The Hunter: An Enemies-to-Lovers Romance: Chapter 24
The Hunter: An Enemies-to-Lovers Romance (Boston Belles Book 1)
I borrowed Sailorâs car, drove her back to her parentsâ house (I didnât take any chances in case Syllie had hired muscle to come to my apartment and finish me off), then drove straight to his house, hoping he was still there. I was glad for Knoxâs investigative skills. He knew where Syllie lived, worked out, took shits, and all his favorite call girls.
The entire drive there, I tried calling Da and Cillian. Finally, I called Mom and told her to try to reach them and not stop until she found them and told them not to go to the refinery.
âBut why?â she asked for the millionth time.
âBecause fucking stop asking questions, Mom. Just do it!â
I parked in front of Syllieâs place in Charlestown, a ten-bedroom Jacobian-style mansion, stark white over black windows, with a lush front yard I currently wanted to set on fire. I slammed the driverâs door shut and tromped my way to the entrance, banging on the door, then punching the bell five times for good measure. It was way past visiting hours, but if I wasnât going to get some sleep tonight, fuck if anyone in his family would.
Syllie opened the door with a scowl, wearing a purple burgundy house robe. I swear my libido bled to death the second I saw him.
His face turned from deadly to pleasant in an instant.
âHunter, what a lovely surprise. I thought you were supposed to be on your way to Maine?â he asked innocently.
âGod, terrible acting. Iâm talking Harrison Ford in The Frisco Kid. Just terrible. We need to talk.â
âSomething happened?â He grimaced.
I wanted to punch his teeth in. I smiled instead. Iâd asked Aisling to work on Mom and convince her to give me the private plane to get to Maineânot that my mother wouldnât give me a limb if I asked for it, but I didnât want to talk to her if I could help it.
âJust playing catch-up.â I shrugged.
âAt midnight?â His eyes nearly bulged.
I inclined my head, buying time. âWhat can I say? I missed you so.â
He invited me in, hesitantly, and motioned for me to follow him to his office on the third floor. He opened the door to the balcony after pouring us two timbers of whiskey. I knew better than to put my lips to any drink Syllie gave me, but swirled the golden liquid in its tumbler for show.
âI know about your plan.â I let the drink slosh over the rim. âAnd I know whoâs helping you execute it.â
That part was a lie, but if there was one thing I was good at, it was having a poker face. It had saved my ass countless times.
âOf course I studied for the test.â
âOf course youâre the only girl I thought about this week.â
âOf course Iâm not too intoxicated to operate this heavy machinery.â
âI have no idea what you mean.â He leaned on the bannister, taking a sip of his drink. It was the little things that gave him away: the beads of sweat gathering at his temples, the way his lips twitched, how deeply he leaned against a high balcony. He was nervous.
I leaned against the doorframe, far from the bannister, studying him. âI hope you have a better line of defense when you get arrested, Mr. Lewis. Because trying to blow up a refinery with dozens of people inside, including the three major shareholders of Royal Pipelines, is no kiddie game.â
None of those things were confirmed, but his face twisted in horror as the words left my mouth, and I knew I was spot-on. He quickly rearranged his features, placing his timber of whiskey on the marble railing.
âWho fed you this nonsense, Sonny-boy?â
âYour partner in crime,â I replied. Another lie.
âI have no such thing.â
âWould you continue singing this tune if I told you every single time you used burner phones to call him, he recorded both of you?â I quirked an eyebrow.
Lies, lies, lies.
His face fell.
He thought I had something I wasnât in possession of.
âBoris should know better,â he gritted out.
Boris, huh? I was sure Sailorâs dad knew who he was, and made a mental note to check.
Syllie continued, âBut you have one thing wrong. I knew you werenât going to be there. I never wished you harm.â
âPlease donât take offense when I call all the bullshits in the world on that.â
He shook his head, rushing to me. I raised a hand, motioning for him to stop where he was. He did.
âLook, I knew this thing with your father and brother was going to blow up sooner or later. I knew you wouldnât accompany them to Maine. And you didnât. The truth is, Sonny-boy, I would never wish you harm becauseâ¦â
God, not this.
âBecause Iâm your father.â His throat worked around the admission, the words spilling out between us, toxic.
âMy father is some Eastern European underwear model,â I countered.
âThatâs what Gerald told everyone so he could keep me on his payroll, because he knew I was too important to let go of. And itâs what your mother unfortunately went along with to keep the peace in the Fitzpatrick household. But think about it, Sonny-boy. Who took care of you over the years? Who did you rush to when you needed help? Who cleaned up the mess for you? Me. Always me. I was practically a father to you without being a father to you. I took care of you. And now, Iâm telling you, this is the beginning of a new era. We can take this company and run it together. We can do great things. Be a team. They will never respect you, Hunter. You are not a blue-blooded Fitzpatrick, a true heir. Your father put Cillian on the pedestal, and you will never reach his levelânot because youâre not as good, but because Gerald would never allow it. You are looked down upon. They are not your family.â
He took another step, and I let him. He put his hand on my shoulder. I let him do that, too.
âThrown around from one private school to the other, then exiled to your uncle and aunt on the West Coastâyou never stood a chance. I tried telling your father, Hunter. I beggedâ¦â
He took a ragged breath, looking away from me and shaking his head, like it all pained him too much. âLook, I know I havenât been the best father to you so far by not coming clean about this. I had my own family to think of. I have three daughters. But I promise, from now on, Iâll be there.â
âWill you take me to softball games?â I croaked, my voice rough with emotion.
He paused, regarding me with wariness, before agreeing. âYes, Sonny-boy. Yes, I will, if thatâs what you want.â
âAnd will we have family dinners?â I continued.
âOf course.â His eyes widened, and he embraced me in a half-hug, relieved. âOf course. Weekly. Iâll tell Dianne you are always welcome.â
Dianne was his wife. The next part I said after pretending to wipe an imaginary tear from the corner of my eye. âAnd will you teach me about the birds and the bees? I heard rumors, Daddy, but really, do boys do that to girls? It sounds soâ¦painful.â
He disconnected from me, examining my face.
I started laughing. âDamn.â I pushed him away. âGet the fuck out. Iâm not your son. I may be dumb and pretty, but for fuckâs sake, I am pretty. You look like Gargamel.â
As I said that, I realized Iâd stopped believing it. Well, some of it. I wasnât stupid. I wasnât a dumbass. I was just an asshole with no one to hold him accountable for anything. Until now.
âYou little piece ofââ
The front door three floors under us was kicked open before Syllie finished his thought. Shouts of âFBIâ rang from the first floor.
I sighed at him exaggeratedly, lifting my timber of whiskey and using my hand to pry his jaw open by squeezing his cheeks. I poured the contents of my glass into his mouth.
âHere. Iâve a feeling youâll need some liquid courage for this next part.â
I knew the police had been sent to the Lewis residence. That type of courtesy I expected, seeing as Iâd called them with my story, but had no hard proof to give them. The fact that the FBI was here made me think someone else was involved.
Troy Brennan, to be exact. Sailor had asked him for help, knowing I might not be able to pull it off myself. Sheâd asked her father for help, even though she hated everything he did and represented. For me.
Syllieâs face contorted in fury. âTheyâre dead men walking. Thereâs no way you can reach them, you little idiot. They donât have any reception where they are.â
âWhy did you do this?â I asked.
Footfalls raced up the stairs. Dozens of them, it sounded like. It was happening.
âI was always mistreated. I gave Royal Pipelines my best years and didnât even get a raise. The truth is, your father has a lot of blood on his hands, which is why he hired Troy Brennan and his son to work on retainer for him. Cillian is a well-suited terrorist, a devil waiting to unleash hell at any moment. And you? Youâre a simple idiot. I tried to save this company from itself, from awful, unjust succession.â Syllie grabbed me by the shirt and tried to fling me over the bannister.
Heâd been calling me an idiot the entire six months I was in Boston, but somehow thought he could fling a two-hundred-pound, six-foot-four-inch ex-polo player made of sheer muscle and pheromones. I stumbled two steps before throwing him toward the bannister, bending him so half his body was hanging in the air, between life and death.
It was a tall fucking house. The air felt thin and chilly, like breathing icicles.
âYouâre dead, Fitzpatrick!â he spat, his face red.
The boys in black kicked the office door open (I loved when they did that; door handles were for pussies) and rushed over to grab him by the robe.
I waved goodbye with my fingertips. âWeâll always have our little league softball,â I called.
âFuck you!â he yelled back, rather impolitely. âI want to call my lawyer. Let me speak to my lawyer.â
I stayed half an hour to give two investigators my side of things, then asked if I could start making my way to Maine. They said yes. When I exited the Lewis household, I got a text message.
Ash: Mom said youâre not getting anything before you talk to her face to face. Sorry.
I wanted to kill someone.
âYou do realize your husband and son are mere hours from being blown to pieces in a remote place with zero reception?â I moved down the corridor toward my motherâs office.
She led me briskly to her private roomânot the bedroom she sometimes shared with Da. She nodded. âI do. But you are just as important as they are, sweetie.â
I said nothing to that, because I still didnât believe it. After we got in, she closed the door and took a seat behind her desk. I didnât even know why she had an office. Itâs not like sheâd worked a day in her life.
I remained standing. I didnât have time. âGet it over with and give me the keys to the private jet.â
âPrivate jets donât have a kââ
âItâs a figure of speech.â I smiled. âTalk, Mother.â
She shook her head, looking down at her fingers, which were splashed on the table.
âI know youâre mad at me, Hunter, and for good reason. I had you illegitimately to get back at your father, then sent you away when you were six. You have every right in the world to despise me. But honey, you must understand. I wasnât a terrible mother to you. I was a terrible mother, period. When I found out I was pregnant with youâ¦â She sucked in a breath and looked the other way, shaking her head, like the memory was too much.
If this was her plan to make shit better, she was doing a terrible job.
âIt was the happiest moment of my life. Would you like to know why?â
Not really. âSure,â I groaned instead. Anything to make her give me the goddamn Gulfstreamer.
She looked up at me, her eyes shining. âBecause you, I knew Iâd love the most. I was crazy in love with your fatherâyour real fatherâbut Filip never loved me back. In fact, he ran back to Croatia when he realized I was going to leave Gerald for him. Your father paid him handsomely to disappear, I assume. But you were my lovechild, Hunter. Still are. You were the only one of my children I breastfed, that I nurtured until you were three.â
âWow. Iâm humbled,â I said sarcastically. I didnât understand where she was going with this.
âButâ¦â She held up a hand. âI struggled with a lot of things, severe depression among them. I stayed in bed for weeks at a time. Sometimes your father would drag me out, and weâd have violent fights. I tore out his hair one time. Another, I broke his rib. I wasnât fit to be a mother, so sending you away before you saw all that seemed like the only option.â
âAnd bring Aisling into the world,â I reminded her. âThat was important, too. Fuck up one more kid.â
âAisling was my apology for Filip.â
âDamn, that sounds bad.â I sucked my teeth.
She jumped from her seat, running to me. Every bone in my body turned to ice. Even when she stopped a few inches away. Even when she began to lower herself to her knees.
âDammit, Hunter, I cannot tolerate this anymore. You have to forgive me.â
âOr else?â I asked, shoving my hands into my pockets. I forgot, momentarily, that I had my asshole family to save. I was so immersed in my motherâs attempt to patch things up.
She looked up, on her knees in front of me. âOr Iâm not giving you the Gulfstreamer.â
âYour husband and son will die,â I said slowly, examining her.
She really was insane. She smiled at me, her eyes full of tears. It was a sad, broken smile, that of a person who has nothing left to lose.
âYouâre killing me every day you donât take my calls. Please.â She lowered her face to my sneakers. Jesus Christ. Was she going toâ¦oh, fuck. She was. She was going to kiss my feet. I couldnât take it. Couldnât see the person whoâd purged me out into the world losing the remainder of her pride.
âGet up,â I roared, yanking her by the shoulder. âI forgive you.â
âReally?â She was bawling now.
âYes, really. The apology was a fucking mess, but it is obvious itâs important to you. Now, please, for the love of God, Mom, send the Gulfstreamer.â
âItâs already warmed up and waiting for you in the gang hanger. Oh, I love you, Hunt.â
I couldnât help but wrap my arms around her, patting her head awkwardly. âYeah, Mom. Love you, too.â
My last stop before boarding the plane to Maine was the Brennan residence. Sailor lived in a high-rise with her parents, so honking for her to come down wasnât in the cards. I had to drag my ass to her door.
She opened, looking alert, like it wasnât two in the morning. Sheâd been waiting for me.
âWell?â Her eyes widened in anticipation.
âYou told your dad. Youâve never asked him for this kind of favor.â
âI had to help you in some way,â she said quietly.
I knew how much it had cost her, how much it wounded her sense of who she was, and vowed to make it up to her.
âCan I go Christian Grey on your ass and invite you for a trip in my private plane?â I flashed her my pearly whites.
âI guess. But no BDSM.â
âBoo. Youâre no fun.â
âInvite someone else, then.â She laughed.
I pulled her out, barely resisting the urge to kiss her.
âFun is overrated. Letâs go.â