Devious Lies: Part 3 – Chapter 47
Devious Lies: A Standalone Enemies-to-Lovers Romance
I bit into the turkey and Ruffles sandwich, tossing a chunk of the bread onto Dadâs grave. A bird waddled over and pecked at it.
Finally, life in this miserable place.
Blithe Beach, North Carolina.
A small town of humble, hardworking people. The town Iâd grown up in before moving to Eastridge. Shitty houses. Shitty streets. Shitty beach, thatâs more waste run-off than beach.
But the people didnât suck.
They worked hard, raised good families, and did nice things for each other. Gideon could do worse.
Footsteps approached from behind. The shadow loomed over me, but I faced the tombstone. He sat beside me and leaned against some strangerâs grave marker. When he caught me staring, he shrugged.
âYou think the dead care about sharing? If anything, they like the company.â He combed his fingers through his hair. âI take it Emery didnât send me that email, asking me to meet her here?â
Nope. All me.
âGideon.â
âHey, kid.â
Kid. Wonder if youâd still call me that if you found out what Iâve done with your daughter.
He picked at his Timberlands, a far cry from the billionaire who never left the house in anything that cost less than a house mortgage. âI take it youâre talking to Emery if she gave you access to her email?â
âIâm more than talking to Emery.â
My Durga.
I never really gave much thought to Fate, but every time I considered how hard the world must have worked to get our paths to intersect so many different ways, I became a believer.
A war brewed within Gideonâs eyes as if heâd considered punching me before the yearning won. He missed his daughter. So obvious, a glass window would be less transparent.
âHow is she?â
I rested a forearm on my bent knee. âSheâs trouble.â
âAlways was. When she was eight⦠and you were an adult,â he slid in, âI used to think sheâd burn the world down with a smile on her face and good intentions.â
âStill could.â I tossed the sandwich to the crow.
Another landed.
You eavesdropping, Dad?
I wiped my palms on my sweats. Dad would give me shit if he caught me here in any of the overpriced suits that filled my closet, so Iâd stopped by Nike for a pair of joggers. Heâd still kill me for these. They cost more than he used to make in a day.
Gideon toyed with a beer can Iâd placed in front of Dadâs tombstone. âHas she seen Virginia?â
âIâm not here for idle chitchat.â I swiped the Budweiser from his palm and chugged it.
He yanked another can from the 6-pack and cracked it open. âTell me about my daughter, and Iâll talk to you.â
âTalk to me, or Iâll tell the world where youâre at.â
âYouâve changed.â
âYou changed me.â
âI did nothing, and I suspect you know that, or Iâd be cradling a black eye right now.â
True. True as fuck. Iâd spent the past four years searching for Gideon, and now that Iâd found him, I skirted around the damn questions.
Maybe I didnât want to know the answer, because everything about this felt off. Blithe Beach? The population couldnât fill Eastridge Prepâs football stands. Most maps left the place out, and despite the beach, it hardly constituted as a beach town.
Tourists didnât go to places like this.
Billionaires didnât hide out in places like this either.
They flew to non-extradition countries and lived the rest of their lives in luxury. At the very least, anywhere but Blithe fucking Beach.
I emptied the can and crushed it. âWhy Blithe Beach?â
âHank mentioned Blithe a few times.â Gideon drank small sips of his beer. âHe told me to escape here when the company collapsed. I figured itâd be a good place to settle down.â
âDad told you to come here?â I frowned at the âloving friendâ engraved on the marble.
Always took you as a bleeding heart, Dad.
âYeah.â
âYou talked to him?â
âYeah.â
âDo you possess a vocabulary beyond âyeah,â or have the polluted waters here induced developmental regression in your brain?â
âFuck, kid.â Gideon shook his head. âYouâre too young to be this jaded.â
âI was less jaded when I had a dad.â
He ignored my jab. âI heard the trialâs board booted Hank. I talked to someone on the research team and found out why they nixed him.â
âBecause Doctor Douche lost his money with Winthrop Textiles and took it out on Dad,â I finished for him.
âNo.â Gideon exhaled. âThatâs what I thought, too, but no.â
I could punch him. Rewriting history to make himself feel better sat on some low-as-shit rung of hell.
âIâm done with this bullshit.â I moved to leave, but he stopped me.
âHank lied.â
âWatch your mouth.â I fixated on Dadâs marker, wishing ghosts existed so he could haunt the fuck out of Gideon.
âHe told you and Betty the lie because it was better than the truth.â
âWhich was?â
âThat heâd die any day. The trial hadnât helped.â Gideon finished off the beer and replaced it with another. âIt was all a placebo effect.â
âHe took the medicine.â I jacked the can from him. âI saw him. I drove him there myself and waited in the treatment clinic.â
âYeah, and it looked like it was working because he thought it was working. It wasnât. They removed him from the trial after they realized the results werenât there. It had nothing to do with the money. In fact, I offered to pay for more treatments elsewhere. Hank said they wouldnât help, but he did ask for a favor.â
I refused to accept this.
If Dadâs death had nothing to do with money, I wasnât guilty. I didnât play a hand in killing him. That meant, all this fixation on revenge over the past four years amounted to⦠nothing.
I downed that beer, too. âWhatâd he want from you?â
âHe asked me to take care of his family, but I knew you wouldnât let me.â
âNo shit.â I crushed the can and added it to the stack. Looked better than the dead flowers soiling the other graves.
âI was your seed investor.â
My hand hovered above a new can. âMy seed investor was a Saudi oilââ
ââprince named Zayn Al-Asnam.â His sly smirk begged to be punched. âI know. Heâs a character from 1001 Arabian Nights. I had a cover story made, a shell company founded, the works.â
The windfall from insider trading on Winthrop Textiles stocks started Prescott Hotels, but Al-AsnamâsâGideonâsâinvestment turned it into an empire.
Shit.
No part of my life went untouched by dirty money and devious lies.
I flicked lint off my joggers. âThat means you know I had my own money going into this.â
âI know where itâs from, too.â
âWhy didnât you say anything?â
Or turn me in?
âI admired Hank Prescott. I enjoyed his company, friendship, and sometimes, advice.â Gideon leaned forward and wiped a smudge off the gravestone.
I noticed that it appeared in far better condition than the rest of the ones in the cemetery. How often did he come here?
Gideon continued, âI regretted the way Virginia treated your family, but she needed to control the household. It gave her something to do outside of pestering Emery and scheming. I also know you stole the ledger the night of the cotillion.â
âWhy didnât you say anything?â
âI saw you burn it. If not for your dad, I still wouldnât have turned you in because of what you did for my daughter. We all knew you hospitalized Able. He only pointed at Reed, since he knew hurting your brother would cut you deepest.â
To this day, my relationship with Reed had never recovered. Small Dick was smarter than I gave him credit for.
âHow do you know I burned the ledger?â I thought of the charred remnants Iâd locked in my safe before driving down here. Still viable evidence. Against the thief. Against me. âYou were holed in the office with Eric Cartwright and Virginia. You couldnât have seen.â
âI saw the replay. I had hidden cameras installed in the mansion when I became suspicious of Virginia.â
The second profiting party Brandon Vu had mentioned.
âShe was the one who embezzled,â I said, a statement. Not a question.
I pieced it together, mostly because I knew Dad would never befriend someone whoâd hurt so many people.
âI figured it out too late.â Gideonâs lament seemed genuine. âI stole the ledger from her and wouldâve turned it over to the S.E.C., but you took it after I confirmed Balthazar and Cartwrightâs involvements. Whyâd you burn it?â
âEmery. She stood up for Reed and got you to negotiate his release.â I shook my head and raked a hand through my hair. Regret felt like a bullet to the skull. All this could have been prevented if Iâd left the ledger where Iâd found it. âSheâs loyal as hell.â
Gideon hummed in agreement. âWhyâd you take the ledger back from the fire?â
âI overheard you arguing in the office.â
âIf Emery finds out, I will cut you off, Virginia, and I will sue you for everything you own, Cartwright,â Gideon had warned, his voice steady and threat real.
âPlease,â Virginia scoffed, âshe already knows. Why do you think I sent her to that shrink to set her straight?â
âI thought Emery knew about the embezzlement and kept it from my family,â I continued, âdespite knowing weâd invested everything into your company.â
âThat wasnât what Virginia meant when she said Emery already knew.â
âWhatâd she mean?â
âVirginia needed money to leave me. I wouldâve given her a divorce settlement to keep her out of our lives, but sheâd signed a prenup. It made her uncertain. So, she embezzled from the company. First a little, but she got greedy.â
He toyed with his words, selecting them like you would a pet. With careful consideration. âI had plans to turn her in, but she had something over me. If I kept my mouth shut on her involvement in the scandal, said nothing about Eric or Balthazar, and left Eastridge, sheâd keep her mouth shut.â
âThey deserve to pay.â
âI canât go after them. Not without Emery suffering.â
And then he explained the argument Iâd overheard in the office.
He spilled his secret, telling me the one thing that could convince me to keep this from Emery.
I didnât agree with lying to her, but I agreed she needed to find out from him.
She was a plot twist. A surprise. The curveball thrown at me near the end of the book. If I wanted to reach the happy fucking ending, I needed to embrace the twist and fight my way to the finish line.
I couldnât keep secrets from her.
If I didnât tell her, I would lose her.
But if I told her, I would hurt her.
So, when the man Iâd spent four years seeking revenge from asked me to keep his secret, I agreed.
Even if it meant losing Emery.