Bennett Mafia(10)
If Tanner was here, that meant the whole Bennett family knew about me. They. Had. Found. Me.
Pure and genuine panic started to filter in.
They knew my father.
Did he send them for me?
Had he found out about me?
They were capable of murder. Were they going to ki— I had to wait and think. Be clear-headed.
After the oldest brother had died, it was ruled an accident, but I knew Brooke never agreed. After her father and Kai left that day, she’d broken down, saying Cord was murdered. That had been all she ever said. She’d never talked about how he died, just that he was dead.
Three months later, we’d found ourselves back on the front steps of Hillcrest again. This time Brooke hadn’t been crying. She’d been pale and holding on to my hand as if it were a life preserver, but she’d known why they were coming again.
They were coming for her.
Her father, Anthony Bennett, the patriarch of their family, had died in his sleep.
Kai Bennett, the oldest remaining brother, was the new boss of the family, and he wanted Brooke back at home.
That was the last day I saw her, until the pictures on the news after her recent disappearance.
There were whispers around school after Brooke was gone that Kai had killed both his rivals. Brooke and I continued to talk on the phone and email for a few months after she left, but I never asked. I knew she’d never tell me anyway, even if she knew.
Fear trickled through me, expanding to my toes as I looked around the SUV again. Were her brothers behind Brooke’s disappearance?
Or—ice lined my veins—was Brooke dead too?
“Don’t do it, Ray ray.”
I gritted my teeth. “Don’t use that name. That was Brooke’s, not yours.”
Tanner laughed, raising his phone again. “All I’m saying is don’t let your mind wander down to all the dark and twisted places you’re going. Let us get where we need to go, then you can embrace all the accusations.” He continued to chuckle as his attention went back to whatever was on his phone.
“Where are we going?”
He smiled, his gaze not leaving the screen. “You’ll see.”
I bit back a growl. “What time is it?”
I had two hours before Blade would start looking for me. They had a two-hour head start. That was it.
“You’ll see,” he said again. He still didn’t look at me.
The lie fell from my lips so easily. “I’m diabetic, Tanner. I need to know the time to see if I need to check my blood sugar.”
He looked up then. So did the guards.
His eyes narrowed. He didn’t move his phone. “You’re lying.”
I rolled my eyes. “Right. Who’d lie about having diabetes?”
“Someone who wants to judge how far away we are from her hiding spot.” He smirked again. “And speaking of, why Calgary? You know we have holdings there, right?” His eyes slid up and down my body, lingering on my lips. “Though, I have to say, the woodsy, all-natural look you have going on works for you. Makes me think of embracing some wood too.”
I felt a flush trailing up my neck.
What was this? Tanner was flirting? No, this was just his personality. Brooke had talked about how he was a player, even back then. It seemed that hadn’t changed. In a way, it calmed me a little bit, finding something still the same. Something at least sort of familiar.
But I had to know. Feeling my throat growing raw, I rasped out, “Did you find me for him?”
Tanner lowered the phone to his lap. His head tilted to the side.
He didn’t reply, just stared at me for a full minute. He wasn’t going to answer, damn him.
“My father,” I clarified.
His eyes widened a fraction of an inch. An emotion flared before he stomped it down. His phone came back up, and his gaze returned to it. “No. Now shut it and chill.”
“My blood sugar—”
“You’re not diabetic. You weren’t when you were twelve, and there’s no way you got type 2 since then. Stop insulting my intelligence.”
Well then.
I could try the door, jump out of a moving car, and tear through the woods—but that would only work if I could run after I landed. We were moving so fast, it would be useless. They had four fucking vehicles here. Who knew how many guards were in each of them.
I sat back. I would wait to see who was at the end of this drive.
That was my only option.
CHAPTER SIX
I slept for a while—not sure how long—but we drove for three hours after I woke up before we stopped. I’d been counting and looking around until we pulled into a gas station. There were no other businesses around it, just forest. I had to figure they’d picked this place for that specific reason.
Once our vehicle stopped, both the guards got out and opened our doors.
Tanner put his phone away and sighed. “Don’t try anything, Gone Girl.” He gestured outside. “See all those guys?”
I gulped.
Ten of them got out of the cars and took up positions around the gas station.
“They will surround the station so you can walk free in there, but if you try to make a run for it, they’ve been approved to shoot you.”
My eyes flew back to his.
He seemed smug. “With that said, have fun peeing. Pick anything you want inside and put it on the counter. We’ll foot the bill.” He whistled as he got out on his side. His door closed, and the guard followed him as he went toward the building.