The Atonement (The Arrangement, #3)

The Atonement (The Arrangement, #3)

Kiersten Modglin




AUTHOR’S NOTE


Dear Reader, Thank you for picking up this book! THE ATONEMENT is the third and final book in my bestselling ARRANGEMENT trilogy. In order to fully understand the events in this book, it’s important that you start at the beginning. If you haven’t had a chance to read THE ARRANGEMENT, start there: http://mybook.to/arrangement, next check out THE AMENDMENT: mybook.to/theamendment, and then come back here for the conclusion to this dark and scandalous story.

Thanks so much for your support. I hope you love every thrilling moment!

XO, Kiersten





CHAPTER ONE





AINSLEY





My husband was alive.

He was alive and he shouldn’t be.

That was my fault.

I checked the rearview, both for signs of being followed and to make sure my children were still there. Still asleep. Still safe. But for how long?

How long did we have until he found us?

Maybe he already had.

I’d read over his text message what felt like a thousand times, until my eyes blurred with tears, fear, and fury.

Then, I’d loaded up my kids, sand still drying on their damp legs, and we’d rushed back to the hotel. I couldn’t tell them what was happening—could never tell them what I’d done, so instead, I said very little. They understood something was very wrong—I never let them see me so distraught—and I was grateful when they moved with me, packing their things quickly and loading them into the rental car without too many questions.

We were coming home from our vacation days early, but the stress I wore like a blinding hazard sign seemed to keep them from complaining.

“Is everything okay?” Maisy had asked once more, after her brothers had both fallen asleep. I wanted to be honest with her, truly I did, but what could I say?

What could I ever tell her in order to make her understand how we got here?

As I stared into the headlights approaching our car on the quiet highway, I had to wonder how exactly we had gotten here.

Ten years ago—hell, two years ago even, if someone had told me this was what would become of us, I would’ve laughed at them. Because it was ridiculous.

We were normal people.

A normal family.

Two loving parents.

Three perfect children.

How, then, had we managed to fall this far so fast?

I knew the answer without having to think about it, really.

Peter.

The answer was always Peter.

He was the reason I’d had to make the choices I did. He was the reason for all my mistakes. No matter what I did, nothing seemed to faze him, nothing seemed to make him want to change…not for me, not for his kids, not for anything.

And now, he was refusing to die.

The easiest thing he could’ve done, yet he refused.

While I could predict almost everything about him, I had no idea what would be running through my husband’s mind at that moment, and that scared me maybe more than anything else.

Being unable to stay one step ahead of him simply because he wasn’t meant to have any steps left, had caused me to stumble.

And I’d always prided myself on my ability to never stumble.

As the car behind us gained speed, the bright headlights blinding me in the rearview, my stomach lurched.

It couldn’t be him.

There was no way.

And yet, every car that passed us, I worried. Every gas station I’d stopped at, I’d scanned the faces of each person I passed, convinced that as I rounded a corner, he’d be there. Waiting for me. Waiting for me with that stupid, charming smile.

Was he going to make me pay for what I did?

Not if I could help it, no.

My children needed me to stay alive. They needed me to protect them—from the world and from their father.

Next to me, Maisy stirred against the cool pane of the window. I checked on the boys again. Dylan’s mouth hung open in the back seat, his head resting against his seat belt, and Riley was all but lying down.

They would be hungry soon, I suspected. And ready for showers. The car was caked with sand at that point, but there was just no time for us to stop. We had to keep moving for as long as we could.

I wasn’t sure where we were going or where we would be safe. All I knew was that I couldn’t let him find us.

I couldn’t let him ever find us again.

I slowed down as the car grew closer, willing it to pass me, to let me know it wasn’t following us. Instead, the driver slowed too, still following me closely despite the clear left lane.

Chills lined my arms.

No.

I was overreacting.

Being paranoid.

It wasn’t Peter.

Reaching forward, I turned the radio down further, driving with only the hum of the road noise in my ears as I searched for signs and weighed my options.

The likelihood that Peter had found us so quickly was terribly low, but I couldn’t put anything past him. How long had he had to track us down, after all? How long had I lain on the beach thinking I’d won, thinking I was finally free, yet all the while I’d failed in every way?

How stupid could I have been?

I should’ve made sure it was done.

But there was no sense dwelling on the past or hating myself for my mistakes. All there was left to do was fix things. Fix everything.

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