Promises We Meant To Keep: Chapter 37
Promises We Meant To Keep (A Lancaster Prep Novel)
WEâRE HEADED BACK to myâourâapartment after the gathering, Sylvieâs head heavy as it rests on my shoulder. Sheâs so tired. The last few days have been a lot, and while I know sheâs trying to hide the relief she feels about her motherâs death to everyone else, she knows she can always be real with me.
Just like I need to be real with her.
âAre you awake?â My voice is soft in the confines of the car, the wall up between us and the driver.
We have complete privacy. I already scoped the vehicle out earlier for any possible bugs. Iâve been at this too long to let a rookie mistake like that slip past me.
She slowly lifts her head, her gaze searching mine. âYes. Everything okay?â
âNot really.â A ragged sigh leaves me. âI need to tell you something.â
âAre you finally going to confess your truths? The ones you keep from me?â Her voice is hopeful. No one else would want to know this kind of shit.
Only Sylvie.
I hang my head, letting my shame wash over me. After everything thatâs happened with her mother, I havenât been able to tell her about my father, and what I do for him. There are already so many secrets that tie us together.
Whatâs one more?
Taking a deep breath, I lift my head, my gaze finding hers. Thereâs no judgment in her eyes and itâs such a relief, the words spill out of me.
âWeâre in the mafia. Well, weâre more on the fringe of it. We work for a family, one thatâs well-connected.â
Her expression doesnât change. âYouâve already told me that. Well, not the fringe part.â
âRight. Yeah.â I run a hand through my hair, noting that itâs shaking. Fuck, Iâm agitated. This isnât easy. âWhen I was younger, I used to go with the guys and weâd visit the ones who owed us money. Those poor suckers. Theyâd cry and plead. Beg us not to hurt them or their family.â
My chest aches with the confession but she remains quiet, listening. Which is what I need.
âSometimes things would getâviolent.â I pause, the words turning over in my brain. âIâve hurt people, and I donât like that.â
âOh, Spence.â Her voice is the barest whisper, breaking my heart.
âI never killed anyone though. I couldnât muster up the nerve. My father would always tell me it takes time. He didnât make his first kill until he was twenty-six. I had a few years to go.â I laugh but thereâs no humor in the sound.
âYour fatherâ¦â
âIs decent when he wants to be, but yeah. Heâs got blood on his hands. So do I.â
She touches my hands, bringing one up to her mouth so she can kiss it, and the gesture nearly breaks me.
âI donât do that any longer. Iâm an accountant now for the business.â
She drops my hand and bursts out laughing, as if what I said was a joke. âYouâre kidding.â
âIâm not.â I shake my head.
âAn accountant?â Her laughter dies.
âYeah. We have one set of documents we turn in, and then thereâs another set.â I glance around, like Iâm worried there is some sort of spy camera in this place. But I checked it already. My paranoid urges are making me want to search the car again. âYou know what Iâm referring to.â
âI think I do,â she says slowly.
âWe move drugs, Syl. All kinds. Counterfeit money. Arms.â At her frown, I explain. âGuns. Ammo. Anything the family needs us to do, weâre doing it. It fucking sucks.â
âThen why do you do it?â
âI donât have a choice.â
âWe always have a choice.â She touches my cheek lightly and I lean into her hand, my eyes falling shut for the briefest moment. âThank you for telling me.â
âThank you for not running away from me.â
âAs if I would.â She smiles.
I smile too. God, this woman.
What did I do to deserve her?