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Burying the Past Page 5


  “You’re one to talk,” she said, rolling her eyes.

  “Yeah, I guess. Still, something to think about.”

  “I need to go to the office for a bit,” she said as they neared their apartment. “I want to follow up on some of the warrants, make sure all the paperwork’s filed and that we’ve got feelers out everywhere we need to.”

  “Don’t trust your people?” Taylor said with a smirk.

  “Don’t be a dick.”

  “I’ll hop out at the curb and bring our bags inside.”

  He put the car in park in front of their building, and both he and Taylor hopped out. She dropped her bag on the curb while he pulled his out of the back seat. As she pulled the driver's side door open, Taylor grabbed her by the hips and spun her around, pinning her to the SUV.

  “Sorry for being a dick,” he said, pushing his body into hers.

  “No, you’re not.”

  “In general no, but this time I am. You know I appreciate you.”

  “Yeah, yeah,” she said, but her hands snaked around his waist, belying her annoyed attitude.

  Taylor leaned in and kissed her hard. She returned the gesture, hands tightening on his side.

  Taylor pulled back and looked into her deep brown eyes, “Drive safe. Hurry home.”

  She leaned in and gave him one more peck then planted her hands on his chest and pushed him back, giving him a grin as she slid into the driver's seat and pulled away from the curb. Taylor picked up the bags and headed up to the apartment.

  Taylor found a smallish, mousy looking woman with brown hair sitting on the couch when he went through the front door. Dropping his bags, he stepped towards her, reaching out his hand.

  “You must be Lily. I’m John.”

  “Great, you’re finally home. Now I can get the hell out of here,” she said, ignoring his hand and grabbing her purse from the couch.

  “Is something wrong?” Taylor asked.

  It would be easy to assume she was just being rude, but the exasperated sound in her voice told him there was probably more to it.

  “I’ll just say this has been the longest day of my life. That girl is just, well, she’s not a very nice person.”

  Taylor sighed, and pinched the bridge of his nose. “I’m sorry about that. Kara has … I know she can be a trial sometimes.”

  “A trial? She’s basically only cursed at me since I got here. That is, when she spoke English. Most of the time she just stared at me, speaking in Russian. I’m positive she wasn’t being kind, and she found it pretty funny. She was rude, cruel, and all around a bitch.”

  “I’m sorry again. Loretta and I really appreciate your helping out. I promise Kara isn’t a bad person, she just has a lot of anger issues. I’ll let you get out of here, and I’ll tell Loretta to call you.”

  “I’d say I was happy to do it, but after today that’d be a lie. Lola told me some of the stuff Kara’s been through, so I understand why she’s difficult, but it’s hard spending a whole day on the end of that difficulty.”

  “Well, thanks again for helping out,” Taylor said walking her to the door.

  The woman gave one last glance to the back of the apartment and fled out the door. Taylor shut it behind her and leaned his forehead on the smooth white finish, banging against it twice in frustration.

  “She was an idiot,” Kara said behind him.

  “No, she wasn’t. You just felt like messing with her and showing her you were boss. The woman came to do us a favor, and you took a dump all over her.”

  “She wanted to ‘get to know me’ and ‘be friends,’ bah, what do I want with tiny weak girl as friend.”

  “Yeah, that sounds awful. What a horrible person she is, trying to be nice to you.”

  “I don’t need fake nice. She felt sorry for me, I could see in her eyes.”

  “So, what? You’re just going to attack everyone who tries to be nice to you? Sounds pretty damn lonely.”

  “Whatever,” she said with an eye roll and turned to go back to her room.

  “No, not whatever, Goddammit,” Taylor boomed, stopping her in her tracks. “You can’t keep running, and you can’t keep attacking everyone in sight. I know you can never put it behind you completely, but you have to find a way to stop your past ruling your life or you’re going to end up miserable and alone. Is that what you want?”

  “No, but I don’t need sympathy.”

  “I get it. You don’t want people to feel sorry for you, because maybe it means you’re weak. It doesn’t make you weak, and it doesn’t make you less than you are. It’s also not what the person you’re mad at is trying to say. I guarantee you most of the time, it’s someone who hasn’t experienced what you have, and usually can’t even really understand what you experienced, trying to reach out to you. You don’t have to be afraid of the hand they're offering.”

  “I’m afraid of nothing,” she said, moving towards Taylor angrily.

  “Bullshit. You’re terrified.”

  “You don’t know shit.”

  “I know what it’s like, escaping Hell and scared every day you’re going to end up back there. Looking at everyone else around you, thinking ‘these people don’t have a clue’ as they drink their coffee, confident that nothing bad will happen to them today. I know what it’s like waking up in the middle of the night, drenched in sweat. I know most people wake up from a nightmare and say ‘it’s all a dream’ and we wake up knowing it's real and it could happen again. I know the anger. I know the feeling of just giving up. I know the thoughts, when no one’s around, that maybe you actually deserved it. Most of all, I know the fear.”

  She broke eye contact with him, looking at the ground. Taylor moved closer to her, lifting her chin with a finger and wiping away the tracks left by her tears. Kara threw her arms around him, buried her face in his chest, and sobbed. He held her, one hand on the back of her head, slowly stroking her hair as her body clenched with each gulp of air as she cried.

  While he whispered softly to her, in the back of his mind, he realized this was the first time she’d really cried in front of him. She’d shed a tear or two, and he knew she’d cried some in the doctor's office, but as far as he was aware, she hadn’t really broken down, until now.

  Eventually, she stopped, wiping a shirt sleeve across her nose.

  “I’m sorry,” she said with a sniffle. “I shouldn’t ”

  He switched to Russian, wanting to get his point across without the language barrier getting in the way.

  “Hey, it’s ok to cry. I definitely did when I got home. I spent hours sitting in a small motel, crying like a baby. It doesn’t make you weak. It makes you human.”

  “You never really talk about, your thing.”

  “Do you like talking about yours?”

  She shook her head no, her red hair falling in front of her face as she looked down at her shoes. Taylor led her to the couch and eased her down, grabbing a box of tissues.

  “How do you get past this?”

  “You don’t. It never goes away. You just find a way to deal with it.”

  “How did you do that?”

  Taylor stopped and thought about it. He knew he had dealt with it, mostly. He still had the nightmares, but they only came once or so a month now, instead of every night. That alone was a good sign that he’d put some of it behind him.

  “I guess part of it is what I’m doing. I found a way to get some control back. Finding people has let me use some of that pain into something useful.”

  “How do I do that?”

  “Honestly, I don’t know. You could ask your doctor, but I think she might not even be able to tell you specifically what you have to do. Everyone is different, and the damage is different for everyone, so I’m betting what helps you get over it is different from everyone else.”

  “That isn’t helpful,” she said with a small chuckle.

  “I know it’s changed me, though. A lot of the things Loretta hates about me, how confrontational I am, the pig-hea
dedness, they weren’t things people would have said about me before my time in the desert. I don’t know if the changes were caused by what happened or by the anger, but it definitely happened.”

  “Do you think my personality is changing?”

  “I don’t know. For one, it was a lot longer for you than me. Also, I didn’t know you before, so I can’t say how you’ve changed.”

  “I don’t think I’ve changed.”

  “It’s possible. I know it’s hard to tell yourself. The only reason I realize I changed is Loretta calls me on my bullshit so much.”

  “She’s pretty good at that.”

  They were quiet, just sitting together. Taylor left her to her thoughts, knowing he didn’t want people pestering him when he was working through stuff.

  “I do want to get better, you know?” she said in a soft voice.

  “I know. You just have to work through it. Hey,” he said, wiping one of the tears off her cheek, “You know that we really care about you, right?”

  “I guess.”

  “Do you think we’d go through this whole adoption thing otherwise? I know we had a deal, but we could’ve found a way through this without bringing you into our lives. We’re doing it because you’ve become important to us. Not just me, Loretta too. Although you two are a little too much alike for her to say it to you easily.”

  She wrapped her arms around Taylor’s back and leaned her head onto his chest, squeezing tight. He put his arms around her, returning the embrace. They sat there like that for a full five minutes, with him just holding her. She wasn’t crying anymore, and for a moment he thought she’d fallen asleep, until her voice floated up to him, in English this time.

  “I care about you guys too.”

  “You aren’t alone anymore kiddo. You have a family now.”

  “Or I will tomorrow.”

  “Tomorrow is just for the paperwork. I don’t need a judge to sign off on who my family is.”

  She snuggled deeper into Taylor’s chest, her feet curled underneath her, and actually fell asleep. Taylor felt her muscles relax and her breathing become regular. Taylor leaned his head back, thoughts of everything that'd happened since he got back home bouncing around in his head until he followed Kara into sleep.

  Whitaker found them like that several hours later when she got home. She stood in front of the couch staring down at the man she loved and, to her surprise, the girl she was starting to love. Whitaker had never thought of herself as having much of a maternal instinct, and when John had first told her about this prostitute he was bringing home with him, she’d been pissed.

  With a shake of her head, Whitaker chastised herself. Even in her own head, she needed to stop thinking of Kara like that, even in the past tense. This girl, child really, hadn’t ever been a prostitute. She’d been a victim. Whitaker knew that, and was mad at herself for even thinking about Kara otherwise.

  Looking at the girl as she slept, Loretta smiled. When she was awake, Kara had this aura about her that pushed everyone away and her face twisted in a permanent scowl. When she slept, though, you could see the girl that Kara might have been before those bastards got their hands on her. She wouldn’t ever admit it to Taylor, but he’d been right. She’d found herself starting to care for Kara over the last few months. He was also right when he said the main reason she and the teen butted heads so much was that they were more alike than they were different.

  Sure, their life experiences had been different, but they both had a need to prove themselves. Whitaker to her coworkers that she was equal to any of the men she competed with, Kara that she wasn’t defined by what had happened to her. Their similarities were deeper than that, too.

  Whitaker had never really thought of having kids before, always being career first. Now that Kara was in their lives, though, Loretta found something she’d locked away deep in herself had resurfaced. Half the time, when she wasn’t pissed at Kara, she found herself wanting to hug the girl.

  She couldn’t put her finger on it, but in just a few months Whitaker had found herself going from annoyance at Taylor upending their life to finding it hard to fathom not having Kara with them. She smiled again, looking at their soon to be daughter when a small noise pulled her attention.

  Looking up from Kara, she found herself staring into Taylor’s eyes.

  “Hey,” he said in a whisper.

  “Hey.”

  “Get everything taken care of?”

  “Yea. Let's get her to bed, and I’ll tell you all about it.”

  “Sure,” Taylor said, stretching, his back tight from sleeping in the sitting position.

  “Kara, prosnut'sya printsessa,” Taylor said quietly, shaking the girl.

  She opened her eyes, stiffening slightly as her eyes darted around before she relaxed, remember where she was.

  “It’s late. You’ll probably sleep better in your own bed.”

  Kara rubbed her right eye with the palm of her hand and stretched her legs out.

  “Ok,” she said and pushed herself off the couch.

  Halfway out of the room she stopped and turned back, putting her arms around Whitaker in a brief hug before quickly disappearing out of the room.

  “What was that about,” Whitaker said, her eyes wide as Kara disappeared down the hall.

  “I told you she liked you.”

  “I believed you, but Kara isn’t usually big on physical contact.”

  They’d both made a point of not initiating hugs or anything else with the girl, who was jumpy when people tried to touch her.

  “She wants it though, just on her terms. We had a long talk after your friend left. Like I said yesterday, we just need to give her time.”

  Taylor followed Kara’s example and stretched out fully as he stood up.

  “So what happened at the office?”

  “We confirmed that the guy in L.A. had his card stolen. It looks like whoever stole it resold it a couple of times. There was a charge at Best Buy in Chicago shortly after we landed. Local’s picked up a nineteen-year-old delinquent buying a bunch of electronics. He admitted to the detective there that he bought the card off the internet for fifty bucks.”

  Taylor headed towards the bedroom and through to the master bathroom, peeling off his shirt and throwing it into the dirty clothes hamper as Whitaker followed behind him, explaining.

  “Can we track back to the person who sold it to him?”

  “We have some of our computer people looking into that, but they said not to get our hopes up. Something about the Dark net and Tor browsers, and honestly, I stopped listening at some point as they explained why we weren’t going to find the seller. Basically, the kid bought it from an untraceable source. We might get lucky, and the seller made a mistake and gave away his identity, but they said it was a crap shoot.”

  “And the ID?”

  “Fake. Again, looks to have been bought off the internet. We found Takir Malek. He’s a student at George Town. His alibi’s solid. We sent a picture of him to agents in Tuscon, and the desk clerk said he wasn’t the guy who rented the car or the picture on the ID. If I had to guess, it’s another dead end. Crawford’s starting to get anxious.”

  “I know it sucks, but we just have to be patient until they make a mistake.”

  “I thought you said Qasim was an evil mastermind. Doesn’t sound like the kind of guy who’d make big mistakes.”

  “He isn’t, but these aren’t his people. I’m pretty certain he’s drafting off of someone else's organization for personnel.”

  “Why are you so certain?”

  Whitaker started following Taylors actions, changing out of the clothes she’d worn to Tuscon and, in her case, cleaning off the makeup she’d worn all day.

  “Because if it were his men, he wouldn’t have ever stumbled across Lawson. I read the interviews your guys did with Lawson’s coworkers. He’d set up for a few hours every night in that same area for weeks, ever since some kids died of exposure. It was some kind of personal crusade or som
ething. If people 'Qasim trained' had been on our side of the border to pick him up, they would have spent weeks, if not months, changing the crossing point. They would have known about Lawson and waited to signal Qasim until after Lawson left or moved the pickup point.”

  “If his men are so well trained, how’d you get away?”

  “He’d brought in some guys from other cells in preparation for an operation. He’d left with his top guys to coordinate with another group, leaving me for a few hours with some of these borrowed guys. I wouldn’t have ever made it out if he hadn’t left me with the Stooges.”