Never Never: Part Two (Never Never #2)(8)
I tilt my head in confusion. Is she expecting an apology? “Well…what?”
She huffs and folds her arms over her chest. “Did you find my sister?”
Janette. This is Charlie’s sister, Janette. Crap.
I can imagine it’s hard enough searching for a missing person, but trying to search for them when you have no idea who you are, who they are, or who anyone else is kind of feels like shooting for the impossible.
“Not yet,” I tell her. “Still looking. You?”
She takes a step toward me and tucks her chin in. “Don’t you think if I found her I wouldn’t have asked you if you found her?”
I take a step back, putting a safe distance between that glare and me.
Okay. So Janette is not a very pleasant person. I should write that in the notes for future reference.
She pulls a phone from her purse. “I’m calling the police,” she says. “I’m really worried about her.”
“I already spoke to the police.”
She darts her eyes up to mine. “When? What did they say?”
“I was at your house. Your mother called the police when she found me in the attic looking for Charlie. I told the officer she’s been missing since last night, but your mother made it sound like I was overreacting, so they didn’t take it seriously.”
Janette groans. “Figures,” she says. “Well, I’m calling them again. I need to go outside to get a better signal. I’ll let you know what they say.” She steps around me to head outside.
Once she’s gone, I head in the direction of where I think the athletic building might be.
“Silas,” someone says from behind me.
Are you kidding me? Can I not make it five feet in this hallway without having to answer to someone?
I turn to face whoever is wasting my time, only to find a girl—or woman, rather—who perfectly matches the description of Avril Ashley.
This is exactly what I don’t need right now.
“Can I see you in my office, please?”
I squeeze the back of my neck and shake my head. “I can’t, Avril.”
She reveals nothing of what is going through her head. She stares at me with a stoic expression and then says, “My office. Now.” She turns on her heels and heads down the hall.
I contemplate running in the other direction, but drawing attention to myself won’t do me any favors. I reluctantly follow her until she reaches the door to administration. I follow her past the secretary and into an office. I step aside as she closes the door, but I don’t sit. I’m watching her carefully, and she still hasn’t looked back at me.
She makes her way to the window and stares outside, wrapping her arms around herself. The silence is awkward at best.
“Do you want to explain what happened Friday night?” she asks.
I immediately begin searching my infant memory for what she could be talking about.
Friday, Friday, Friday.
Without my notes in front of me, I come up empty. There’s no way I can remember every detail of what I’ve read in the past two hours.
When I fail to respond, she lets out a soft laugh. “You are unreal,” she says, turning to face me now. Her eyes are red, but so far they’re dry. “What in the world possessed you to punch my father?”
Oh. The diner. The fight with the owner, Brian’s father.
Wait.
I stand up straighter, the hairs prickling up across the skin of my neck. Avril Ashley is Brian Finley’s sister? How is that even possible? And why would Charlie and I be involved with them?
“Did it have to do with her?” she asks.
She’s throwing too much at me at once. I grip the back of my neck with my hands again and squeeze away some of the nerves. She doesn’t seem to care that I’m not in the mood to discuss this right now. She takes several quick steps toward me until her finger is poking me in the chest.
“My father was offering her a job, you know. I don’t know what you’re up to, Silas.” She spins and walks back to the window but then throws her hands up in frustration and faces me. “First, you waltz in here three weeks ago and act like Charlie is destroying your life because of her involvement with Brian. You make me feel sorry for you. You even make me feel guilty just for being his sister. And then you use that to manipulate me into kissing you, and once I finally cave, you show up every single day for more. Then you go to my father’s restaurant and attack him, then follow that up by breaking things off with me.” She takes a step back and puts her hand against her forehead. “Do you realize how much trouble I could be in, Silas?” She begins pacing back and forth. “I liked you. I risked my job for you. Hell, I risked my relationship with my own brother for you.” She stares up at the ceiling, placing her hands on her hips. “I’m an idiot,” she says. “I’m married. I’m a married woman with a degree, and here I am messing around with a student simply because he’s attractive and I’m too damn foolish to know when someone is using me.”
Information overload. I can’t even respond as everything she just said sinks in.
“If you tell anyone about this, I’ll make sure my father presses charges against you,” she says with a threatening glare.
I find my tongue with that comment. “I’ll never tell anyone, Avril. You know that.”