Chapter 30
The Dare (Briar U Book 4)
Conorâs Jeep is in the driveway when I get to his townhouse. Foster answers the door, donning a big dumb grin when he sees me. He lets me in without a question, saying Conâs upstairs in his room. For a moment it crosses my mind to interrogate Foster. If any one of the roommates were to crack, spill the tea for a glimpse of some cleavage, itâd be Foster. Right now, though, I just want to nail Conor to a wall.
I barge into his room to find him totally alone. I guess part of me expected there to be a skinny naked woman in his bed, but instead, itâs just him, dressed like heâs going somewhere and about to leave.
He doesnât even look surprised to see me. Disappointed, maybe. âI canât talk right now, T,â he says with a sigh.
âWell, youâre gonna have to.â
He tries to open the bedroom door behind me, but I stand in his way. âTaylor, please. I donât have time for this. I need to go.â His voice is cold, indifferent. He wonât look at me. I think I wanted him to be angry, annoyed. This is worse.
âYou owe me some kind of explanation. Blowing off dinner plans is one thing, but the Spring Gala was important to me.â My eyes are hot and stinging. I swallow hard. âNow youâre bailing on me hours before the event? Thatâs cold, even for you lately.â
âI said I was sorry.â
âIâm sick of sorry. I feel like we broke up only you forgot to tell me. Dammit, Con, if thisââI gesture between usââis over, just tell me. I think I deserve that much.â
He turns away from me, raking his hands through his hair and mumbling something under his breath.
âWhat? Just spit out,â I order. âIâm right here.â
âIt has nothing to do with you, okay?â
âThen what? Just tell me why.â Exasperation washes over me. I donât understand what he possibly has to gain from all this subterfuge, if not to drive me crazy. âWhatâs so important that youâre ditching me tonight?â
âThereâs just something I have to do.â Frustration builds in his voice. The lines deepen across his face, and his shoulders hold more tension than Iâve ever seen. âI wish I didnât, but it is what it is.â
âThatâs not an answer!â I say in frustration.
âItâs the only one youâre getting.â He stalks past me and reaches for the jacket draped over his desk chair. âIâve gotta go. You need to leave.â
As he grabs the jacket, it catches on the armrest and a thick white envelope about the size of a brick tumbles out of one of the pockets. From the envelope, several bound straps of twenty-dollar bills splay on the floor.
We both stare in silence at the money until Conor swipes it up off the floor and starts shoving it back in the envelope.
âWhat are you doing with all that money?â I ask warily.
âItâs not important,â he mutters, shoving the envelope into his jacket pocket. âI have to go.â
âNo.â I shove the door closed and plaster myself against it. âNo one walks around with that kind of money unless theyâre up to no good. Iâm not letting you walk out this door until you tell me whatâs wrong. If youâre in some kind of trouble, let me help you.â
âYou donât understand,â he says. âPlease, just get out of my way.â
âI canât. Not until you tell me the truth.â
âFuck,â he grits out, yanking at his hair. âJust let me go. I donât want you involved, T. Why are you making this so difficult?â
His mask has finally failed. Gone is the aloof, indifferent face heâs held in place all week while heâs done his best to hide the anguish inside. Now all I see is pain, desperation. This thing has been eating him up and he looks exhausted.
âDonât you get it?â I say. âI care about you. What other reason is there?â
Conor deflates. He collapses on the edge of his bed and drops his head in his hands. Heâs quiet for so long I think heâs given up.
But then he finally speaks.
âLast May, back home in California, Kai comes to me one dayâI hadnât seen him in weeksâand says he needs money. Like a lot of money. He got in bad with a drug dealer and had to pay him back or the guy would fuck him up. I told him I donât have that kind of cash. So he says, you know, ask Max for money.â Conor raises his eyes, as if checking to see whether I remember what heâs told me about his relationship with his stepfather.
I nod slowly.
âRight, so I said hell no, I canât do that. Kai gets pissed, like, fuck you, I thought we were friends, all that crap, but he doesnât push it. He just says heâll find another way and leaves. At the time I thought he was exaggerating about the trouble he was in, that maybe he just wanted a new phone or some dumb shit and thought I could waltz into a giant gold vault and take whatever I wanted.â
Conor takes a breath and rubs at his face. As if heâs gathering energy.
âSo then maybe a couple weeks later, Max and I got into some stupid argument. I hadnât declared a major yet and he was getting on my case about figuring out what Iâm going to do with my life. So of course I get defensive because what he really means is that Iâm a loser whoâs never going to amount to anything if I donât become just like him. It turns into a full-on shouting match and then I get pissed off and leave. I end up at Kaiâs place, tell him what happened, and he says, hey, you know, we can totally get back at him. Just say the word.â
I approach the bed with timid steps and sit down, keeping several feet of space between us. âAnd what did you say?â
âI said fuck it. Letâs do it.â
He shakes his head, letting out a deep sigh. I can feel the anxiety wafting off him, how hard it is to admit all of this. How far he has to reach into himself to find the courage.
âI gave Kai the alarm code and told him Max always keeps three grand in cash in his desk drawer for emergencies. I said I didnât want to know when itâs gonna happen. Itâd be months before Max would even notice it was missing, and besides, that kind of money is nothing to the man. Heâd spend that in a week on dinner and wine. Nobody gets hurt.â
âButâ¦?â
Conor looks at me. Finally. For the first time in a week, he really looks at me.
âSo one weekend we all go to Tahoe. I wanted to stay behind but Mom gave me a guilt trip about spending quality time together. So the house is empty for a few days, and Kai makes his move. He was probably high or wasted on some shitâthe kid never had a fucking dimmer switch, you know? He slips in quiet enough, but then he trashes the place. He grabs one of Maxâs golf clubs from the garage and smashes up Maxâs office and the living room. We came home a couple days later and itâs obvious the place has been robbed. The messed up part is, Max blamed himself. Figured he must have forgotten to set the alarm. But whatever, no big thing, he says. Insurance will cover the damage.â
My forehead wrinkles. âThey didnât wonder why nothing else was stolen?â
Conor barks out a sardonic laugh. âNope. The cops decided some teenagers probably just wanted to trash the place. They said theyâd seen it a million times, a crime of opportunity, and that maybe the teens got scared off by something.â
âSo you got away with it.â
âYeah, but thatâs the thing, right? The guilt tore me up from the moment we stepped inside the house and I saw what Kai did. What I did. Somehow in my head I convinced myself that itâd feel good to see the look on Maxâs face. But it fucking hurt. What kind of asshole trashes his own house? My mom was terrified for weeks afterward that whoever did it would come back. She couldnât sleep.â His voice cracks. âI did that to her.â
My heart hurts for him. âAnd Kai?â
âHe found me at the beach a couple weeks later and was asking, you know, howâd it go. I told him I couldnât hang out with him anymore, that heâd gone too far and it was a bad idea to begin with. And that was it, we were through. In his head he thought he was being a good friend, like he was sticking up for me or something. Thatâs probably the best example anyone could give you of how his brain works.â
âIâm guessing he didnât take the break-up well?â
âNope. I think more than anything he was worried Iâd rat him out. But I reminded him that doing so would be mutually assured destruction. And we went our separate ways.â
âUntil Buffalo.â
âBuffalo,â he agrees ruefully. âThen Saturday at the beach. He followed me there, gave me the same old story. He owes money to bad people and theyâll kill him if he doesnât get it. Except this time he needs ten grand.â
âShit,â I say under my breath.
Conor laughs sadly in response. âRight?â
âYou canât give him the money.â
He cocks his head at me.
âNo, Iâm serious, Conor. You canât give him the money. This time itâs ten, next time itâs fifteen, twenty, fifty. Heâs blackmailing you, right? Thatâs what this is all about? Mutually assured destruction? And the contents of that envelopeâ¦I bet you didnât get the money from your family.â
âI donât have a choice, Taylor.â His eyes turn angry.
âYes, you do. You can tell Max and your mom the truth. If you come clean, Kai has no more leverage. Heâll leave you alone and you can finally get on with your life without worrying about the day heâll show up again to derail your whole life.â
âYou donât know what youâre talking about. You have noââ
âI know that because of this shame and embarrassment you feel, youâve blown me off, fucked your family over, and done who knows what to get that money. Whenâs it going to stop? When is it enough?â I shake my head at him. âThereâs only one thing you can do to fight back, or you can be a slave to this secret forever.â
âYeah, you knowâ¦â Conor gets up. âThis really doesnât concern you. I told you the truth and now Iâve gotta go.â
I jump up and try to intercept him, but he sidesteps me with little effort on his way to the door. I grab his hand as he turns his back on me. âPlease. Iâll help you. Donât do this.â
He snatches his hand away. When he speaks, the coldness and detachment has returned. âI donât need your help, Taylor. I donât want it. And I definitely donât need some chick telling me what to do. You were right. We shouldnât be together.â
He doesnât look back. Down the hallway and out the door. Not a single hesitation.
He just leaves me there with the poisoned memories of this room, with my makeup smeared and hair falling down.
Conor Fucking Edwards.