Be My Brayshaw (Brayshaw High #4)(34)



My dad and Maybell step inside right as the others disappear from sight.

Maybell nods. “You ready, boy?”

The three of us quickly go over everything for Zoey even though we’ve done this a solid dozen times in the last week, and then I’m sliding into the driver’s seat of my SUV.

We stop at the donut shop on our way to school, getting right back to our regular routine.

“Two chocolate sprinkle donuts for me, large hot choc,” Royce says, his face in his phone.

“Coffee, lots of creamer,” Raven tells me.

I look to Maddoc who eyes me.

He told me last night to swap her out for decaf if she asked—she’ll kick his ass if she finds out, and he’ll gladly take it.

“Black,” Maddoc says. “And grab her a maple bar.”

“I don’t want one today.” Raven shakes her head.

“You will the second you smell Royce’s.”

“No, I won’t—”

“Get the damn donut, Cap.”

I fight a grin, and turn to Victoria, but she doesn’t bother looking my way, keeping her head dropped against the seat, eyes pointed out the window, so I slam my door and head inside to get everyone’s orders.

Not ten minutes later we’re turning into the parking lot of the school, and just like that, head after head snaps our way, conversations dying on people’s lips as they turn, unable to control their stares as they normally would when they spot the familiar SUV.

It’s been almost two months since we’ve been here and a lot of shit’s changed.

Thankfully our boy, Mac, helped keep things in line best he could in our absence, still though, people pulled their shit.

Perfect example, were the assholes at the promenade, the Graven Prep dicks who are looking for an in they won’t get. We would never trust someone who flip-flopped so fast, and all because the head of their little world will never be allowed back here. That’s not how loyalty works.

Mac did good, held down what he could and well, but no matter how you look at it, the perfect little world the students of Brayshaw High felt they lived in has been shaken and stirred and they have no clue what to do with that.

They don’t know how to function without order and rules and expectations. They were born into it, into this town ran by power and respect, so when it was disrupted, they panicked.

This is Brayshaw, and it’s the head of our name they need to feel safe, that they want to look to.

Me, my brothers, Raven—the queen they were promised.

Rumors spread like wildfire when we first allowed Collins Graven, the next in line for the Graven empire and our family enemies, into our school this past winter, and they only got worse when he and Donley Graven disappeared not long after his estate was burnt to the ground.

Mac told us dozens of kids flipped out and stopped showing at school, so we had to give them something, let them know we weren’t hiding, but building our strength.

They know now the town is ours without question and the Gravens no longer have a leg to try and challenge this.

They know Raven is both Brayshaw and Graven blood, and holds more clout here than anyone before her, and that she married my brother to fulfill a decades’ old contract made by men before our time. Not that she wouldn’t have on her own later, the contract just sped the timeline up a bit.

But that’s it.

They don’t know about my daughter.

They don’t know Victoria is Raven’s sister.

They don’t know the sudden departure of their principal was our doing—Connor Perkins, the man who helped hide Zoey’s existence from me by hiding her mother. They also don’t know he was the man who got my mother pregnant with me, giving her the son her husband couldn’t—my biological father, who I would never claim.

Rolland is my dad, period.

There is a lot they’re clueless about, but the shock they’ll be let in on first is what’ll be most obvious the second we step from this vehicle.

I glance at Raven, who frowns out her window.

“I’m a fucking statistic,” she grumbles.

“And anyone who points that out will get their tits punched or balls chopped.” Royce glares, sitting forward in his seat.

My eyes fall to her top, a stretchy material that forms to her frame perfectly, leaving her small bump on full display for the first time.

She shrugs, looking to Royce. “Why, it’s the truth.”

“Yeah, and so is the fact that Victoria here is a sneaky little snake.” I look in my mirror in time to see him point a malicious grin toward her. “But we still won’t allow others to say it to her face.”

“I don’t need you to look out for me,” Victoria tells him in a monotone, eyeing the chaos in the parking lot with annoyance.

She’s so used to hiding in the background, but she won’t get that anymore.

“If you haven’t figured it out yet, VicVee, lemme break it down for ya. We don’t give a fuck what you need, not yet anyway.” He pushes his door open the second I put the vehicle in park, and steps out, quickly tucking his head back inside. A deep glower covers his face. “Or instead of ‘not yet,’ maybe I should say not anymore, huh?” He slams the door.

She scoffs, drops her head back on the seat, and lets her gaze flick past mine.

“Fuck it,” Raven huffs. “Let’s go.”

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