SEAL'd Perfection Book 5 Read online




  SEAL’d Perfection

  Book 5

  By

  KB Winters

  Copyright © 2015 BookBoyfriends Publishing LLC

  Published By: BookBoyfriends Publishing LLC

  Copyright and Disclaimer

  This book is a work of fiction. The names, characters, places and incidents are products of the writer’s imagination and have been used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to persons, living or dead, actual events, locales or organizations is entirely coincidental.

  Copyright © 2015 BookBoyfriends Publishing LLC

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without the prior written permission of the copyright owner. The author acknowledges the trademarked status and trademark owners of various products referenced in this work of fiction, which have been used without permission. The publication/use of the trademarks is not authorized, associated with, or sponsored by the trademark owners.

  Contents

  SEAL'd Perfection Book 5

  Copyright and Disclaimer

  Chapter One — Jace

  Chapter Two — Kat

  Chapter Three — Kat

  Chapter Four — Kat

  Chapter Five — Jace

  Chapter Six — Kat

  Chapter Seven — Jace

  Chapter Eight — Kat

  Chapter Nine — Jace

  Chapter Ten — Kat

  Free Book!

  Acknowledgements

  About The Author

  Chapter One — Jace

  Frost coated the outside of the windows, but through the small patches where my breath had melted it away, I could see across the street, over to the diner where I knew Kat would be arriving soon, to brew the morning coffee, drop place settings at each table, make sure the little wicker baskets had the proper assortment of packaged jams and jellies, and then, after a final sweep, she’d click on the neon Open sign and wait for the crew of regulars to descend. It was the same routine every day. I’d memorized it over the past few weeks. It was a steady constant that had somehow blended into my morning routine too.

  Truth was, there wasn’t a lot left to do now that my reality show had come to an end and my business had shut down for good. It was surprising how quickly things had calmed down, leaving me with long, endless days that I struggled to fill. In the mornings I made myself a cup of instant joe, watched from my vantage point at the diner, watching for glimpses of Kat as she buzzed through opening procedures. After that, I’d go upstairs to the small apartment above the abandoned tattoo shop and spend my days alternating between sleeping and watching reruns of 90s sitcoms on various TV channels, counting down the hours until I could take my next batch of meds and go back to sleep. Eventually, I’d drift off in my reclining chair and transition to my bed when the pain in my hand woke me from a dead sleep somewhere around one in the morning.

  I looked down at the useless, mangled appendage and cursed under my breath. God, it was ugly.

  Some days I think I’d have been better off if they’d just removed the whole damn thing. Staring at the scarred, twisted flesh was only a greater reminder of how it was supposed to look…and how far it was from normal, despite the half a dozen surgeries to repair it.

  I didn’t remember much about the day that it had happened, but I’d heard enough accounts from my fellow SEALs that I had a pretty good grip on what had occurred. I’d gone after a sniper who had already killed one of my men, and stood between the rest of my team and a safe exit from our mission. I’d taken out the shooter, but in the process, found myself on the trigger of an explosive that had damn near killed me. I’d woken up in the medical wing of a palace that the Army had taken over and transformed into a base. I’d suffered a head injury, but thanks to my helmet, it wasn’t serious, but I still cringed to think of the splitting headaches I’d endured over the months that followed. But really, they were the cherry on top of the pile of shit I had to go through to recover. I’d landed wrong on my back, and had damage to some of my disks. My leg had been broken in two places. I’d lost most of two fingers on my right hand, and what was left had been so full of shrapnel that the surgeons had been forced to remove large chunks, leaving deep scars that I was told would never fade. Thanks to all the scar tissue, it was impossible for me to grip anything with that hand, even after months of rehab and physical therapy.

  When my back and leg injuries had healed, I’d been shipped stateside, where I’d had one final procedure on my hand, and then discharged, cleared to go home and pick up the pieces of my life. The Navy had discharged me after presenting me with a Purple Heart and a couple of other medals celebrating my so-called valor. I’d smiled and said thank you at the ceremony, saluted my commanders, and walked off the stage, barely getting to the restroom before breaking down in body wracking sobs.

  My whole life was fucked and they’d taken the one last thing I had to cling to, my military career.

  Everything was gone.

  I looked back at the diner, my eye catching on a swirl of chestnut hair that I’d dreamed of so many times.

  Kat.

  My Kat.

  Or, at least, she had been. For a brief, shining moment, I’d had her. We’d exchanged dozens of emails, and had started talking about building a life together when I got home again. She had finally learned to trust me, and even though she hadn’t said it, I knew she felt the same way as I did. I loved her.

  Still did.

  I turned away from the window, my heart unable to take anymore. I ached for her and it was a deep, hollow longing like nothing I’d ever felt before. When I’d been gone, I’d figured it was just from missing her and that the ache would fade away once we were together again. I’d never anticipated that I could be thirty feet away from her and miss her even more than I had on my worst day in another country.

  But it wasn’t that simple. I couldn’t just walk across the street and have things snap back to the way they had been. That Jace had died in Afghanistan. He was buried somewhere at the base of the jagged mountain range that filled my drug induced nightmares. He wasn’t coming back, and that was the version that Kat wanted, that she fell in love with.

  The version that she deserved.

  Kat had been through more than anyone should have to. She needed someone who could take care of her and her son, who would provide a good life for them. Someone who wasn’t bitter and jaded, mad at the world, and lived just to get through to his next pain pill fix.

  I shook my head to myself. No, I refused to burden her with more hardship than she’d already had to endure. It wouldn’t be fair.

  So, I stayed on my side of the street, watching her from afar. Besides the day she’d come into the shop and found me rummaging in the backroom, we had only seen each other three times in the past few weeks. Once at the grocery store, I’d been dressed in a dingy sweat suit, halfway dazed from the heavy pain killers. She spotted me, but I turned down an aisle, retreating before she could come talk to me. The other two times had been on the street in front of the shop, she’d either been going into, or leaving, the diner, and had called out to me, but I’d acted like I couldn’t hear, and kept on my way. On the outside, I probably looked like a heartless bastard, not caring that she was trying to get my attention, but inside, every step away from her voice was heavy, as though my shoes were filled with wet cement.

  It was for the best, her best.

  On that point, I was unwavering.

  I took my cup of coffee, unsteady in my left hand, to my desk and sat in my leather chair. I sipped the lukewarm beverage
as my computer fired up, and finished off the cup as I scanned through my email. The final contracts from the studio that had produced my show, had been sent over, and I read through them before printing off two copies. It turned out that no one wanted to watch a show about a former tattoo artist, with a fucked up hand, sitting alone in an empty tattoo parlor in the middle of fucking nowhere. So, after filming a final update, explaining what had happened to “give closure to my fans,” the studio had paid off the remainder of my contract, and sent the crew off packing to the next gig.

  Since the day of the explosion, I couldn’t remember a happy memory, but watching the asshat director, John walk out of my tattoo shop once and for all had been pretty damn close.

  As I was waiting on the printer to finish, a new message popped up. I pulled it open and my heart started racing. It was from my real estate agent. She’d forwarded some listings that were in my price range.

  In Chicago.

  I glanced to the right, out the front windows, wondering what Kat would say if she knew I was moving away. I knew it was a shit move, to up and leave in the middle of the night, with no warning, no explanation, but I knew it was the only way I’d be able to do it. The few times that I’d seen her since being back in town had damn near killed me, and if I were to have a heartfelt conversation with her…I’d come completely undone.

  I couldn’t do it.

  I turned my attention back to the listings, and replied back to my agent which ones I’d be interested in seeing. I had enough money in savings, and from the settlement with the show, to buy a house with cash, and still have plenty to live on for the next several years with my basic expenses. I had no idea what I was going to do, all I’d ever known had been the Navy and my tattoo business. With both of those options off my radar forever, it left me reeling with a lack of direction.

  My hand started throbbing, and I realized I’d forgotten to take my pills that morning with breakfast. I heaved up from the chair, my back stiff and aching despite the surgeries to repair the damaged disks.

  “You’re a fuckin’ disaster, dude,” I muttered to myself as I shuffled towards the stairs, feeling as spry as a ninety-year-old man.

  I made it up the stairs, my spine on fire, panting from the exertion, and hobbled into the kitchen to take my pills, resisting the urge to slip an extra one into the stack. I gulped them down with a swig of water, and went to my recliner chair, which was one of the few places I could relax. I lowered myself down, cursing under my breath at the shooting pain up my back, and the way my damaged hand slipped on the leather armrest, still not used to missing the tips of my fingers and my permanently locked up thumb that made me feel as though I had a claw instead of a hand.

  I eased back into a reclined position and stared up at the white ceiling, reaffirming my decision to leave Kat out of my life. It didn’t matter how much I missed her, I refused to turn the rest of her life into an endless chore of being my caretaker.

  I loved her too much.

  Chapter Two — Kat

  He probably thought I couldn’t see him, that he was somehow masked behind his windows, hidden from my view in the shadows of his always dark shop. But he was wrong. I saw him nearly every morning, coffee in hand, staring into the space between us. He was too far away for me to see his eyes, but I didn’t have to see them to know what they looked like. I’d seen him around town a handful of times since his silent return, and each time, he had the same lost, distant look. Half the time, I didn’t think he even saw me. And even on the times I’d called out his name, begging him to see me, to talk to me, to touch me, he didn’t hear me, continuing on his way as though I wasn’t there at all.

  When he’d been deployed, I’d thought the hardest thing was being separated by thousands of miles. But now, I’d come to realize that there was something that cut even deeper: being right next to each other, breathing the same air, and feeling even more alone.

  The pain was suffocating me slowly. As much as I was dying to talk to Jace, to see him and hold him, and kiss away all of the pain that was so evident on his face, I knew there was nothing I could do if he refused to let me in. It had gotten to the point that I was reconsidering my job at the diner. It was too hard to see his shop, to see him, every single day and not have him in my life.

  There might not have been a death or even a break-up, but the ache and loneliness in my heart didn’t seem to realize that.

  “Kat?” Patrice called for me across the diner. “Damn girl! You got everything done all by yourself?”

  I turned to find her surveying the dining room, mentally checking off the usual morning tasks. “I got here early,” I explained, offering a slight smile.

  “Nice. Guess I’ll have a cup of coffee before we get started. You want some?”

  I shook my head. “No thanks.”

  The last thing my system needed was caffeine coursing through it, it would only add to my anxiety. I looked out the window and Jace was gone. I sighed and went back to scrubbing the already immaculate tabletops.

  “Honey, everything all right?” Patrice asked.

  I nodded, battling the tears pricking at the corners of my eyes. I plastered a smile on my face as I looked up at her. “Yup. Everything’s great.”

  She scowled at me, her disbelief obvious, but continued sipping her steaming coffee and didn’t pick at me further. Something I was incredibly grateful for. I had somehow managed to keep it together at work and school, going through the motions as though nothing had changed, only letting myself break in the hours I spent tossing and turning in my bed, tangled up with Jace’s leather jacket that still faintly held his clean, masculine scent around the edges of the collar.

  Hilda was the only one who knew the truth, who could see how wrecked I was on the inside, but even she had stopped trying to help, finally giving up on getting me to talk about it.

  Time heals all wounds—that was the hope I clung to, anyway. With each passing day, I had to accept that I’d probably never get answers to all of my questions, the main one being what the hell had happened overseas, or wherever Jace had been, that had changed everything between us. What catastrophic event had managed to erase all of the plans and dreams we spent so much time building over email and video chats during his time away. I knew he had come home injured, his hand bore the scars of war, and whenever I’d seen him out, he walked stiff, like a ramrod had replaced his spine, but what else was wrong? What had made him pull away from me so completely?

  The morning rush started pouring in, and I got lost in the mindless busyness of the day, which was a sweet relief, my only break from the endless questions and worries that ran on a rampant repeat loop through my mind every other waking hour.

  * * * *

  At the end of my ten hour shift, my feet hurt, my head ached, and all I wanted to do was get home as fast as humanly possible so that I could snuggle up with Jax and have him tell me all about his day with Hilda. But some force tugged me in a different direction, and before I could even consciously give myself permission, I found myself back in the kitchen, packing up a bag full of leftovers from the dinner that had been served the night before. The diner owner, Harry, had got it in his head to start doing a special dinner during the week, and even though it hadn’t been terribly successful so far, he had stuck to it, filling our chalkboard with a new dish each night—pot roast, mashed potatoes with gravy and homestyle biscuits, fish and chips with cabbage slaw, chicken sautéed in mushrooms and garlic with a veggie medley.

  Really, the only benefit was that everyone on staff went home with a bag full of leftover meals each night.

  I rounded up two days worth of food, and set out across the street, my footsteps clipped as I neared, my mind racing with encouraging thoughts to keep my moving. It’s just dinner. He needs to eat. He won’t send you away. He might be ready to talk.

  I was surprised to find the front door of the shop was unlocked. I pushed inside the dark shop, noting that nothing looked like it had been used since the last time I�
��d been in, the night that I’d discovered that Jace was back home again. I glanced around and reassured myself that it was empty. I set the bag of groceries on Jace’s desk and took a look around, running my finger through the layer of dust that coated the counter in between the tall shelving units where I knew all his tattoo tools were stored away. I hadn’t seen the open sign—or the lights—on since he’d come home, and the dust confirmed my suspicion that he hadn’t done any work since his return.

  I went back to the bag of food and made my way up the stairway that led to his upstairs apartment. The landing was lit up with the glow from a single, exposed light bulb hanging above. His front door was closed. I took a deep breath, trying to slow my racing heart rate, before raising my hand and knocking a gently tap on the metal door. The knocks vibrated through the small space, and I held the breath I’d sucked in, my heart pounding all the more as I waited.

  Seconds—that felt like hours—later, the door slid to the side in its industrial style tracks, revealing Jace.

  “Kat? What are you doing here?” His voice was short and demanding, but his eyes were almost soft around the edges, or at the very least, less harsh and cold than they’d been the last time we’d spoken to each other.

  I held out the bag. “I brought you some food from the diner. We’re drowning in a sea of pot roast and gravy. I figured you could use a home cooked meal.”

  He stared at me blankly, and I had to bite my tongue to keep from asking what he was thinking. I so desperately wanted to be inside his head, to see what was wrong, and to find a way to fix whatever had been broken. After a long pause, he stepped aside and let me into the apartment. His movements were less ginger than they’d been before, and a little spark of hope ignited in my chest, wondering if things were in fact changing.

  I followed his lead into the kitchen, and set the large paper bag full of food on the counter near the fridge. Without a word, I started unpacking the bag, loading the food into his fridge to save him the effort. I’d made it less than halfway through the bag, when he snapped at me, “Stop! I can do it!” He grabbed my arm and pulled it away from the fridge, letting the door slam shut on its own.

 

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