Bad Intentions: Chapter 34
Bad Intentions: A Dark Hockey Bully Romance (Hellions of Hade Harbor Book 1)
Saturday afternoon, I caught the bus to Midnight Falls after my shift at the clinic. I might have no idea where I stood with Cayden, but I still wanted to prove that I hadnât leaked his secrets. It was a warm late afternoon, and the sunlight slanting through the bus window was comforting. I needed all the comfort I could get, going to Midnight Falls. It hadnât been the best experience last time; in fact, I didnât think Iâd ever be able to forget the things Iâd learned in Black Lake trailer park or the smell of Caydenâs childhood home.
I got off the bus at the Main Street stop and headed toward the address I had written down. The library with the newspaper archive was located just off Main Street. I found it easily, relieved to see it was still open.
Inside smelled like old papers, coffee, and breath mints. I waited at the reception desk for an older lady to shuffle into her seat.
âCan I help you, dear?â She gave me a kind smile.
âI hope so! Iâm here to look up some old issues of the Midnight Falls Chronicle.â I crossed my fingers under the desk that she wouldnât ask for press credentials.
She peered at me over half-moon spectacles. âOh, is that right? Letâs see hereâ¦I have a log for you to sign. If you just put your name, and then you can go on through.â
Relief flooded me. âGreat!â
I tried to dial my enthusiasm down a notch as she blinked at me. I needed to ask this lady some questions, after all. I wasnât really here to see the archive.
âDo you get a lot of visitors?â I aimed to sound nonchalant.
âSome. Sometimes thereâs a project at school and students need to do some research. These papers arenât on the internet, you know.â
âAh, I see. Have there been any projects like that recently?â I asked.
She reached over for the visitorâs log with glacial slowness, giving me plenty of time to dig for information.
âOh, Iâm sure. I was off last month, though. We work in rotation around here,â she continued.
Damn. That was probably the exact time I was looking for.
âOh, really? Who else works here, if you donât mind me asking?â
âOh, you can ask, but I donât know who was on. I could check, I suppose,â she said faintly, glancing back at the open door to the office behind her. She put the visitor log down before me and turned that way. âWait here, Iâll go and see.â
âThank you so much!â I called after her departing back. I pulled the visitor log to me and scribbled in the corner with the ballpoint pen attached to the book, until ink came out.
I headed down the list, about to put my name, when I saw it.
Of course. The visitorâs log. Damn, I wasnât very good at this research spy stuff.
The archive really didnât get many visitors, and thatâs why the name stood out so clearly.
Last monthâs date was printed in small capitals, very neat and clearly, as was the name beside it.
Josh Samuels.
Josh? Josh had been here, just before the article had been leaked on the student community boards. Of course. If I had to make a list of the people at HHH who had it out for Cayden, except myself, Josh had to be right at the top of the list.
I suddenly remembered seeing him outside the cafeteria with his bruised nose and Ellen on his arm. Ellen, the former resident of Midnight Falls, the one who had tried to warn me about Cayden. The one who knew all about his past and could have pointed Josh in the right direction.
It was so obvious, it was a slap on the face, and yet it hadnât occurred to me until this moment.
The receptionist was just on her way back as I took a picture of the visitorâs log and backed toward the door. I didnât know what to do with this information. Should I tell Cayden? What would he do to Josh? I didnât want to be responsible for actual murder. On the other hand, if I didnât tell Cayden, heâd keep thinking it was me.
âThanks so much for your help! I have everything I need,â I called to the kind receptionist.
She raised an eyebrow as I stepped out of the door and waved quickly. Now that I had the information, I wanted to get the hell out of Midnight Falls as fast as I could.
I walked back to Main Street just as a shiny black car pulled up at the curb. A girl got out, and I recognized her immediately.
Ellen. The girl who had warned me about Cayden in the first place. The one who used to live here.
Dread pooled in my gut as the driver got out the other side and rounded the front of the car, immediately moving toward me.
âBug? What are you doing in Midnight Falls?â Josh wondered, looking around. His eyes narrowed as he took in the small side street Iâd just come from. Realization dawned in his eyes.
âI was just visiting a friend,â I hedged and made to go around them. I jumped when Ellenâs hand landed on my arm.
âYou went to the archive, didnât you? Itâs okay. I know you have to hate Cayden just as much as us. Everything he put you through this month alone is enough to hate him, even without knowing what else heâs capable of.â
âIâ¦â I trailed off, not knowing what the hell to say.
âCome for coffee with us, and letâs talk about it. We should stick together. Weâre all victims of his. It might make you feel better to know more about what heâs capable of,â Ellen said.
Josh watched me with an unreadable expression. He didnât seem as sold on the fact that Iâd be happy to expose more about Cayden than had already come out.
âMore? What more is there?â I wondered.
Ellen nodded. âA whole lot more. Weâre just getting started. Are you coming?â She gave me a hopeful smile. âCome on, Josh, letâs take her to the nice place with the cold-brew stuff.â Ellen launched into a spiel about different coffees as she headed back to the car.
Josh stared at me, and I met his gaze unflinchingly. They were planning on exposing more about Cayden? I had to stay and find out what.
âAre you with us, Lily?â Josh asked quietly.
âLooks like it, doesnât it?â I asked, avoiding answering. I was a terrible liar. It was best not to risk it.
He nodded and jerked his head toward the back seat. âGet in then, letâs go.â
The coffee place was nowhere near as nice as Ellen had hyped it up to be. As soon as we were sitting, it became awkward as hell. I didnât really know either of them, so suddenly having coffee together was uncomfortable. Not only that, but I wanted to get home and think about how to tell Cayden about Josh. Well, that had been the plan. Now, I had no idea. Clearly, I couldnât trust Josh not to make things worse, and I couldnât trust Cayden not to kill him when he found out.
âHow come you guys are here? Do you still have family in town?â I asked Ellen. She had been living in Hade Harbor a while now.
She flushed as she nodded. âMy mom lives here. I live with my uncle in Hade Harbor.â
âOh, ok.â When she didnât say anything more, I changed the subject. âSo, you knew Cayden well when you lived here?â I asked, sipping on black coffee that tasted like tar.
âNot really, but my dad did. He was one of Uncle Jackâs best customers.â Ellen let out a bitter laugh. âUncle Jack was Caydenâs foster father and a well-known guy around these parts. He and my dad were pretty close. My dad passed away last year.â
âIâm so sorry, I had no idea.â
She shrugged, her eyes glittering for a moment. âHe wasnât a bad person, he was just sick. If it hadnât been for his addiction and Midnight Falls, heâd still be here. If it wasnât for Cayden West, heâd still be here.â
âHow was Cayden involved?â
âBecause he came calling when my dad was late on payments. He didnât just ask for the money.â Ellen let out a humorless laugh. âHe was violent. He withheld more product until the account was settled. You know itâs dangerous to come off the hard stuff abruptly. The withdrawal can kill you. It killed him.â
Horror slid through me. It was a truly horrible story. The pain in Ellenâs voice made it clear that she was a long way from having dealt with the trauma of it all. It was also clear that she blamed Cayden for all of it, even if it sounded like he merely worked for his foster father.
âIâm so sorry to hear that. Caydenâs former foster father, Jack, was the supplier?â I asked carefully.
It seemed obvious to me that Cayden had just been doing his uncleâs bidding, but Ellen didnât look like she agreed.
She nodded and wet her lips. âHeâs not so bad, he pays my mom compensation and helps her with her habits. Heâd never cut her off, he knows itâs dangerous.â
My heart broke for her, even as angry as I was. She was torn and twisted by the terrible things that had happened to her family, and put all the blame on the wrong person. Well, maybe Cayden was to blame as well, but the truth remained that he was just young then and acting on his foster dadâs orders. Ellen seemed determined not to acknowledge that, and I got it. It was easier to turn a blind eye to Jack himself, since he was supplying her mom.
Josh interrupted, growing impatient with any discussion that wasnât about vilifying Cayden. âCayden is a dangerous person to have in Hade Harbor. Heâs a dangerous guy to have on the Hellions. Weâre only doing the responsible thing by bringing his past to everyoneâs attention. People should know who they have to go to school with â who they live with,â Josh added. âDoesnât it scare you?â he wondered.
I shrugged, numb. It did scare me, but not entirely for the reasons they meant.
âSo, weâre going to make sure everyone knows. That way, heâll get kicked off the team and can slither back here. You wonât have to see him in your house anymore, either.â
âBut if you have real concerns, wouldnât it be best to go straight to the police, or at least Principal Smith, instead of just dragging his name through the mud? Theyâll investigate it properly.â
As soon as Iâd spoken, Josh exchanged a glance with Ellen.
âWhat?â I wondered.
He was still looking at Ellen. âI told you she was on his side. I told you thereâs something between them.â
âI had to know for sure,â Ellen said grimly.
I squirmed on my seat, feeling exposed. âIâm not protecting him â I just think there are right and wrong ways to do things.â
âYeah, and you think that whatever we do, Cayden shouldnât suffer for it, right? It wasnât his fault, not his choicesâ¦so predictable. I really thought you were better than the other puck whores who hang on the Ice Godsâ every word, but I guess youâre the same after all. Even after he treated you like shit, you defend him.â
His words struck against the barriers around my heart, piercing just hard enough to hurt.
âIâm not hanging on his words, or defending him â I just think itâs weird that if heâs to blame for so many things, how come heâs not in trouble with the police?â
Josh sighed and sank back in the booth. âI donât know why this guy gets a pass, but I think in time, youâll see what we see if you knew more about him.â Josh had been fiddling with his phone, and now, the furtive way he kept glancing over my shoulder was making me nervous. I had to get out of here. My instincts screamed at me to get going, and I pasted an understanding smile on my face.
âLet me think about all of this. I really need to get going,â I started.
Josh silenced me by slamming his hand on the table. âThis is all Caydenâs fault,â Josh burst out. âIf he hadnât been such a superstar and stolen the team, and all the attention⦠and then broken my fucking nose, none of this would have happened. Donât look at me like Iâm the bad guy.â
I stared at Josh. Caydenâs actions had ignited a chain reaction that had fucked up both our lives, it was true, but Joshâs jealousy and resentments were festering sores that might have led us to the same place, anyway.
âHe didnât make you come here to dig dirt up on him. You should have just gone to my dad about the attack. Thatâs the way it should have been handled.â
Josh scoffed. âAnd your dad wouldnât have done a thing. Heâd have protected his golden boy, his one shot at moving up in the coaching world, and we both know it.â
âWell, maybe you should just focus on yourself and stop sucking up to my father. Your skills can speak for themselves and get you noticed.â
Josh stared between me and Ellen, a muscle working in his jaw. âWhatever. You guys donât understand the pressure of making it in the Hellions. We have a ton of talented players, and getting noticed was already next to impossible before West showed up. Now â forget it.â He let out a bitter laugh and waved his arm. âEspecially now.â
âItâs not Caydenâs fault that heâs better than you.â
A red flush worked up Joshâs neck at my flat statement.
He shook his head and checked his phone before nodding to himself. Apprehension rippled up my spine at his solemn look.
âWhatever, keep being delusional. He doesnât care about you, Lillian, he only cares about himself. Itâs a shame you canât see that. I have someone for you to meet who might be able to change your mind. Heâs been waiting for you to come back to Midnight. Heâs happy youâre here.â
âWho? I canât wait around to meet anyone, I have to get home,â I started and shuffled toward the end of the bench.
A body blocked my exit, sliding into the booth and trapping me.
âOuch, that hurts my feelings,â Uncle Jack said.
So, that was who Josh had been texting.
I stared at him, suddenly afraid. âI have to get home, my parents are waiting for me; theyâll come here to get me if Iâm not back in time.â
Jack tutted. âDidnât anyone ever tell you not to tell lies, girl? Iâm betting that you didnât tell anyone where you were going today, a shameful little trip to Midnight Falls. Iâm sure your parents wouldnât even agree to let you come here at all, never mind alone.â
I had no comeback for that. He was right, after all.
âWhat do you want with me?â I asked quietly.
Jack sighed and cracked his knuckles. âNothing, Iâm serious, I want nothing from you. I just miss my foster son, and he isnât answering my messages or taking my calls. No one just weasels away from Uncle Jack like thatâ¦so I have a way to make him answer my calls.â He grinned at me, exposing brown teeth. He tapped my phone sitting on the table in front of us. âYou call him and ask nicely. I bet heâll come running for his pretty little foster sister.â
I wet my lips, my mouth as dry as hell. âHe wonât come. We donât talk to each other anymore. He doesnât care about me.â
Jack raised an eyebrow and then shrugged. âLetâs see, shall we?â