The Monster (Boston Belles #3) - L.J. Shen Page 0,24
at my feet. I hitched one shoulder up, feigning calmness.
“I don’t see the point of paying for a place when I basically live at the hospital.”
“Don’t act like living in your own apartment would require you to wash a mug. You’re too rich to do shit yourself, and you and I both know that. Why are you still hiding behind Mommy and Daddy?” he repeated sternly.
The truth was complex, surprising, and worst of all … unbelievable. He would never buy it. Even if I told him. Which I did not consider doing since the truth was embarrassing. I was a puppet. A pawn in my parents’ game. Nothing to be proud of.
I shook my head.
“Does that mean I’m no longer banned from Badlands?” I asked.
“Oh, you’re still banned, missy. I don’t want to see you partying with these losers. One of the bouncers will show you through the back door when you get here tomorrow, but you’re not allowed at the bar or any of the card rooms.”
“See you tomorrow, Monster.”
“Nix,” he nodded his goodbye.
I all but made it back home in a tornado and Googled his nickname for me, elated and terrified and pleased and joyous.
Nix: A water being, half-human, half-fish, that lives in a gorgeous underwater palace and mingles with humans by assuming a variety of attractive physical forms (usually as a fair maiden).
Nix was a female monster.
Sam still thought of us as the same.
Dark, unpredictable creatures, lurking in plain sight.
Now that he let me in, I was going to destroy every single one of his walls and finally make him mine.
Ten hours after being balls deep inside Aisling Fitzpatrick, I got a call that Catalina Greystone, AKA Mother Dearest, had finally (and uneventfully) kicked the bucket.
“Just thought y’all should know. What with the fact that they’re gonna knock the whole thang down next week. Not that the property’s worth a dime, mind you. But I thought, why not let her son know?” Cat’s neighbor, Mrs. Masterson, munched on something crunchy in my ear via a particularly annoying phone call.
Because I don’t care, I was tempted to reply.
Catalina’s death was new to me but not something I was interested in finding out more about.
She caught me at my personal trainer’s, flipping a truck tire that weighed almost as much as I did. I put her on speaker, tossing the phone on the foam floor as I continued flipping.
“How’d you get my number?” I grumbled, not mentioning the special code it required to get through to my line.
“Your daddy gave it to me. Troy somethin’.”
So Troy knew she was dead, too. I was surprised he didn’t show up at my door this morning with a bottle of champagne.
“Well, I appreciate the heads-up, but I can’t imagine there’s anything in this house of value to me.”
Other than my fucking long-lost childhood and memories of drug and alcohol abuse.
Cat had tried reconnecting with me over the years since dropping me off at the Brennans’ with nothing but a duffel bag and bad memories, but the truth of the matter was, I’d rather get fucked by a cactus—raw—than exchange a word with her.
Hell, I’d marry the goddamn cactus if it meant never seeing her wretched face.
Fortunately, being the garbage human that she was, Cat hadn’t gone through extreme lengths to try to reach out. She sent me letters periodically and tried to call every now and again, especially when she had money troubles, which—cue the surprise act—was fucking always.
As if giving a fuck was on the menu for me. By the address on the letters (that went straight into the trash—unless it was wintertime, in which case straight into the fireplace), I figured she spent the last half decade on the outskirts of Atlanta, sucking soggy cock to fund her drug and designer bag problems.
One especially slow night at Badlands I even Google-mapped her address and wasn’t surprised to see she lived in a place I wouldn’t even store my shoes. A rickety wooden thing any wolf could blow over and knock down.
If I cared enough for revenge, I’d have gone there to do exactly that. Made her homeless. As it happened, not enough time had passed for me to think of her as an afterthought, let alone an enemy.
“Aren’t you gonna ask how she passed away?” The woman on the other line continued nagging. My trainer, Mitchell, a man who looked like a rock (not to be confused with The Rock), handed me a fresh towel, offering me a what-the-hell look.