by T. L Smith
I’m a good girl, having never done anything bad in my life.
“Boss, we can dispose of her easily enough.”
Something snaps in me. “No.” It’s croaky, but I manage to squeak out the word.
The hands around my throat don’t move, but his breath I can feel and smell through the beanie has a minty scent as he leans in closer to me.
“No,” he says. “Do you even know why you are here, Theadora?” This man says my name as if he knows me. I don’t know him—that voice, I would remember it. Trying to analyze him will do me no good. I can’t see his reactions, so I go with gut instinct about what I want to say.
“No,” I say because I have absolutely no idea why I am here. Which makes this situation even worse because I can be clumsy and forgetful. But for me to have done something to put me in this situation where they are talking of physically harming me? No. That’s not something I’ve done.
“Maybe you should ask Lucy.”
I pull back at his words, finally trying to free myself from his grasp. He holds me in place, the pressure hardening at my movement. “So, you know now, don’t you?” I hear him take a deep breath, breathing me in.
“Where is she?” I ask with more venom than I thought I could muster. I feel the tears welling in my eyes, which I can’t reach to wipe away, so they fall helplessly down my cheek and soak into my beanie.
“So, that got your attention.” He pulls back. Well, I think he does, as I can no longer smell his breath near my face, and his hand on my throat loosens until it drops away completely. “Theadora! You don’t mind if I call you that now, do you?”
I try to keep my smart-ass mouth shut at his words.
“Look, you’re learning, much faster than Lucy did.”
A small, shaky cry leaves me as heavy footsteps surround me. Hands reach under my arms and pull me up roughly, so I am standing on my own two feet.
“Where is she?” I ask the one who is doing all the talking. I can’t tell where he is now that his hands aren’t touching my throat, but my guess is he’s in charge, so I direct my voice to where I assume he’s standing
“Lucy stole over a million dollars from me, Theadora. You will help me get that back. Or else Lucy will forget to breathe.”
My mouth opens wide in shock at his words.
A million dollars? Fuck.
How?
Why?
So many questions.
And the last but most important one.
How the fuck am I meant to get that much money?
I’m smart. I earn good money managing one of the busiest clothing companies in the world, but I don’t come near to earning that. And my savings is next to nothing, since I just bought my first home.
“Do you understand me, Theadora?”
My brain is too busy trying to figure out how to pull together that much money. Selling my house won’t even give me half, and Lucy has no assets or money. Our parents died a long time ago, so it’s just Lucy and me.
“How long do I have?” I ask.
The beanie is ripped from my face, my blonde hair, which was being held back, now sticks to my lips and I push it away with my tongue. My eyes are blurry, and I can hardly make anything out as he starts talking again, so I close my eyes and listen to his voice.
“You have one month, Theadora.”
My heart drops, and I open my eyes, zoning in on that voice.
The man standing in front of me is not what I expected. Actually, he is anything but. If I saw him walking down the street I would stop to stare. If he were one of my company models, I would have stayed the whole shoot instead of instructing what I want, then leaving like I normally would.
No. This man? He is an attractive bad man, nothing more.
But despite his eyes that seem to stare straight through me, his hair is best described as scorched chestnut in color and appears tangled. He also has a nose ring and a slight beard.
Who is this man?
He looks like a grungy, hot supermodel. Not someone who just had his hands around my neck telling me I had one month to pay him back for something I haven’t even done.
One of his hands, which is free of tattoos, reaches into his pocket. He pulls out his cell phone, snaps a picture of me, and places it back where it was.
His amber, almond-shaped eyes stare at me as he glances me up and down before speaking, “You look different to Lucy.”
My blonde hair doesn’t match her black hair. My wide hips don’t match her narrow little waist either. If you put us side by side, the only part we got from our mother was her lips, there’s not a single thing else. We both look like our fathers—different fathers.
“Do you plan to hurt me?” I ask, managing to look straight into his amber eyes.
“I told you, not yet.” His hands stay at his sides, but when I look down, one twitches. I quickly look away and behind me where there is no one.
“They are outside that door.” His dark voice rocks through me as I look at the red door that would provide freedom. But what’s the use when he knows who I am? He takes a few steps, his lips right at my ear. “You could run. You could definitely make this more fun…”
I turn around fast, and he doesn’t step back as he inhales me. My body freezes when a knock on the red door makes him step back just a fraction so he isn’t near my neck anymore. A shiver I was holding in wracks through my body.
“One month,” he repeats.
“I don’t have that kind of money,” I reply, looking at him.
“Would you like to make a deal?”
Goddamn! My head tells me no, run, and try to find a way to make the money. You should never make a deal with a devil. Yet, here I am, nodding my head because my voice is lost.
“I need to hear you say it, Theadora. Would you like to make a deal so you can work off your sister’s indiscretions?”
“Yes,” I squeak.
He steps forward, his hand reaches up, and when it does, I catch a glimpse of a tattoo from under his black sleeve. Another peeks out from under his collar on his neck. Are they all over his body?
He pulls on a piece of my blonde hair, and then lets it slide between his fingertips.
“I’ll own you until her debt is paid. You do understand this?”
Nodding, it seems to be what I am good at right at this moment.
“Your life will not be the same. Any jobs you do for me will be confidential. Do you understand?”
My eyes search around the empty room frantically.
“Theadora, this will not work if you go mute. It will do nothing to assist you, but it will piss me off.”
“Yes…” I hiccup. “I understand.”
He walks over to a fold-up chair, which is the only thing in the room, and reaches for a watch, then places it on his wrist.
Why was that off in the first place? is all I can think.
What was he planning to do with me?
“My sister.”
“Alive,” he says, easing my mind. “For now.” Then he walks past, brushing against my arm as he goes to leave me standing in the cold, empty, cement room. He reaches for the red door and pulls it open, letting light in. It’s then I see the two guys standing there waiting. Both look at me, then him as he speaks to them before they walk off.
He turns back, those eyes that I’m sure will haunt me tonight stare right at me.
“Goodnight, Theadora Fitzgerald of Thatcher Lane.”
My eyes go wide at his words—he knows my street address—before he smirks and turns, letting the red door slam behind him on his way out.
The minute the door shuts I fall to the cold floor, and the tears I have been holding back fall, leaving my soul heavy.
Lucy.
What have you done?
But it here.
hive.