It was. I saw the speculation deep in Tristian’s eyes.
He didn’t look away from me, but he angled his head toward Ashton. “She’s not particularly close to her aunt. My PI was thorough.”
I wasn’t giving anything away. I couldn’t. This was some sort of standoff right now.
“They’re family. She came up here after her job. Think on that, brother,” Ashton said.
He continued to drill holes into my head before he sighed. “Fine.” He nodded to the guard remaining, who was holding my aunt. “Help her get situated, then give her the keys to your SUV.”
“Won’t they question me when I pull up with an SUV instead of my car?”
“I doubt they even know what vehicle you drove here in, but Jess ...”
Ashton gave us both one last lingering look before heading down to the basement.
Tristian stepped in close to me. I could feel his body heat. “Keep your phone on. I’ll be calling with instructions. Unblock me.” He handed me my phone, and I took it, giving him one last glare before leaving the house, this time going through the actual back door.
Nope. I wasnotgoing to ruminate over the shitpile I’d just stepped into.
My aunt. Trace.
None of it. This was a situation where I didn’t want to think. If I did, I probably wouldn’t like what went through my head.
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
TRACE
We watched from afar as Jess parked and went inside to get the children. It was a minute wait until the door burst open and a little girl sprinted for the SUV. The front door was opened. Jess’s aunt got out and caught up to her kid, and they both moved into the back seat.
Ashton chuckled next to me. “Looks like Jess is chauffeur now.”
Thirty seconds later, two more kids came out, each holding a bag awkwardly, half dragging on the ground. A boy had one arm inside his jacket and was struggling to get his arm through the other. I watched as Jess stopped him, knelt, and slowly and very patiently helped him get his other arm through the sleeve. Once the jacket was in place, she zipped him up and took the bag he’d been trying to carry. He didn’t thank her but looked up briefly before taking off and climbing into the back door of the SUV. The last girl had red hair, and she was zipped up already, carrying two bags herself.
Jess glanced back, checking on her. The little girl stopped. Jess held a hand out to her, saying something, but the little girl’s head loweredbefore she shook it from side to side. Jess looked at her for one second; then the girl darted around her, also clambering up into the back seat.
“Aren’t there laws about child seats?”
I gave Ashton a look. “That’s your concern this morning?”
He gave a shrug, half smirking. “Don’t want her to get stopped.”
“I have a feeling Jess will handle it if she does.”
“Cops are assholes.”
“Says the guy who’s got how many on his family’s payroll?”
“That’s why I can say it.Iknow.”
“Jess is a parole officer.”
“There’s a distinction there if you want to start considering it.”
I narrowed my eyes. “What are you talking about?”
He continued to watch how Jess now had the reverse lights on and was backing out of the driveway onto the street. “I know where this is going. You know where it’s going. So does she. Might make it easier if you stop thinking of her as a cop.”
My stomach churned. “I do and that’s when someone will get burned.”