Page 82
Chapter 82 of "Public Enemy, Undercover Lover" unveils a new twist: âEverythingâs complicated. For everyone. All the time. Who cares? I mean, Andrew went along with... See what happens!
âEverythingâs complicated. For everyone. All the time. Who cares? I mean, Andrew went along with that ridiculous liewithout losing a step. Foryou. Would it be so insane to ask him out?â
Isaac gazed at his son. âHeâs your friend, and a good man, but Iâve never understood. Why do you want us together so badly?â
âBecause you like each other,â Dalton shrugged, âbut youâre letting stupid things keep you apart. Just like you and Mom.â
A swell of anguish bubbled up from the pit of Isaacâs stomach. âDaltonâŚâ
âShe told me she left not because she didnât like you, but because she was afraid you couldnât make it work when your lives were heading different directions. She said she had no regrets, but that she wished sheâd at least given you the chance to decide if you could become something more, like youâre doing now. I couldnât stand the thought of watching the same thing happen again, not when I know what youâre really afraid of.â
âAnd what is that?â
Daltonâs smile was soft and sweet as he said, âThat youâll fail. That youâll let me down. I think youâre afraid youâll let Andrew down too, now that you really know each other and are starting to realize that maybe something could work between you two.
âI donât care if you screw up sometimes, Dad. Nobody can be perfect and good all the time. Not me. Not you. Not Andrew. I just want you to think better of yourself, to be as good at that as you are at everything else. If that includes being with Andrew, well⌠I canât imagine anyone Iâd rather have watching out for you than a good friend. You deserve that.â
Once again, Isaac didnât know what to say, so he grabbed Daltonâs shoulder and pulled him against him tight. He was always going to worry about Daltonâand worry that someday heâd disappoint him. Maybe that was all that was keeping him from asking more from Andrew too.
âI love you, Dad.â
âI love you, too.â
ANDREW
CandacehadbeenhoundingAndrew all morningâand most of yesterdayâthat he needed to ditch Ford on the Avalon case and mend bridges immediately to keep the contract, but he knew what she didnât: if all went well catching the thief and it really was someone from Fordâs firm, Andrewâs relationship with Vallancourt would be solid.
And Ford would likely lose all his clients.
Winning that way was not how Andrew wanted this to go. A couple weeks earlier, he would have been celebrating. Now, he just felt nauseous.
His phone going off in his pocket interrupted his pace on his way to the newsstand. If the thief was following Fordâs old code, then the classifieds ad would be under Merchandise.
Fumbling to answer the call as he reached the corner, Andrew saw that Candace had grown tired of him evading her texts. âIâm just getting a paper. Iâm on my way to the office now,â he said by way of greeting.
âI should hope so,â she answered. âNow is the time to act. The thief getting away again doesnât make us look very good. You need to throw Ford under the bus before itâs made public, before he can throw you under the bus first.â
âHeâs not going to do that. Weâre working through things with Vallancourt.â
âAndrew, please donât set yourself up to eat those words later. Dalton and a nice family dinner do not mean Fordâs changed. Do you remember how hard he was to catch as a criminal? Literally everything heâs doing around you, everything thatâs been going on, could be part of a ploy and you just canât see it.â
Andrew tucked himself in the corner where the edge of the newsstand met the building it stood in front of. For one ugly moment he wondered if she could be right and that everything had been a ruse, even down to the man Andrew punched in that underground club, and Ford simply had accomplices.
Then he felt ridiculous for even entertaining the idea.
âNot this time. Forget Avalon for right now. We have other clients. Letâs focus on them. Itâs going to be okay, Candace. My judgment isnât always as bad as it was with Liv.â
Candace sighed, but signed off with wary, âI hope youâre right.â
âThat wasnât very nice.â
Andrewâs attention darted up, and he nearly dropped his phone.
Olivia.Smiling again, just there, always there, without any shred of remorse.
If they werenât in public, Andrew honestly might have punched her like that man the other night, but sheâd only make a story out of that too.
âHear me outââ
He pushed from the wall of the building with such force and angry intent, she cut off, maybe thought hewouldhit her, but he steeled himself and said, âFord was right about you. You donât even know what honest work looks like anymore. To think, someone I was with for almost two years has less integrity than an ex-criminal I used to hate.