Chapter Twenty - Part Two
The Rules of the Red - 2014 Watty Award Winner |✓|
âAnd Ethan? Have you any thought to what youâve done to him? Or his family? Mathew was their only source of income. He was doing what was necessary to support his family ââ
âPlease, Charles, spare me the parts of this conversation where you pretend to be the good guy â thatâs so cliché itâs annoying.â I said, pouring myself a cup of coffee. âBesides, we both know that you donât give a damn about Mathew Raines. Sofia â maybe, but I have a hard time seeing Diane being ok with thatâ¦â
âObviously,â Charles began tightly, straightening his tie, but I knew that he would much rather have been strangling me with it. âYou knew Mathew was stealing the money. And I wonât ask how, because frankly, at this point it doesnât matter. But what I want you to know, is that Iâve also known the entire time. And I allowed it to happen so that he could get out of debt and focus on supporting his family and this Pack. He couldnât have done that worrying about bills.â
âBut?â I asked, eyebrows raised as I took the first tentative sip of my drink.
âBut?â he repeated, in a questioning sneer.
âGet real,â I said, with a snort. âDo you honestly expect me to believe that you let Mathew get away with stealing out of the kindness of your heart? You had something on him, or he had something on you⦠Either way you used the money as a ticket out â a favor for a favor and you each turned a blind eye to what the other was doing. But one of your mice got caught in a trap yesterday, so you had no choice but to let the cops haul him away while you turned your back. But now I have a question for you, Grandfather. How did you escape the cuffs? Why didnât Mathew rat out his partner? Or Sofia, even? Why were they both so willing to let you break them? Why did they take the fall for you?â
Charles stooped slightly, and gathered his case and coat, silent. But on his face sat a strange and devilish smile.
âBecause theyâre afraid, Naomi,â he said casually, and turned to go. âAs you should be tooâ¦â
âOh? Should I be afraid like you are of the Hunters?â I said, rising as he paused with his back to me in the doorway.
âYou have something to do with those Humans dying now, just like you had something to do with that magical flue all those years ago. And itâs happening again.â
âYou think that because weâre family, I canât be hard on you, and you moronically assume that Iâve underestimated you. But I am warning you now, Naomi, your last name holds weight no more. And as of this moment, your blood will no longer protect you.â
He left, and with a frustrated cry, I turned and chucked the coffee mug hard against the wall. It broke with a satisfied tinkle as coffee splattered in large droplets across the floor and wall.
His threats were genuine, I knew, but what scared me more was that perhaps he was right â what if I truly had underestimated him? What if I all along I had gone up against an adversary who had only given me his ten percent? I had deceived myself with my own pride, it seemed.
Not to mention that at the same time, Charles â the real villain â had somehow managed to paint me as the bad guy too. So now, the only real question was who could play the role bestâ¦
*Â *Â *
I showered and dressed hurriedly, intent on making my way to the Blue Moon to find Lucas. I wanted to catch him early during the day, in order to talk when I knew the bar would still be quiet. No more coffee â and no breakfast either â would be able to pass my lips again until I found a way to shine some light on this dark, dire situation.
I pushed through the doors of the bar, and though the sign in the front window displayed that they were open, the Blue Moon was empty. Save for Lucas, of course, who was busy sweeping between the tables.
âSo, I heard there was a lot of drama last night,â I said, approaching carefully. I couldnât tell if he was in a mood or not, seeing as how his normal expression usually tended to be dark and brooding anyway.
âIf you wanna call it that,â he said, without looking up. âDeeds done in the dark, usually tend to come to light after a while. Itâs all just a matter of when⦠Iâm surprised the Elder hasnât called an emergency meeting yet.â
âYeah, me too.â I said, as my stomach turned with guilt. âSo Sofia and Mathew both confessed?â I asked, sticking my hands in the back pockets of my jeans.
Lucas nodded.
âThey did, but I can tell Charles wants to be lenient. But Pack law stands â either the Elder had to turn them over to the Hunters, or the Human police. He made his choice. But Iâm sure the Humans are much kinder, so Charles actually did them a favor.â
âRight,â I said, nodding, but seething too as I realized that in the center of it all, my grandfather was still being made the hero. âBut with that said, the Leadership is two down. Weâre gonna replace at least one of them, right?â
âI donât know,â Lucas said, stopping his work to lean on the broom. âThatâs still somethinâ to be addressed. But weâve already got members from all the leading families in Harbor, and rules are you have to be a pureblood to be on the Leadership. And that doesnât leave us with many options.â
âRules. I get so tired of them.â I replied, with a sigh.
âThatâs not obvious,â Lucas said with a snort.
I chose to ignore him.
âYou know, Iâm just thinking about how all of this affects Ethan. I donât think he and Mathew were very close, but I know that he still really looks up to his dad. I canât imagine how heâs dealing with all this. It must be so hard on him and his familyâ¦â
âAnd?â
âAnd, this wasnât Ethanâs fault. But I have a feeling that this is all somehow gonna backlash on him and the rest of his family. And I know that it wouldnât make up for what might happen, but I was thinking that maybe there was something we could do to help.â
âSuch as?â
âWell,â I said, and took a deep breath. âWe could make Ethan a real Leader â give him more than just a Championâs title. With Mathew gone, the Raines family doesnât have an income anymore, and Champions donât get paid.â
But Lucas cast me a knowing look, deciding that it was time he get back to his sweeping.
âYou do realize,â he said. âEven if heâs made a Leader, that wonât break your bond? Heâll be a Leader, but heâll still be your Champion too.â
âIâm really not even thinking about that right now,â I assured Lucas. âIâm only focused on Ethan. I know heâs upset, and I can push aside my own problems to focus on that. After all, that is what a true Leader does, isnât it?â
âRight,â Lucas said, giving me a grin that was full of both amusement and suspicion. âLook, Iâll mention it to Jonathan and if I have his backing, then weâll bring it up at the next meeting. But letâs have the three of us â including Ethan â on a united front about this before we bring it up. That way, weâll have a better chance of convincing the Elder.â
âHey, weâll do it any way you want,â I replied, with an obliging smile.
This had actually gone much better than I had planned. If Lucas could turn Jonathan onto the idea of making Ethan a Leader, and if Lucas was to present the idea to Charles, then maybe the Elder might actually consider it. I didnât know whether it was more my guilt or my own inner desires that caused me to think up the idea of turning Ethan into Leader. The idea never could have worked properly with Mathew and Ethan both serving at the same time, because the possibility of two against one werenât odds in my favor. But on the other hand, with Mathew out of the picture, giving Ethan more power was a risk that I was more than glad to take.
After all, helping Ethan to become a Leader would make up for me getting his father thrown in jail (karma-wise). And keeping him beneath my thumb, but still with a measure of his own power, was enough to give me hope that I could retain some sort of protection against Charles. With Sofia and Mathew gone, there was more room for my influence to spread. Which meant I could get rid of Charles that much sooner.
With a grin, I turned to go, but seeing an empty cup on a table prompted me to grab it and return it to the counter for Lucas. I set it down, but his clipboard caught my eye â the same one that he used to hold his order forms and receipts. But as I looked down at it, lying there carelessly on the barâs countertop, I noticed something strange, and astonishingly confusingâ¦
Written in familiar handwriting on a sheet of familiar stationary, was a short list of ingredients the bar was running low on. And as my heart began to dance a jig in my chest, I reached out and touched a hand to the paper, letting my eyes travel across its crème color with the silver trimâ¦
Lucas. Lucas Blacklock had left the anonymous note on my doorstep.
I looked down the bar where Lucas stayed faithfully sweeping. He knew. He knew something dark about me and my past, something about my shifting ability that obviously he was afraid would be discovered by the wrong people. He had the answers to questions that I hadnât yet even thought of, and I intended to find out exactly what it was that he knew. Even if that meant having to take my time with it.
*Â *Â *
Acting casually, I hung around the bar for a while longer, ordering a coke for breakfast. But the bar began to have its first few customers trickling in after that, and Lucas had other patrons to turn his attentions to. So after my drink had been finished, I turned my thoughts towards home and Ethan. I had the strong desire to call him, as a true friend would, and make sure that he was ok. But then, with a sad irony, I remembered that I had stolen his phone, and that he wouldnât have been able to answer my call anyway.
So I went home instead, and decided the nap couldnât have been a better invention. I couldnât think of the last time when Iâd had one, and upon entering my room and looking at my bed, it had never looked so empty and inviting. The mattress sang out with a sirenâs cry and I went to it, willingly. And for once I managed to scrape together a few hours of uninterrupted sleep, before Mrs. Trentley was shaking me awake for the second time that day.
âCome off it woman!â I grumbled, shaking off her hand after she had brutally thrown back the covers. âSleep isnât just for the dead ya know!â
âIâd get my behind up and moving if I were you!â Mrs. Trentley said severely, standing over me with her hands on her hips, as I rolled over and closed the sheets over my head.
âI donât want to, Mrs. Trentley. Beat me later if you want. Hell, Iâll give you a raise if you just get out. Iâm tired.â
âWell, are you too tired for Ethan Raines? Or your mother, Paris?â
I sat straight up, like the dead rising from its grave, shoving off the sheets as I did.
âMy mother is here? In my house?â I asked, needing to hear her clarify, as my heart began to thump.
âYes, sheâs here.â Mrs. Trentley said. âAnd she doesnât look happy, so I suggest you get downstairs to the foyer before she eats your friend. Isnât that what vultures do?â
We shared a small snicker together, trying to find the humor in such a black occasion.
âObviously she knows,â Mrs. Trentley went on, flipping the switch back to serious. âThatâs why sheâs here â sheâs got the autopsy report with her.â
âAnd now sheâs here to confront me,â I said, finally rising from the bed. Iâd have to change back into my street clothes; I had put on my pajamas to fall asleep in.
âOh, I donât know why I havenât called the police.â she said, fretting. âAnd I donât know why you havenât either ââ
âMrs. Trentley, the police couldnât handle a woman like my mother,â I said. âAnd besides, if sheâs clever enough to get away with killing her own husband, then sheâs clever enough to escape prison. She isnât like Mathew Raines â you and I both know that.â
âTrue, but you were still cleverer than her, Naomi.â Mrs. Trentley said, surprising me with a rare, almost motherly compliment. âYou were the one to figure out her secret when the rest of us were too busy grieving to notice. So if you can figure that out, then I know you can figure out how to put that hideous woman away.â
I didnât have enough time to say âhowâ or even âthank youâ before she left the room. It seemed that Mrs. Trentleyâs mood wasnât that sentimental. But regardless, I smiled and thanked her silently as I took my clothes into the bathroom, feeling slightly pleased.
*Â *Â *
As I descended the staircase and saw Ethan and Paris coming into view, it was obvious that they were working hard to ignore each other from opposite corners of the hall. But they both looked up in unison as I made my entrance.
I could see that Paris was only a word away from releasing her fury, but Ethan on the other hand, remained much more passive. He was here to make peace, while my mother had ridden in on a current straight from hell.