Legacy of Lies (Empire of Lies #3) - Whitney G. Page 0,3
must. I’m just letting you know what to expect.”
“Can you also tell me if you have some type of psychic abilities that I’ve never known about? It really would’ve come in handy when we were younger.”
“I don’t.” He shakes his head. “I’ve just had a similar experience, and I never told you about it because you always said that I was too damn emotional.”
I raise my eyebrow.
“I’m just trying to save you from feeling any more pain.” He looks away from me. “I tried to do what you did before—save a target who I loved, but it didn’t work out.”
I lean back against the booth, confused as to why he’s waited until just now to mention this.
“Which job was it?” I ask.
“A woman named Ali Carter,” he says. “Two and a half years ago. The Rhode Island tryst.”
I nod, remembering that one. A simple drowning by request, a four-million-dollar payday.
“You told me that you finished that one faster than any job you’d ever done before,” I say. “You told me that it was one of the easiest paydays ever.”
“I know, but…” Guilt suddenly fills his eyes. “I fucking lied, Michael. I couldn’t kill her. I still can’t believe I almost did it in the first place.”
I make a mental note to press him about this when he looks like his emotions are under control, because he looks like he’s about to break down and cry. I haven’t seen him do that in years, and I want to keep it that way.
“It’s okay,” I say. “I just don’t understand how that job ties into Meredith being a conflict of interest for you.”
“Ali Carter was formerly Ali Carter Thatchwood.” He pauses. “She’s Meredith’s mother.”
What the fuck? “What?” I narrow my eyes at him, refusing to believe the words that just fell from his mouth. “What the fuck did you just say?
“Don’t worry. I haven’t spoken to her since, she’s long moved on, and it would’ve never worked out between us anyway.”
I tap my fingers against the table, glaring at him in utter shock. Waiting for him to give me the goddamn explanation I deserved, before I beat it out of him.
“I couldn’t bring myself to push her down into the sea with the anchor, so…” His voice trails off for several seconds. “I kept her tied up and told her that she had two options. She could either roll off the boat herself and let the anchor follow her, or she could agree to stay missing for the rest of her life.” He lets out a breath. “I had to convince her to take option two.”
I set down my glass. “Where is she now?”
“She died a tragic death, and she’ll never be found.” He mocks me, rolling his eyes. “Safe and currently deeply in love with a man who isn’t me.”
“She never thanked you for saving her life?”
“No,” he says, swallowing. “She said that by taking her away from her old life, by ripping her away from everything she loved, that I’d still killed her. She didn’t want to see or hear from me again.
“And you were fine with that?”
“Does it look like I was fine with that?” He shoots me a glare as he tosses back the rest of his drink. “It is what it is. I learned a valuable lesson, so you won’t have to. Don’t fall for the targets. It’ll never work out.”
Silence stretches between us for several minutes, and I can’t help but think of the time when Meredith suddenly left my club, when an Adele song triggered the memory of her mother’s death. Then I remember all of the other nights when she’d burst into tears while lying in my arms, whispering, “You’re all I have now in this city, Michael…I know I barely know you, but you’re really all I have…”
Shaking away those thoughts, I can’t help but ask the obvious. “Who ordered the hit on her mother?”
“I don’t think so.” He shakes his head. “I’ve let you in on enough logistics.”
“Who the fuck was it, Trevor?”
“Depends.” He hesitates. “Can you promise that you won’t react or do anything about it?”
“No.”
“Can you promise that you won’t react or do anything about it for at least two weeks?”
“I can consider it.”
“I guess that’s as fair as I’ll get with you on that,” he says, hesitating again. “It was her father’s sister, Meredith’s aunt. She only spoke to the underlings, though. She had no idea about me being involved at all.”
I let out a breath. “What a fucked-up