until he got tired of feeling Kelly’s eyes on him so he’d look
at him. Nick’s jaw jumped and he swallowed heavily, but he
never turned, never met Kelly’s eyes.
“What’s this going to do to you, babe?” Kelly finally asked
him. “What does it mean, owing Paddy a favor?”
Nick licked his lips, a nervous habit he’d nearly broken
himself of over the years but which had returned full force
when he’d come home the last time. “It’ll be fine.”
“O’Flaherty,” Julian said softly. “I understand what you’re
doing. I can assure you, the next time you call I will answer.
No matter the reason.”
Nick glanced over his shoulder, but never actually at
Julian. He returned his eyes to the elevator doors. “I do hope
you mean that.”
The elevator opened up before they could say more.
Nick’s face could have been cut from marble when Kelly
finally saw it.
158
Kelly had always wondered about those tales Nick had
told of barely escaping the grasp of the mob, if Nick had
simply been a young man exaggerating about a rough past
because it gave him that added air of authority among the
other Marines, or if he’d been serious.
The look in his eyes now, of stark fear and resignation
barely covered by steely determination, told Kelly he hadn’t
been exaggerating all those years ago.
Nick would go to the ends of the earth, carve out little
pieces of his soul, to keep a promise. Kelly could see him
carving away right now, preparing another piece to throw into
the fire.