Hearts Series Bundle: Books 1-6

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Hearts Series Bundle: Books 1-6 Page 25

by Sabrina Lacey


  Gasping against the pain, I grunt, “He was fucking some bitch from our college in a bar. He was naked. Vulnerable. It was my chance to take him out. The fog was in. The streets were empty. I could have gotten away with it! I had to do it!”

  “How’d he get the jump on you?”

  My jaw locks and I say through my teeth, “He pulled some martial arts shit. But I shot him first.”

  Paul mutters to my dad, “He probably choked.” Then looks to me. “First time you ever shot someone, Tommy, right?”

  I nod. Dad glares at me. “Did he know it was you?”

  I jerk my head. “No. He had no idea.”

  He wants to believe me. He knows I’m good at what I do. I may have gotten shot, but I don’t normally fuck up. “You sure?”

  “I’m sure.”

  Paul lifts the shiny metal tool and has the decency to look apologetic. “We have to get this out, Tommy.”

  “What the fuck is that thing?”

  “It’s tweezers. What does it look like?”

  “Tweezers are smaller than that. That looks like…”

  “They’re long fucking tweezers. What do you want from me?” He leans in and pokes them into my shoulder.

  I scream out and my dad smacks me hard in the face. “Shut it. Take it like a man, not a fuckin’ pussy.”

  Having no choice, I squeeze my jaw tight and fight back impossible tears, focusing on the covered light bulb above us in the garage, light refractions pulsing out from it with each burst of pain, a glowing heartbeat.

  “Man, I’d hate to be you right now!” my cousin Bruce yells out from somewhere, voice sounding muffled, hollow. I didn’t know he was here, but of course he is. I should have known the whole family would have to be involved. I crane my neck with sweat dripping down it. He’s in my car, cleaning blood off the seat. They must have brought the car inside the garage when I was passed out. Probably while they waited for Uncle Paul and Bruce to show up. What time is it?

  “You better get all the blood out, Bruce, or I’ll kick your ass,” I shout at him through clenched teeth.

  “Yeah, yeah,” he yells back. “Hey! Here’s a wallet. Looks like he got Brendan’s wallet, at least!”

  Dad and Uncle Paul are both hovering over me and I close my eyes, the metallic taste of blood in my mouth telling me I bit my own tongue.

  My dad calls over, “Bury the wallet deep. How much money’s in it?”

  Bruce counts it and calls back, “Sixty-two dollars.”

  “Give it to me,” he holds out his hand without looking back, the sunspots dark on his arm. My dad was a good-looking guy, but his love of the pool and no sunscreen have weathered the fuck out of his body.

  Bruce walks over a little too daintily and slaps it in Dad’s hand. “Why don’t I get to keep it for cleaning the car?”

  Dad yells in his face, “Are you really asking me that, Brucie?!”

  Paul, his beady eyes squinting with determination, mumbles, “Walter, shut the fuck up so I can concentrate.” The fingers of his free hand push open the hole in my skin to give him room to see.

  “Jesus! Can’t you give me some fucking drugs or something?!”

  My uncle ignores me and cuts his eyes to his brother. “Who’s Brendan?”

  With a booming voice, my dad grandstands, “Brendan is my boy’s gauge for how badly he’s fucking up!”

  “Stay still now,” Paul mutters. “Hold on. I’ve almost got it. It’s ripped into the muscle is the problem.”

  Dad chuckles like the evil sonofabitch he is. “Told ya the gym wasn’t gonna do you no good.”

  I try not to breath, stay as still as I can, while Paul slowly pulls the bullet out, his long whatever-the-fuck-they-are tweezers rubbing the sides of the hole. Triumphant, he holds it up for us to see, a small bloody ball of metal.

  “That’s great. I’ll frame it,” I mumble, sitting up with effort, my hands clenched on the side of the workbench.

  Paul steps back to put the bullet on a piece of plastic to be disposed of where no one will ever find it. The wallet will go with it. This, I know. “You should be easier on the boy, Walter. You were in this scrape when you were his age.”

  Dad side-eyeballs his brother to shut up and I look from one to the other. My cousin calls out from my car, “I never get tired of this story!”

  “How you comin’ along in there, Bruce?” I ask him, tired and gritty. I’m not ready to stand, but weakness is unacceptable so I jump down and grimace as the impact jars my body all the way up.

  “It’ll be good as new. But I don’t see why I have to do this…” He mumbled that last part.

  My dad swivels and hits the hood of my car, hard. “Quit your whining! You get a percentage just like the rest of us, so you gotta work for it, Brucie.”

  Brucie. He hates being called that, but he can’t say anything. My dad’s old school and even though he fucks with him about his feminine ways, if Bruce ever really came out, my dad would kick his ass. So Bruce always acts like he’s into women more so than if he were. If there’s a girl with big tits anywhere near us, Bruce will call out to her like he wants her when we all know he doesn’t.

  We all act like something we’re not, in some way or another. We do this for my dad, the patriarch and the scariest piece of shit that ever walked around suburbia, pretending like he fits in. Bruce acts like he’s straight, my mom acts like she loves my dad, Paul acts like he doesn’t hate us all, and I act stupid.

  We come from a long line of dropouts including my father, except for me and Bruce. My mother came from a long line of intelligence that didn’t stop with her, but I can’t ever show my dad my IQ if I don’t want a beating. So I use words like ‘ain’t’ and ‘gonna’ to appear his equal or lesser than. That’s how it’s always been. When I got into Yale, Stanford, and Princeton, I picked San Francisco State so my dad didn’t disown me or cut me out of the family business.

  We steal. That’s what we do. It’s what we’ve always done as far back as we can trace our lineage. We were carpetbaggers in the Civil War and after that, we’ve stolen by all sorts of methods. In this generation – mine – it’s armed robbery and burglary. This ring was from my first take when I was eight. I lied when I told Rebecca otherwise.

  It was too big for my fingers, then, but Dad gave it to me and said, with his chest stuck out like a proud papa rooster, “When you can wear this ring without it falling off, is when you’re a man. Now run.” And I did. I ran all the way out of the three-story Colonial into the dead of night, racing as far as my eight year old legs could carry me, my chest pounding with a heart that felt like it wanted to beat me there.

  Two blocks away, uncle Paul was waiting for me, with Bruce, two years younger than me, in the backseat, wishing it had been his turn. I didn’t blame him because I felt higher than I ever had, sneaking into that house and robbing it of everything I could find. I climbed into the backseat of Uncle Paul’s sedan, sliding in next to Bruce, and whispered, “It was great.”

  Oh man, it was great.

  Dad opened the passenger car door and leapt in with the grace of a panther stalking prey; he’d done it so many times. “Go!” he told Paul, and looked back at me with a proud, twisted smile. I grinned back at him, still catching my breath. “You done good, Tommy. That’s my boy.”

  He never says that anymore.

  Looking down at my wound, I mumble, “I want to try and take a bank, next.”

  Dad glares at me. “You think after you fucked this up, you want to aim higher?” He mumbles, shaking his head, “Kid’s a wild card. Fuckin’ shit.”

  Paul locks eyes with me. I know what he’s thinking; Dad will never go down that road again. He tried it when he was my age, robbed a Bank of America with his buddy Jim – a guy who’s dead now. Died that day, in fact. Jim made the sorry mistake of shooting my dad right there in the bank in front of the floor-kissing hostages, hoping to take my dad out and keep the money for himself. The two of them were friends since age four, but they had a r
ivalry and Jim wanted it over and done with. He wanted to be free, a goal I can understand. I’m guessing Jim knew my dad was tough, expected him to be hard to contend with and take out, but he had no idea that my dad’s resiliency is like my own – never ending and stronger than steel. Dad shot Jim in both legs first, even with the bullet sunk deep in his own chest. Then – as the story goes – Jim opened his mouth to say Walter and Dad shot him right in the face and got out of there slower than molasses on a cold day. “I refuse to run from a funeral,” he always says when telling the story. But what I think is that he was stunned it went down like that. I think that, because he never says it proudly, and he’s the most prideful sonofabitch.

  “Fine. I’m going to bed.” I trudge toward the door.

  “Your momma’s turned your old room into a meditation space, so you’ll be sleeping on the couch in the den,” my dad says to my back.

  I turn my head and wince, shifting my feet to do the work instead so I can face him. “She did what?”

  “You know your mother. She’s into that hippy shit.”

  Paul, looking from me to my dad from underneath his eyebrows, wipes his stupid fucking long-ass tweezers with a rag and some paint remover. I shake my head and leave the room, calling to Bruce over my fucked-up shoulder, “It better look like it did before.”

  “Yeah, yeah, yeah,” Bruce calls back in his best attempt at a deep voice.

  My mom has laid blankets on the couch and she’s fluffing a pillow when I scuffle up. Her eyes look me over quickly, and she lays the pillow down, her long salt and pepper hair falling on the sides of her face. “Your father give you that mark on your face?” She straightens her back and looks at me from the corners of her gray eyes. “It wasn’t there before.”

  “Well, it’s there now.” I come up to stand beside her at the couch. The room is decorated in safari colors, safari prints, safari art. It’s like a camel threw up in here. There are framed photographs of Lions, a Giraffe lamp with a lampshade made of fake green leaves, Monkey coasters, and even a hyena statue with a snake around the base of its paws. My mom wants to go to Africa, but they’re never going to go. Dad’s too much of a racist to be around all those black people. The racism in this family will die with him. Paul, Bruce, Mom and I – none of us are that dumb.

  “A meditation room, Mom? Really?” I climb into the bed and she pulls up the covers.

  “I need a space of my own. And it quiets me, Tommy.” She sits on the arm of the couch near my feet. Her sad eyes fall on the source of my pain. “I should wash that.”

  “Please don’t touch it, Mom. Not unless you have some pain meds to overdose me with, first.” My eyelids fall half-mast and I let my head sink into the clean, camel-colored pillowcase.

  Her eyebrows twitch up. “They didn’t give you pain meds?”

  I don’t say anything. She should know better than to even ask, but I don’t need to tell her that. Nothing’s going to change around here anytime soon. Except my room.

  “I’ve got some. I’ll go and get them for you.” She rises slowly and flattens her hands on her belly, a personal tick she has that comforts her.

  “Thanks, Mom.”

  She nods as she walks away to the window to shut out the growing brightness of morning. I watch her thinking what I always think: how’d she ever say ‘yes’ to my dad? I’ve stopped asking why she stays with him long ago. It’s the abuser/victim psychosis. The victim gets used to the abuse so much that they don’t see it as abuse anymore. Any little crumb the abuser gives them is like a steak to the starving, so when he says something nice, she feels like the world is brighter. And it is… for two whole minutes. I used to beg her to leave him when I was a little guy and we were alone. But she slapped me hard across the face the last time. I learned to keep my mouth shut after that.

  “Tommy?” she mumbles, turning away from the closed curtains.

  “Yeah?”

  “Who did this to you?”

  I blink, thinking of what I want to tell her. “It was a robbery gone wrong, Mom. That’s all.”

  She looks at me, expecting more. “But it wasn’t time to do the Tiburon deal.”

  I sigh loudly, annoyed, and adjust my arms, crunching my face against the ache. “It wasn’t the Tiburon deal. I did something on my own.”

  And just as I was feeling sorry for her, she says, “Well, that was a stupid thing to do, now wasn’t it.” She walks to the door, mumbling, “You got what you deserved.”

  Speak for yourself, Mom.

  I’m still on the couch, sleeping, when I get a phone call a couple days later. My dad comes in the room, holding my phone. “Your buddy’s calling you from the grave,” with his expression sneering, You couldn’t even get this right.

  I cut my eyes to the phone. Brendan’s alive? Well, that answers that question.

  “Well, this is a surprise,” I say to Brendan.

  My dad kicks my leg and I bite down on my tongue. Shit. I didn’t think.

  “Tommy?” a female voice asks.

  I pause, thrown off. “Who’s this?”

  Her voice sounds urgent and unrecognizable as she says, “Rebecca. Can I come see you?”

  “Rebecca? Why are you calling me from Brendan’s phone?”

  My dad’s eyes stay glued to me. “Is he dead?” he whispers.

  Rebecca sounds like she’s almost panting. “Because I didn’t have your number. Um… I’m calling because…” she pauses and I wait, staring at my dad, both of us impatient. “Brendan’s in the hospital. There was a robbery and he got shot and there’s some other things that are happening.” Her voice trails off like she doesn’t know what to say, or if she even should.

  I exhale and cover the phone. “He’s alive.” To her, I say, “Oh no. That’s terrible. How’s he doing? Is he gonna make it?”

  “He’s fine. It grazed his lung, but they were able to save it. He was in surgery for five hours.”

  Probably with pain meds, the dick. “Great. That’s great. How are you doing? You okay? You must be pretty scared, huh?”

  “Yes, and I’m a mess. I need to see a friendly face. Can I come over?”

  She wants to cry on my shoulder? This is my chance to get in there, and here I am on the couch in a fake Sahara Desert. Unbelievably bad timing.

  “I’m sorry, Bec. I can’t. I’m staying with family for a while. There’s a family emergency. We’re really close. You know how it is.”

  “Oh. I talked with Margaret – we’ve stayed in touch – I had to tell her Brendan wasn’t coming in to work for a while, tell her what happened. But she didn’t tell me you were out of town. I guess she wouldn’t have mentioned it, though…”

  “Yeah, she probably wouldn’t.” My brain is doing somersaults thinking how I can make this happen. My dad reaches out his arm, wanting me to end the call. “Bec, I’ve got another call coming through. I have to go.” There’s silence on the other end. “Bec?”

  “Yeah… sorry. I just wanted to see you.” I can hear the hesitancy. The guilt. What is she playing at? “I’m sorry for calling. I’ll talk to you later.”

  She hangs up and I look at my dad. “She hung up. He’s alive.”

  “Who was that?”

  “Brendan’s girl,” I answer, still thinking about her call, my eyes distant.

  “What’s she want with you?” I smirk my answer and throw him a look. His eyes go hard. “It’s a good thing you’re holed up here with that.” He points to my shoulder. “Give you a chance to cool off and not dig yourself deeper in this ditch you’ve made. Listen up, Tommy. You’re not taking this family down just because some guy has gold coming out of his ass and that galls ya. You stay put and let that steam that’s boiling out the top of your head, cool off. And stay away from his girl, too. If he ever finds out it was you that shot him…”

  “He’s not going to, Dad.”

  “You better make sure he doesn’t. Keep your head clear and your nose clean, you hear me? Or you’ll have to deal with me.” He juts his
thumb to his chest, a wicked gleam in his eyes that still terrifies me.

  “Okay, Dad. Alright.”

  He stares at me until he believes me, and he turns, holding my eyes prisoner as he walks out of the room, his gait slow and steady. He closes the door and I wait with my heart beating hard in my chest. I’m staring at the door, wondering if he noticed. But the door stays closed, so I reach down to pick up the phone he forgot to take with him. She answers on the first ring.

  “Bec, I only have a second,” I whisper, “I can meet you tomorrow night. Tell me where.”

  “Really? That’s great. Thank you! I’m getting a hotel tonight. You can meet me there. I’ve been staying at Brendan’s, but I… I don’t want to do that anymore.”

  “Go to The Inn on South Van Ness. It’s a Bed and Breakfast. You’ll love it. I’ll meet you there at 9:00 p.m. And look, I might not have my phone, so don’t call me. But I’ll be there. I promise.”

  “Okay.” Her voice changes and she says, again, “Thank you, Tommy.”

  “No problem, babe. Delete these calls from his phone.”

  “Oh. Right. Good thinking.”

  “See you tomorrow.” I hang up and delete the call myself, reaching over gingerly to lay it on the coffee table next to books on Zimbabwe and Nigeria. Lying back, I stare at the ceiling, my blood pumping in a cool, accelerating rhythm as I plan my escape tomorrow night. This is gonna be fun.

  Rebecca

  Brendan’s keys: shoved in his stupid fucking lock.

  Palm: slapping the door. Door: succumbing, despite itself.

  ________

  It occurs to me that Mark might have come home from New York. I have no idea how long he was supposed to be gone. I hope he’s not here, and instantly regret having just yelled at the stubborn lock. I don’t want to appear like I’m a crazy person. Scanning the vast room, I see no signs of him, everything is just as I left it, but just in case, I call upstairs, “Mark?”

  Silence.

  I step in a few more steps, calling out for him again, but he doesn’t answer. I walk to the other side of the penthouse and into Brendan’s room to gather up my things, because I’ll be damned if I’m staying here again tonight. I’ll go check in at The Inn and get a good night’s sleep without memories haunting me wherever I look. With my toiletries tucked away in a plastic bag inside my suitcase, I spy one of my black hair-ties on his nightstand and I stare at it, considering leaving it there for that little twit to find.

 

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