d asked to go with him and he simply said, “No.”
But she was going stir-crazy, and it was obvious John was, too. Rowan typed. John paced. Rowan stared out the window. John checked the perimeter. Rowan cleaned the guns. John paced.
Quinn had checked in that morning and said there was no news. Bobby hadn’t surfaced, but the decoy was in place.
Finally, Rowan had had enough. “Let’s run.”
“We can’t leave.”
“We’ve been cooped up in this damn cabin for the whole day. We have at least a good hour of daylight left, and running will do us both good. Besides, you’re wearing the finish off the poor hardwood floor.”
John frowned, obviously debating her suggestion. “All right,” he snapped. “We’ll go. But I’m in charge.”
“Of course you are,” Rowan mumbled, irritated.
They changed into sweats and running shoes. It was cooler up the coast in the evening. John had checked out the perimeter-again-and brought a map. The beach was a quarter-mile walk through the woods. He led the way, his whole body tense. Rowan resisted an urge to massage his shoulders; certain they would feel too tight and rock hard.
Not being in the action was hurting him as much as it was her. The sacrifice he’d made to protect her both disturbed and warmed her heart. She didn’t want to think he cared. After all, with Michael’s death on their conscience and the reality that when this was all over they wouldn’t be together, she could hardly afford to think that there was something more than physical desire between them.
Last night, before she’d drifted off to sleep-alone-she couldn’t help but think about what might have been. If Michael hadn’t been killed. If Bobby weren’t after her. If she were certain of her sanity.
John Flynn was a man she could love.
But love wasn’t for people like her. John had helped her start putting together the pieces of a life that had been shattered years ago, but now she could do it herself. And in doing it, she acknowledged that she wasn’t whole and it would take a lot more than accepting the past and focusing on the future to make her a complete, viable, lovable woman.
She would never forget what John had done for her.
They walked to the shore and stopped at the edge of a cliff. The beach looked clean and unused. Serene. The ocean here was more volatile than at Malibu, the waves crashing hard against the wet, rocky sand, violently claiming the land. They walked along the rim of the cliff until they found a slope easy to scramble down, then without talking they ran.
She breathed in the cold, wet air. The spray from the breaking waves caressed her skin, and the sensation invigorated her. She was alive. Free. Her heart felt lighter somehow, and she owed it to John. He couldn’t possibly know or understand the transformation she’d gone through over the past few days. Reliving the murders, feeling Dani in her arms again-even if only in her mind. Her willingness to confront Bobby. All of that, together, freed her soul.
She’d written more in the last two days than she had in months. Seventy pages, and she had more in her.
She felt guilty for her elation. Michael was dead. She wanted vengeance, justice, and for the first time truly believed it would happen. Bobby wouldn’t get away with his crimes. He would be punished-both Colorado and California had the death penalty-and he could rot for ten years in a ten-by-ten cell until he finally fried in the electric chair.
For the first time in a long time, she had hope. Not only that justice would be served, but that she would be complete. Healed.
She didn’t know the distance they ran, but suspected it was nearly three miles by the time they got back to the ledge they had descended. She started up first, John right behind her. The setting sun caught her eye and she turned.
“John,” she said quietly, nodding toward the sky.
He turned and looked. “It’s beautiful,” he whispered, then looked back at her. “Just like you.”
Her breath caught in her throat. “John, I-”
He put his finger to her lips, took her arm, and motioned for her to sit. She did. Together, they watched the sunset. Such a normal thing, really. Why did it feel so odd? So different?
Because she didn’t do normal things. She didn’t have a normal life. She didn’t watch sunsets with handsome men she loved-cared about, she corrected herself.
She wanted to freeze this moment in time, as John wrapped an arm around her, squeezing her close to his side. Sighing, she let her head rest on his shoulder. This quiet affection was something she’d never had, but she could live with it. Forever.
“They’re going to catch Bobby,” John said quietly as the sun began its descent, seeming to sink into the ocean.
“I know.”
“You being here, safe, is the right thing. I know you’re torn up about not being in on the op, and I’m sorry I wasn’t more-uh, sensitive-about the way I told you.”
He was worrying about her feelings when she’d acted so irresponsibly. “No apologies, John. I’m okay.”
“Are you?”
“Yes. I am. For the first time in a long time I’m okay.”
Acknowledging that she hadn’t been okay for a long time was the hardest part. But once she’d said it out loud, she felt at peace.
John fidgeted next to her. She glanced over at him. He was frowning slightly, his brows furrowed in some sort of deep thought, and she wondered what was going on in his mind.
She was also curious about what Roger had told her about John’s past, the sting operation that had gone bad.
“Roger told me what happened in Baton Rouge.”
John tensed next to her. “Did he?”
“Roger was impressed.”
“Not many people were.”
She sighed, looked at his hand on the ground, and took it into her own. Rowan surprised herself; she’d never considered herself a comforting sort of person.
“It seems to me,” she said after a moment, “that you risked your own life to save your fellow agents. At least, that’s how Roger portrayed it.”