Authors: Piper Vaughn
federal crime.”
Asher stiffened against me. “I can’t,” he
replied, voice muffled by my shirt. “How would I
prove it? He opened everything with my
information, and even if they were to check
security cameras at the stores where he shopped,
they would see a guy who looks exactly like me.”
He shook his head and groaned. “Besides, he’s my
brother. I can’t have him arrested. I don’t—I mean,
my mom would—”
“Shh. I’m sorry, love.” I petted his hair gently
and kept him pressed close. He made no attempt to
pull away as I rocked us a little. “Have you talked
to your parents about it yet?”
“No. I just… I’m freaking out. I can’t sleep. I
can barely eat. I don’t want to put any of that on
them.”
I drew back to look down into his face. His
eyes were wet and dark with emotion. I couldn’t
blame him. I would cry for a week if I’d found out
my sister had done something like that to me. Not
that I thought she ever would, but if she had…
God, would I be able to turn her in?
I wasn’t
sure. Even the hypothetical scenario made me want
to throw up. I couldn’t even imagine how Asher
felt.
“I can’t believe he did this,” I murmured.
“Maybe you should try to talk to your mom. You
can’t keep something this huge from her and your
dad. I mean, Ash… this is major.”
Asher’s expression crumpled. He buried his
face against my chest again and released a
shuddery breath. “I know.”
Oh, God.
Words couldn’t even express how
much the situation sucked. I wasn’t sure what a
credit card company could do if you didn’t get
them their money. Could they sue? Have him
arrested? Garnish wages? All of that was scary,
especially when I thought about the fact that
Asher’s work was entirely freelance and his
income varied from month to month. That was okay
when he had money saved for the slow periods,
but with his savings drained, he didn’t even have
that anymore. It was no wonder he’d been so
distant lately. He’d been handling the stress way
better than I could have.
“We’ll work something out,” I told him.
“We’ll come up with some kind of plan. I
promise.”
Of course, I had no idea what that plan would
be. I could help him, sure, and I’d be checking my
own bank account as soon as possible to see just
how much, but while I loved my job and it made
me happy, it wasn’t exactly lucrative. There was
only so much I could do, so much I could earn,
even if I worked every day without taking any time
off. But we would figure it out. We had to.
And, yeah, I noticed the “we” in my thoughts.
At no point did it cross my mind that this was just
Asher’s
problem. It wasn’t. I lived with him,
wanted to build a life with him, and whether that
included marriage or domestic partnership or
nothing but our own commitment to each other, I
was in it for the long haul, sick or healthy, better or
worse. Lack of vows wouldn’t change that.
“Come on, hon,” I said, urging him to his feet.
“Go lie down in the bedroom. I’ll make you some
tea and bring it right in.”
Asher grabbed me before I could step away.
“No tea. Just come with me. I need to hold you.”
I nodded and trailed a hand down his arm to
lace our fingers together. “Whatever you need. I
love you, Ash.”
We made our way to the bedroom, leaving the
mess in the kitchen and dining room behind, which
was something I almost never did, but it wasn’t
exactly a typical night for us. My thoughts were
focused entirely on him, soothing him, trying to
take some of the burden off his shoulders and put it
onto myself. I could feel the tension in his body,
the way he was practically vibrating from stress.
Twenty grand was a lot of goddamn money, not to
mention the interest, finance charges, and whatever
the heck else the credit card company was tacking
onto that total every minute.
There had to be something we could do—
maybe see if some of the purchases Archer had
made could be returned to the stores, maybe look
into getting a loan with a better interest rate and
lower monthly payments,
something
. Whatever it
was, I would help Asher think of it. I’d even ask
Rue if he had any ideas. Later. Right then, my only
concern was giving Asher whatever comfort he
needed.
I led him to bed and stripped him down,
kissed him and touched him the way he’d done to
me when I’d been hurt after the rollerblading
accident, took him into my mouth and sucked him
until he cried out his release. And then I held him,
our limbs entangled, his head on my chest, until he
fell into a restless sleep.
Asher
FOUR grand. That was it. And the worst part was I
didn’t even
have
it yet. That was just what was
owed to me from all the extra work I’d been
putting in. I’d managed to squeeze in all the single
photo shoots of everyone who’d been hounding me
for one, do some wedding photography and a few
shoots for Dom. Still, I was more than ten grand
short. The collections agency had made a deal with
me to pay off the balance in one fifteen-thousand-
dollar chunk. Other than that, they’d be taking huge
payments every month forever and a day.
I still was looking for some way,
any
way to
get out of it. And I seriously was starting to
wonder if I hated my brother.
My mom called when I was in the middle of
pounding on my calculator in a desperate attempt
to make the numbers change magically. It hadn’t
worked so far.
“Hey, Ma.” I hadn’t told her about the credit
card yet. I didn’t know how she’d take it, and if
she offered to help, it would make me feel even
worse about the whole thing than I already did.
“Hi, honey. How’s my boy? How’s Dusty?”
She knew that Dusty had moved in with me and
was unnaturally happy about it. I wondered if she
was just glad I’d moved out of the place with
Archer.
“I’m okay. What’s up?”
“You sound stressed, baby. What’s going
on?”
Damn her and her ESP.
”Just having some
money iss—You know what, I’m not going to
bother you with it. I shouldn’t have said anything.”
“Tell me. We’ll come up with a solution
together.”
My mother, the teacher. Always ready to help
think things through. I felt like a jerk. “Mom, I
really don’t want you to get involved in this.”
“Does it have something to do with Archer?”
“No, of course not. Why would you think
that?”
Well, that was a convincing lie. In a not-
at-all kind of way.
“Because you’ve been protecting your brother
for as long as you’ve been able to, and I know that
voice. What did Archer do?”
Shit.
“He opened a credit card in my name.
I’ve been getting calls from collections. It’s a lot
of money, Ma.”
There was silence on the other line for a long
time. I thought she was mad at me for a minute.
Finally, she spoke. Yelled was more like it. “Your
goddamned brother! When is he going to learn?”
“I really didn’t want you to get involved in
this. Damn. I’m sorry. I shouldn’t have said
anything.”
My mom made a noise I didn’t know she was
capable of. It sounded an awful lot like the word
fuck
. “Why not? He’s my son, and I should know
when he screws up royally. I’m of half a mind to
go down there and drag his twenty-six-year-old
butt back to Sonoma to do a stint at home.”
I almost laughed at that one. “Do you think
he’d go?”
“Probably not. But I do want to help you. It’s
not fair that you have to clean up Archer’s mess.”
“I know. Sad part is, officially it’s
my
mess.
My name. My credit report.” And I hated even
more that it was going to affect Dusty as well. We
were so new. I hoped we’d be strong enough to
weather something this shitty.
“Let me talk to your brother and see if I can’t
get some sense knocked into him.”
“No, Ma—” I tried to protest. Getting her
involved was the last thing that would make
Archer do what I wanted.
“Asher. You can’t take care of him forever.
I’m going to call him right now.”
And then she’d hung up. I was screwed. One
thing I knew about my mom is that she wouldn’t
back down until Archer ended up coming over
here to kill me, when I hadn’t even done anything
wrong.
It wasn’t fifteen minutes later when my mom
called, steamed as all hell, saying she hadn’t gotten
anywhere with Archer and was half a heartbeat
away from getting in her car to come down here
and skin him alive.
“Good luck with that. You probably just
irritated him so now he’ll never give me any
money.”
“
Asher
.”
I chuckled. She always got so worked up
when I gave her even the slightest bit of attitude.
I’d always been her “good boy.”
“I talked to your father, by the way. He wants
to help your brother out of this since he most likely
can’t or won’t help himself. We have about three
thousand in the bank we can give you.”
I felt like scum. “No way, Mom. That’s your
Santorini money.” They’d been planning a trip
forever to see where my dad was from. “I’m not
taking it.”
“I’m mailing the check to your place
tomorrow. Do not let your brother get his hands on
it.”
“Mom—”
“No arguments. I love you, honey. Say hi to
Dusty for me.”
After I talked to my mom, I spent another
frustrating hour or so on the phone with the
collection agency, trying to get them to transfer the
file into my brother’s name, which of course they
wouldn’t do. The credit card company wasn’t any
more helpful. They refused to cancel the account
since I didn’t have a password to do so and
couldn’t answer the security questions, even
though the damn thing was in my name, which had
started all the problems to begin with.
Then
I
spent
another
thirty
minutes
desperately setting up as many appointments as I
could, promo shots, more work with Dom, yet
another winter wedding. I hoped these people at
least had the sense to get married indoors. Sure, it
was LA, but my hands had frozen at that last
wedding. Outside. In December. Crazy people. By
the time Dusty came home, I was collapsed on the
couch, my phone balanced on my chest, waiting for
a callback from the credit card company, who said
they might be able to put the account on hold due to
outstanding charges. I was afraid if I paid any of
them down, Archer would just waltz out and run
them back up again. Hopefully, in this big mess,
one damn thing would go right.
“Ash? What are you doing?” Dusty had a bit
of a chuckle in his voice, but I knew he was
worried about me. Hell,
I
was worried about me. I
just didn’t know what to do about it.
“Just lying here. They refuse to be logical.
It’s so annoying. Now my mom wants to send
money. I can’t take my parents’ money.”
He sat down on the end of the couch, and I
lifted my head to let him scoot under it so my face
was in his lap. He rubbed his fingers through my
hair and massaged my head. I loved when he did
that. It could make nearly anything feel better.
“Honey, they love you. Maybe they just want to
help you out of an impossible situation. Just like I
do.”
I sat up a little. “What do you mean?”
“Well, I checked in my savings account today
and—”
“No, no, no. I’m not taking your money to bail
my dumb brother out. There has to be another
way.”
Dusty sighed. “I think we both know what that
other way is.”
Yeah. If I claimed identity theft. It was a long
shot, and I hated to do it. It would end any