“Do you know how many times I thank God I’m not you?” Gabriel asked.
“Because I’m a jackass?” Raul managed a crooked smile.
“Well, there’s that, of course.” Gabriel gave him a brief answering smile. Then he grew serious. “You’ve never had a choice about your responsibilities. Even that night in Barcelona you made the hard decision to let me go in your place.” Gabriel shook his head. “I couldn’t have done that.”
“Your decision was just as hard.”
“No, mine was obvious.” It had only become hard once he’d been lying on the floor of the van, his wrists and ankles bound together with zip ties, his head covered in a cloth bag that had smelled of sweat and his own fear. The abductors had been silent, even when he’d tried to provoke them, so he’d had too much time to imagine what his fate would be.
Raul’s voice jerked him out of the dark memory. “I’ve missed you, primo. You’re the brother of my heart.”
“As you are mine. Always.” Which made their relationship complicated. Sibling dynamics always were.
“Gabri, we can do better. We will do better.” He held out his hand in supplication, and Gabriel took it. For a long moment, they stood still. The warmth of Raul’s palm seemed to radiate into Gabriel’s chest, loosening a tightness there.
Raul released his grip with a sudden smile. “Besides, I need someone to tell me I’m a jerk. The older I get, the fewer people are willing to do that.”
“Now there’s a job I’m happy to volunteer for.” Gabriel slung his arm around Raul’s shoulders. “Let’s ride down to that crap bar in Jaca and get drunk before we go back to the palace. Since we’re on horseback, we can’t get arrested for drinking and driving.”
Raul laughed. “Genial. That will piss my father off even more.”
Chapter 9
“Uncle Pete?” Quinn stopped dead on the sidewalk and stared at the man lounging on the steps leading up to her townhouse. If the acrid smoke from his cigar hadn’t made her want to sneeze, she would have thought he was a mirage. “How did you get…? What are you doing…? Is my father with you?” She glanced around as anger and disbelief roiled in her stomach.
“Quinnie, I can’t believe you’d think such a thing. Brendan’s a man of his word. He said he wouldn’t come here, and he hasn’t.” His voice lilted with that disarming Irish accent.
Within her father’s self-defined parameters, she supposed he was a man of his word. “Did he send you?”
Pete Gleeson pushed up from the steps to his substantial height and laid a meaty hand over his heart. “I’ve come entirely on me own to see how my favorite niece is faring out in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean.”
She wasn’t his niece, and she wasn’t sure he was really Irish, but he’d been one of the few kind and semi-stable presences in her childhood, taking care of her when her father had had to “go away for a while”—Brendan’s euphemism for serving a prison sentence. She loved Pete and tried to overlook his utter lack of moral principles.
“Aren’t you going to give your uncle a welcome hug?” He held out his arms, and she noticed that he’d gained some weight around his middle.
She crossed the distance between them and was enveloped in his still-powerful grasp, the smell of the cigar permeating his tweed jacket and even his gray-and-red beard. “How on earth did you get here?” she asked into his chest.
He held her away from him and smiled. “On an airplane. How else?”
“You know what I mean. It’s not exactly on the way to anywhere.”
“I used my frequent-flier miles.” He winked, and she wondered how he’d scammed them out of someone.
She shrugged mentally before she turned to walk up the steps to her front door and laid her palm against the security panel.
“Very fancy,” her uncle said from right behind her.
“My boss is a security expert.” She pushed open the bright blue door and stepped into her foyer, plunking her bag on the carved wooden side table.
“You’ve done very well for yourself,” Pete said, taking in the spacious entryway with its rough stucco walls and azure blue tiled floor. “I’m proud of you, darlin’.”
“Do you still prefer rye to Irish?” Quinn led him to the kitchen at the back of the house.
“Aye, that I do.” He whistled as he surveyed the colorful garden outside the French doors. “You didn’t plant this.”
“No, and I don’t maintain it either. I have a gardener.” She loved saying that. Taking down a rocks glass, she poured a generous serving of rye whiskey and handed it to her uncle.
He glanced at the bottle’s label and nodded his approval before he took a swallow. “Ahh, I was a wee bit parched, truth be told.”