Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright
Life As I Know It
Ignorance is Bliss
My Mistake
Survival
Social Suicide
Reckless Behavior
Permanent Footprints
Imprisoned
A Real Goodbye
Time Out
Do It
D-Day
The Rising Sun
Downward Spiral
Blackmail
Ruby Red
Win, Lose, or Draw
Life or Death
Under the Influence
Karma
Those Little Things
My Best Shot
Revenge is Sweet
Clean House
Change is Good
You’re Hired
From Dusk Till Dawn
It’s Your Dime
And so we meet again
Sneak peek at Wicked Intentions
No spoilers, please!
Meet Christa Simpson
A Special Note from the Author
Acknowledgements
Other Books by Christa Simpson
Next up!
Playing House
(A Black Widow Novel)
By Christa Simpson
Dark Secrets Duet, #1
Black Widow
Publishing
Playing House
By Christa Simpson
Copyright © 2015 Christa Simpson
Electronic Edition
ISBN: 978-1-926478-08-1
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
Cover Design by Christa Simpson
Copy Editor: Lia Fairchild
Black Widow Publishing: March 2017
This is a work of fiction. All names, characters, and places are fictitious. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
WARNING: The unauthorized reproduction or distribution of this copyrighted work is illegal. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any form, electronic or otherwise, without written consent of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in editorial reviews. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright
1: Life As I Know It
2: Ignorance is Bliss
3: My Mistake
4: Survival
5: Social Suicide
6: Reckless Behavior
7: Permanent Footprints
8: Imprisoned
9: A Real Goodbye
10: Time Out
11: Do It
12: D-Day
13: The Rising Sun
14: Downward Spiral
15: Blackmail
16: Ruby Red
17: His Death Sentence
18: Win, Lose, or Draw
19: Life or Death
20: Under the Influence
21: Karma
22: Those Little Things
23: My Best Shot
24: Revenge is Sweet
25: Clean House
26: Change is Good
27: You’re Hired
28: From Dusk Till Dawn
29: It’s Your Dime
30: And so we meet again
Sneak peek at Wicked Intentions
No spoilers, please!
Meet Christa Simpson
A Special Note from the Author
Acknowledgements
Other Books by Christa Simpson
Next up!
No men were harmed in the making of this novel.
1: Life As I Know It
Ignorance truly is bliss. My car pulls away from the curb, my tousled hair dancing in the wind as if our autumn is unseasonably warm. You can't believe everything you see. In all honesty, it's not that warm. I have a chill running through my body that I can’t escape. I probably would have closed up my car window a long time ago, if I could have, but it’s stuck halfway down. I’m just lucky the raincloud over there is keeping its distance. Lucky. Hah! I'm lucky like that man up ahead.
Look at his tidy pile of leaves. He probably spent his entire morning raking those things into a heap next to the curb and is proud of himself for beating the rain. I smirk at the rotund, older man in his front yard. He hasn’t even had enough time to put away his rake. Instead, he stands there proudly, leaning against the handle and scratching his overfed belly. I can’t resist. Someone has handed this opportunity to me, and I simply can’t pass it up.
My foot presses deeper into the accelerator, thrusting my small car forward. I glare at the old man from beneath dark lashes. His eyes immediately connect with mine, begging me to rethink what I’m about to do. That only encourages me further. I veer toward the pile, blasting through the leaves and cheering with a crazed depth to my voice.
“Woooooo!”
I feel so alive. When the old man stumbles after me, frantically waving his hands with leaves raining around him, I smile harder. A smile. For the longest time, I forgot my mouth could even do that. It feels like my world has shifted, though, and maybe, just maybe things are looking up for me. I force the images of my tormented childhood down, forgetting about my mother’s wasted apologies and the gurgling sound that came from my father’s throat when he drowned before my very eyes. I’ve blown through enough of my life boo-hooing over them. No more.
I carry on down the road, wearing a real smile—not the fake one I wore throughout my unfortunate youth, being spread between perverted foster fathers and overbearing relatives who wanted to make themselves feel better by sporadically treating me like family. No, remembering how I was pawned off to the system never helps. This is why my smiles never last long.
With a deep breath, my smile wilts, but I remind myself that I’m not a teenager anymore. I’m finally free of those people and their unanswered promises. No one’s in charge of my destiny but me. I have to grab life by the balls and make shit happen. Just because my late parents had a few screws loose, doesn’t mean I have to be stuck in my own self-inflicted hell, right? Right?
I pause at a yellow light and proceed into the intersection, flicking on my left turn signal as I make the turn in front of an oncoming sports car. It’s a dumb move. Traffic is thick, and the dude driving the small, black car is in a hurry to go nowhere. He swerves around my rear bumper and lays on his horn. I flip him the bird and hold it there for a few long seconds, completely lost in my own world. I forget to reacquaint myself with the car in front of me. Traffic is now at a standstill.
I quickly jam onto my brake, but I’m screwed. My balding tires argue with the pavement and make a loud screeching noise while my front-end slams into the car in front of me. A loud popping noise is the only warning I have before wearing a face full of airbag. I don’t care if it looks like a fluffy cloud; it feels like a brick wall, and I wonder if I have a broken nose. I struggle to breathe as I push the bag out of my face and clutch at my nose, sighing deeply, choking on the stale air.
Way to go, Clarisse.
“Are you okay?” a man shouts, reaching through my half-open window and tearing my car door from its hinges to pull me free of the wreckage. He thinks my window is broken because of the accident, and I’m going to let him keep on thinking that.
I’m still holding my nose when I collapse into his arms and look up into apologetic eyes. “I’ve had better days,” I admit.
“But you’re alive.”
The corners of my lips quirk upwards oh so slightly. “There’s that.”
He helps me right myself, and I push off of him once I regain my footing. “My bumper didn’t even see you coming,” he says with a smile.
I assess the damage. My shitty little car is banged up pretty good, but it’ll drive. The back end of his car sits on the ground in a heap of ruin. “Is it true that they can pick that thing up and reattach it?” I ask, already knowing the answer.
“I don’t know. See the way the fender is curled under. That’ll be a hard fix.”
I nod, wondering if I should throw my entire first year of college away and run for the hills. The dark cloud that had been following me finally catches up. My eyes wander to the bystanders who scatter for cover as droplets of rain start to pelt the pavement.
“I can’t afford to fix your car.” I look back to him, trying not to admire his clean-cut military hairstyle. “I’m sorry but I just can’t.”
His eyes sink into mine while he thinks on it, the rain quickly dampening his clothes and mine. He takes my hand to get my attention. It works.
“What do you say we talk to these nice policemen over here and then I take you out for a coffee? I’m sure we can work something out.”
2: Ignorance is Bliss
“Move in with me, Clarisse.” Finlay moves in close and whispers intimately against my ear.
I laugh and push him away because I’m stunned. We haven’t been dating all that long. I quickly hide my reaction when I notice how serious he’s being. If the rickety wooden swing we were sitting on hadn’t been rocking gently, I wouldn’t have been able to hide my jittery hands. “You’re serious?”
“Dead serious.”
“But we’ve only been dating for a few months now.” I don’t think his insurance company has even paid him for his extensive car repairs yet, but his soft brown eyes beg me to say yes anyways.
“I love you, Clarisse.” His serious expression doesn’t change and neither does the firm line of his jaw. He plants both of his feet on the ground, and it stops all motion, but my head keeps swinging as he speaks. “When school’s back in, we won’t be able to see each other as much. Is that what you want?”
I shake my head, still too stunned by the sudden proposal to form a complete sentence. “But… but…”
A smirk replaces that serious look on his face. “I’ve already contacted the Admissions Department and all of our classes for next semester are a match.”
I nibble on my lower lip and gloss over that fact for a few seconds. A little odd—maybe even too good to be true—as many things tend to be right before they turn to shit. I should know. My life is about to land in a really big pile of the stinky stuff, and there isn’t a damn thing I can do about it.
“Come on,” he says, tearing me from my thoughts.
I nod and get in the car—the same car I had practically demolished mere months ago. I ignore the seatbelt at first, but when Finlay starts weaving through traffic at a high speed, I secretly secure it over my shoulder. Within another five minutes of his maniacal city driving, he parks his car on a tight street with tall pastel houses and short driveways. He gets out of the car, pulls open my door, and helps me to the sidewalk. I grip on to his gloved hand and look up into his eyes, curiosity getting the better of me.
“Where are we?” My stomach roils, like a hollow ball of pain, because I know Finlay is up to something here, and I don’t know what it is.
Finlay stops me dead in my tracks and holds up a finger, not ready to let the cat out of the bag just yet. "Give me one second." He jogs through someone’s front yard and plucks a small winter flower from the lawn. He walks back toward me grinning like a fool, and I meet him halfway.
He shows me the small flower. "I love you," he says, offering it to me.
I look at the small, purple flower dwarfed between his index finger and thumb. Most people would call it a weed, but when he waits expectantly for me to take it, the little, purple flower might as well be a dozen long-stemmed roses. I take it and smile. For one stolen moment, he makes me forget about first impressions and meeting the parents.
His lips come down on mine gently. They’re forgiving and tender at first, but what starts out as something affectionate and sweet, turns into a deeply intimate kiss that has me drinking from his mouth and angling my head to swallow him whole. This is when his mother opens her front door.
I glance up with puckered lips and half-lidded eyes, cowering into my scarf with a yelp and a swear word cut off by my shock of finding her standing there with her arms folded across her chest. Her face remains very stern. So that’s where he gets his prominent jawline from.
Finlay takes my hand and pulls me toward the glowering woman. “Clarisse, I’d like you to meet my mother.”
I stumble over my own two feet until I find solid ground beneath them. “Finlay, do you think I could see you over here for just a minute? Excuse us,” I say to his mother, dragging him back down the sidewalk.
There will be no forgiveness from her. I check back over my shoulder to make sure I’m not hallucinating, but the tightness of her jaw proves I am not.
I try to whisper, but I start rambling anxiously. “What can I say? I was not expecting this.”
“And... what’s the problem, exactly?” Finlay asks me.
I scratch the back of my head and cringe, passing it off as a chill. “You’re the first steady thing I’ve ever known in a life full of ups and downs—mostly downs.” I glance down at my boots, but he lifts my chin.
“Come on, Clarisse. My mom’s invited you to dinner. This is important. We’re going to tell her tonight. You can’t say no.” Finlay’s full-pouting smile is all he needs to reel me in and make for damn sure that I can’t say no.
I’m extremely nervous. “Tell her what, exactly?”
“School comes back in soon and I’ve decided to move back home,” he says. “I’m planning on telling her that tonight. She’ll be ecstatic.”
I just barely stop my jaw from hitting the ground. “About you, maybe.”
He shakes his head and grips on to my chin a little too strongly. “My mom is going to love you. I want you to move in with us, too. Is that not what you want?”
He asks so many damn questions. I don’t see what the rush is. Why does he always have to put me on the spot like this? I flip over another idea in my head. I could go back to my hole in the ground—alone—but where will that get me?
I answer him with a nod because I’m not opposed to living with him, and this house looks a lot nicer than the dump I’m currently staying at, but I’m afraid his mother won’t be as easily persuaded.
Finlay reassures me in every way he can. His hand squeezes mine. “We aren’t going to see each other as much as we have been. I don’t like that very much. Are you not okay with this? I thought it was going to be a nice surprise.”
When I hesitate, he keeps talking, as if my avoidance of the question isn’t a slap across the face.
“You’ll be closer to school and we can spend more time together.”
Without thinking of another lame excuse, I take my first real chance at a new life. “I’m ready and, as long as your mother is onboard, I’m okay with this.”
“You are?” He’s surprised I agreed, and frankly so am I.
“Yeah,” I repeat, certain that this is the best move for me.
He reaches for my hand, looking like he’s ready to take me back to his mother, but then he leans over and claims my mouth, clutching my head, not wanting to let me go. At first, he slows his lips, and then he deepens the kiss again before breaking free for a breath and a smile. I smile back.
There’s the reason why I’m saying yes.
He whispers next to my ear. “I love you, Clarisse.”
Those words tie my stomach in knots, and those knots don’t loosen for the rest of evening. It’s not until I’ve struggled through the awkward dinner conversation and received the third degree from his mother over dishes that I get to settle on my heels and take a much needed breath.
Finlay can see I need
a break from his mother. “Come on. Let’s go downstairs.” He takes my hand and hauls me toward the basement door, smiling back at me. The second my socked feet reach the cold basement floor, he tugs me into a hug. For two whole seconds, I feel completely secure—happy even.
“Come.” Finlay pulls me across the room to the entertainment area where he drops to his knees in front of me. “Thank you for everything tonight. My mom really likes you. I think this is going to be great.”
I smirk, running my hand over the short hairs on his head. “You really think so? I don’t know.”
“She does,” he insists while he digs through a drawer of adapters and remote controls.
“I’m sure she treats all of your girlfriends like this.”
Finlay snaps to his feet and twists to face me. “You’re the only one, Clarisse. I’ve never brought a girl back to meet my family before. I don’t want to hear you ever say anything like that again.”
I wasn’t expecting such an intense response. He’s breathing heavier. Darkness seeps into his eyes. I’m starting to believe that maybe his family life isn’t as picture perfect as his mother lets on. I’m stunned into a silence that makes me shiver. Finlay’s expression lightens when he catches the surprise in my eyes. He scoops a blanket from the back of the sofa and tosses it on the basement floor, and when he looks back to me, the darkness has already begun to fade.
“You’re special to me, Clarisse. That’s all. You’re not like the other college girls.”
He’s got that much right. I’m nothing like the other girls. I’m different. You’ll never catch me staring at every passing mirror, worrying about my hair or the color of my lip gloss. I live in reality. I worry about where my next meal is coming from and where I’ll lay my head. I do my best to hide my weaknesses and pride myself on how far I’ve come on my own, but right now, I just want to be the girl he thinks I am.
“Are you going to spend the night with me?” His question knocks me off kilter, but I know what I’m agreeing to if I say yes.
Playing House: A Black Widow Novel (Dark Secrets Duet Book 1) Page 1