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The Crow Brothers: JET - TULSA - RIVERS - RIDGE

Page 87

by Scott, S. L.


  “My apologies, Ms. Fellowes, but I need to make a quick call upstairs to inform our bosses that you’re leaving the premises.”

  “Inform them?”

  “Yes, I have to let them know.”

  “Let them,” I say, pitching my tone up an octave until I hit that perfect note of insanity. “I am not anyone’s property.” I poke him hard in the chest, which actually hurts my fingertip. “You are not my boss and no one owns me.”

  “Ma’am, I didn’t mean to offend you. I wasn’t inferring that anyone owns you like property. This is our protoc—”

  The door slides open and I see my target, dashing out as soon as he looks down. I practically dive into the car and lock the door. “Go. Go. Go.”

  The driver hits the gas, leaving skid marks on the parking garage floor. Looty barely hits the car before we’re too far-gone. Turning back, he’s on his phone with his other hand raised into the air.

  The driver makes eye contact through the rearview mirror. “Stella?”

  Checking my phone, I see my driver’s name and look up again. “Topher?”

  “Yes,” he says, seeming to relax. “What was that about?”

  Rolling my eyes, I wave my hand. “Crazy ex.”

  “Ugh. I have a few of those.” When his car tells him to take a right, he confirms, “Rostinal Academy, right?”

  “Yes. Thank you.”

  “It’s a bit early for a school visit.”

  It’s really none of his business what I’m doing no matter if it’s three p.m. or three a.m., but since he’s mentioned it, it would be suspicious if I didn’t say something. “I work there. I’m a teacher. Midterms start tomorrow and my printer at home isn’t working. I have to be ready when the students walk in, so it will be a long night, but I refuse not to be prepared.”

  “That sucks. Do you like teaching?”

  “Love it,” I lie. Then I pretend to play on my phone, so he leaves me alone.

  When he pulls into the parking lot, he asks, “Are you sure you’ll be okay?”

  The kindness of strangers is never lost on me. “I’ll be fine. Thank you.” I get out and send a bonus tip and give him the highest rating as I walk to the back door. Digging into the secret pocket of the pants, I pull out my key card and hold it to the security pad. The door unlocks, and I’m in.

  The school is highly secure. Every camera in the place will show I’ve been here, but I don’t care. I’m hoping to be in and out before the alarm company calls. By the time I enter the front office, though, I realize I’m not fast enough. I answer to keep them at bay. “This is Safe Haven Security, can you please identify yourself.”

  “Sorry for the late-night visit,” I start feeding the same midterm lie to this guy. “Stella Fellowes. 569 is my security clearance. I used my card to get in.”

  “I’m scanning the list. Yes, you’re right here. You have clearance. Thank you, Ms. Fellowes, and have a safe night.”

  I hang up and rush to my classroom to get the universal key I was given last week to meet with the dance committee in the gymnasium at night. Grabbing it out of the back of my filing cabinet, I lock my drawers again and head back to the first floor.

  If my suspicions are correct about the money, I need that check as evidence. It will be the key to everything. I’m either right, and this will put them all away, or wrong and back where I started no safer than I was hours ago. It’s worth the risk.

  After unlocking the door to the front office, I rush to Brian’s office. I’m quick to learn that the key doesn’t work on his door. I’m not surprised, but I have other tricks up my sleeve.

  I pull the key card from my pocket and leverage it into the small space between the door and the frame. It’s an interior door so the lock should be fairly easy to pop. When the doorknob turns, and I push it open, I’m shocked how a few online videos I watched this afternoon can teach anybody anything. I still feel guilty for asking Rivers not to join me in the bath, but I knew it was the only time he’d be okay with me being alone. Safe.

  I rush to his desk and pull the drawers open, rummaging through the files and eliminating them by name first before going through each one. Not that he’ll have a file labeled donations for illegal activity, but it’s worth a search for something that stands out.

  I turn to the file cabinet in the corner and pull the handle, but it doesn’t open. Damn it. It’s locked.

  The light comes on, and I spin around. Busted. “Brian?”

  “What are you doing here, Stella?”

  “I, um.” The lie I told the last two guys comes to mind, but he knows better. “How did you know I was here?”

  Holding his phone up, he says, “Alarm company. They have to call me as part of the procedure we have in place.”

  Shit.

  “Stella,” he starts as he comes closer. Sitting on the other side of the desk where the students sent to see him usually sit, he continues, “I think we got off track with our friendship. Ever since your friend came into the picture, we seem to have lost what we once had.”

  Still standing where he found me, I eye the desk for anything that will help fend him off to give me a chance to run if needed. I know it will be needed, but my head is playing mind games, toying with the idea that I have a chance to actually get out of this situation alive. “What did we have, Brian?”

  “I liked you.”

  Past tense. “And now?”

  He seems to relax under my scrutiny, and a grin appears. “I still like you. I think the sparks we had still exist. Even though Baird’s sullied you, I’d still take you.”

  Oh God. I’m going to be sick. He’s not just delusional.

  He’s dangerous.

  Very, very dangerous.

  “I don’t know what you want me to say.” With my thumb, I try to call for help.

  Darkness spreads over the lightness of his irises, and he stands. “You push another button on that phone, and I’ll kill you right here, and then I’ll kill your sister and your father and your boyfriend. Although, Josh has behaved himself, so I think I’ll give him your sister to play with first. No doubt your father will love watching that.”

  The pulled together principal is gone. The upstanding detective is nowhere to be found as hate fills his expression. “Phone on the desk. Now.”

  There’s no room to fight this, and I’ll never make it to the door behind him, so I set my phone on the desk between us. With nothing left to lose, I ask, “Did you know I was the daughter of one of your debtors? Did you target him or me first?”

  His eyes never leave mine when he angles his head down. The knuckles of his hands whiten as he grips the arms of the chair. “Brown found a bunch of low-level gamblers who felt like bigshots tossing five-dollar chips around like they were a grand. They were easy prey. So easy. I used to run a successful bookie business when I first came out of the police academy. With the connections I made through arrests, I was making money hand over fist.”

  “How did you end up working for that monster if you were so successful?”

  “I discovered when you swim with sharks, you attract whales. Like you, I had no choice. Conrad Baird has bought and paid for half the police force. How do you think I got assigned to his case? Why do you think no charges have been filed after years?”

  “And Suthers?”

  “No,” he says, laughing. “Somehow, that sap still thinks he can change things.” He chuckles, and it sounds positively evil. How did I think this man was good at heart? “And for the record, I thought I was doing your family a favor by offering you a job. As soon as you graduated, you had a paycheck.” Shaking his head, he says, “When your dad drinks, he brags. He used to brag about you, so fucking proud of his daughters. I was the good guy. I was trying to help you and your family out from under the fucking mess your father created.” He believes he’s still the good guy? Oh shit. He’s more than delusional.

  He sits forward, resting his elbows on his legs while rubbing his hands together. “Your dad wasn’t safe
until Baird laid eyes on you. You should have never gone with him to sign over the house. Once he heard about you, he didn’t care about your father. He didn’t care about the debt. He saw something he could make more money off than a three bedroom on the wrong side of the tracks.”

  “Me.” My chest hurts, breathing getting harder in the stifling room. “Is that what you’re saying? That you didn’t know when I was taken to him?”

  “No. Not until after. I found out through Brown. You still showed up at school the next day, acting like nothing happened.” A grin begins at one corner and then slides onto the other side of his mouth. “Your bravery is to be admired.”

  I wasn’t brave. I was broken. But I’ll never give him the satisfaction of seeing that side of me. Trying to find the man I once thought I knew, I ask, “Was the money worth it?”

  “Worth what?”

  “My life?” I try to be brave, but I’m terrified, and it was heard in my shaking voice. Standing up, he keeps his eyes on me but doesn’t answer. I guess that man is long gone. “Now what?” I ask, dreading the answer because I know how this story ends. He’s confessed his sins. There’s nowhere to go but down from here.

  “Unfortunately, we go for a car ride.”

  40

  Stella

  I once heard that if attacked, never let the attacker move you to a second location. Your odds for survival go down.

  But what if you’re living on borrowed time already?

  Does the location of your death matter?

  Yes.

  I’d rather die in my lover’s arms than in the trunk of this car.

  * * *

  The hammering in my head causes me to wake up, my eyes bleary as early daylight slips in through the blinds lifted a few inches above the sill. Beige textured paper coats the walls in a high-end design with a polished brass bench anchoring the window.

  I squint, trying to remember if this is the hotel or where I am. Moving my arm from my side to behind me on the bed, I feel around for Rivers. When I don’t find him, I sit up abruptly, my head pounding from the rush of blood.

  “Get up.”

  I know the voice before I find Yellow sitting in a chair on the other side of the room near the door. On the trust scale, it’s sad to say, but I trust Brown more than being alone with Yellow. “Where’s Brown?”

  “Busy.”

  Scanning the room once more, I know where I am. My throat hurts as it constricts.

  He stands, angered. “The boss is waiting for you.”

  My body refuses to move, to leave this bed. My head hurts, and my fingers ache from holding the blanket so tight. He charges, taking me down with a blow to the left ear. “Get the fuck up!” he screams loud enough for me to hear in the other ear that’s pressed to the mattress.

  He’s done damage, but it’s not my ear that hurts; it’s my heart. My body’s already gone numb, but I can hear the phantom hum of Rivers’s heart next to mine and the feel of his arms around me.

  I’m grabbed by the ankles and yanked to the floor before I have time to recover. My side hurts in addition to my ear throbbing. Against my wishes, I’m feeling too much, the pain the least of my concerns.

  I move to my feet, and I’m pulled by the arm to the door. Pushed forward against the wall, I feel his dick against my backside. I will not go down without a fight. With a swift swing, I elbow him in the neck, sending him back in pain. I open the door and run right into Brian’s hard chest.

  Catching me, he wraps his arms around me. “Where are you off to so fast?” he asks with a playful grin as if I’m not a hostage in this house of horrors. How this man was permitted to be around children day in and day out is beyond me. He’s just as much monster as Baird. I doubt it will work, but the only thing I can think to do is appeal to his ego. I’m going to hate every single word coming out of my mouth, and I feel as though I’m going to be sick. But I take a deep breath. This is for my life.

  “I’m sorry, Brian. Your behavior has confused me lately. You’ve hurt me, but then tell me we could have been something. Do you still believe that? Despite what happened with Baird?”

  “Crow is an asshole. You shouldn’t have let him touch you. He shouldn’t have been able to fuck you in my house.” Oh God. He watched us? Bile rises to my throat, but I have to push that back.

  Yellow goes to grab me, but Brian says, “I’ll handle her. Go.”

  Brian’s hold on me tightens, and it reminds me of how he held me in the hallway. That seems so long ago . . . when Yellow is out of earshot, he says, “What are you saying?”

  “I’m saying I’m sorry. Sorry that . . . that I confused you. Don’t hand me over to Baird. Please help me.”

  “What’s in it for me?”

  “What do you want?”

  “You know what I want, Stella. I was on your side. I was protecting you. I wanted you, knowing how you chose Conrad over your own dignity.”

  “Protecting me?”

  “Yes,” he says, picking pieces of my hair off my face that are sticking for some reason. “I told him I would handle you, take care of you. He agreed. But then . . . well, it’s too late now. I can’t protect you anymore.” He pulls me by the arm down a few doors and stops.

  My voice is weak, so weak that I don’t even recognize it. I do recognize the door to the bathroom though. “Please don’t make me do this. I’ll do anything you want, but please—”

  “Date?”

  Rivers. Rivers. My heart will only ever belong to that man.

  Brian starts laughing in my face. “Kidding. It’s too late to negotiate.” He opens the door and pushes me inside. “You know what to do.”

  The door is closed behind me, and I stand in the purgatory of cleanliness to prepare for the devil incarnate. I turn toward the mirror and now know why my hair was stuck to my face. Blood from my ear streaks across my cheek, and I lean in to get a closer look. What have I done?

  No one knows where I went.

  No one knows where I am.

  No one will ever know what happened to me until it’s too late.

  I start the shower and strip off my clothes. There’s no point in putting off the inevitable. I clip my hair up after testing how sturdy the plastic tips are. They’re too weak and bendable to do any damage. I wash my face. Using the perfumed gel, I cleanse my body, freeing it from the blood, the dirt from where their grimy hands touched me, and free from this world.

  No one is going to touch me like they did once before. I’ll fight. I’ll fight for my life. I pull the clip out and get some of my hair wet because fuck him.

  The shower is turned off, and I dry my body. I don’t put my yoga pants back on in protest. I’ve learned that trick won’t work anyway. I fix my hair and slip on the heels that have been set next to my clothes on the floor before putting on the robe. I open the door to find Brian still standing there. “Demoted to lackey?”

  “No. Making sure none of the perverts here walked in on you.”

  “And somehow they’re a different caliber of criminal than you?”

  “Yes.”

  His answer is direct, so simple but chilling in delivery. I look down the hall, but we’re still alone . . . or so it seems. Since he’s suddenly feeling so honest, I ask in a whisper, “I want to ask you something, and I need you to tell me the truth. You know as well as I do that I may not walk out of that room once I walk in.” His eyes are cast down, his lack of eye contact speaking volumes. “Was I supposed to die last time?”

  When he looks back at me, he says, “Yes.”

  “Then why did I live?”

  “Because I promised to keep an eye on you.”

  “You saved me?”

  There’s no reply to that question, but he says, “You did everything he never expected. You didn’t tell a soul—not your father. Not your sister. Not the police. And as long as you didn’t tell anyone, you were safe. He expected you to cry to your father, which would be torture, I assume, for a dad. But you didn’t hold it over him.” He checks t
he hall before he whispers, “It was a test that you passed. He wanted to keep you, to sell you to the highest bidder for your loyalty.” To sell me? He’s involved in sex slavery? Here . . . the man is evil.

  “I wasn’t being loyal. I was living in shame.”

  “I asked for a favor. The only one I’ve ever asked for and it was granted.”

  “Me?”

  “You.”

  “You saved me once, Brian. Will you save me again?”

  Dark clouds storm his eyes. “I can’t ask for a second favor, or I won’t walk out of that room.”

  “Then there’s no sense waiting around for death to show up. Let’s go greet the bastard.”

  When I turn to leave, he takes my wrist, causing me to glance back. For a moment, I think I see the clouds clear, but I have no idea how to read him anymore. “Remember not to ask questions. He hates being asked questioned. You know how this works.”

  The door is opened, and we walk in. I expect Brown and Yellow to be there, but it’s unsettling to only find Yellow. “I know,” I say, holding my hand up. I don’t want to hear him. “He wants me on the X.”

  I move around the desk with lead feet unsure of anything that is about to happen. I place my feet on the X and stand there in the robe.

  When “the boss” comes in, he’s drying his hands on a hand towel that he promptly tosses into a basket near the bathroom. “Ms. Fellowes.” He comes to me as if we’re old friends, pleased to see me. “How have you been? I’ve been thinking about you since you had to leave the dinner party early. I hated that you felt ill.”

  I watch him carefully. He has a good façade, but he slips every once in a while. Those are his moments of weakness when by word or by physically doing something are your only chances to turn the tables. Today, he shows no weakness. “Take the robe off.”

  With Yellow gawking at me and Brian watching, I stare at the desk in front of me. My hands start shaking and my knees get weak, my guillotine taunting me as I disrobe.

 

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