Page 10 of Without a Trace

Page List

Font Size:

“Still drinking?” he asked, voice quiet.

“Still watching?”

His mouth twitched, almost a smile.

I tilted my head, bold in a way I knew I’d regret. “What — no‘Careful, Sunshine’this time?” My voice came out sharper than I meant.

He shook his head once, slow. “You’ve always enjoyed playing with fire, Sunshine. Figured you didn’t need a warning.”

I leaned forward, elbows on my knees, eyes locked on his. “Maybe I like getting burned.”

Silence stretched between us—hot and thick. Full of everything we weren’t saying.

“Why’d you come back?” I asked.

His jaw flexed. “You know why.”

“No—I really fucking don’t.”

“I never stopped thinking about you.”

The words hit harder than they should have. Too plain. Too honest. Like he didn’t know how to make them pretty, so he just let them bleed.

I looked back at the fire, fingers curling into the sand beside me.

“I hate you,” I whispered.

He stood up, walked around the fire, and stopped just behind me. I didn’t look up. I couldn’t.

He crouched beside me slowly, his thigh brushing mine. His voice was low, hot against my neck. “No, you don’t.”

I could feel the weight of him without him touching me, and it made me dizzy.

“You want me to leave?” he asked.

I should’ve said yes.

Instead, I looked at him—really looked. His eyes were darker than the night around us, his hair tousled like he’d been fighting himself for hours. He smelled like beer and fire and something that had haunted me for years.

“No.”

He leaned in, just barely. Close enough that his breath hit my cheek. “Say it again.”

“I don’t want you to leave.”

His eyes dropped to my lips. But I caught his shift, the kind you make when something burns, and you can’t show it.

Tension building as we sat there, on the edge of something stupid, something selfish. Something we’d both crawl out of bleeding.

And from the shadows of the porch, Alden’s silhouette was still there.

Still watching.

Scarlett

It hit me all at once.

The heat. The liquor. The weight of everything I hadn’t said.