Devious Lies: Part 4 – Chapter 51
Devious Lies: A Standalone Enemies-to-Lovers Romance
The only way to Synd Beach was by boat, which made it the perfect place for shady shit to go down. Small island. No actual police force. The highest property rates in the state.
Rich college students took their summer breaks there, throwing parties, dealing drugs, and fuck if I knew what else. Reed hanging there unsettled me. Ma would flip the second she found out. If she ever did.
I told myself I had to be here, waiting for a fucking boat to Synd, rather than in Blithe Beach with Emery. Reed had avoided this talk since Dad died, and it never exactly made the top of my to-do list.
Now that I learned Dadâs side of the story via Gideon, I at least had something true to tell him. Truth. Ha. I was trustworthy in the same way Richard Nixon wasânot at all. I fucked over my parents. I fucked over my brother. And I literally fucked Emery.
The parking lot attendant gave me a retrieval ticket. I shoved it into my pocket and walked down the dock. Iâd left my suit jacket and vest in the car, leaving me in a button-down and slacks.
It looked ridiculous as fuck, but I kept a baseball cap on my head. I didnât need the press taking pictures of me headed to an island commonly referred to as Synd City. The boat ride splashed water all over the cockpit, ruining my Giannis and soaking my socks.
I spent it staring at the message Emery had sent me before everything went to shit.
My fingers hovered over the keyboard. I typed out my answer and deleted it. I couldnât send it until Gideon confessed and explained it all. If I thought it was better that she heard it from me, I would have spilled the second I identified Sir Balty as her sperm donor.
Until then, Iâd be here for her.
I found Reed smoking a joint at the beach. As in, my salutatorian brother with the D1 football scholarship. I sat beside him, tore it from his fingers, brought it to my lips, and inhaled.
âNice hat,â he greeted, shaking shit out of his hair.
The baseball cap had a bug-eyed gray squirrel above the bill, the North Carolina state animal. Iâd bought it at a tourist stand.
I held up the joint. âThe fuck are you doing with this, kid?â
âNot like itâs laced with LSD, Dad.â He paused, digging his heels into the sand. âThe stash you stole from me, on the other handâ¦â
I noticed that shit smelled funny.
âYou running with this crowd now?â I signaled to the group of over-privileged posers playing guitar next to a ten-foot-tall bonfire in broad fucking daylight.
âYou said you wanted to meet.â He spread his arms wide, unapologetic and high out of his mind. âThis is where I hang.â
âDoes Emery know?â
âKnow what?â
I gestured at him. âYouâve turned into this tool.â
Fuck, not how I expected this conversation to go.
âEmery doesnât judge.â He muttered a curse, swiped the joint from me, and inhaled. âNah, she doesnât know.â
âWhatâs going on with you?â
âDonât worry, I know what Iâm doing.â
The least assuring words ever, since they implied he was currently doing or had done something shady.
I followed Reedâs line of sight directly to Basil. Jesus. âSeriously? All this for Basil Berkshire? Why?â
âIf I told you, you wouldnât believe me.â
âTry me.â
I sat back, listening as he spilled. By the end of his story, I sure as shit didnât believe him. Katrina Berkshireâs tale of spending two months at band camp over the summer and returning with a new nose and double Ds was more likely.
Reed laughed, digging the tip of the joint in the sand. âYou donât believe me.â
âI do, but I donât believe the situation.â Cursing, I snagged a water bottle from the bright blue cooler beside him.
âItâs vodka.â
âFucking hell, Reed. Who are you?â
âSame person.â He shrugged. âEveryone considered me to be the golden boy, and I liked it that way. Easier to sneak around as I pleased.â
I nodded at Basil. âFor her.â
âYeah.â A smile softened his face, and it reminded me of us before Eastridge sunk its claws into my family. âYou finally here to tell me the truth?â
It defied every instinct of mine, but I did.
We talked about Dadâs diagnosis, the fights I got into to raise cash, beating up Small Dick, the ledger, and how Iâd unknowingly built my company on Gideonâs money.
By the time the sun set and his douche friends moved on from weed to harder drugs, Reed told me he didnât agree with what happened the night of the cotillion, but he forgave me.
Reed swapped his soda for the vodka, pouring in Coke to chase it. âI knew about you and Emery on my bed.â
The fuck?
My water bottle hovered before my lips. âWhy didnât you say anything?â
âFigured having sex with you mortified her enough.â He stole my cap and used it as a trashcan for the junk food heâd eaten. âI saw her running from the cottage, half-naked. Then, she moaned your name one night. Iâm talking full-blown moaned. Iâd passed out on her floor after sneaking back from the Berkshires. Didnât want Ma to find me.â
âThanks for the play-by-play, Jerry Springer.â I pretended to check my watch, feeling some sort of cosmic. Like someone had rigged my life against me, and I somehow still had a shot at winning.
Reed tossed the cap, wrappers and all, into the bonfire like a frisbee. He pitched the vodka into it, forcing the flame higher. Tossing the bottle at my feet, he hovered over me. âConsider this your obligatory warning. Brother or not, Iâll happily burn your ass if you hurt my best friend.â
Too fucking late.
SWEAT SLICKED my palms.
I sat on the steps of his new house, debating whether to enter. Iâd seen it in an email attachment, yet it surprised me. Smaller than the Prescottsâ cottage, it countered every definition I possessed of Dad.
Of Gideon.
What else has changed?
I doubted he still dressed in the suits. A sensible Toyota parked in the driveway. The foliage seemed maintained but not immaculately groomed. This wasnât a three-piece bespoke suit kind of place.
Truthfully, I feared looking at my dad and seeing a stranger.
Because if I didnât have blood to bond us, what else was there?
âYou coming in or what, sweetheart?â
Querencia.
It came to me with the force of a battle cry. Overwhelming and fierce. The urge to shout it gripped my vocal cords, but I suffered in silence. I mouthed the word, taking in Gideon, who stood near the bend of the house.
He wore a plain white t-shirt, faded blue jeans, a Hornets baseball cap, and a pair of Timberlands. My querencia disguised as a regular guy. He tore off his gardening gloves and tossed them into the nearest topiary.
A smile crinkled the corner of his eyes. âWhatâs the magic word this time?â
He still understood me.
I wanted to fall against him and finally, finally shed the tears Iâd kept at bay for four years. Relief wobbled my feet forward like a rickety rocking chair. Dad caught me before I fell off the steps.
I clung to his arms, breathed him in, and released my grip on him with the exhale. âQuerencia.â
âYouâll have to explain to an old man what it means.â He tapped his temple. âMindâs not what it used to be.â
Being near him seemed surreal, like returning home after a long vacation to see all your furniture gone. I still recognized him, but the memories came to me slowly as I pieced together what went where.
âIn bullfighting, itâs the part of the ring where the bull feels strongest and safest. The place he gravitates to and makes his home. It develops as the fight progresses and becomes the place he is most dangerous, where he is impossible to kill.â
He flashed me a brilliant smile, one that had always convinced me of how proud he was that I existed. âIâve missed you, Em.â
âYouâre happy,â I replied, not a statement or a question. More like an accusation or demand, except I didnât understand what Iâd asked of him.
I saw it in the deeper laugh lines. The carefree demeanor. How heâd stopped graying. If being in Eastridge had sucked the life out of him, living in Blithe Beach had granted him more.
It was callous, but I wanted none of this fanfare. I wanted to cut straight to the problem and fix it. âVirginia told me Balthazar Van Doren is my father.â
âHeâs not your father.â Gideonâs jaw ticked. He pulled back a step. âHeâs a sperm donor at best.â
âWhy did you keep this from me?â
âI planned on telling you when you turned eighteen, but the scandal happened.â
âNash told me Balthazar blackmailed you into giving him a share of the company.â
âHe and Virginia embezzled from it. She needed a cushion in case I divorced her. I found out, so they cut Eric Cartwright into their scam.â He swiped his jaw, eyes fixated in the distance. âThey had him draw up parental rights papers and threatened me with them. You were a minor. If I told anyone about the embezzlement, I would have lost you.â
âAnd now? Iâm twenty-three.â
âIâve been emailing you every week, trying to talk to you, waiting for you to come see me, so we can do this in person.â He clasped onto my hands, drawing me nearer. âIâm not blaming you. Itâs not your fault. But I need you to realize I tried. Even when you saw me outside your diner and called the cops on me, I kept showing up. I love you. Far as Iâm concerned, youâre my daughter.â
I swallowed, squinting into the distance to avoid looking at him. Did this make me the architect of my misery? I didnât feel like the girl who chased storms. I felt like the girl who ran from them.
âWill you tell me about the rest? I want to know what happened to you after the scandal. I want to know why Virginia isnât in jail. Was there no proof? Was it your word against hers? I want to know how Nash is involved. I want to know how I am involved.â
âIâll tell you.â He flipped the bill of his hat and covered the top step of his porch. âEvery Saturday, we can meet up, and Iâll explain it piece by piece. I promise.â
I sat beside him. âYou canât explain it now?â
âI could, but how else am I gonna get you to meet me?â He nudged my arm with his shoulder.
Biting back a smile, I considered the reception heâd get anywhere but Blithe. âIâll come here.â
âYou sure? I can drive to Haling Cove.â
âYeah, Iâm sure. Can we meet at Hankâs grave next time?â
âOf course.â He appraised me, taking in my black hair and the t-shirt. âI want to know everything about you.â
I shrugged and tapped my foot on the step. âThereâs not much to know. I can write everything on a sheet of paper and have most of the white space left over.â
Except Demi.
My penance.
Why did it feel less meaningful suddenly? Why did it feel different?
My eyes widened. I ducked my head down, processing. Perhaps I hadnât been trying to alleviate my guilt. I was trying to alleviate Dadâs culpability. If he could make things right, maybe I could see him again. Maybe I could have a dad.
âWhatâs eating at you?â Dad tapped my shoulder. âThereâs something else.â
âItâs a lot to take in.â I considered lying, but went with the ugly, painful truth. âAnd mostly⦠In the past four years, I knew we werenât talking, but I never felt like I didnât belong here. And now⦠Iâm not sure.â
He folded me into his arms and squeezed me into a bear hug, one he used to give me as a kid. Even when heâd known I didnât share the same blood.
âYou think I send weekly unanswered postcards to just anyone? Youâre my daughter, Emery Winthrop. Always have been. Always will be. We donât need blood to bond us when weâve got love.â