Wolf Bite (Wolf Cove #2) (22 page)

 

Chapter Twenty-Six

 

Henry smooths the back of his windswept hair down.
“Had to wake my chopper pilot up. He wasn’t planning on flying me in again so
soon.”

“Neither were we.” Jack chuckles and clasps hands with
Henry. “Grab a seat. We’re ready to go.”

My heart is pounding like a jackhammer in my chest. Henry’s
here? He’s going to fly to Pittsburgh with me?

Crystal-blue eyes land on me, weighing me down with a
hundred emotions. “Where are we refueling?”

“Just outside Seattle.”

“Perfect.” Instead of taking a seat, Henry ducks into the
cockpit, and I hear him exchanging greetings with someone else. The captain, I
presume.

I watch quietly, brimming with excitement and trepidation,
as Jack seals the door. Henry reappears. “Cooler’s stocked?”

“Yes, sir.” Adjusting his hat, Jack disappears into the
cockpit, pulling that door closed.

Henry sets a brown paper bag on the table in front of me.
“Figured you didn’t eat, so I had the kitchen make something for you.”

“Thank you.” I’m starving, actually.

He peels his jacket off and tosses it onto the seat. I
admire the soft charcoal-gray t-shirt beneath, and the simple way it hangs over
his jeans, in just that perfect way: not too tight, but enough to show his
muscles.

How I miss the feel of him beneath my fingertips.

To think I was allowed to touch that—that he was mine—for
even just a short period of time.

Until I got jealous, and possessive, and mistrusting.

And there’s nothing I can do to change that, or make it
better. If I regret anything for the rest of my life, it’ll be that.

Folding into the seat across from me, he fastens his
seatbelt and begins fiddling with the media system, until soft music fills the
cabin. “You should eat, Abbi.”

The world outside us begins to move as the plane rolls into
position for takeoff. To distract myself, I dig out the contents of the bag and
set them in front of me. Granola, yogurt, fruit, an omelet, bagels with various
cream cheeses, lox, bacon, and danishes. Basically, most of the breakfast menu.

“I didn’t know what you would want. I figured I’d give you
options.” Henry opens the fruit container and pops a grape into his mouth.
“It’s going to be a long flight.”

“How long?”

“Nine to ten hours. We won’t get to Pittsburgh until late
tonight.”

I take a deep, shaky breath. Nine to ten hours. Way better
than fifteen to twenty, but will my father still be alive when we land?

“I almost forgot.” He reaches into his jeans pocket and pulls
out two sticks of turkey jerky, tossing them onto the table alongside
everything else. “Just in case.”

I can’t help it, I burst out laughing, thinking of that
first day with Henry. All the hope and excitement and nervousness. The wonder.
The impossible what-if.

Before I screwed everything up.

It’s not long before my laughter morphs into tears. I’m not even
sure what I’m crying about anymore. Henry, my dad. Leaving Alaska. Nothing
seems to be going well right now. “I’m sorry.” I wipe the tears with the back
of my hand, but more replace them instantly, until I can’t even see through the
blur.

I hear his seat belt unfastening and then, a moment later,
so is mine, and strong arms are lifting me out of my seat. Together we sit on
the other side where there’s no table, with me on his lap, wrapped within his
arms, my face burrowed against his neck.

“Don’t we have to be in our seats for takeoff?” I whisper,
inhaling Henry’s scent, hoping it will help calm my nerves.

“This is my plane. We can do whatever the fuck we want.”

“Okay.” I don’t want to move. Ever. I curl my fingers around
his t-shirt and stay put as the engine roars with the sudden increase of speed,
and then we’re off the ground and climbing high into the sky.

I don’t want to say anything to scare him off, so I bite my
bottom lip and keep quiet, letting the moments pass, memorizing the feeling of
being in Henry’s arms again—how lucky I was to ever experience it in the first
place.

“I wish I could go back in time,” I whisper against him.

His chest swells with a deep sigh. “Not now, Abbi.”

He’s shutting me down.

I close my eyes and let myself dream about his mouth, and
his hands, of his bare skin against mine.

Wishing it was mine again.

And that’s how I drift off.

~ ~ ~

I awake in Henry’s arms to the captain’s voice over
the intercom, telling us that we’ve begun our decent into Seattle.

The awful reality of the situation hits me like a brick to the
chest. My dad. The accident. I instantly reach for my phone.

“He’s still in surgery as of half an hour ago. I’ve been
keeping an eye out,” Henry says.

“I guess that’s good?”

He pushes my matted hair off my forehead and then, as if
catching himself, pulls his hand away. “Yeah, that’s good.”

“You could have moved me.”

“I didn’t want to wake you. You looked comfortable.”

“Yeah, I didn’t sleep much last night, and the anti-nausea
meds sometimes knock me out.” I let my eyes wander over his handsome face. “And
I was comfortable.”

He offers me a tight smile in return. Suddenly I feel
awkward, like I should either climb off him or kiss him. He hasn’t given any
indication that he’d be okay with me kissing him, so I climb off his lap.

He must have been waiting for that because he stands and,
stretching his arms over his shoulders, he makes his way to the tiny restroom
in the back.

The food he brought is still all laid out on the table. I
shift over to that seat and pick at the cold bacon and chewy omelet, too hungry
to be grossed out.

“Don’t worry. We’ll have something hot delivered in Seattle.”
Henry slides into the seat across from me, checking his phone.

“I’m fine. I like fruit.” I shift over to the yogurt and
granola, accidently knocking a lid off the table in the process. When I reach
down to collect it, I get a good look at Henry’s shoes and socks.

I press my lips together to hide my smile but it doesn’t
work.

“What?”

“I take it you don’t ask Miles to dress you?”

His eyes narrow. “Why?”

I purposely stall answering by dipping a strawberry into the
yogurt and then sucking it off the end. I feel his eyes on my mouth and I revel
in the moment of attention, remembering when those heated eyes would be looking
down on me, when I was allowed to suck him like this. “Because you’re wearing
two different shades of blue socks.”

He groans, but then he’s chuckling at himself. “Dammit. It
was nice, not to have to worry about doing that for a while.”

Until I fucked it all up.

“I’m sorry.”

“Don’t, Abbi.” His jaw tightens as he pulls his phone from
his pocket and begins scrolling.

I do my best to keep my tears at bay. “Do you have a lot of
work to do?”

“Always,” he murmurs absently.

I sense he doesn’t want to speak, so I focus on the view out
the window as we approach Seattle.

~ ~ ~

“What’s taking so long?” Henry doesn’t hide his irritation
well.

“There was a delay with the fuel truck. We’ll be back in the
air shortly,” Jack promises on his way out the door.

Henry looks to me.

“Jed says he’s still in surgery.” That means he’s still
alive.

With a slight nod, Henry dials someone on his phone. “Yeah....
Where are we with the specs?” I stare unabashed at him as he watches the
refueling truck outside the window and listens to someone one the other end of
the phone.

Have those full, soft lips touched anyone? What about those
hands. My eyes drop farther, to his jeans, and his belt.

What about the rest of him?

Not that I’d have any right to ever say a word, given what
I’ve been doing. Both Connor and Ronan texted me to see if I was okay. I
haven’t answered. That world, them, me
with
them... it’s already so far
from my mind.

“Okay, here we go.” Jack is back and carrying two food trays
toward the table.

“Here.” I scramble to help clear what’s left of breakfast.

“Thanks. I don’t have this flight attendant thing down pat
yet,” Jack mumbles.

“They don’t teach that in flight school?”

He chuckles. “I guess I missed that day. All right. We’ll be
taking off in a few minutes, in case you want to stick your head out for some
fresh air before you’re trapped in this tin can again.”

I giggle. “I think I can handle this tin can.”

“Not a bad way to travel, hey?” He winks. “Come up and check
out the cockpit later, if you want.”

“I will. Thanks.”

“...I don’t care if it takes another year, we need to open
with at least two runs!” Henry’s impatient “do as I say” voice is creeping in.
“The bottom’s been clear-cut for three years already. Yeah. We used the wood to
build the lodge.”

He’s talking about Wolf Cove. What is he planning now?

“No.... Shit, I can’t remember. Hold on.” Henry starts
fumbling with the dossier on his lap, unzipping it with one hand. A piece of
paper slips out and floats to the ground.

I don’t think twice, crouching to retrieve it for him. My
hand freeze when I realize that it’s a picture of me.

The one that Hachiro took that day, on the deck at his
grandfather’s cabin, when I was staring off into the water, my thoughts
drifting into a life with Henry.

Henry actually printed it off. He’s kept it all this time.

“The permits are as good as signed. That’s a nonissue.” Henry
is still staring out the window and talking. He doesn’t seem to have noticed
the picture. Would he be angry that I know? I never know with him.

I quickly tuck it into the back of my jeans.

“See if you can get a revised plan by end of week. I want to
start the work before winter, which isn’t that far off up there.” He hangs up
with a sigh. “What did they bring in to eat?”

Trying my best to sound normal, I lift the metal cover.
“Looks like chicken parm.”

He moves in across from me, unraveling the cloth napkin for
his lap. “Good. I’m starving.”

I alternate my focus between my food, Henry, and the view outside,
as the engines roar and we’re speeding down the runway, into the sky once
again.

Deciding what to say. If I should say anything, or if I
should just ignore it.

I can’t ignore it. Why does he still have this picture of me
in his dossier, nearly two months after our disastrous downfall?

I’d love to think it’s because he still cares about me.

Finally, I decide to not say a word. I simply reach behind
my back and pull out the picture, sliding it across the table to sit next to
his plate.

He pauses with fork midair, his steady gaze on it.

And then he continues eating. Not saying a single word about
it. Not until he’s cleaned his plate and is wiping his mouth.

“It was my fault.”

“What was?”

He tosses the napkin onto his dishes and then brings the can
of Coke to his lips. I count four throat bobs before he relents, setting it
down in front of him. “When you told me what Scott had done, I should have
worried about you. Not about me, not about what he was up to.”

“He was trying to have you framed for rape, Henry.”

Henry’s eyes drift out the window. “He scared the shit out
of you. He introduced doubt into your mind that I didn’t do anything to get rid
of. Here you are, this twenty-one-year-old who’s only ever been in one
relationship, with that fuckhead who crushed you. Of course you’re going to
have a hard time trusting anyone so easily again. I expected you to take what I
said at face value.” His eyes flicker to me. “That wasn’t fair to you.”

“What happened with Michael—”

“The asshole took advantage of a distraught woman. I saw the
video.”

My mouth falls open. Oh my God. “There’s a video?”

“Security footage. Of you running into him, and him leading
you back to his cabin with his arm around you. And of you leaving the next
morning. I wasn’t sure you actually fucked him until I saw your face. Then I
knew, right away.” He shakes his head to himself. “I have to say, it’s the
first time I’ve ever had a woman I was with do that to me.”

His words are soft and without accusation, and yet I flinch
as if they’re a slap. “I wish I could go back in time and change it all.
Really, I do.”

His jaw tenses. “Did you enjoy it?”

“No. I mean....” I close my eyes. “I did, for what it was,
at the time. But I didn’t want to be there. I wanted to be with you.”

“I should have made you come home with me that night,
instead of walking that....” His words drift off with a snort and an eye roll.
“That piece of work back to her cabin.” He sighs, chuckling to himself. “But I
didn’t. And then, to top it all off, I threatened you with a video. Knowing
that would terrorize you. Not one of my finer moments, Abbi. But...” He
hesitates. “I didn’t like how you made me feel.”

“Do you have a video of me? Of
us
?”

He pauses to peer at the bottom of his glass. “I would never
do that to you.”

“You did it to your last assistant,” I remind him.

“No, I didn’t.”

“You didn’t videotape the two of you together?” Was that a
lie, too?

“No. To be fair, I
asked
if she’d be willing but....”
When he looks up to see my mouth hanging open, he chuckles softly. “There’s
this table in the foyer of my penthouse. One night, Kiera decided to surprise
me by stripping down and lying on it. She figured I’d enjoy stepping out of my
elevator to that sight. She didn’t realize that there’s a security camera
there, with a perfect angle.”

“So you got a video of everythi—”

“Right down to the happy look on her face as I fucked her.”

I cringe with mortification, putting myself in that
unwitting position. “But you knew the camera was there.”

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