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The Wolves of New Bristol (Lila Randolph Book 3)

Page 34

by Wren Weston


  “How do you put up with her? You’re a good man, you—”

  “I have other responsibilities. I have to let go of the little things if I want to act on the big ones.”

  “Is Senator Dubois a little thing?”

  “If he makes himself into one, then yes. You can’t lend him your outrage, Lila. He has to act on it himself.”

  “That’s ridiculous.”

  “That’s the only way anything will ever come of it, which is why you didn’t bring up charges against Jewel before you left.” He sipped his hot chocolate and studied her face. “You’re not going back there, are you?”

  “Perhaps I should. I could do a great deal of good as prime. I could suck it up even if I hate it, even if I hate everyone in my whole damn family right now.”

  “Except for Pax and Shiloh.”

  Lila nodded.

  “You know, there are a lot of ways that someone can do good. Things that don’t include the Randolphs. Now that you have your mark, you have more options.”

  “What of the family?”

  “You’re not worried about the family, and this isn’t about them. It never has been. It’s about you. What do you want, Lila?”

  “What I wanted is gone,” Lila said, knowing she’d never be chief anymore, knowing she might never get Tristan back.

  “Is it? Life is about what you want from it and what you can make of it. What can you make of your life now?”

  “What a self-indulgent and irresponsible question. I can’t believe that’s coming out of your mouth.”

  “You can’t make a difference if you don’t agree with the manner in which you make that difference. That’s what you’d have if you went back home. If you don’t want to fight your battles that way, then find a new way.”

  “What battles?”

  Lemaire traced a knot on the table. “I made a mistake with you, Lila. I freely admit that now. You were my first child, and I was just so excited by you, so fascinated, so in love with the idea of being the best sort of father I could be. I’d seen Senator Blanc’s daughters make a mess of their family’s finances for their own gains, and I overdid it. You were older and more responsible at ten than most senators, and I kept pushing you anyway.”

  He shook his head. “I did this to you, made you incapable of prioritizing yourself. You would have made a great senator, perhaps a far better prime minister than me, had you been born a man.”

  Lila spun her sapphire ring. “I hacked Liberté.”

  Lemaire’s jaw dropped. It was one of the few times she’d ever seen him surprised.

  “I did it for the case. Don’t panic. Well, except for the first time, when I was a kid and I wanted to see if I could. My point is only that I would have made a lousy senator, just like I’ve made a lousy chief. We’re not meant to prod and poke, and damn the means so long as the end result is useful. Alex and my mother were both right. I bend the rules when I feel the cause is just, or perhaps I just feel like I’m above them.”

  “You’re thinking of Senator Dubois.”

  Lila didn’t answer.

  “If you had been born in the poorer classes, if you’d always owned your mark, what would you have done with yourself?”

  “Private militia,” she said immediately.

  Lemaire leaned over the table, his brows raised and waiting.

  Lila let out her breath. “I would have ended up like Max or Trudy Poole. There’s not a doubt in my mind.”

  “You wouldn’t have ended up like them. Ms. Poole hacked and spied for money, and her son does the same thing for the same reasons, but I think that’s the most honest thing I’ve ever heard you say. I could make use of you, Lila. I need someone who understands both worlds, the games that the highborn play with one another, as well as the world of those who would steal from the masses. I need someone who can stay neutral in it all, someone I can trust, especially next year, when I ascend to the council. If you were from the poorer classes, I would have made you an offer long before now. I would have asked you to become a paid consultant. It’s not unheard of for a woman to be absorbed into government if she has the skills we need. We could use you, Lila. Think about it.”

  Under the table, Lila rubbed her belly.

  “We would have to talk about what happened with the oracles, though. You can’t go off and make decisions on your own.”

  “Father…”

  “Have you talked with the oracle yet?”

  Lila shook her head. In point of fact, she had received a call from the oracle that very morning. She’d said that Lila was in danger. She’d seen it in a vision. She’d even promised to send a contingent of purplecoats to the south gate to escort Lila to safety.

  The oracle didn’t seem keen to tell Lila where that safety might be found.

  “I’ve dealt with the assassin,” she’d told the oracle, not in the mood for more bodyguards, and disconnected before the woman could say another word.

  “Talk to the oracle soon, please. She won’t stop calling, and I’m legally obligated to answer.” His palm vibrated, and he checked the screen.

  “Is that her?”

  “No,” he said, sucking in a breath.

  Lila had never seen her father so startled. “Who, then?”

  “Get your bag and get out of the hotel now.”

  “What? Why?”

  He slid his palm across the table.

  Lila saw a familiar article. This time, it wasn’t in her inbox. It wasn’t in her mother’s, either. It had been posted on the front page of the New Bristol Times’s website.

  Tomorrow it would hit the papers, knocking aside any mention of the Holguíns and Oskar Kruger. The protestors would make brand-new signs with brand-new slogans, all about her.

  “Mother did this?”

  Maybe it was a joke.

  Her fingers moved quickly across her father’s palm as she scanned the page, eyeing the link below her story.

  Another highborn revealed.

  And another.

  And another.

  Not her mother, then. La Roux. He must have set it up as a dead man’s switch. If he wasn’t alive to prevent it, every piece of dirt on every highborn and lowborn he’d had in his clutches would be revealed and sent to the press.

  The switch had been flipped.

  Had he forgotten about it, or had he planned it all along, knowing that Bullstow wouldn’t change their official story after it broke, knowing that his reputation would be safe? That his children wouldn’t suffer under it?

  He’d ended up with everything he’d wanted in the end, except his life and a place in the senate.

  “Senator La Roux. He did this. He—”

  “Yes, and you have to get out of here now,” her father said, tugging her toward the door. “It’s the only way I can keep you from a holding cell. I need to figure out how to handle this. I need to call Chief Shaw and find out what evidence has leaked. Go now.”

  Lila opened the door to the private booth and hurried from the hotel toward her car.

  Slipping her key into the ignition, she faltered.

  She had no idea where to go.

  Lila's story continues in book four, The Oracle of New Bristol, ready for release in Spring 2017!

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  Other Titles by the Author

  The Lila Randolph Novels

  The Heirs of New Bristol

  The Lost of New Bristol

  The Wolves of New Bristol

  The Oracle of New Bristol

  The Gods of New Bristol

  The Champions of New Bristol

  About the Author

  Wren Weston grew up writing fantasy and science fiction stories, but one chance book club encounter with a roma
nce novel changed her favorite genre forever.

  She became addicted.

  Not only can she not stop reading them, she can’t stop injecting shades of the genre into everything she writes.

  You have been warned, darlings.

  To recommend a romance novel to Wren, visit www.wrenweston.com or drop her a line on Twitter.

 

 

 


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