Devious Lies: Part 3 – Chapter 41
Devious Lies: A Standalone Enemies-to-Lovers Romance
I reread the messages between me and Durga from two nights ago, feeling oddly guilty about them. And I never felt guilty about Durga.
Iâd sent her that because sheâd sent me the same thing earlier. Then, ghosted me.
She hadnât responded.
Still no response.
I stopped reading, changed into a tee and sweats, and wandered around the hotel, struck by how goddamned empty it was. Reed would spend this weekend with Basil and Ma, Delilah had flown to New York a few nights ago with her husband, and my plans for the weekend included Durga, whoâd been acting weird, and my fist, because the idea of seeking a meaningless fuck did nothing for me.
This was probably karma rearing its head, and it was uglier than Rosco.
I watched a Hornets vs. Lakers replay with a night guard, drank a few beers, cursed appropriately when the Hornets lost even though I gave no shits, and wandered the floors one by one.
When I reached the fifth floor and heard laughter, I counted down the beers Iâd drunk with the guard.
Not nearly enough for hallucinations.
Especially considering I recognized the laugh.
I should have turned around and left her alone, but I justified my intrusion with the reminder sheâd snuck into my shower and onto me.
Emery wore a tee that read lypophrenia and headphones in her ears. Her body laid flat on the couch, cocooned by the rattiest quilt Iâd ever seen. Checkered with holes and faded to the point where I couldnât tell if the little dots all over were a design or stains.
Her eyes remained closed until she burst out in carefree laughter. They popped open and instantly found mine with unerring precision. I expected surprise on her face, but I got one lifted shoulder and a lazy smile.
A smile.
Weird shit sheâd been doing since I caved and bought that Sisyphus statue. Usually when she thought I wasnât paying attention.
She looked pure and innocent and beautiful, like a fallen red maple leaf before someone stepped on it. I wondered how I didnât see it before. Maybe Fika was right. Maybe Iâd misheard the argument in the office the night of the cotillion. After all, Iâd been wrong about who owned the ledger.
Emery stretched. Her sad excuse for a blanket fell to the floor. The movement lifted the bottom of her shirt, flashing me with skin. âI feel like Sebastian Yorkâs voice is the kind of thing that transcends time. Silent films, skinny jeans, and Sebastian York. Things that never get old.â
The sudden urge to rip out the assholeâs vocal cords gripped me. She never talked to anyone but Reed, and Iâd assumed there was no one else.
Fuck, no, you did not just say, no one âelseâ.
I rounded the couch.
She caught my look and laughed again. âYouâd think Iâd just told you I sacrificed a toddler tonight. Whatâs your deal?â She sat up and sloped her chin to scrutinize me. âHeâs a narrator. I borrowed an audiobook from the library. Entice by Ava Harrison.â The toe of her Chucks accidentally hit my Brionis. âItâs an age-gap romance.â
âYou borrowed an audiobook. From the library,â I parroted, fully aware her Chucks touched my shoes again, not by accident this time.
âJesus, Nash, are you illiterate? Do you know what a book is? Theyâre these things full of words, and when you read them, you live another life. You should try it sometime. Might help with the crankiness.â
The jabs brushed off my shoulders like insignificant flies. âFuck Sebastian York.â
Transparent as saran wrap.
âReally? You kind of sound like him.â
âWhat does he sound like?â
âLike you. I literally just said that.â
âCareful.â I sat beside her on the couch, taking up most of the space. âItâs after hours. I could call security.â
âAnd I could start a Change.org petition. Your wages for interns are embarrassing, and I have a student loan payment due in two days.â She set her phone down and nodded to the television. âIf I use the companyâs Netflix account, I get entertainment and I can still pay my utilities bill. I was watching Twilight before this.â
I smelled her bullshit but didnât call her out on it. Mostly because it required admitting I looked into her and knew about the Demi situation.
âBefore thisââ
She cut me off. âWhat do you think would happen if Edward Cullen met another mind reader? Who would be reading whose mind?â
I allowed her lame attempts at distraction. âNeither, because mind-reading doesnât exist.â
âI donât recall you being this cranky back then.â
Ignoring the empty insult, I examined her set up. Phone, charger, blanket, and headphones. âYouâve been coming here to watch Netflix every night?â
âNo.â She toyed with the hem of her shirt, teasing me without ever realizing it. âOnly recently.â
âWhat did you use before?â
âMy ex from freshman yearâs account. I dated him for, like, two days. He cheated, but I got four years of Netflix free. I think I came out victorious in that relationship.â She leaned against the couch back. âHe changed the password a few days ago.â
âHe didnât know you were using his account?â Something about her right now didnât add up. âIsnât there a watch history?â
âThe trick is to create a new user each time you watch and delete that user when youâre done watching. Silent revenge is the best revenge.â
Her words spiked my impulse.
I wanted to slam my lips onto hers for a second kiss, but I kicked my feet onto the coffee table and sunk deeper into the couch. âYou remind me of Delilah.â
âA compliment. Sheâs smarter and hotter than you.â She retrieved her quilt. âShe should be running the company.â
âItâs like youâre asking to get kicked out.â
I could have kicked her out, but I wouldnât.
Reed had plans of proposing or whatever, and I had⦠a company I couldnât give two shits about; a friend I couldnât bring myself to call my best friend, even though she deserved it; Durga, who was acting weird; and⦠Emery.
âYou canât kick me out.â Her flippant tone suggested she knew I wouldnât. âItâs my birthday next week.â
âAccording to you, the day that doesnât make people special.â
âWhy is it that youâre the one who gets me? When the hell did that happen?â
More pressing questionâwhen had she become so candid about us?
Rather than answer, I ordered delivery from every restaurant still open because she looked like she needed ten cheeseburgers, and I wasnât giving her an excuse not to eat one.
âWe could watch a movie while we wait,â she offered. âWarningâIâm picky, and given the circumstances, I donât have a Netflix queue, which means it takes me forever to pick.â
She grabbed the remote and scrolled through the options. âIâll read the recommended list, but itâs mostly Chantilly and Ida Marie watching on the account. Beauty and the Beast?â
âIf youâre into Stockholm Syndrome. Sleeping Beauty?â
I imagined hell consisted of Chantillyâs Netflix queue on repeat.
âBecause kissing solves everything?â Her lips parted when I glanced at them. âNot to mention the DubCon. Aladdin?â
âRub until something comes out. Great lesson to teach children.â
âThat oneâs realistic. Lying and stealing always lands you the girlâ¦â
One of the night guards interrupted us with bags of delivery. Peruvian. Tunisian. American. Americaâs bastardized take on Italian. Emery grabbed the Tunisian first, dug through it, and took the first bite out of every item before settling on the Shakshuka.
We ate our way through four cuisines, scrolling through Chantillyâs Netflix queue and ridiculing every movie until we found one both of us agreed with. John Wick, because contrary to Delilahâs belief, I didnât hate dogs. Just ones that resembled rats.
I shoved our leftovers into the fridge and sat down again. She glanced at me every minute, fixated on my lips like she wanted to kiss me. At this point, neither of us pretended to watch the movie.
I opened up Candy Crush, because I needed to do something with my hands or Iâd cover her body with mine and kiss her until her lips bruised. She pulled out her sketchpad and shaded in a design.
The night continued like that. I moved up ten levels. She watched John Wick while sketching fashion designs on her pad. Really, I had no reason to be here other than the penthouse was empty and I enjoyed Emeryâs company.
There.
I said it.
So fucking what?
When the movie ended, she set aside her designs, pulled her knees to her chest, and asked, âWhat is up with you and Candy Crush?â
I swiped up, obliterating the level. She waited for me to respond, burning the side of my face with her attention.
I considered my answer, but Dad thought of her as family, which meant she deserved the truth. âDad used to play it during his treatments. Weâd sit side-by-side, trying to beat levels before the other. It distracted him from the needles pumping shit into his arms.â
âLike chemo?â
âNo.â I set the phone down and studied her, content to watch her watch me. âIt doesnât eat away at your health like chemo. In fact, it made him better. Healthier. Sturdy when he worked. Kept the heart running great. But the drugs were delivered intravenously and, judging from the noises in the clinic, painfully.â
Her front teeth pierced her lower lip. A coat of liquid brimmed her eyes. So fierce, yet so gentle. Typical Emery, longest claws and the biggest heart. âI wish Hank had told me and Reed.â
âSo you two could suffer, too? Never.â I shook my head, remembering how Ma, Dad, and I barely made it work at times. âMa held it together by a thread most times. She didnât want Reed to suffer that, and Dad didnât want you two to think of him as weak.â
âI love Hank and Betty, but it was selfish. We deserved to know each moment with him could have been our last. I could have treated him better.â
âYou treated him the best, Tiger. He knew that.â
I swallowed down the idea of her taking Reedâs side on this, of possibly being involved in the embezzlement, though I now had my doubts. She had loyalty to Gideon, but she also had loyalty to us.
âLook,â I added, taking in the watery blue and grey eyes, âhis illness wasnât contagious, but it spread from him to Ma to me. His heartbeats could be fucking useless. I felt the drag of my heartbeat each time I took a punch for him. Ma felt it each time she worked double shifts. For all my life, I fucking felt it. We stopped it from infecting you and Reed. You think it wasnât my choice to make, and youâre right. It was Dadâs, because if his heart hadnât killed him, watching two of his favorite people suffer for him would have.â
Thatâs the thing about getting sick. You donât suffer alone. You suffer with the people you love, which is too much fucking suffering.
Emery accepted my answer. The silence didnât bother me, mostly because I knew she liked it.
Always had.
âWhatâs with the charities?â she asked ten minutes into the second John Wick. âWhy do you volunteer at soup kitchens?â
I do it to ease the guilt. I burned that fucking ledger, thought I could use the info to build my company and save my dad, and I ended up too late. Life and regret are my punishments. Giving away every piece of me is my penance.
âPenance,â I offered without elaborating.
Her eyes flicked to my tattoo, visible under my tee. The tip of her tongue peeked past her lips. It darted back inside. âWhat sins are you atoning for, Nash?â
âStay in your lane, Tiger.â
âLetâs play a game.â She tucked her legs beneath her ass, leaning closer to me.
âLetâs not.â
âTruth or Dare?â
I shot her a look, knowing which she wanted me to pick and choosing the opposite. âDare.â
âI dare you to pick Truth.â
âJesus, do you ever follow the rules?â
âThere are no rules. Itâs Truth or Dare. Now say, Truth.â
âTruth,â I said for the sole reason of shutting her up, and not because she still had a tear trail on her cheek.
âHow are you really feeling about your dad?â At my silence, she added, âYou donât have to answer if you donât want to.â
I toyed with a few words. âI donât think thereâs a word for it.â
âTry me.â
âI canât,â I ground out, âif the words donât exist.â
âYou want to know why I like words?â
I did, but I didnât tell her that.
She continued, anyway, âI love words, because theyâre mine. Utterly, completely mine. I can share them with others. I can keep them to myself. I can use them over and over again. No matter what I do, theyâll always be mine. No one can take them from me. Want to know what the best part is?â
âIâm sure youâll tell me.â
âThe existence of a word proves that someone in the history of humanity felt the same way I did and gave it a name. It means weâre not alone. If thereâs a word for what weâre feeling, weâre never alone.â
âTell me how you feel about my dad.â
âLacuna.â She grabbed my hand and squeezed. âLacuna is a blank space. A missing part.â
Bullseye.
I eyed the screen, where Keanu Reeves was running through New York City, bleeding out of every orifice.
When I didnât answer, she asked, âTruth or dare?â
âNeither. You had your turn.â
âYou didnât answer the question.â She inched closer, wanting to know so much about me when no one ever did. âTruth or dare?â
âJust fucking ask the question.â I raked my fingers through my hair. âI know you want to.â
âWhy donât you kiss?â
Everyone has had a piece of me. This is one I donât have to give away.
I could taste her breath. I turned my face, not because I didnât want to be kissed, but because I did. That itself was a foreign feeling. Most people didnât have shit I liked to hear, and the mouth was the biggest perpetrator of disappointment.
Kissing disgusted me.
But kissing Emery?
It didnât.
Batshit, considering Iâd stopped long ago. When I started the illegal underground fights, I came home with cuts and bruises I tried to hide under clothes. Iâd cover for them by fighting at school, letting everyone assume they came from football tackles and field tussles.
The kiss thing started because my body would get too bruised to be touched. It transformed into a general disdain for people touching me. Why the fuck would I let someone I couldnât stand touch me?
âI kissed you, didnât I?â I shot back, keeping it light.
âYeah, you did.â Her eyes dipped to my lips, holding the heavy gaze. She smiled suddenly and stretched, standing up. âI have to go. The bus leaves soon.â
âThis again. Itâs late and dark. Iâm taking you home.â
âIâm going to Eastridge.â She popped a brow. âYouâll take me to Eastridge?â
Shit, I promised Ma Iâd stay away while Reed visited. But Ma would tell me to make an exception. The Greyhound to Eastridge was long with too many shady stops along with way.
I stole a card from Emeryâs deck, watching her gather her things. âYes, but I need something from you.â
Your dadâs address, please and fucking thank you.
She paused and slanted her head. âIs it illegal?â
âNo.â
âIs it sexual?â
Fuck, she looked too enticed by the idea.
âNo.â
âIf you accompany me to brunch with my mom, too,â she bartered, always set on cinching a victory. âAble will be there, and since Reed is spending the weekend with Basilâ¦â
Get in. Get out, dick.
I would have said no on account of my promise to Ma that Iâd stay away from Eastridge, but Able Small Dick Cartwright was the type of rich prick who thought he could get away with murder.
âDeal.â
âDeal,â she agreed, betraying her dad with a smile on her face.
She just didnât know it yet.