My phone buzzed with an incoming message right as I sat myself on a stool during the lunch rush at Psychos.
A second later, another text came in.
Yeah. Like I hadnât worked that out from the rest of the message.
Getting thrown out of my place was just the cherry on top of what had already been a shit spectacular of a morning. I hadnât even had a chance to call Liam and ask him about Bartâs will when another email from the lawyer hit my inbox, stating Vaughn was contesting me receiving anything. I just stared at my phone in disbelief. It was a harbinger of bad news today.
âWhatâs wrong?â Nash peered over at my screen while pulling a beer for a regular. He placed it down on the countertop, a little of the froth spilling over onto his fingers. He wiped at it with a cloth before taking the cash from the man waiting for his drink.
If I told him about the housing situation, heâd try to fix it for me. I had too much pride for that. So I went with the legal situation instead. âI got an email from a lawyer saying Bartâs son is contesting the will. Predictably, rich boy doesnât want me getting a dime of his money. Fuck him. I donât want it anyway.â
Vincent, who was supposed to be working as the clubâs bouncer, leaned his folded arms on the countertop with interest. âHow much money is in question?â
I shrugged. âVaughn said multi-millions.â
Nash coughed and spluttered, âExcuse me? Multi millions?â
âWhat, like itâs a lot?â I joked. Though of course it was. Nash and I were Saint View hood rats who barely had two nickels to rub together. Vincent was better off, and he, Nash, War, and Bliss all lived in one of his familyâs big houses, but I didnât think they were multimillionaires either. It was a lot of money no matter who you talked to.
âYou are not just walking away from that, Rebel,â Bliss declared, wiping out a glass.
âI donât know. Itâs not my family fortune. Maybe heâs right to be pissed. I probably would be too.â
âHe can be pissed all he wants, but his dad and your mom obviously wanted you to have that money, or they wouldnât have put your name in the will. They want you to be looked after.â Bliss shoved her hands on her ample hips and pinned me with a matter-of-fact glare, just daring me to argue back.
Iâd give anything for curves like hers, but I was stuck with my runty tomboy look. âOkay, fine. Hypothetically, though, what do I do? This email says heâs putting the house on the market as of the end of the week. Heâs not even giving me a chance.â
âHe canât do that,â Nash argued.
âI think we all know that a bartender from Saint View without a cent to her name hasnât got much power against a wealthy businessman with his daddyâs money and lawyers to back him up. Heâll probably have the place sold before I can even hire a lawyer. And look,â I wailed, scrolling through the photo app on my phone, selecting the one I wanted and then flashing it at them. It showed off the sprawling two-story mansionâs gabled roof and painted shutters. A wide verandah on the ground level made me want to buy a porch swing where I could sit curled up and watch the world go by. Or something equally romantic. âI scoped out the place on Street View, and itâs my dream house.â
Vincent crinkled his nose. âIt looks haunted.â
I slapped his solid arm. âStop. Itâs beautiful and charming. Old, yes. But I love it. It has personality. Not to mention the fact my apartment could probably fit in just one bedroom of that place. Think of the parties we could have there.â
Bliss raised an eyebrow. âBecause we throw keggers and invite the entire football team on a regular basis? The only parties we ever throw are here and of the sexy variety.â
I side-eyed her. âWe could try having more of a life.â
âTell that to my all-day sickness.â
âHalloween is coming up. Youâll be well into the second trimester then, right? You should be feeling better. We could throw an amazing party at this house.â
Bliss stared at the beautiful house in the photo. âIt is a lot nicer than your apartment. You need to fight for it.â
I ran my finger over the image on the screen. âImagine being such an entitled twat that you would even consider selling a house like that. He has more money than sense.â
âAgreed,â Bliss announced. âWe hate him.â
I nodded, ignoring the memory of the chemistry sparking between me and Vaughn, before thereâd been a will to get his knickers in a twist. I went back to the email and sighed. Vaughnâs phone number was listed as a contact in the details section of the front page.
Without thinking about it too much, I typed out a message.
I gaped at Bliss. âThis jackass is trying to pay me off.â
âHow much?â Nash asked curiously.
âTwenty-five thousand.â
âOh, fuck that guy,â Bliss spit out. âTell him youâll see him in court.â
I wavered. âHeâll probably win in court. We all know that.â
âYou canât take twenty-five K, Rebel! Thatâs insulting.â
It was. âWhat if I tell him I want the house? He can keep the business and the cash. I donât care about those. But that houseâ¦â I could imagine myself waking up in a huge bed every morning, stretching as sun streamed in the bay windows. I would eat my breakfast overlooking the pool. Dance around in a gown and slippers. Maybe plonk a tiara on my headâ¦
But mostly I would just be safe in the knowledge no landlord was going to kick me out. Iâd sleep better at night knowing I wasnât going to be living out of my car or crashing on Blissâs couch because my rent was overdue.
That was all I truly wanted. To work at Psychos. To have my friends around me. To have a safe, stable home nobody could take away from me.
Oh, and to kill Caleb and his friends, but that could wait until the housing problem was fixed.
I ground my teeth. I was being more than reasonable, I was sure. Yes, the house was worth a lot of money, but it was definitely the smaller portion of Bartâs overall estate. Iâd really hoped Vaughn would be reasonable.
I tossed my phone down on the counter and groaned. âItâs hopeless. Heâs an ass who wants it all, even though he probably swims in his pool of money on a nightly basis.â
âSounds like something Caleb would have done,â Bliss ground out.
I blanched at the comparison. Even though he was being an ass, Vaughn hadnât hurt me the way Caleb had. He hadnât laid a finger on me. When Iâd told him to leave, he had.
âThey arenât the same,â I said quietly, but Bliss didnât hear me. Sheâd already walked away to retrieve some empty glasses from a table.
Nash had gone back to work too, and I needed to do the same. I put the phone away and headed for the main floor to join Bliss in cleaning up.
Vincent put an arm out to stop me as I passed. âRebel.â
âYeah?â
âPossession is nine-tenths of the law.â
I squinted at him. âMeaningâ¦â
âItâs really hard to sell a house that has a tenant in it who wonât budge. Doesnât even need to be a legal tenant. Squatters canât be forcibly removed without notice either.â
He had a point. I was supposed to have coughed up my late rent or moved out two weeks ago. I was still there and would be until the landlord took me to court and I was forcibly removed. I pressed up onto my toes and kissed my bestieâs psychopath on the cheek. âYouâre a genius.â
He blushed pink. âIt might buy you some time.â
I was being evicted anyway, so what did I have to lose? All I had to do was find a time that Vaughn wasnât home, find a way inside, and make myself comfy.
I smiled to myself just imagining his outrage.