Book Read Free

The Misters: Books 1-5 Box Set

Page 111

by JA Huss


  “You wanna have lunch with me today?” Oliver says. “We could look at all the pictures we just took.”

  “Well.” I smile. “I have a date with your sister today at lunch time. She and the rest of the girls want to ‘get to know me better.’” I make air quotes for that last part.

  “Shit,” Oliver says, giving me a squeeze. “I’m sorry.”

  “Don’t be. I like them. I’m happy to get to know them better. I could use some friends.”

  “Well, watch out for Ariel. And Tori,” he adds quickly. “They are trouble.”

  “Yeah.” I laugh for real. “I can totally see that. But it’s just lunch. What do you have on your schedule?”

  “It’s just another day, Katya. Just another day. But I’ll see you tonight. In fact, don’t be on that bench when I get off work. Just come back to the office with Ariel when you’re done with lunch. Or I’ll come up to your apartment.”

  I want to say, Nope. Sorry. You can’t come up to my place because the Silver Society has it bugged and they would like nothing more than to have more dirt on you so they can rip your world apart before the end of the week.

  But I don’t say that. Because we’re not in that moment. He said so. And if Oliver Shrike says I’m safe and he’s got things under control, well, who am I to argue?

  I’m just the scared girl in the lifeboat for this scene. Surrounded by hungry sharks. Dying of thirst even though land and safety are in full view. And my hero says it’s all gonna be OK.

  I am just the girl who wants to believe.

  The girl who needs to believe.

  So I believe.

  Oliver and I get up after that. We shower, and he’s right. His markers don’t wash off. But I like that. It’s fitting. That all this will end with his words the last thing I remember about him.

  He takes me to his work and walks me down the alley to my building. We kiss in front of the doorman. And I refuse the elevator when I get inside and take the stairs down to the storage units.

  I dial the combination, go inside, pick up my phone, and press the contact I’ve been keeping secret all these years.

  “Yes,” she says after two rings.

  “I think I need you today.”

  She hesitates. And for several painful seconds there is nothing but dead air. I even take the phone away from my ear and look at it to see if I lost the call.

  “Are you sure?” she finally asks.

  “I’ve never been more sure of anything in my life.”

  “We’re a day early, Katya. You know timing is everything.”

  A day early. Her words send a chill through my entire body. Why didn’t I see it before? Jesus fucking Christ. I walked right into it. “I know,” I say, swallowing hard. “I understand. But I have a very bad feeling, Mariel.”

  More silence. “What happened?”

  “Nothing. But that’s the problem. They are too patient.”

  “Katya, you of all people should understand that what they are after has been decades in the making.”

  That brings me back to the conversation I had with Oliver. About the eleven-year anniversary. “Did you know that Claudette tried to take Cindy on the eleventh anniversary of the rape accusation?”

  “Of course. Why do think I got involved?”

  “OK. But do you know what tomorrow is?”

  Silence for seven whole seconds. “What is tomorrow?” she asks, a hint of worry in her voice.

  “My sister’s eighteenth birthday.”

  Mariel sighs. “Kat, I’ve told you before. They do not recruit out of high school.”

  “They recruited me out of high school.”

  “You’re different.”

  “Yeah. And she’s my sister. So how is she not different?”

  “She is not you.”

  It’s my turn to be silent. For eleven whole seconds. The number of years I’ve gone to bed hoping I might die before I wake up.

  “I want you here. And I want you with her all day tomorrow, Mariel. You promised me she would be safe if I helped you. You promised me you’d take care of her if anything happened to me. Well, either they are going to grab her tomorrow or they are going to do something to me. And I need you to make good on that promise. I need you here, Mariel. Today. Or I quit and I won’t do it. I’m dead fucking serious. Today.”

  Mariel sucks in a deep breath and holds it. She exhales. Loudly. Like she’s pissed off but doesn’t want me to know. “OK. I’ll come today and we’ll do it your way. But you need to stick to the plan, Katya. No more deviations.”

  “Agreed,” I say, relief flooding through me. And then the line goes silent for too long and I know she’s ended the call.

  I’m in that blissful moment again. The moment when I think I have all the answers and it’s gonna be just fine.

  I close my eyes and force myself to believe it.

  I want to believe it.

  I need to believe it.

  So I believe it.

  Chapter Thirty-One - OLIVER

  “What do you know about sharks?” I ask Weston, who was waiting for me in my office when I walked up the stairs.

  “What?” he asks. He hasn’t told me why he’s here yet. But he’s nervous about something. He turns away from the window and looks at me. I’ve got my boots kicked up on my old desk, leaning back in that chair that might fall over if I lean just half an inch more.

  “Shark movies, specifically. Do the sharks eat the people?”

  “What the fuck are you talking about?”

  “Did you see Jaws? I never did. Did that shark eat everyone?”

  West sighs and turns back to the window. “I have no idea what you’re talking about.”

  “Well, I have no idea why you’re here. How about we start there?”

  “My parents are coming,” he says.

  “Your parents? Why?”

  “Remember?” he says. “I told you they want to spend time with my new family.”

  “What’s Tori say about that?”

  “She fucking hates them.” He snorts a little, but it’s not a laugh.

  I nod. I can see her point. I’ve never actually met the Conrads, but I’m guessing they are not really my people. Kinda like the Delaneys aren’t my people either.

  “But Tori doesn’t know yet.”

  “When are they coming?” I ask.

  “Today,” he says, walking over to my desk and taking a seat in one of the two chairs. “This evening, I think.”

  “Where the fuck do they think they’re staying? Ariel won’t let them stay with her if Tori says no. And there’s no five-star hotels in FoCo, dude. I don’t think I can picture your parents staying at the three-star Ramada over by the vet school.”

  “They got an Airbnb on Mountain Avenue.”

  “Fuck. Tori’s gonna love that.”

  He just sighs.

  “Is that why you’re here? Moral support? I’m not really the moral support kind of guy. You should talk to Mac. He’s all understanding and shit. He’ll walk you through it.”

  “That’s not why I’m here,” West says, squinting at me.

  “What’s that look for?”

  “I’ve got a question for you.”

  “Shoot,” I say.

  “Do you think Tori is being dramatic?”

  I laugh. Like very loud. “When is she not being dramatic?”

  “I know,” he says, sighing. “That’s why I don’t pay much attention to it most of the time. But her hatred for my parents? Do you think that’s just misplaced loyalty to me?”

  “Your parents bought you, Weston. Bought. You.”

  “Right. I know that. But they were never mean. They saved me from a pretty shitty life. They were fucking good to me. And yeah, maybe they weren’t too happy about the rape charge, but it didn’t matter. I had Victoria as my alibi. I didn’t even care.”

  I shrug. “Yeah, OK. So she’s being dramatic.”

  “You really think she is?” West leans forward in his chair, like
my opinion on this is make-or-break.

  “West, I don’t fucking know. I don’t know her that well but she’s smart, man. Ya know? And she’s been around like”—I stop talking and rewind this morning’s conversation through my head—“like Katya.”

  “Yeah, that’s weird. Don’t you think? I mean what are the chances that those Gori fucks would be so involved in both our girlfriends’ lives?”

  “Yeah,” I say, thinking about the earlier convo with new eyes. “What are the chances?”

  “Nil, dude. Zero. Nada. No chance at all this shit is not related.”

  “So where do your parents fit in?” I ask.

  “They’re old friends with Liam. And Liam is helping the Gori clan.”

  “You know who I don’t understand?” I say, putting my feet back on the floor and leaning forward towards West now. “Mariel Hawthorne. Where the fuck does she fit it?”

  Weston shrugs his shoulders. “I don’t know. But she’s definitely involved.”

  “And where the fuck did she go?” I ask. “She just drops my sister off at Nolan’s and then disappears? Never to be heard from again?”

  “And what about Five? Where the fuck is Five?”

  “I don’t know,” I say. “I’ve been trying not to think about that too much.”

  “Why?” West asks. “You guys are friends, right?”

  “More family than friends. But yeah, I guess we’re friends.”

  “You don’t think he’s involved with them do you?”

  “Nah,” I say, shaking my head. “Nah,” I say it again. But I have to admit, the thought has crossed my mind. I shoot West a look from the corner of my eye. “He did know about the Silver Society. It’s like he was leading us down a path that night at dinner out at the resort. And he knew there was a tunnel. Or secret room, whatever. And that they set fire to the rooms so they can escape. He had a lot of information that night.”

  “Your sister?” West says. “Because of her, you think? The Rory one?”

  The Rory one. I’d like to punch him. But then again, I do have a lot of sisters. “Or maybe he just did what Mariel did? Came in, stirred things up, and then left.”

  “Hmm,” West says, getting up and walking back to the window.

  “What are you looking at out there?”

  “I don’t know.” He gives me a sidelong glance over his shoulder. “But I feel like I need to be looking for something. I just have a very bad feeling about all this.”

  I let out a long breath and get up to join him at the window. I look over at Katya’s window out of habit, but there’s nothing to see there. “What are you gonna do about your parents?”

  “What can I do?” He shrugs. “Nothing. I can’t do shit unless I have a real reason. And I don’t really have a reason other than Tori’s gut instinct.”

  It’s my turn to shrug. “Maybe that’s enough?”

  “Do you think I should leave town?” When he turns his head to look at me, I can see fear in his eyes. I squint at him, incredulous that this, of all things—his parents coming to town for a visit—is something he fears.

  “Leave town?” I ask.

  “I can’t tell them not to come, right? They wouldn’t even listen.”

  “But you want to actually leave town? Is there something you’re not telling me about them, West? Because maybe Tori is dramatic, but she’s not the one talking about running away.”

  He’s quiet for a long time. Almost a minute. And then he says, “They asked me about the gold, Oliver.”

  “That fucking treasure that no one can touch without going to jail for piracy? What did they say?”

  “They asked me if I still knew where it was. But that’s not the part worries me. Because they asked me that question last week.”

  I narrow my eyes as I think about this. “What’d you say?”

  He looks at me with even more fear in his eyes. “I never told them there was more, Oliver. I told them the same thing I told Liam. That I gave him what I had. That was the end of it.”

  “So why were they asking?”

  He swallows hard. “That’s what I’d like to know.”

  “You think they’re after that gold? Why? They have more money than God. They don’t need it.”

  “Neither does Liam. And he still wants it.”

  We stand there for a little while. Mulling all this information over in our heads. And then I say, “Tell me everything you know about that treasure.”

  So he does. He tells everything again. Same story though. Maybe a few more details about what it looked like. But that’s it.

  “What are you doing for lunch today?” I ask, when he’s done talking.

  “Nothing, I guess. Tori has plans. I was just gonna hang out with you today.”

  “Well, how about we crash that little lunch party? I’ve got some questions for my sister and I think they need answering sooner rather than later.”

  Chapter Thirty-Two - KATYA

  I walk slowly up the stairs after I hang up with Mariel. My stomach is in knots and I feel sick. Like I want to throw up. I push the stairwell door open on my floor and come face to face with my sister.

  “Shit, you scared me!” I say, my heart beating so fast it might explode out of my chest.

  “Where did you just come from?” Lily asks, a very perturbed look on her face.

  “Sorry,” I say. “I took the stairs.”

  “Where were you last night? I’ve left seven messages this morning but obviously you never came home, did you?”

  I narrow my eyes at her. “I don’t owe you an explanation, Lily. I’m a grown-up.”

  “So am I,” she sneers.

  I laugh at her teenage moment. “Is this what I’ve been missing the past four years? Your entitled attitude? And technically you’re not a legal grown-up until tomorrow.”

  “I’ve been on my own since I was thirteen, just as much as you, Katya. So don’t tell me what I am.”

  “You,” I say, my anger building, “were under twenty-four-seven care of one of the most elite boarding schools in the country. You were hardly on your own.”

  “How would you know what went on while I was here in school? You never once came for a visit.”

  “And you know the reason why,” I growl back. The nerve of her. I did everything for her. I made her life fucking luxurious compared to what I had. “And fuck you for saying that. Really. Just fuck you.”

  I push past her and go for my door. I unlock it, step in, and I really am going to slam it on her face… but she puts her foot in the door jamb and it just bounces back.

  “You have something else to say?” I ask her, my anger overflowing now. She is so ungrateful.

  Calm down, Kat. Just breathe and calm down.

  I left to give her a different life. I left so she didn’t have to know the life I had. I left so she’d never have to think about the past the way I do.

  “I’m sorry,” Lily says. “Seriously, I am. OK? It’s just… I was calling and calling. I just wanted to have coffee like we always do. And then you didn’t answer. So I came over and there was no answer at the door. And the doorman said he hadn’t seen you. And just… I got all these ideas in my head. Like you were gone. They came and—”

  “Stop,” I say. I can’t bear to hear this. “Just stop. I’m fine. I was out with a guy. I have a boyfriend, OK? Are you happy now?”

  “Since when?” She looks crushed. Like I just told her something horrible. “Who? You’ve been in town for like two weeks. How could you already be spending the night with a fucking guy? You’re not even allowed to—”

  “I’m allowed to do whatever I want.”

  “Yeah, OK.” She laughs. “Fine. And then they will come in and kill you. Do you think I want to lose you, Katya? For Christ’s sake. You’re all I have right now. And you’re treating me like I’m some nosey stranger instead of your sister.”

  We stare at each other. At an impasse.

  “Well,” she says, blinking first.

&n
bsp; “Well?” I say, answering but not backing down. I’m in control here. She thinks she’s so tough? Please. She has no idea what it means to be tough. She thinks she’s so wounded? I don’t see a scar on her neck.

  “I meant it,” she says, her voice soft and conciliatory. “I didn’t mean to come off that way. Do you want to get coffee?”

  “I really don’t,” I say. A little surprised at my honesty. I just want to close the door and be alone. Think about what’s happening a little more carefully. Maybe take some of my own pictures of Oliver’s words, and then spend the morning lost in my head as I make it into art.

  But her face crumples. Like she was just barely holding things together over this fight and my snub was the last straw. Her eyes fill with tears.

  I sigh and roll my eyes a little. “Fine. OK. I’ll have coffee with you. We can go to the Fort Collins—”

  “No, no, no,” Lily says, stopping me mid-sentence. “That’s why I was so upset. I got invited over to the Antimony house.”

  “House?” I ask. “They have a house?”

  But Lily shrugs me off. “It’s a dorm, not a house. It’s just small. Just them.”

  “So… a house?”

  “Kat, don’t be a paranoid freak. They’re having a brunch in like thirty minutes. And I want you to come. Please?” She bats her eyelashes at me. “Please, please, please? Everyone is bringing a boyfriend and I don’t have one.”

  She doesn’t say the rest, but I can read her thoughts. I don’t have one… because of you.

  Because I am a paranoid freak and I’ve been telling her since she was little all the bad things that can happen if she gets mixed up with the wrong guy. I’m the poster child for poor man choices. Not that mine was a choice, but it’s still a good lesson. One that should scare the ever-loving shit out of her.

  I hesitate anyway. I do not want to go spend time with college kids. Least of all these Antimony girls.

  “Come on, please,” Lily begs. “We can walk over right now, get there just in time, and then we spend one hour there. That’s all the time I have anyway. I have class at noon.”

 

‹ Prev