Truth is what stands the test of experience.
âAlbert Einstein
âYouâre dating a fucking FBI agent?â Jake blares over the phone, and I groan, pulling it away from my ear as I park at the restaurant across the street from where Tyler is.
Iâm starving, and we canât get a visual inside this office, so Iâll stalk from here, since this is where he has reservations.
Right now, this blonde wig is itching the crap out of me, and this red lipstick is definitely causing me to stick out. Add both in with the dark sunglasses and skin tight dress that Iâm wearing, and I look nothing like Lana Myers, just in case.
âI already explained how it happened,â I tell Jake, wishing I had just kept the confession out of it.
âAnd youâre in New York, where he also happens to be.â
âTyler is here, which is why Iâm here. He took an unscheduled trip up here, so I got worried he was coming to see one of the others, since Lawrence is the next target and heâs also here. He has lunch reservations for two, Jake.â
He blows out a heavy breath. âNew York is a long way from West Virginia. Whatâs he doing there?â
âI donât know. He went into the same office where Lawrence works.â
âThe media hasnât gotten ahold of the story.â
âYeah, but that doesnât mean they havenât heard several of their friends died recently.â
He grows quiet, and I stare out at the restaurant. Tyler has reservations for two here at lunch. That much I found out from the cloned phone. But he hasnât been texting Lawrence. Iâm not sure who heâs texting.
âJake? You still there?â
âNo,â he says, sounding muffled. âIâm right beside you.â
I look out my window to find a guy with a goatee, dark glasses, and a stick⦠Iâm not sure what itâs called, but it looks suspiciously like the stick the seeing impaired would use to feel their way around. His hair has also been bleached blonde.
I guess weâre both incognito.
I climb out of the car, arching an eyebrow at him. âCowabunga?â
He snorts, but then his lips thin.
âSo you decided to come to New York City without telling me?â I ask, crossing my arms over my chest.
He shrugs carelessly. âSame thing you essentially did. I have the same phone you do, remember? I knew youâd be heading out.â
He points a finger at me.
âDonât think youâre off the hook over this FBI boyfriend thing. That conversation is pausedânot over.â
I groan, and he smirks as he holds his arm out for me to take.
He looks all classy in his suit. With the way Iâm dressed, I look like his high-paid hooker.
âYou look good, by the way,â he whispers as he guides me down the sidewalk.
âHigh praise coming from a man whoâs supposed to be blind,â I say with a sweet smile.
He restrains a smile as we walk inside. âReservation for Demarco,â I tell the hostess. âWe requested the terrace, since itâs so beautiful outside today.â
Just like Tyler requested.
She beams at me, treating me like I donât resemble a call girl with her John. âOf course. Right this way,â she says, refraining from calling me Mrs. Demarco in case itâs the name of my date.
So I guess theyâre used to this sort of thing.
âYouâre making me look like a hooker,â I hiss under my breath.
Jake covers a laugh with a forced cough, and I stop myself from kicking him with my stiletto heel.
âPretty sure you did that all by yourself. Trying to stand out?â
âTrying to look the opposite of me,â I whisper.
âGood job.â
âHa,â I grumble as the sweet hostess seats us.
She flashes all of her beautifully white teeth at us in the best genuine smile Iâve seen. Maybe sheâs just a friendly little perky thing.
âYour waiter will be with you momentarily. Enjoy your lunch,â she says, still not using names.
As she glides away, I turn my attention on Jake. His glasses have tinted sides that cover his eyes completely, allowing him to look wherever he wants without people noticing where his eyes are directed from the side.
âClever,â I note in a mock, deep southern drawl, and he grins.
âThought youâd appreciate it,â he says, adjusting his glasses for emphasis.
Our table is private enough to speak without anyone overhearing, but I look around for any cameras that might overhear.
âTwo above us,â Jake says, not having to guess about why Iâm looking around. âI can hear those birds like I can hear an alarm going off.â
So talk in code or type a text. Got it.
They must have audio if heâs hinting for me to be silent.
âYouâre right. Two birds are up there. Iâll never understand how you do that,â I tell him, keeping with the southern accent Iâve accidentally committed to.
âI still love your accent,â he tells me, grinning.
Asshole.
I look over just as Tyler walks in, and my stomach hits my toes when I see Lawrence with him. They get seated two tables over, and Jake hands me something under the table. I feel it and know exactly what it is.
With subtlety, I pretend as though my earring is loose, and lift my hand to pretend to fix it under the long mane of blonde hair that hides my ears perfectly. Instead of touching the earring, I put in the small ear piece that Jake just gave me.
I pet Jakeâs hand like an affectionate little hooker, and pretend to devote all my attention to him. âI assume youâll tell me all about your day after we eat?â he asks, sticking with code-speak.
âYou know it, darlinâ.â
He barely stops himself from laughing, but my smile falls away when I hear Tyler and Lawrence speaking quietly to each other.
The earpiece amplifies their words as long as itâs facing what I want to hear, so I keep my head angled toward Jake like Iâm staring at him affectionately.
âIt has to be Dev, man. Thereâs no one else whoâd want to do something to us for that night,â Tyler is saying.
So they are meeting about me. I guess the catâs out of the bag.
âThereâs no way,â Lawrence scoffs dismissively.
âHe had a breakdown two nights later and said we took it too far. He fucking cried, dude. Cried like a little bitch. Said we were sick for what we did to them. Itâs him. That fucker has finally cracked and now heâs doing this. He thinks heâs innocent since he didnât get his dick dirty that night, and now heâs picking us off one by one.â
From the corner of my eye, I notice Lawrence shaking his head. I run my hand up and down Jakeâs arm, pretending to be lost in thought as I read the menu aloud to him, but really all my attention is caught up in the conversation across from us.
âNo. Itâs not him. I talked to his sister, and she said heâs been in Mexico for the past two months on a church mission thing.â
Dev is the only one Iâm not sure what to do with, to be honest. Heâs the only one who showed remorse, and they did essentially force him to be there that night. He wasnât a victim, by any means. He could have spoken up and said somethingâ¦anything.
Currently, heâs not on my kill list. But he is in the ten fingers column.
Jake gets tired of not hearing, so he discreetly lifts his hand and places another sound amplifier in his ear. Itâs small enough to not be seen as long as no one stares directly into his ear. Even then, they might assume itâs a hearing aid instead of a listening device.
âIâm telling you itâs not him. Trust me. I doubt heâs even heard anything about this, and Melissa sent me pictures of him from the church mission heâs on. Heâs been texting her daily with updates and such,â Lawrence argues.
âThink Melissa is just covering for him? She is his fucking sister.â
âSheâs had a crush on me since we were kids. Trust me, sheâd be over that crush if she had any idea what we did, unless sheâs into that sort of thing. In which case sheâd be outing her brother to us if it was him. Either way, sheâs not covering for him.â
âI think itâs him. Thereâs no one else it could be.â
Lawrence looks around, letting his gaze linger on our table for a fleeting second, and then his gaze moves on, taking in the few people out on the terrace before settling his attention back on Tyler.
âItâs not him. The night he freaked out, who do you think got him back in line?â
Tyler looks confused.
Our waitress has dropped off some bread, and Jake is ordering for us, so itâs harder to hear with so many people so close speaking at once. I strain, making sure I donât miss anything as I force myself to chew on a piece of bread, finding my appetite to be sorely lacking.
âWhatâd you do?â I hear Tyler ask.
âI told him the same thing that happened to Victoria would happen to Melissa if he ever said a word. After that, they left town, and he started preaching the gospel. Thatâs how he sought penance. Heâs not out killing people, for fuckâs sake,â Lawrence hisses.
He may have just saved Dev ten fingers.
And a tongue. His tongue was going to be gone too. It was a special column I was going to draw up just for him.
âThen who else is there?â
âI think thatâs pretty obvious, donât you?â
âNo.â
Lawrence slaps his head like heâs exasperated. Theyâre acting like this is normal terrace conversation for a late lunch. I assume itâs why they picked a restaurant that doesnât have a lot of terrace traffic.
Lawrence has a roommate. Tyler has a wife. I get why they didnât meet up at their homes to discuss this, but why not do it over the phone?
âThe entire town hated them after what their father did. Think of the one person who didnât hate them. Hereâs a hint: his father was their fatherâs lawyer.â
Tyler shakes his head immediately.
âNo. I saw Jacob two years ago. Ran into him at a company thing, and he fist bumped me. Even told me to call and hang out some time. If heâd known, he would have at least taken a swing. Iâm sure they both died before he ever heard the truth. And he left town after that, so itâs not like he was around for the rumors.â
Lawrence sits back, now looking confused. Jake squeezes my hand a little too hard.
I remember that run-in. Jake does freelance computer work, and Tyler was working closer to where Jake lives now at that time. It was all Jake could do not to kill him, but he knew we had a plan, and he knew this revenge was mine. He knew he had a part to play, but his part was to be the brains. My part was to be their worst nightmare.
âBesides,â Tyler goes on, âheâs in a wheelchair these days. Some motorcycle wreck put him in the chair a few years ago.â
Jake nudges my foot with his, a calculated grin on his lips. Weâve thought of everything.
âThen I donât know anyone else who would be enraged over a rapistâs whore daughter and fag son,â Lawrence says coldly.
My stomach churns hearing the way he refers to my brother. My good, honest, strong, loving, incredible brother who never deserved to be mutilated and⦠So much happened that he never deserved.
Because of them, I was left without anyone. Because of them, the best man who has ever walked the face of the earth died before he could light the world with his smile.
And they think itâs okay because he was gay. They think itâs okay because Iâd had sex with two guys before that night.
They think it makes it alright to punish us so brutally for loving our fatherâ¦
Jake clears his throat, and I realize that itâs my grip that is too tight now. My nails are cutting into his hand.
Loosening my grip, I continue to listen, wondering how much more I can take before I slice both of their throats right now.
Lawrence may die sooner than I planned. I may tie him up with Tyler and let them cry to each other while I cut them both to pieces.
âMaybe itâs not even related,â Lawrence says with a shrug. âJust donât let anyone in your house for a while, and tell your wife to do the same. Iâm getting a security system installed in my apartment. You should too. Not that it matters. According to Dad, theyâre being let in, because thereâs no sign of a break in.â
âFuck,â Tyler hisses. âFine. Iâll get something installed.â
Keyless entry locks are my best friends. Itâs easy to catch the code being punched in on camera. Itâs also easy to grab a set of keys and have a copy made if they use traditional locks. It just looks like Iâm being invited in.
One more thing to keep them off a dead girlâs trail.
He grabs a bite of his bread, and I find myself dizzy. Itâs the first time I havenât heard them begging for forgiveness when this subject gets brought up. Usually itâs not brought up until I have a knife pressed to their skin.
They donât have the balls to say this kind of shit when Iâm the one making them cry for mercy, beg for forgiveness, and plead for their lives. Iâve never been more eager to get to the fun part.
Their conversation shifts to the best security systems to get, and I try to calm myself down before I slit both their throats and dicks in the middle of a restaurant.
âI think we should probably consider getting two birds for the new house. What do you think?â Jake asks, apparently thinking the same damn thing I am.
âThink we could do it on such short notice?â I ask him, smiling sweetly even though the taste of vengeance is potent on my tongue.
âI think so. Maybe an extra week at most. Could probably find a better place for them too, just to be safe.â
Thereâs a storm shelter behind Tylerâs old house that is still up for sale. I could put them both in there, and Jake could do something to keep any realtors from walking in on me while Iâm busy killing two boys at once.
âIâm not as hungry as I thought I was, dearest,â Jake tells me when the waitress drops off our food.
âMe neither,â I say, stabbing my steak much harder than necessary.
Tyler and Lawrence never say anything else worth hearing again. Mostly I hear a few people around them taking bets on if Iâm really a hooker or not.
Just as Tyler starts to leave, Lawrence stops him.
âGet a burner phone like I did. Anything else comes up, call me from that phone. No more personal phone calls. Got it?â
So he got a burner phone? Howâd we miss that?
Tyler nods, and Jake and I exchange a look.
âIf we find out who it is, we donât need anything linking it back to us when we take matters into our own hands. Understood?â Lawrence asks.
âIâd love to see them fucking try,â Jake whispers.
My lips twitch. Iâve never been this excited to kill someone.
We let Tyler be gone for a while before we stand. As we walk past Lawrenceâs table, his hand shoots up, grabbing my wrist. My stomach roils and my heart hammers in my chest as I fight all my instincts not to rip his throat out here and now.
I look down, glaring at him.
The bastard winks up at me and hands me a card that I take, trying to get away from him.
âCall me sometime, sweetheart. A girl who looks like you needs someone to appreciate all those sights.â
I give him a dazzling smile, wink at him, and start walking again, gently brushing his hand away. Oh, Iâll give him something to look at. Iâll paint the walls with his and Tylerâs blood, and Iâll let them bleed out as they watch.
Itâll be so pretty.
Just as we reach the sidewalk, I stumble over my own feet, watching in disbelief as a SUV rolls up to the curb. Hissing out a breath, I step closer to Jake, practically crawling against his side as Logan hops out.
New York City is way too freaking big for this to be happening.
Thereâs food truck on the curb, and he and the Mr. Arrogant guy get out to go over there, both smiling like itâs a great day. Theyâre in street clothesâjeans and t-shirts. Not their typical suits or anything else. Did I miss something?
âWhat?â Jake whispers, looking at them then me.
âBoyfriend,â I whisper back.
He wheezes out a breath before cursing, and he tugs me along to my car (which is not registered in my name or anything) that is parked way too close to them. Itâs one of my many âburnerâ cars.
The universe is trying to send me mixed signals. First it saves Devâs fingers and tongue. Then it condemns two men to a more brutal death after I discover more than I thought possible from one late lunch. Now itâs tossing me directly in front of the man of my dreams?
âYouâre going to end up running the FBI. That was absolutely amazing,â Mr. Arrogant says, genuine awe in his tone as he speaks to Logan.
âThatâs not what Iâm after. Iâm just glad we provoked a damn confession. Makes getting home happen that much quicker.â
Mr. Arrogant groans while Jake continues to try and draw me toward the car. My ear piece is still in, making their conversation very easy to follow despite the noises on the street. Well, as long as I keep it directed solely at them, which has me walking with my head cocked.
âBack home to the Ice Queen?â the guy says, a touch of snark in his tone.
I bet thatâs Carter. Or was it Chris? Craig? I canât remember.
Loganâs smile is so damn beautiful. âYeah. Donât be jealous.â
C-Name guy rolls his eyes, and I watch like a swooning girl on the sidewalk as I drag my feet in my stilettos. My heart was ripped out moments ago, but just seeing Logan is soothing the burn.
âWhen are you going back?â C-Name guy asks.
âAs soon as we know for sure the evidence has followed proper chains of command and is being sealed tight. I donât want this one to ever get away.â
âFucking da Vinci. The shit in your head is scary.â
I have no idea what that means.
âYou havenât seen half the shit in my head, Craig. I need to call my girl, so order me a burger.â
Shit!
I push my phone to silent, hating that I have to let it go to voicemail as Jake opens the door to my car. I get in, remove the earpiece, and let my heart sink when Logan calls. Sighing, I toss my phone aside as I stare up at Jake, who is glaring down at me.
âWeâll talk about this later. My place as soon as you can make it.â
Nodding, I let him shut my door, and I crank my car. I have two kills to plan, a boyfriend to see, and a best friend to un-piss off. And not in that order.
Iâm just the typical American woman.
Or is it the typical American Psycho?