When You're Back(48)

I didn’t respond to that. Instead, I used my most professional tone. “What can I help you with?”

Captain cocked an eyebrow as he sat in the leather chair across from me. Not where I wanted him to sit. I wanted him to tell me what he needed and leave. Fast.

“Do you get to leave for lunch today?” he asked, leaning back and crossing his right ankle over his left knee like he was getting comfortable.

“No,” was my clipped response.

He looked amused. “I thought we called a truce. We were going to be friends. You aren’t acting very friendly.”

I had never said I was going to be his friend. “I agreed to work with you. I didn’t say I’d go out to eat with you.”

“You liked the picnic yesterday,” he reminded me.

“I liked Henry,” I corrected him.

He nodded as if he already knew that. “I knew you would. He’s a great kid.”

I also got why he had brought Henry to meet me. It had been a nice thing to do. I appreciated it, but I still felt wrong about having anything other than a working relationship with him. Something about the way he looked at me made me feel he wanted more. I didn’t care what he said.

“Why don’t you drive?” he asked, pulling me out of my thoughts.

“Because I haven’t been able to read and write until recently. Couldn’t take the driver’s test.”

He reached into his back pocket, pulled out two thin books, and leaned over to place them on the table. One was a driver’s handbook for the state of Texas. The other was a permit handbook. “You can read now. Read these.”

I reached for them. I had meant to get these. The idea scared me, but now that they were here on my desk, it wasn’t that terrifying. Captain had gotten them for me before I had even told him why I didn’t drive. Why did he have to do such nice things for me?

“I don’t expect a thank you. Just read them. You can pass the test, Reese. I know you can.”

He didn’t expect a thank you. I stared down at the books in front of me. I wasn’t sure what to say. He was going out of his way to help me. He didn’t need to be thinking about me. He didn’t need to help me. But he was, and I wasn’t sure how to stop that.

“Thank you,” I said, because he did deserve that. “I’ve been meaning to pick these up.”

He nodded. “Good. I’m glad you’re ready to take another step in that direction.”

I’d started to say something when the door opened, and I looked up to see Mase’s face. My heart leaped at the sight of him, but as his gaze swung to Captain, I went from giddy to sick to my stomach.

“What the fuck are you doing here?” he asked as he stepped into the room, filling it up with his presence.

Captain dropped his propped-up foot to the floor and stood up. He was at eye level with Mase. “Came to drop something off for Reese,” Captain said, as if he wasn’t bothered at all.

“Doesn’t look like that,” Mase snarled. He swung his gaze to me. “He bothering you?”

This was a trick question. If I said no, then Mase would think something that wasn’t true. But as I glanced down at the handbooks on my desk, I knew I couldn’t very well throw Captain under the bus.

“Mase, it’s OK. He was dropping off some handbooks he thought I might need. Nothing more,” I explained.

I shot Captain a quick glance, and he looked surprised that I hadn’t said he was bothering me. Mase was frowning—at me or my response, I wasn’t sure.

“Does he visit you often to bring you things he thinks you need?” Mase asked, his voice holding a warning. He wasn’t happy, and this was not the way I wanted to explain my relationship with Captain to him.

“I just bring her lunch a couple of times a week,” Captain said.

The fire that lit in Mase’s eyes didn’t bode well. Why had he said that? “You do what?” he asked slowly as he turned his glare to Captain.

“I have to bring her paperwork to file, and I sometimes bring her food, too. Better than those damn turkey sandwiches she eats.”

Mase stood so still I was afraid of what he would do next. “I think it’s time you leave,” he said in a hard, clipped tone.