Unraveling
Book two of the Kirin Lane Series
By Kelley Griffin
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the author, except by reviewers, who may quote brief passages in a review.
https://www.KelleyGriffinAuthor.com
ASIN: B08952KH6W
ISBN:
Cover Art by Amor Paloma Designs, LLC
Edited by Wendy Waxmonsky
Produced in the United States of America
Griffin, Kelley
Unraveling, Book Two of the Kirin Lane Series
This is a work of fiction. Characters and events in this book are a product of the author’s imagination and are used fictitiously. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, business establishments, events or locales is entirely coincidental.
June 2020
Copyright © 2020 Kelley Griffin
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Other titles by Kelley Griffin
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Chapter Thirty
Read an excerpt from Kelley’s newest romantic comedy coming out | Summer of 2021
Jen Harper Hates the “f” Word
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Dedication
To my late Grandma Elaine. Thank you for being a trailblazer. For jumping in to become a reporter, photographer, writer, and formatter for your local paper when the men went off to war and for finding your passion for writing! You are the reason I started writing. And you did it all while taking care of your four young children! You helped to shape my belief that anything is possible. Thank you.
To my niece, Sarah. Thank you for believing in me.
Dear Reader,
Thank you for reading the second installment of the Kirin Lane story. Kirin grows even more in this adventure. She’s challenged to hold her own in her ever-changing world. She still battles with trusting others but is learning how to rely on her own intuition and the people around her who love her.
Thank you for reading my stories and please connect with me! I’d love to know what you think of this book! Please consider taking a minute to leave a review. It’s one of the best ways to encourage other readers to take a chance on a new author.
XO~
Kelley
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Other titles by Kelley Griffin
Binding Circumstance Find it here
Entangling, Book One of the Kirin Lane Series Find it here
A Mind Unequal, Book One of the Casey King Series Find it here
Chapter One
For a woman who lived the first thirty-nine years of her uneventful life wishing for more excitement, Kirin Lane now begged for ordinary. It was the second time in less than a year, she thought she was dead. Obviously, she wasn’t livin’ right.
The first time, Saul Calamia—the leader of the crime ring who enslaved her father and killed her mother—pressed a desperate gun to her forehead. She’d prayed then for a quick end.
As if that hadn’t jolted her enough, this time...she felt dead. Noise had ceased to exist. She lay face down on the cold, cafeteria floor of her employer, St. Mary’s hospital. Shards of glass sparkled innocently next to her face like someone had sprinkled a sack of rock candy all around her. Vibrant rays of purples, reds and yellows reflected and bounced off the glass from sunlight filtering through the demolished wall next to her. It was terrifying and beautiful at the same time.
Black smoke hung in what was left of the hospital cafeteria, choking her like a dark cloud that refused to rise. She felt the pressure of a second blast, and closed her eyes, but still—no noise.
Nothing made sense. Her mind flashed images: the crisp fall day, the short drive to work and the smart, yellow scrubs she’d worn to instruct a fresh crop of incoming nurses. She remembered her jittering nerves dancing in her stomach in anticipation of today’s lunch date. Today was the day she was to see Stacy, her BFF who’d abruptly ended their friendship the night Saul died in her back yard.
Their mutual friend, Laura had been the one to hatch a plan to put them in the same room to air things out. She’d invited Stacy to lunch in the cafeteria where they’d all once worked.
In the few short months since Saul’s death, Stacy had become a recluse. She’d quit her nursing job, moved in with Todd—her new husband nobody particularly liked, who was also Saul’s son—and cut all ties with some friends and family. And most especially Kirin. Gone was the audacious, southern, spitfire she’d loved since nursing school. Now, she was skittish, pimped out with Saul’s money, and closed off.
The plan was for Kirin to grab food, waltz over and sit with them. Laura was positive they’d laugh and talk, like old times and pull Stacy out of her trance. The perfect plan. Except for one person who shouldn’t have been there—Scar. He was Saul’s brother and right-hand man. The undertaker of The Club. The same man who’d chased her in the airport and ransacked her house.
Kirin had snagged a chicken salad sandwich and a sweet tea and as she waited to pay, she caught sight of a familiar face with a scar running down one cheek. And panicked. His head snapped up at that exact second. Their eyes met. A smirk trickled across his lips. She’d been so nervous to see Stacy, she hadn’t thought to check her surroundings first, like Sam and Stacy’s FBI brother Steve, had cautioned her to always do.
Now, noise began to rumble in her ears. Every sound reverberated like loud whispers directly into her ears. Muffled screams, glass breaking, thuds that sounded like blocks falling on tile, car alarms—or maybe hospital alarms, she couldn’t tell, all jumbled inside her ears.
She had to move. She was a nurse for Pete’s sake. Trained in what to do in an emergency. She should get to her feet and help the others. But at that moment, she only wanted to close her eyes and let the dark overtake her. The scraped fingers on her left hand however, had other plans. They walked curiously toward one large piece of the blown-out window to touch it.
Squinting, she pulled her eyes into focus. Through the broken glass, a distorted wave of sandy brown hair covering a face came into view. The person’s neck was coated in dust and blood. Focus. Kirin pushed off her toes and balanced her weight on her left elbow. Then she dug that elbow into the floor like an oar, barely registering the sha
rp glass cutting it and shifted her body forward. A few more inches and she’d be able to move the hair and see the face. Her right arm must’ve been broken or completely gone because it wasn’t responding. And she couldn’t turn her head to the right without unbearable pain shooting through her right shoulder.
With a low grunt of pain, she pushed off once more to align her good arm within reach of the hair. As her brain and eyes focused more, she realized this was a woman. With her fingers outstretched, she gently lifted the blood-soaked hair off the woman’s face. Kirin’s hand recoiled as if she’d touched a snake. A sob bubbled up in her throat right before everything went dark. One thought screamed in her subconscious as tears fell and she let the dark pull her under...
Laura. They got Laura.
Chapter Two
Kirin woke. Even before she could crack her eyes open, the antiseptic smell invaded her nose. Mixed in with it was the intoxicating, spicy scent of her fiancé, Sam. Her heart fluttered. Cracking open one eye she was inside a vaguely familiar hospital room. Her mind sputtered and flipped to make sense of her surroundings. The beeping of a heart monitor filled the air. Her head felt three sizes too big. She knew this room. This was her hospital. Second floor, ICU, overlooking the parking lot. She could tell by the direction the bed faced and the window.
A nurse she didn’t recognize checked the monitor above her head. Slowly, she took inventory and tried moving body parts; toes wiggled, knees bent, hips moved, but ached, abs tightened hurt, left hand...taped like a mummy around her wrist with an IV sticking out. Oh, God...did she have surgery?
Her right arm was tied up in a sling and her fingers stung like tiny paper cuts covered them. She scraped her left thumb across the underside of her ring finger to check for her engagement ring, but it was gone. Her left eye must have been swollen shut. It wasn’t responding, so she glanced around the room like a pirate.
After taking inventory of her bruised and battered body, she took a few deep breaths.
Her rugged man sat in a chair pulled up next to her hospital bed. The jeans she loved that usually hugged his rear, were crumpled and baggy like he’d lived in them for days. Sam’s forehead rested on the bed with his face buried in his right hand. His left hand touched the blanket over her legs.
Without looking up, he whispered, “...please God. This is all my fault, please don’t take it out on her. I’m the one that should be punished, not her. Please...”
Kirin tried to say his name, but some odd squeaky noise came out instead. Sam’s head snapped up. She whispered, “Hi,” and he stood, kissed her forehead, and wiped at red eyes.
Sam smiled down and whispered, “’bout time.”
She tried to sit up, but both Sam and the nurse in the room told her no. Sam spoke, “They removed your spleen which ruptured after the explosion.” Sam took a deep breath, “You need to lie still. You have a nasty concussion, a broken right arm and collarbone, a fairly good shiner on your left eye and some cuts and bruises all over, but you fared better than some...”
Sam’s voice cracked as he trailed off. It broke her heart how tired he looked. As he glanced down he wiped at his eyes again.
Memories of the explosion played like a horror film in her mind. Tears filled her eyes. “Laura? Sam...Laura?”
Sam leaned in close and kissed her head again. “In a coma—still. She’s been out for two days.”
The tears that raced down her cheeks were a mixture of sadness, anger, and pure guilt. If she hadn’t pushed to see Stacy, Laura wouldn’t have been there. She wouldn’t be fighting for her life in another room.
“I want to go see her today.”
The newbie nurse she didn’t recognize, let out a “psh” then stated very matter-of-factly that Kirin wouldn’t be permitted to move for several more hours at the earliest. Kirin leveled a look at Sam. He read her perfectly, kissed her one more time on the forehead, ignored the nurse and walked out toward Kirin’s boss’s office. He’d get it done.
The nurse stomped out as Kirin’s mind cleared and began churning. Why would anyone blow up a hospital cafeteria? What would Scar and Stacy gain by hurting so many people, especially Laura? And how could Stacy do this to her? Anger burned the dry lump in her throat. Holding back tears made her eyes sting.
Stacy was now her enemy.
The “why” bothered her more than anything. Stacy had acted friendly when Kirin strode up. She didn’t even seem angry when Kirin scooted her over in the booth, so she couldn’t escape, and they could talk. Stacy had grasped her hand under the table, firm, and spoke of friendship, but her face showed anger.
Her actions and words were in direct opposition of each other. It was as if she was acting—putting on a show for someone watching. Kirin’s mind wandered back to minutes prior to the blast. She’d even hugged Kirin, then pushed her away as they stood to say goodbye. She’d whispered sorry into Kirin’s ear. It didn’t add up.
And then, when Stacy turned on her heels and stomped out to the waiting car, she hadn’t looked back, but a mere second later, Kirin’s phone had buzzed. A quick text that read, “get out.” It was then, through the window she caught eyes with the man who shut Stacy’s car door.
Scar. He smiled and mouthed the word, “BOOM.”
Half a minute later the cafeteria exploded.
Had Stacy felt guilty that her “new family” had been responsible? Maybe. Maybe she’d meant for the warning text to go to Laura. She’d always gotten their numbers mixed when they were friends. Maybe she’d never know the truth.
The heat kicked on and the door to Kirin’s hospital room creaked open a few inches. Sam’s voice floated inside. He spoke low to another man with an even deeper voice—a voice she recognized but couldn’t place, like a dream.
“Thanks again. How about 2:45? I’ll grab the boys from school, get them settled then relieve you for the night, okay?” Sam’s tone was almost a whisper, but thanks to the door opening and the acoustics in the old walls, she could hear most of what was said.
“No problem, brother. I’ll go home, get a few hours of sleep and come back.”
“Be safe. Watch your back.” Sam called out as he placed one hand on the doorknob and walked backward into the room.
A giant bouquet of flowers blocked out Sam’s face. He laid them down on the table under the flat screen. She watched him stuff the card in his pocket.
“Who are the flowers from?” She was wide awake and by the way he whipped around, he hadn’t expected her to be.
“Hospital staff,” he stammered. “The nurses and...your boss.”
“Who were you talking to?”
He watched her, appearing confused by her question. “Who?” his voice sounded high and innocent.
“The man coming back at 2:45?”
“Honey, I think the fall did something to your hearing.” A quick flash of a grin and he turned away. He was lying. But why?
She dropped it for the moment as one of her favorite lunch ladies delivered a tray to her room. Sam sprang into action. He moved the newspaper and a water bottle and placed them on the counter next to the sink. Then pushed the tray table over her bed and uncovered a cup of steaming broth and opened her milk like she was two.
He took great pleasure in feeding her. She’d argued she could do it left handed even with an IV in and tied to a pole, but it was no use. Sam made her laugh by holding the spoon out and making her reach for it and feeding her with airplane sounds. After she grabbed her incision site while laughing, he stopped.
After lunch, Doris—the head of nursing—came by to check on her. Sam took the opportunity to get out and stretch his legs.
Doris was, by far, the best boss she’d ever had. She was shrewd when she had to be, but fair and kind. And she’d back up a good nurse in a hot second. If you were you doing your job, she left you alone. She was white-headed and only a few years from retirement. They all dreaded the day she’d retire.
No sooner than Sam left, Doris remembered something she’d left at the
nurse’s station and ran back to get it. A bouquet of flowers. She set them near the window then plopped in the chair next to the bed. The woman never sat. She held Kirin’s good hand. “I’m so happy you’re awake. And I’m so sorry this happened to you.”
“Thanks.” Kirin thought about Laura. Doris wouldn’t be having this conversation with her anytime soon. She raised her chin to fight back the tears, focusing instead on the flowers.
“Thanks for the flowers...both sets. You really didn’t have to do that.”
Doris looked around, confused and pointed at the ones closest to the window, “Those are from us...from my garden. The big ones look like they’re from a delivery service.”
“Oh...sorry. Sam told me they were from you... I probably heard him wrong.” But her hackles were already raised. Why would he lie about flowers? She’d ask him about it when he returned. “Have you been to see Laura?”
“Yes,” Doris lowered her eyes, “No change.”
Nothing could stop the tears this time. Her innocent friend was lying in a coma. Doris squeezed her hand, “I hate to do this now, but I need to ask you a difficult question. You and Stacy were once close, right?”
Kirin nodded. Doris took a deep breath. “HR would have my ass for telling you this, so I didn’t...” Eyebrows up, she looked pointedly at Kirin, who nodded back. “But she was in my office yesterday—quitting.” Doris let that sentence linger before continuing, “But it almost seemed...”
“What?” Kirin asked, wiping tears from her eyes.
“She just kept apologizing...it was like she was forced to resign. She was so sad.”
Kirin had gotten that same feeling before the blast. Like she didn’t want to be the person she’d become.
Doris continued, “So, the rumor mill is telling me she was in the cafeteria before it exploded. With you and Laura. It’s been suggested she was at least partially responsible for it.” Doris watched Kirin’s eyes.
She’d known Stacy a long time. Blowing up a cafeteria or being even partially responsible seemed so out of character. But, she had to admit, this new person Stacy had become...driven around with a bodyguard, dripping in diamonds, and fraternizing with mobsters—who knew? In her anger for Laura, who laid just a few rooms away in a coma, she wanted to say yes, Stacy caused this, but she couldn’t throw Stacy under the bus when she had no proof. Involved with those who did the crime, yes ... but responsible for the blast, no. She couldn’t imagine Stacy was the main player in the blast.
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