Devious Lies: Part 1 – Chapter 4
Devious Lies: A Standalone Enemies-to-Lovers Romance
âI donât understand!â
âWhat is happening?â
âStop, please! Iâm begging yâall.â
An argument pervaded my dreams. I reached out, my hands finding empty sheets in the starless dark. Reed had left. I crossed my fingers and hoped Dad hadnât found him sneaking out of my room. I would sooner lunge on a blade than let Reed take the fall for making me happy.
Slipping into drawstring shorts under my oversized shirt, I forced myself out of bed and into the hallway. My arms found their way across my chest, and I shivered in the cold, cursing my mom and her need to keep the AC at sixty-five degrees.
âOnly poor people suffer in the heat, darling.â
I followed the voices into the living room. A yawn in my mouth died down the second I caught sight of both my parents, Hank and Betty Prescott, Reed, and Nash. They stood wrapped around the walls of the room like an exhibition at Madame Tussauds, frozen in varying degrees of rage and anxiety.
The Winthrop mansion comprised of cold marble with a farmhouse twist. Reed joked Dad was the farmhouse, and Mother was like the cold marble.
Tonight, the marble had taken over, and we stood inside a tomb of statuario, gold, and silverâmummified, waiting for life to move on and forget about us.
I rubbed my bleary eyes and took in the scene as quick as I could. Mother wore that frozen stare of hers. Dad stood like a Hummer, imposing, arms crossed as if daring someone to talk to him.
Tremors rocked Bettyâs round frame. Hank stared between Betty and Nash, whose relaxed shoulders spoke of boredom, but instinct demanded I not be fooled. He was more alert than the rest of us.
It made the baby hairs on my arms stand up as I brought my focus onto Reed. Handcuffed beside his brother, his fury left no feature of his unscathed. I barely recognized him through his scowl.
In front of the fireplace with hands on their hips, two detectives took turns speaking, police badges proudly displayed. Iâd been transported into a Dirty Harry flick, except instead of Clint Eastwood, I got cheap suits and a frantic Southern mother. (Betty, not Virginia. My mother couldnât give two shits.)
âReed?â My voice halted the yelling.
The two detectives scrutinized me in unison. I didnât want to think of how I looked with the mascara-stained cheeks and bed head, my arms clenched around my chest to fight the chill and feet shoved into the hot pink bunny slippers Reed had gotten me as a gag gift last year.
Instead, I turned to Reed. âWhatâs going on?â My eyes dipped to the cuffs interlinking his wrists. âWhy are you handcuffed?â
âAble is in the hospital.â The voice belonged to Reed, but it didnât sound like Reed. It sounded like rage, thinly veiled, looking for a target. âHe woke up long enough to tell the police I beat him up.â
One detective approached Reed. âIs that a confession?â His eyes lingered on Reedâs Able-Cartwright-has-a-small-dick t-shirt, and I realized weâd never taken them off. Great.
Nash stepped in front of his brother, blocking him from view. âItâs not a confession, because I did it.â
The other detective shook his head. His man bun bobbed with the movement. âMr. Prescott, you expect me to believe you assaulted a boy ten years younger than you with whom you donât spend time, do not go to the same school as, and no longer live in the same town as? Allow me to remind you hindering an investigation is illegal, and the victim has already identified his assailant.â
âNash!â Betty glanced between her sons, desperation turning her brows into a mountain peak that met at the middle. âYou will not take responsibility for something you didnât do.â
âMaââ
âNash.â
Their stare-down lasted a full minute. Tension swarmed the air, and no one dared to breathe loud. Meanwhile, I kept my head down, confused as I tried and failed to make sense of this. Reed wasnât violent. That sounded more like Nash, who Basil used to gossip would punch a man out for breathing at him the wrong way.
Reed was a pacifist. He took out his aggression on the football field. Even then, he was a quarterback, and Iâd never seen him tackle anyone. Ever. And Iâd gone to all of his games since his mom had become our housekeeper and his dad had taken up the mantel as our groundsman.
One time, a fight had broken out on the football field, and Reed had been the first to walk to the sidelines and wait for it to subside. Yet, heâd fought for me. That pleasure in my chest, like a balloon filling the space around my heart with air, returned.
âDetectivesâ¦â
Dad stepped forward, pulled a cigar from his front pocket and a lighter from his back pocket, then lit it. We waited as he tilted the cigar above the flame, taking his time to turn it until the foot ignited.
When Dad spoke, everyone listened. It happened without fail. All heâd said was one word, and weâd stopped. Even as he brought the cigar to his lips, inhaled, held, and exhaled, we waited.
The people at the cotillion today? They were rich because Dad had made them rich. Everyone in townâwith or without moneyâinvested in the Winthrop name. The richer we became, the richer they became.
The detectives knew of Dad. They shared a glance, not a complaint on their lips as he took his damn time. He lowered his cigar. The smoke clouded the living room, bringing the warmth it lacked.
The pitter-patter of rain against the roof filled the silence. At one point, Iâd loved the noise until Mother caught me and Reed dancing in the rain, and Iâd come down with a cold that lasted three weeks because she had refused to get me medicine until I promised I had learned my lesson.
My dad had returned from a business trip a week into my cold. By then, my tenth birthday had been a week away, and Iâd feared heâd make me stay home from our Disneyland trip if I told him Iâd gotten sick.
Dad had rented out the park, and Iâd spent the entire night on Space Mountain with Reed, pretending I didnât need to throw up every time the ride lurched to a stop.
Mother knew, but sheâd pulled me aside and said, âPunishment is the backbone of this country. Being sick is not your punishment; itâs suffering in silence.â
âIâm sure we can figure this out.â Dad stepped closer, looking at ease despite the tension in the room.
He still possessed a head full of dark hair, graying at the temples in a way that made him look distinguished rather than old. Heâd once joked that Iâd gotten my gray eye from him and my blue eye from Mama.
As soon as heâd said it, my gray eye had become my favorite, because that was Gideon Winthrop. He had the ability to make everything better, including this.
âMr. Winthrop.â The detective with the man bun swiped at his baby hairs, transferring sweat from his forehead to his fingertips. âWith all due respectâ¦â He trailed off when Dad interrupted him.
âWith all due respect, you are in my house at midnight without a warrant.â Dad held the cigar in front of his lips as he finished, âI am telling you we can figure this out, and you will listen.â He drew the cigar to his lips and pulled.
âMr. Winthrop, someone is getting arrested tonight.â The detective glanced at Reedâs shirt, coughing a bit when Dad exhaled the cigar smoke in his direction. âA fifteen-year-old boy is in the hospital with a broken nose, rib, and leg; a separated collar bone; and a dislocated shoulder.â
Mother gasped, and it took everything in me not to.
Holy crap.
Reed had done that?
For me?
Thump.
Thump.
Thump.
My cheeks flushed when I realized how fast the knowledge had my heart beating. I pulled my arms tighter across my chest as if they could protect me from my feelings. They couldnât. Nothing could.
This would be our fateâchildhood naivety repaved by darkness.
âHis father, Eric Cartwright, is my attorneyââ Dad stopped as soon as heâd caught my wince at the mention of Ableâs dad. âEmeryâ¦â Wrathful eyes dipped to where my arms met my shirt. He lowered the cigar and stepped toward me. âWhat does your shirt say?â
I backed up a step and considered the cost of moving to Eritrea and opening up a seawater farm. Somewhere no one in this room but Reed could find me. Weâd live on white-leg shrimp and milkfish and would probably die of mercury poisoning before twenty, but it would be a better way to go than death by mortification.
âDad.â I almost shrugged but dug my crisscrossed arms tighter to my chest. At this rate, Iâd never grow boobs because Iâd suffocated the cells before they could grow. âItâs no big deal.â
âEmery.â
âPlease.â
âEmery.â
Another step back, and my heel hit a wall because, apparently, I didnât know how to walk a straight line out of here. Truth was, I didnât even need to show him.
He knew.
No way did the fury in his eyes escape anyoneâs notice. My arms shook. I succumbed to inevitability and lowered them. Not that I was ashamed of what had happened to me. I didnât want it to follow me.
Once one person knew, the whole town knew. That was how Eastridge worked. And people always, always blamed the girl. Since everyone from Eastridge would undoubtedly go to Duke with me and Reed, they would forever remember me as the girl whoâd fucked up Reedâs and maybe Ableâs future.
My burden and mine alone.
Dad was a good person. Most times judicious, and sometimes even rational in a way most blue bloods werenât. He wouldnât blame me. Reed wouldnât blame me. Neither would Hank nor Betty. Hell, I even knew Nash wouldnât stoop so low. But Mother? The two detectives Iâd just met?
I felt vulnerable as I laid my secrets on the table without speaking a word. I should have said something or explained that nothing had happened; instead, I appreciated the silence, because I knew itâd be the last time I heard it before my dad blew his lid and destroyed the Cartwrights and possibly Eastridge with them.
The two detectives glanced down at my shirt, piecing things together before Reed and Nash stepped in front of me in tandem. I peeked around the brothers but let them cover most of me.
Dad pulled out his phone and dialed. âEric. My home office. Now.â
Classic Dad.
Always standing up for me.
I wanted to grab his hands, drag him to the Harry Potter World theme park, and drink ginger beer with him. Or dance in the rain with no music as I replaced my memories of Able with his ridiculous eighties moves.
Dad turned to Hank and Betty, tossed the cigar on the floor, smashed it with his heel, and ignored Motherâs irritated gasp. âEric Cartwright is on his way. As far as I am concerned, your son did nothing wrong, and Eric will agree with me. No charges will be pressed.â He said it with such certainty, I believed him. That, and he was Gideon Winthrop, and that meant everything in Eastridge.
The detectives didnât even argue as he asked them to un-cuff Reed and wait in his office. Satisfaction unfurled in my belly. I had no plans on telling Dad what had happened because I had no plans on giving it more attention than Able deserved, but revenge felt good at my fingertips. They burned with the urge to raze, dismantle, devastate.
I wondered if this was how Nash felt as he blazed his own path, doing as he pleased with no concern over consequences. When heâd played football for Eastridge Prep, heâd start fights with the players, the mascots, the refs without considering the consequences. Or perhaps he had considered them and simply didnât care.
Heâd ditch school, to be found behind the gym with his hands up a seniorâs shirt. And Iâd never forget those nights in the kitchen, a spoonful of ice cream in my mouth, watching blood drip from his fists onto the floor as he tried and failed to ebb the flow with ice and towels.
âHoneyâ¦â Mother placed a palm on Dadâs shoulder, hard enough that his shirt bunched at her touch. âGideon, donât be silly. Think about this.â She ran her palms across his shoulders and down the length of his arms. All six carats of her engagement ring winked at me, sandwiched between two diamond-encrusted wedding bands. âThe Cartwrights are great people. What about Winthrop Textiles? Eric Cartwright knows all our company secrets.â
Rage expanded in my chest, lacing itself with the oxygen I inhaled, momentarily blinding me. I struggled to focus my vision. I stared into the backs of the Prescott brothers and counted down from ten, allowing myself a moment to hide behind them as I processed in silence.
Calm down, Em. Donât say a thing. Let her think sheâs winning. Dad has this handled.
People assume strength is loud. In reality, strength is silent. It is resilience, the will to never surrender your dignity. And sometimes, the only person who knows strength exists inside you is you.
Nashâs muscles tensed. He seemed coiled, ready to burst. I didnât know what to do, but I felt like I owed him. Touching him felt weird. Forbidden. Like I had broken a boundary no one had warned me existed. Still, I placed a palm on his back, hoping it brought him some comfort, like he and Reed had gifted me today.
If anything, he became tenser until I drew invisible lines on his back with my finger and began playing Tic-Tac-Toe with myself. Nash twisted his head and arched a brow at me, but his muscles had loosened. A lopsided grin tilted my lips up. I slashed a finger across the imaginary grid, pretending it was Reedâs back I was touching.
âWinthrop Textiles?â Dad raised his voice and pivoted to face Mother. His heel crushed the cigar against the marble, scattering dusky ashes like a shattered urn. âAble Cartwright hurt our daughter, and youâre worried about Winthrop Textiles?â
âYes, I am. You should be, too.â I could picture her waving her arms around, gesturing to the cold marble of the living room. âHow do you think we afford all this?â
I peeked around Reed and Nash a bit, in time to see Dad spear Mother with a glower that suggested he might hate her. I wasnât my momâs biggest fan, but Dad seemed pained, betrayed, some mixture of feelings that hurt me to witness.
âWhat if we did nothing?â I rested my forehead against one of the brothers. âWhat ifâ¦â
I considered Reed in juvie, all golden-haired and bronze-skinned beauty. He wouldnât last. Heâd come out jaded and acting like⦠well, like Nash.
âWhat if we could find a way to make this all disappear?â I finished, louder this time, peeping out from behind my wall of brothers to do so.
Betty Prescott shot me a grateful glance, hope in her eyes along with guilt. I understood itâthe need to protect her sons at all costs. Her hope was mine, too.
âWonderful idea, sweetie.â Mother stepped forward, the pep back in her step, and clapped twice. âLet me talk to Eric. Weâll get this settled. No one presses charges on either side. Itâll be like nothing ever happened.â
Except something had happened.
To me.
Did she even care?
Laughing and making dumb t-shirts with Reed pushed tonight away, but standing in front of an audience, vulnerable⦠what had almost happened hit me hard. I dipped behind the Prescotts and fell forward into Reed.
A broad hand reached back to steady me, and I realized Iâd actually fallen onto Nashâs back.
He looked over his shoulder and whispered, âEasy, Tiger.â
I stared into his eyes, trying to figure out what he was trying to tell me with them. In front of him, my parents fought, but I focused on the Prescott brothers, my fingers finding purchase on Reedâs arm and Nashâs words.
âWhy a tiger?â I asked.
We had one in the foyer, but Iâd never thought much about it. It had a gaudy silver-skinned version of Dionysus riding it and Dionysusâ cult tattooed on its hind legs, none of which I identified with.
âItâs a saying,â Reed offered, still refusing to stare at either of us. He trained his eyes on Betty and Hank. His rage hadnât lessened, but at the very least, I knew it wasnât directed at me.
Nash shook his head. âYouâre the tiger.â
I waited for him to explain. He didnât.
âWhen you say it to me, I canât figure out if youâre being nice or making fun of me.â
He shook his head, laughter on his breath. The amusement in his eyes carried levity I clung to. âWhy canât it be both?â
âGideon!â Mother shouted. Her shrill voice broke the Prescott spell. âWe are not jeopardizing our relationship with the Cartwrights over this!â
âAnd youâre okay with jeopardizing your relationship with your daughter?!â he called out to her retreating back, but sheâd already left the room toward the office.
Finally, Dad turned to me, Reed, and Nash. âAre you okay? Did Ableâ¦â he started, then stopped as if realizing the company.
I bit my lip to stop it from quivering. Winthrops were strong.
âNothing happened, Dad. He tried, butâ¦â I trailed off, feeling silly because I was still hiding behind the Prescott brothers when Iâd done nothing wrong. I stepped to the side and stared Dad in the eyes, my chin tilted up and voice steady. âIâm fine. I swear. And if Able is in the hospital, he got what he deserved, though I think I did a pretty good job kneeing him in the balls if I do say so myself. Twice.â I leaned against Reed, who wrapped an arm around my shoulder. âFor the record, Dad, these shirts are accurate. Able Cartwright has a small dick, and now he has a gazillion broken body parts to go with it.â I squeezed Reedâs hand on my shoulder, a silent thank you.
Dad scanned me, examining my face for any signs of lying. âThatâs my girl, but it ainât enough for me.â He shook his head. Someone cared. Warmth blossomed across my chest. âHe deserves jail.â
âNo.â
âEm?â
âIf I press charges, heâll press charges against Reed. You know this.â
Dad and Nash cursed at the same time. Dad swiped a palm down his face and shifted his weight onto his back foot.
âPlease, Dad, do this for me,â I added.
Silence trickled between us. He finally relented and shifted his eyes to Nash, like he was the leader of our little trio. âI want the three of you in Emeryâs room. I donât want Cartwright to catch sight of yâall when he shows up. Okay? Itâll only make it worse. Iâll do my best to fix this.â
âYes, Dad.â
âHank. Betty. Join me in my office, please?â
As soon as the room emptied, Reed had his forearm pressed against Nashâs throat. âWhat the fuck, man?!â
I caught the flash of remorse in Nashâs eyes before it fled, and he couldnât have looked calmer even if he had a cigarette dangling from the corner of his lips. âIâm sorry.â
Two softly spoken words.
An apology I didnât understand.
Still, I bore witness to the scene, an interloper they didnât bother acknowledging.
Reed pressed harder against his brotherâs throat before letting go. âFuck you.â He shook his head. âFuck Mom. Fuck Dad.â He strode off and out of the back door, ignoring my dadâs demands to hide.
Ignoring me.
âReed!â I stumbled after him, but a hand tugged my shirt back. I jerked away, and Nash released me, even when I fell into the wall.
âLet him go.â
For a fleeting second, I wished to be Nash Prescott. I wished to have whatever chemicals in his brain allowed him to see the people he cared about and let them go.
But I wasnât Nash.
I was Emery Winthrop.
And Emery Winthrop?
Sheâd realized her crush on Reed Prescott wasnât as small as sheâd thought.
It was an itch inside my heart.
I wanted to rip my flesh and tear him from my system.