“Fort Collins.”
“I’m on my way.”
The phone line went dead, leaving Maisie growing colder by the second, knowing that once again, everything she touched turned to disaster.
6
The stench of old coffee and sweat mixed with the sounds of telephones ringing and doors buzzing overwhelmed Hayes’s senses. Closing his eyes, he rested his head against the hard metal bars of the jail cell. A drunk man slept on the floor across from him, having thrown up three times in the steel toilet. A teenage kid cried in the far corner. Last night, the cops hadn’t asked questions, they’d simply hauled Hayes into the station and left him sitting there ever since. Hours had passed, and Hayes felt every one of them. Politics had to be at play if it took his father this long to get him out, and Hayes wondered who exactly he’d punched last night. But that wasn’t his biggest concern.
Maisie.
He’d clammed up when Maisie had asked if they’d complicated things. Of course they had. Because he couldn’t be the man she needed. The one who’d protect her. He was the guy who’d lied to her. Who never told her the real reason Laurel was dead. The last thing he wanted to do was hurt her, and he wasn’t sure he could do anything but that. And yet…and yet, he needed her, like the air he needed to breathe.
“Interesting night?”
Hayes smiled and opened his eyes. His father stood on the other side of the bars, with a uniformed cop next to him. “You could say that.” He rose, approaching the cell’s door. The cop nodded at the camera over his shoulder. The jail cell beeped and then the door clanged open. “What time is it?” Hayes asked as he strode out into the hallway, leaving both the kid and the drunk behind.
Dad looked at his watch. “Just after two o’clock.”
Damn, they’d held him long. The aches in his back and neck told Hayes he’d been there for hours, but he hadn’t thought it’d been for nearly fourteen hours. He kept the thought to himself while he gathered his belongings from lock up and followed his father out the front door. Only when the bright sun warmed his face did he address his father. “Let me guess, the dipshit I punched wasn’t just anyone.”
Dad’s keys jingled as he unlocked his SUV. “He’s a lieutenant’s son.” Before moving to the driver’s side, Dad stopped, folding his arms. “Want to tell me what happened?”
“The guy got handsy with Maisie last night.”
Dad’s brows rose. “And that warranted a broken nose?”
“Ah, good, I broke it.” Hayes hadn’t been sure, even with the blood. He grinned at the slow shake of his father’s head. He wouldn’t apologize for the punch—the prick deserved it and Hayes hoped his nose killed this morning—but to clarify, he added, “His hold was tight enough that she flinched.” Done with explaining himself, Hayes shifted the conversation. “How was Maisie when you saw her this morning?” Her pained gaze when the cops took Hayes away had stayed with him all night.
His father’s gaze turned probing, his eyes searching. Whatever he found must have erased the remainder of his concerns. “She was worried but settled when she heard me laying into the lieutenant after she’d told me her side of the story.”
“And what was her side of the story?”
Dad gave a beaming smile. “She’s thinks you’re a goddamn hero.”
“Not a bad way for her to see me.” Hayes chuckled. “Though I imagine she was just trying to get me out of jail.”
“I don’t know about that, son,” Dad said. “There was a ring of truth to it.”
Hayes glanced down to his worn boots and kicked a pebble away. To avoid talking about this new development with Maisie, he asked, “How many strings did you have to pull to make this go away? Do I owe anyone a favor?”
Dad opened the door to his SUV. “Not many strings, and no favor owed.” He got in, and Hayes slid into the passenger seat as his father continued. “Maisie told me this morning that you’ve got two more festivals to go to.” He turned on the ignition and gave Hayes a leveled look. “Let’s not punch someone at every one, all right?”
Hayes snorted. “Believe me when I tell you the prick deserved it.”
His father didn’t comment on that but opened the glove compartment. He offered Hayes his phone. “Maisie left this for you.”
Hayes looked at his screen, not finding any calls or texts. “Where is she now?”
“She fought with me for a good hour about leaving you, but after a call from Clara, she drove your truck to Colorado Springs and is setting up for tonight’s festival.” Dad pulled out into the road and then smiled over at Hayes. “I’m under strict orders to take you there. She’s a force, isn’t she?”
Hayes laughed and nodded. “She may be little, but she is fierce.”
“That is very much true with all of the Carter sisters,” Dad noted.
Hayes agreed and glanced out at the wide-open country, taking in the harvested round hay bales. His thoughts went to Maisie. Her naked body filled his mind. The soft curve of her breasts, her smooth, flat tummy that led down to soft curly hair. God, she was beautiful.
“All right?”