Third Debt (Indebted #4)(28)
The underground parking garage housed thirty or so bikes for the Black Diamond brothers. We’d built the bunker especially for our MC, hidden away in case the police ever raided us, which until last month was never a possibility.
Now it might be thanks to the f*cking Weavers and their lies to the local papers. Our bribes worked perfectly to keep the law on our side. But when strangers started moaning and demanding justice, it wasn’t a simple matter of turning a blind eye anymore.
Luckily, we had a plan. Damage control was in full swing, and after a few weeks out of the limelight, Nila would be forgotten and the world would continue.
We also had a trump card.
The one thing Vaughn couldn’t get his sister to do: a private interview.
Later today, Nila would answer all the questions the world wanted to know. She would shed her silence and feed the media a story that would put an end to the disgusting rumours in a carefully scripted pantomime, then she would go back to belonging to us. To me.
Plucking my captive from my bike, I discarded my helmet and jacket.
She was back where she belonged, but first there was a simple matter to attend to. One that my father had pointed out and shown me how important it was after my indiscretions.
He was wise, my father. I hoped to rule like him when it was my turn.
“Come with me.” Taking her wrist again, I half-escorted, half-dragged Nila through the underground garage and into the private elevator that spat us out by the stables.
Neither of us spoke as we traversed the grass beneath the pink-silver light of dawn. The Hall loomed before us, its turrets glowing with sunrise and stained glass windows looking as if blood ran down the panes.
Flaw and Kestrel had gone—no doubt already snoring in their beds.
I hadn’t slept much last night, but I wasn’t tired. Far from it. I was awake and ready to prove my worth.
My fingers itched to open my tablet bottle. It wasn’t time for another dose, but the way my heart skipped back at the gatehouse proved the fog needed reinforcing.
Now Nila was back in my vicinity, I would have to keep an eye on my dosage—increase the prescription to remain immune to whatever tricks she might play.
“Where are you taking me?” Nila asked as we stepped into the hushed world of Hawksridge and prowled through its sleepy corridors.
I didn’t reply. She had no right to know. She would understand the moment we arrived.
It didn’t take long, another few minutes before I stopped and opened a large carved door in the north wing of the house.
The space wasn’t as big as many of the other rooms, but it’d been staged with the equipment required.
My lips twitched into half a smile as Nila crossed the threshold.
The moment her eyes landed on the medical table in the centre of the room, her mouth fell open in horror. “What—what is this?”
She struggled in my hold while I reached behind her and locked the door.
She wasn’t stupid.
She knew this wouldn’t end well.
The light in her face went out. Her eyes widened in horror. I’d been right to suspect her motives. Did she not think I would see? That her messages weren’t so f*cking obvious?
“I’m not someone you can manipulate, Ms. Weaver.” I patted her arse as I moved forward. A reclining chair suddenly swivelled around, revealing my father.
His eyes landed on Nila, glowing gold with triumph. “Ah, welcome, my dear. So glad to see you after this dreadful time apart.” He raised his tumbler of cognac. “It wasn’t the same without you here. Was it, Kite?”
I no longer hated my bird of prey nickname. I no longer despised my father using it. In fact, it was an honour. Before, it was a constant reminder that I was born and bred to be something I could never be—now it was a badge of distinction. I’d somehow achieved the impossible and become the perfect f*cking son.
Smiling at Nila, I answered, “No. It wasn’t the same without her.”
If only she knew what’d happened while she was off playing seamstress with her brother. If only she knew what Cut had done to me, what I’d done in return. She wouldn’t have come willingly. She would’ve done anything to avoid being my prisoner again.
“Jethro…” Her voice trailed off, her eyes never leaving the table. “What is the meaning of this?”
Cut laughed. “Come now, child. You can’t play that card with us. You know as well as I do what you’ve done to deserve this.”
“Please!” Nila plastered herself against the door, jiggling the doorknob with her hand. It was pointless. I had the key in my pocket. “You don’t have to do this.”
Cut slowly placed his empty glass on the table and stood. Undoing his cufflinks, he rolled up his sleeves, systematically and refined, never rushing. “I think you’ll find, my dear, that we do.”
Nodding in her direction, he ordered, “Jet, enough dallying. Grab the girl and let’s get on with this.”
“Be my pleasure.” I advanced on Nila.
Blues and greys decorated the room. The wallpaper was an oriental silk that was so vibrant, the indigo pattern bounced off Nila’s black hair.
“Stop it,” Nila snarled. “Don’t.”
Standing in front of her, I held out my hand. “This can be easy or hard. Your choice.”
“I hate it when you do that! Can’t you see I don’t want a choice?!”
Pepper Winters's Books
- The Boy and His Ribbon (The Ribbon Duet, #1)
- Throne of Truth (Truth and Lies Duet #2)
- Dollars (Dollar #2)
- Pepper Winters
- Twisted Together (Monsters in the Dark #3)
- Tears of Tess (Monsters in the Dark #1)
- Second Debt (Indebted #3)
- Quintessentially Q (Monsters in the Dark #2)
- Je Suis a Toi (Monsters in the Dark #3.5)
- Fourth Debt (Indebted #5)