“There isn’t,” Cal tells me, voice firm and maybe just a little bit scary. “Vic is good at what he does. He created Havoc; he owns it. He’s fair, and he’s smart, and his fuse is long, but he’s also an asshole. Don’t listen to him. Sooner or later, he’ll understand.”
“Understand what?” I ask, but really, I don’t need Callum to answer me. We both know what he means. Havoc Girl. Not Vic’s girl, not even if I heat up on the inside every single friggin’ time he says it.
“Do we need a turkey for Thanksgiving?” Callum asks after a long pause. He lights up another cigarette and holds it between two fingers, his nails painted blue like always. “My grandma probably has one in her deep freezer. I could bring it over here after I check on her.”
I wet my lips.
I’m dying to ask about Cal’s grandma, about his homelife, what his bedroom looks like … but we’ve already had a tender moment up here, and my heart still feels a bit raw. That’s a subject for another time.
“Won’t she need it?” I ask, but Callum shakes his head, flipping his hood up to cover his hair. Defense mechanism. I’m getting good at recognizing the boys’ little tics. Or … I always knew what those tics were, because I’ve stalked them like a creeper for half of my life.
“She always makes me buy one for her, but she can’t cook it, and I’m no good with that shit.” He keeps smiling, even though there’s melancholy laced in those words. “It makes her happy though, when I bring one home. Maybe I should’ve made more of an effort to learn to cook?”
“You mean, in your spare time, after all the free dance lessons for impoverished little girls, the murdering, the burying of bodies …”
“Bernadette, show some tact,” Oscar says from somewhere behind me, probably leaning out the window of the upstairs bedroom. But if he can leave me to clean blood off the couch by myself, he can deal with my quips.
“Is your mom going to be okay with you staying here indefinitely?” Callum asks after a minute or two. We both know we need to get started with our day, but neither of us has moved. It’s hard to want to leave that spot, with our arms pressed close, hips abutting one another. The sunshine is nice, too. We don’t get much of that these days.
“Probably not,” I admit, pulling my phone out of the hoodie pocket. It’s off, the screen black, all of its horrible secrets hidden away. The last thing I feel like doing is turning it on. After he finishes his cigarette, Callum takes it from me and powers it on. He doesn’t ask me my pin code; he just seems to know it (which is not at all surprising).
“Mm,” he says after a minute, passing the phone back to me. There’s a text message pulled up, just waiting for me to read.
You’re an idiot, Bernadette. But I’ll do it. Let me know when to meet you at the courthouse.
That’s it, the only text I have from Pamela.
There’s nothing from the Thing either.
I smell a rat.
Well, that, and a snake.
“Victor,” I growl, shoving up to my feet and heading for the window. Callum follows close behind, as dexterous as a cat. I’m certain that if I started to fall, he’d catch me.
Hopping into the room, I manage to land just as Hael is pushing his pajama pants down his hips. His cock is hard, and my fingers twitch as I pass him by.
“Morning cutie,” he purrs as I roll my eyes and slip into the hall.
Callum even follows me down the stairs, falling back as I open the downstairs bathroom door to find Vic pissing. He glances casually in my direction, cigarette hanging from his mouth.
“What?” he asks, ebon eyes—and yeah, Mr. Darkwood, ebon is a fucking word because it’s in the Merriam-Webster dictionary, you twat—watching me as I lift up my phone, screen facing toward him.
“Courthouse? Why is Pamela asking me about the courthouse?”
“Oh.” Vic finishes peeing, shakes his dick off, and then tucks it away. He moves over to the sink to wash his hands, taking his sweet time responding to me. “I paid your mother ten-thousand dollars and a Burberry bag for your hand in marriage.”
I just stare at him. And then I chuck my phone at his head. Unfortunately, he manages to catch it like a boss