Jax cleared his throat. “I think your boss is good,” he said. “We should go.”
Sarah felt her cheeks flush. With Eve around, she was sure Gabe was more than good.
“Brent sent some cops to keep watch down here, too,” Jax added. “Molly is going to be safe.”
Gabe’s head slowly lifted. His face had softened with love as he stared down at Eve. But then he seemed to remember that he and Eve weren’t alone. He looked over at Sarah.
“Why don’t you and Eve go to the hotel,” Sarah offered. “I can—”
Eve turned toward her. “I’m staying with Gabe. Viki told me that you were in the fire today. How are you even on your feet?”
Her feet—and knees—were rather wobbly.
“We’ve got this,” Eve said, giving Sarah a faint smile. “Go and rest. And chalk this up as a win for LOST.”
A win . . . the way Eve’s case had been.
Jax followed Sarah toward the door.
“You’ll keep her safe?” Gabe called after them.
Before Jax could answer, Sarah glanced back at him. “I can keep myself safe.” Just what did he think her father had been teaching her all of those years?
How to hunt.
How to kill.
How to survive.
Jax was silent as they rode the elevator down to the parking garage. He led her toward a big, black SUV that waited near one of the columns. Before Sarah slid up onto the seat, she asked, “You’re taking me back to the hotel?”
He caught her chin in his hand. “No, Sarah.”
Her breath whispered out. “My clothes—”
“—will be taken care of.” He smiled at her, a smile that looked like a tiger, sharp and predatory. “So maybe you should send a text to your friends. Let them know you’ll be at my place. I will be keeping you safe.”
Oh, had that struck a nerve with him? Too bad. It was who she was.
“And we’ll be fucking.”
Yes, well, um, she wasn’t going to include that bit in the text.
He leaned down and kissed her. Hard and deep. He made her want more. “You scared the hell out of me today,” he muttered against her mouth.
Wait . . . she’d scared big, bad Jax Fontaine? Impossible. Nothing was supposed to scare him.
“Next time, run away from the fire,” he told her. “Save yourself.”
Ah, but that was what he didn’t understand. She had too many sins to atone for in this world. If she didn’t try to help, then . . .
What will I become?
She climbed into the vehicle. He slammed her door, then came around to the driver’s side. Sarah fired off a quick text to Gabe. A few moments later, she and Jax were leaving that parking garage and heading out into the dark night. “What’s their story?” he asked her, actually seeming to be curious.
Sarah glanced over at him. “You mean Gabe and Eve?” Well, technically, Eve wasn’t the blonde’s name. She was Jessica Montgomery. Or she had been.
“Yeah, them. Gabe looked like—”
“He could pretty much devour her.” As soon as the words left her mouth, Sarah clamped her lips shut. She had to learn to watch herself around Jax. For some reason, she revealed too much with him. “They’re pretty intense together,” she mumbled.
“They are.” His hand slid over. Squeezed her thigh. “And so are we.” His touch seemed to burn right through her jeans.
She wanted him to move his fingers a little bit. To slide them inside her thigh and up to the—
“Sarah? Their story,” he prompted.
Right. Coughing a bit, Sarah said, “Eve was a client. She came in the doors of LOST, and I’m pretty sure Gabe took one look at her and the guy fell . . . hard.” She’d never thought the mighty Gabe would go down that fast. But he’d been nearly obsessed. So determined to stay close to Eve.
To win her heart.
“Who had gone missing from Eve’s life?”
“She had.” Her head turned as she stared out her window. The streets were packed with people, and, up ahead, a horse-drawn carriage was slowly meandering through the city. “Eve woke up in a hospital, with no memory of her past. She happened to see a story in a newspaper—it was a story about the Lady Killer. He was a serial killer who’d been targeting wealthy, blond women—”
“I remember that story,” Jax said, his voice grim.
“Eve looked in the paper, saw the photos of the guy’s victims, and she saw her own face staring back at her.” The horse-drawn carriage turned. Jax sped up. “She came to LOST because she wanted us to find out if she had been a victim. She wanted us to find out anything we could about her.” And in the end, they had. They’d stopped the Lady Killer. Eve had learned about her past . . . and Gabe had fallen in love.
“Some people get happy endings,” Sarah said. “Even if they have to walk through fire first.”
Silence. She closed her eyes, feeling weary all the way to her soul. “I need to speak with Detective West. I want to make sure he’s told Eddie that Molly is alive.” For the moment. But, no, she couldn’t think that way. Molly would make it through the night. She’d be stronger by morning. With every moment that passed, Molly would keep fighting. She’d survive.
“Eddie . . . Eddie was shot, Sarah.”
Her eyes flew open. “What?”
“Guards thought he was attacking one of the nurses that was there to check on him. One of those guards fired at him. I’m sorry, but he didn’t make it.”
It felt as if someone had just punched Sarah in the gut.
“Brent told me that Eddie was acting erratically, saying things that didn’t make sense.” He turned to the right. “It had to be the drugs, still in his system. The kid never had a chance.”
No, he hadn’t. Tears stung her eyes but she blinked, trying to stop them from falling. Brent had told Jax all of this? She was sure starting to suspect that those two were closer than they’d let on. She knew Jax supposedly had informants all over the city. Was Brent part of his network?
“Sarah . . .” His voice was a growl. “Eddie tried to kill you.”
“You said yourself”—her words were hoarse—“he was just a weapon that bastard out there used. Aim and fire . . .” Only now Eddie was gone. And Molly . . .
Live, Molly, please.
SARAH THOUGHT SHE was so damn clever. Escaping from his fire. Getting the girl out.
He’d figured Sarah would leave that girl behind as soon as the bomb exploded. Why not leave her? Molly Guthrie had been dead weight—literally. But Sarah hadn’t been alone. Jax Fontaine had been with her.
Jax. Did the guy even realize how he fit into the game? When he’d seen the two of them together—kissing in front of everyone—rage had consumed him. Jax knew what Sarah was. Fruit of the fucking poisoned tree. And he was going to touch her? Screw her?
Jax didn’t get it. Sarah was the one screwing with him. She was a master at the mind fuck. Like her father, she showed the world only what she wanted them to see. A true manipulator, all the way to her core.
He’d underestimated her. He’d thought taking Sarah out would be easy.
He wouldn’t make that mistake again.
He would show her—and Murphy—just how strong he’d become. He wasn’t helpless. He wouldn’t cower and beg for help any longer. Now, everyone would be begging him.
Sarah would beg.
Then she’d die.
As for Jax Fontaine . . . he smiled. Jax was a pawn that would be used. A pawn whose time had finally come.
Jax didn’t know it, but he knew all of Jax’s secrets. Every single one of them. He’d use those secrets.
Right now, Jax was protecting Sarah. Keeping his goons around her so that she’d never be vulnerable. But he’d get Jax to turn on Sarah. Before he was done, Jax would be serving Sarah up for death.
And Sarah would be screaming.
JAX SHUT THE door behind Sarah and secured his alarm. She stood a few feet in front of him, her shoulders slumped, her hair trailing down her back. As he watched her, Sarah moved forward a bit, and her fingers curled around the banister. “I feel safe with you.” She said those words as she began to climb up the stairs. “And that’s probably wrong, isn’t it?”