Joel (BBW Bear Shifter Wedding Romance) (Grizzly Groomsmen Book 5) (13 page)

“That’s fine,” Annie said, cutting off whatever Hyde opened his mouth to say. “But respect it if they don’t want to answer questions and no recordings without permission. Lastly, if you’d like to talk to anyone about what you’ve been through, any of us would be happy to listen.”

“Oh, don’t worry, I have maybe three emotions and they’ll all whiskey,” Thalia assured her.

Annie raised an eyebrow. “The offer stands. If no one else has anything to say, then we’re done here.”
 

The squeal of chairs being pushed back filled the air as people filtered back out of the kitchen.

“Treat her right,” Custer snickered as he walked past. Hyde put his hands on the table to push himself, only for the short man to grab his wrist.

“Dominic,” Hyde said in a voice that managed to be threatening and patient at the same time.

“Not worth getting disemboweled over,” Dominic said softly.

“Thank you,” Delphine said with a small smile. She turned to Thalia. “Would you like to see where you’ll be staying for now?”

“I’ll take her. I don’t trust her alone in my room,” Hyde said, slipping his arm out of Dominic’s grasp.

“We can all go. It’ll be a party,” Thalia said, leaning down to grab her bag. “A really, really awkward party.”

Hyde sighed. “Just follow me, and don’t touch anything.”

The space on the ship that wasn’t reserved for cargo or the massive amount of machinery required to both run the
Breakwater
normally and to allow it to access its namesake ability—which was surprisingly well documented for something Thalia assumed was supposed to be a secret—was actually fairly small. Not cramped, exactly, but Thalia could see why she was sharing a room (that is, purely for logistics reasons and therefore not anything that should be causing butterflies in her stomach). The hallway was straightforward, with five doors leading to five living spaces, each with a keypad by it. Hyde walked up to one and hit the enter button. The door swooshed open.

“What’s the point in having a keypad if you don’t require an access code?” Thalia asked as they stepped inside.

“When you’re living with seven nosy assholes, five of whom have enhanced hearing and can decipher the code from the sound of the beeps, a code is sort of useless,” Hyde said, spinning on his heel and plopping onto his bed.

Thalia looked around the room. It was insanely clean to the point that she wasn’t sure anyone actually had ever been in it before. The only sign of life was a tablet on the bedside table and the multicolored stickers on the intercom over the bed.
 

“I feel like I shouldn’t be surprised that your room looks like a hotel room,” Thalia told him, “but I am anyways.”

Delphine snorted. “It’s because he can’t bear to be parted from the communications station. He can hang up on anyone he doesn’t want to talk to there.”

“Not a social butterfly, is he?” Thalia asked.

“Watch it,” Hyde growled.

“More like a depressing, pessimistic moth,” Delphine answered, smiling serenely.

Hyde stared at her. “Don’t take this the wrong way, but you developing a sense of humor is one of the worst things that has ever happened to me.”

“Are you comfortable being alone with Hyde?” Delphine asked, ignoring him.

Thalia took a moment to consider the man who snarled and threatened and hadn’t once seemed to genuinely consider leaving her behind. “Yeah. I’ll be fine.”

Delphine inclined her head slightly. “If you need me, shout. My hearing is excellent.” With that, she turned and walked out the door.

“So…” Thalia started after a moment of heavy silence. “Your crew. They’re interesting.”

“That’s a diplomatic way of phrasing that,” Hyde muttered.
 

“I mean, there’s not a whole lot of ways you can describe Custer, from what I’ve read. He seems like a handful.”

“Yeah, a handful of live dynamite,” Hyde said, leaning back. “His defining characteristic used to be ‘masturbates with his metal hand.’ Now it’s ‘ended up in a committed relationship with the splice assassin sent to kill us.’”

Thalia tucked that little tidbit of information about Delphine away for a rainy day which, courtesy of being spaceborn, could arguably be any day she chose. “They’re good people, though. Or at least, they seem like it.”

At that, Hyde actually laughed. “Oh, no one on this bird is a good person. Closest we’ve got is probably Zosha just because she doesn’t kill people directly. But we’re hospitable.”

“Right,” Thalia said, drawing out the vowel. “’Hospitable’ is exactly the word I would use for you.”

“Not dead yet, are you?” He asked, eyebrows raising.
 

“The ‘yet’ part sort of ruined the effect I think you were going for there,” Thalia replied. “Can I sit?”

Hyde gestured broadly. “Go for it.”

Thalia pulled the chair away from the oddly spotless desk pushed against the wall opposite the bed and sat gingerly, allowing her bag to fall to the floor.
 

“So if I start asking you questions, are you going to shift and bite my head off?” Thalia asked, rummaging around for her main tablet.

Hyde looked at her, considering. “How about this. You ask me a question, I ask you one.”

Thalia looked up. “Okay? I mean, I’m not very interesting. You’ll be disappointed.”
 

Disbelief flickered in Hyde’s eye. “You track me down and chase me across at least one system border to get this story, then corner me in a bar with the apparent intent to pull a honeypot on me, and you say you’re not interesting? Come on.”

“Alright,” Thalia said, shrugging. “I warned you, though. Why did you want to join the Red Quarter’s guard?”

“They paid well, and the insurance covers damn near everything. And I’ve always been aggressive,” Hyde answered easily. “Why did you become a journalist?”

“Took a bunch of random writing electives and then realized I had to actually graduate at some point,” Thalia said. Hyde made a
go on
gesture and she sighed. “I think people are idiots who make shitty decisions. I want them to be informed so they have the opportunity to make less shitty decisions. What’s your family like?”

“My parents are live on Rajan now. They’re strict, but good parents. They know what I do for a living now and haven’t disowned me. What’s yours like?” Hyde asked.
 

“We all get on much better now that most of them are dead,” she answered, which was a fair summary of the first fifteen tear-stained years of her life. “Who are you favorite and least favorite people on the ship?”

“Dominic and Annie, I get along with the best,” Hyde said. “We understand each other. Everyone else is fine, except Custer, who’s the sentient version of an infected ingrown toenail. Who are your favorite and least favorite people?”

“I have a couple friends I hung out with back on Goton. I try not to have least favorite people because it’s exhausting, but at the moment Tillman is at the top of that list as the person who has most recently tried to kill me. What do you do in your free time?”

“Talk to Dominic. Read. I like crossword puzzles. You?” Hyde asked.

“I have been known to do the occasional crossword. I watch a lot of soap operas,” Thalia told him.

“Soap operas? Really?”
 

Thalia shrugged. “Look, my job is talking about all the ways reality sucks. Soap operas are basically my happy place. If you could go anywhere in the universe, where would you go?”

“I’d stay here,” Hyde answered immediately. “My crewmates are insane, but they’re my crewmates. Why do you write the kind of articles you do?”

“Didn’t I just answer this?” Thalia asked.

“No, you told me why you became a journalist. That’s a general question. I’m asking why you write the specific articles you write. No offense, but you don’t seem the good Samaritan type.”

“You stalk a man once…” Thalia sighed. “I write the specific articles I write because I don’t see the point in having a platform capable of reaching people billions of miles away and using it for gossip. Or at least not
just
for gossip. Why didn’t you leave me behind when you had the opportunity?”

“Because the others would have never let me live it down,” Hyde said. It was almost believable except that his gaze was trained on her left ear instead of her face.

Thalia made a buzzer sound. “Wrong! Either tell me the truth or pass and I’ll dedicate myself to wheedling the truth out of you later. It’s what I do for a living, I’m very good at it.”

Hyde stared at her for a tense moment, then huffed out a resigned sounding sigh. “I don’t relax. Ever. It’s not that I enjoy being uptight, but Dominic and Rick are the only ones on this ship that think before they act, and Dom can’t put himself in situations that stress him out too much and Rick trusts the captain too much. So that means when people make dumbass decisions, I’m sometimes the only one willing to say they’re dumbass decisions. Like with Annie, and Zosha. I’m glad they’re here now and that it all worked out, but at the time they were strangers with dangerous people chasing them and we didn’t have the connections we have now. We didn’t have the benefit of being able to see the future and know it’d all be fine, so I stand by not trusting them when they first boarded. There’s too much jumping first and looking second on this ship for me to be able to take it easy most of the time.”

“I don’t understand what that has to do with me,” Thalia said uncertainly.

“At the bar, when you walked over… I don’t know why, but I just couldn’t think of a reason to be tense. For once, my first instinct was to just go with flow and see where I ended up. You sidled up, all smiles, and offered to buy me a drink and I was able to relax for what seemed like the first time since we ran into Annie.”

Thalia felt something uncomfortably like guilt twitch in her stomach. “And then I nearly got you killed.”

Hyde snorted. “No, and then you nearly got
you
killed. Tillman’s hitmen are as incompetent as his politics when he’s not framing innocent men for murder.”

“Still, I’m…” Thalia swallowed. “I’m sorry.”

“Why do I get the feeling you don’t apologize much?” Hyde asked, sounding almost amused.

“Because you’ve got animal instinct on your side. How do you feel about pretending this never happened and never, ever telling anyone we had actual emotions?”

“Sounds good to me,” Hyde said.

There was the sort of awkward pause that followed unexpected emotional connections. Thalia reached into her bag and pulled out a plastic water bottle that’s she’d filled with rum. She popped the top and took a swig before wordlessly handing it to Hyde, who accepted with a raised eyebrow. He nodded approvingly after taking a sip.

“Not bad,” he told her, handing the bottle back over.

“I figure there’s a time to get wasted on the cheap shit and a time to bring out the decent stuff,” she replied. “This is the second.”

“I have nine hours before I’m on deck. Is there anything you need to do before that?” he asked.

Thalia considered. “Nope, can’t think of anything.”

Hyde pushed himself up the bed until he was leaning against the wall and grabbed the tablet on the table.

“Alright. I’ll probably go to sleep in an hour, so if you need anything after that, go find Delphine.”

Thalia stood up and walked to the far side of the bed, bottle held loosely on one hand. She sat, toeing her shoes off, then rolled over so she could see what Hyde was working on. Hyde gave her a silent, judging look but proceeded to turn to his tablet and open a crossword app without telling her to fuck off so she decided to count it as a win.
 

“Eight down is ‘coronation,’ you know,” she told him.

He grunted in response and typed it in. Thalia watched as he typed in a few more answers before giving in to her need to be talking.

“So what’s your deal with Zosha, anyways?” she asked.

Hyde sighed. “She’s irritatingly perky and thinks she’s more mysterious than she is. She’s somehow become our mascot and I don’t like it. Also, she listens to annoying music while at the deck. Why don’t you have thirty million friends and what’s the theoretical temperature at which molecular activity ceases, two words?”

“That’s two questions.”

“Okay, one, you skipped my turn, and two, I don’t count help on a crossword worth personal information on its own,” Hyde informed her.

“I don’t have thirty million friends because I’ve been reliably informed that I have trouble ‘letting people in’ and ‘expressing myself,’” she told him, making finger quotes. “Also, absolute zero.” She took a long sip of rum as he typed it in. “Why do you pretend you don’t have friends? Or at least, why do you pretend that Dominic is the only person on board who’s your friend?”

“I’m not pretending, I’m just not an emotive person and don’t care to correct other people’s misassumptions. If you don’t like connecting with people, why did you choose a job that requires connecting to as many people as possible? Also, ‘egglike,’ five letters.”

“Ovate. And the difference is my articles connect my readers to an event or a place or a person, not to me. I’m not the destination, I’m the pilot. Does that make sense? Great. So if you’re Mr. Lowkey from Planet Serious, why do you wear a bright blue eyepatch?”

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