After a few seconds of stunned silence, Max says, âOkay, thatâs freaky as hell. Heâs calling you after I just said you should call him? What are the odds of that?â
Fin glances around worriedly. âWhatâs really freaky is how he knew we were here. Do you think he followed you after he kicked you out of the taxi?â
âHe mustâve. I guess he likes playing games.â
Like a cat with a mouse right before it delivers the killing bite that severs the spinal cord.
I grit my teeth, square my shoulders, and look around, expecting to see a bunch of big dudes wearing evil expressions and dark suits with suspicious bulges underneath. But I see no hitmen, only regular people talking and drinking, mingling near the bar.
I stand, my heart banging around inside my chest. âIf Iâm not back in five minutes, you guys know what to do.â
Max nods. âBlow the place.â
âWhat? No! Go to your safe spots and text the signal when youâre all clear!â
Fin is frowning. âI thought âif Iâm not back in five minutesâ was code for âIâm going home with the hot piece of ass I just met, donât bother waiting up for me.ââ
âJesus,â I say, glaring at them in disappointment. âWeâre the worst criminals who ever lived.â
Fin replies, âAt least Max and I know better than to insult the grand poohbah of the underworld, babe. Now go save our asses. Weâll be right here getting drunk in case you fail.â
Shaking my head, I leave them and head in the direction of the man bun, whoâs waiting for me at the end of the bar. He motions to a telephone booth near the back exit. Itâs one of those old-fashioned red ones from London that tourists love to take their pictures near.
Adrenaline courses through me like electricity. I enter the booth, pull the door shut, and take a deep breath. Then I lift the receiver off the top of the phone box and bring it to my ear.
The silence on the other end of the line crackles. Even through a phone wire, his presence is as palpable as a hand sliding over my skin.
Then: âI wasnât planning on that.â
The voice is low, rough, and distinctive. Now that Iâve heard it, Iâd recognize that rich Irish brogue anywhere.
I say, âOn not killing me when you had the chance?â
âOn losing my temper. I owe you an apology.â
We breathe at each other until I recover my senses. âAre you joking?â
âNo.â
âIs thisâ¦some kind of game?â
âNo.â
I stare so hard at the buttons on the phone they start to blur. âOkay, Iâm just gonna go ahead and admit I have no idea whatâs happening right now.â
âWhatâs happening is that Iâm apologizing for throwing you out onto the street.â
âAfter I stole ninety thousand dollarsâ worth of diapers from you?â
âAye.â A hint of warmth creeps into his solemn voice. âThough Iâm told that technically they were stolen from a warehouse, not from me.â
I long for a chair to collapse into, but sagging against the glass door of the narrow booth will have to do. Gripping the receiver in both hands, I demand loudly, âAre you going to kill us or what?â
He sighs. âNot this again.â
âIs that a no?â
He says firmly, âAye, lass, itâs a no.â
I ignore how I like being called âlass,â and forge ahead. âWhy? Because weâre girls? If we were men, weâd already be dead, right?â
When he hesitates, I blurt, âOh, god, you changed your mind.â
âNo. Iâm just disappointed that my reputation includes harming women. Iâve never lifted a hand to a woman in myââ
He stops abruptly and curses under his breath.
When he doesnât continue, I say, âUm. You were saying?â
He exhales heavily. âI was about to tell you a lie. I did hit a woman once. I beat her, actually.â
If my jaw drops open any lower, it will be resting on the tops of my shoes.
âItâs one of my greatest regrets. I was under the impression she was trafficking girlsâselling childrenânever mind. Itâs a long story. My point is that I donât want us to get off on the wrong foot, so Iâm being honest.â
When Iâm silent too long, cross-eyed with shock and confusion, he says, âI killed the man who gave me that incorrect information. That Eva was a trafficker.â
Swallowing around my dead lump of a tongue, I say, âOh. Okay, then.â
âI know it doesnât excuse what I did. Iâm not saying it does. Iâm just giving the reason.â
âUhâ¦â
âSheâs married now. Has twins. I watch them when her husband goes out of town for work. Weâve become good friends.â
âSo it all worked out in the end.â
There. I managed to sound like a rational human being and not the mashed-potatoes-for-brains zombie I really am.
His tone turning firm, he commands, âTell me why you donated what you stole from me to a charity. Why take the risk for no financial gain? What was in it for you?â
This guy is giving me whiplash. âWhat difference does it make?â
âMotivation speaks to character. Tell me.â
God, heâs bossy. Iâm irritated until I think of Fin and Max, and what thin ice weâre all skating on right now, and decide to relent. âAll right. If you must know, to make amends.â
A long, blistering silence follows. Then he says slowly, âAmends to whom?â
âWellâ¦the world, I guess. To everyone.â
Thereâs another pause, this one longer. âAnd what kind of terrible sins have Robin Hood and her merry band of thieves committed that would require making amends to the entire world?â
âNot us,â I say, my voice quiet.
âThen who?â
I donât know why I tell him.
Maybe because Iâve never said the words out loud before, or because I sense so much is riding on my answer, or because Iâve had a lot to drink. But the words are out before I can stop them. Along with them comes a strange sense of relief.
âOur fathers are all bad people. Very bad people. The kind who donât care who they have to hurt to get what they want. The people we steal from are all like that, too. What we do is kind ofâ¦itâs our small way of giving back. Of trying to make up for being related to such gigantic assholes.â
When he doesnât say anything for so long I start to get worried, I blurt, âIâm not lying.â
âI believe you,â he says, his voice surprisingly soft.
Then he doesnât say anything else, and panic kicks in. I start to babble.
âUm. So. Thatâs it. Thatâs the reason. Weâre actually pretty bad at what we do. One of us inevitably screws something up, and itâs a miracle weâre all not in jail already, and we do have day jobs, weâre not total criminals, just sort of part-time you could say. Well, I donât mean to make it sound like we donât take it seriously, because obviously we do, itâs dangerous stuff, butââ
âI want to see you.â
His tone has lost all its softness. Itâs still low, but now itâs tense, too, filled with a dark need that makes my panic skyrocket.
All the breath leaves my lungs. Swallowing around the lump in my throat, I whisper, âWhy?â
His voice thick, he says, âYou know why.â
God help me, I do. And itâs not because he wants to kill me.
I didnât even know my heart could do what itâs doing, that throbbing, thrashing thing thatâs making my limbs weak and my entire body shake.
âIâ¦I have a boyfriend.â
He makes a soft sound of dissatisfaction. âWe were doing so well with the truth telling, little thief. I know you donât have a boyfriend. I know you havenât been serious with anyone in years. I know your credit score and how much money you have in your checking account and that your name is probably fake, because I conducted a background check on you and found several interesting holes in your life history.â
His voice drops. âI also know you like me, too, even though youâd never admit it.â
I canât speak. I doubt there are any words that could properly convey the depth of my shock, anyway.
Finally, I pull my head out of my ass and say the only thing that comes to mind, though itâs not even in the top ten most relevant after those bombs he just dropped on me.
âHow did you find me here?â
âI put a tracker on your jacket. Under the collar, left side.â
My hand flies up to fumble around under the collar of my jacket, until my fingers close over a tiny, round piece of metal, smooth and cool against my skin.
I pull it off and stare at it in disbelief. Smaller than a dime, itâs a little electronic gotcha winking at me under the phone boothâs lights.
âIâd apologize, but Iâm not sorry, and I want us to start off on the right foot, like I said. So no lying. Either of us,â he adds sternly, as if heâs being entirely reasonable.
As if he hasnât completely short-circuited my brain.
I say faintly, âWhat is happening?â
âBe in the alley behind the bar in sixty seconds, and Iâll explain it to you.â
The phone goes dead in my hand.
I stare at it, frozen, until someone knocks on the phone booth glass. I jump, looking up into Maxâs face.
She gives me a questioning thumbs-up.
Moving slowly, I hang up the phone and open the door.
She says impatiently, âWell? Howâd it go?â
âIâm pretty sure heâs not going to kill us.â
She examines my expression for a moment. âThen why do you look like youâre about to barf?â
âBecause heâs waiting for me outside.â
She swings around to stare in shock at the exit I gestured to. âHere? Now? Why?â
âIâ¦think weâre going on a date.â
She turns back to me, blinking so slowly itâs comical. âA date.â
âI think so. Either that, or he recently fired his therapist and needs to get some things off his chest.â
âI have no idea what that means.â
âIt means that for a soulless, ruthless, cold-blooded gangster, heâs surprisingly big on confessing his faults.â
Max stares at me in silence.
âAnd honesty. He seems to be big on honesty, too. He kept insisting we werenât going to lie to each other.â My laugh is small and semi-hysterical. âSo we donât get off on the wrong foot.â
She says, âOh shit.â
âExactly.â
We gaze at each other for a while, both of us knowing that my choices are limited.
I can try to run, putting my friendsâ lives in danger, in addition to my own if he finds me. Which Iâm beginning to suspect he could easily do. He seems to have all kinds of tricks up his well-tailored sleeves.
And despite his promises to the contrary, thereâs no guarantee he wonât kill us all if I donât comply with his wishes.
Or.
I can walk out the back door.
âWhereâs Fin?â
âShe went to the restroom.â
I take a deep breath, blow it out, and say a quick, silent prayer. âDonât go back to the apartment tonight. Go to your safe spots and stay there. And if you donât hear from me by dawn, contact my father.â
Max blanches. âYour father? Why?â
I say grimly, âHeâs the only one whoâll be able to protect you and Fin from Liam Black.â
Then I give her a quick, hard hug, and head out.