Verona Comics - Jennifer Dugan Page 0,41

“He learned a lot from that misstep, Ridley.”

“Misstep? That’s one word for it.”

More like all-out disaster. Trinity Comics had three of the most successful comic stores in the Northeast, indie but big indie, with some serious scene cred. Then they had the misfortune of meeting my father.

He offered to bring them in to do a joint business venture, to become affiliates and go from there. We were supposed to stay separate. They were going to be our indie leg. Only they still repped The Geekery brand. And, shocker, Dad got obsessive about it. Pretty soon, he was bringing down rules and regulations “from corporate,” but who are we kidding? He is corporate.

Then they weren’t so much affiliates as something else entirely. A mash-up. A corporate store with an indie front. Artists stopped coming for signings, customers stopped coming in to buy, prices went up to cover costs, inventory went down. It became this weird, sad chimera, leaving everybody unsatisfied on both sides.

Finally, after Dad ran their business into the ground, he bought them out at a teeny tiny fraction of what they were once worth. Dad rebranded them as The Geekery mini-marts, selling mostly cheap merchandise and Funko Pops instead of comics. He even hired one of the old owners as the manager. Twenty-five years of comics history down the drain, and all they could do was watch.

The idea of him doing that to Vera . . .

“She’ll never go for it. Ever.”

“That’s why we’re counting on you to find a way for us to make an offer she can’t refuse.”

“You’ve been watching too much of The Godfather. Vera Flores is not a sellout.”

“Grow up, Ridley. Everyone has a price.”

“Whatever you say.” I reach for my headphones, planning to tune her out completely, but then she says something I can’t ignore.

“You did.” She pulls my laptop off my desk and drops it onto the bed in front of me before slamming the door behind her. Fuck. She’s actually right. Except.

Except.

Maybe I can still fix this. I open the report file on my computer and start filling it in, feeling lighter the more I write. And if it isn’t strictly accurate, well, nobody has to know.

CHAPTER SIXTEEN

Jubilee

RIDLEY AND I are an hour deep into sorting and stocking books—he’s been here so much this last week, I figure he’s an honorary employee at this point anyway—when Jayla walks into the shop. She frowns when she sees him, and I sneak a glance at my phone and see she’s been texting me this whole time. I dropped the ball. Again. I was working, though, sort of, so she can’t really be mad.

I say sort of because, while I did help a customer, and we have gotten a bunch of stock out, we’ve mostly been talking. And laughing. And awkwardly bumping into each other accidentally on purpose. That’s basically our MO here, and maybe, possibly the reason I’ve been picking up so many extra shifts.

I just like talking to him. Like today he was telling me all about how close he is with his sister, and I was telling him all about playing cello. I even almost told him about the audition but changed my mind at the last second. I’m weird about that. Superstitious. Like if I tell too many people, I won’t be invited to the next round.

“Hey, Jay,” I say, mustering up a big smile.

She glances at Ridley. “You work here now?”

“Just helping out.”

Jayla hums and then checks the time. “My shift starts in a half hour, but I wanted to talk to you, Jubi. Alone?”

“Okay,” I say, following her into the back room.

“You two sure are hanging out a lot,” she says the second I’m behind the curtain.

“Is that what you dragged me back here to say?”

“No, I dragged you back here because I miss my best friend and you never answer my texts anymore.”

My face falls. “I know—I’m sorry. I’ve just been busy. I’ve had to cram in practice around all these extra shifts. It doesn’t leave

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