her to digest it, figure out whether she was going to be a part of doing something like this for a complete stranger she didn’t even like.
It didn’t take long for a response. And not at all one I expected. She grinned. Beamed. Full-on ear-to-ear.
“You know, I’m pretty good at reading people,” she began. “A result of how I grew up around all kinds of people, people that looked really fucking bad on the outside, but were mostly good on the inside. And I’ve learned the hard way that most of the people that look good, safe, straight off the bat, they’re gonna be the complete opposite. It’s my job to read people, to know them, figure out what column they fit into. I’ll say straight up, you fit into the ‘bitch’ column quickly—and not a good bitch.” Her eyes flickered over me. “I was pretty darn confident in my assumptions, but it seems I was wrong. And, honey, never in my life have I been happier to have been wrong.”
She started the car and screeched out of the empty parking lot.
We were speeding and back on the interstate before she spoke again.
She eyed me, speculative, curious, surprisingly not angry. “You know this is a bad idea, right?”
“Yes,” I replied.
“Just checking,” she said before returning her focus to the road.
I waited for more, because everything down to Rosie’s shoes told me that she was a more type of woman.
Nothing.
“If you also know this is a bad idea, then why did you come?” I asked finally.
She grinned. “Because I love bad ideas, especially when they come with the promise of some action. Don’t get me wrong, I love being a wife and a mother, blah, blah, blah. But sometimes I really feel like killing sex traffickers in Venezuela, and this is the next best thing. Know what I mean?”
I didn’t know what she meant. But I smiled and said, “Totally.” After a pause, I asked, “Where are we going?”
Another grin from Rosie with mischief in her eyes. “We’re going to Amber, California, baby.”
The drive to California was very different than the one from there. Rosie had obviously decided that escaping my safe house and wanting to enact retribution for my best friend meant that I was cool in her books.
As much as I told myself that I didn’t need validation from another woman to confirm my decisions, I couldn’t help but sit straighter. Someone like Rosie approved of me. It was much like Harriet’s respect, something tough to earn, something to be treasured.
My heart pulsed with pain at the thought of the crazy old woman I’d never get to see again, never get to drink with, eat cheese with, watch fucking Twilight with. The grandmother I’d never had. Shit, the grandmother no one else had.
But just like Duke, just like that ranch in Montana, she was never mine.
Rosie cranked music louder than I’d ever heard a car stereo get up to. Not hard rock, like I expected someone like Rosie to listen to. Alanis Morissette and the fucking Spice Girls. She stopped for snacks, shared her lip gloss with me, smiled, pretty much acted like we were on a girls’ trip across the country and had been friends for years. Not that I was some celebrity that had gotten her and her company—which I gathered was a family—embroiled in murder, corruption, and danger.
Maybe that’s how people like Rosie knew you were solid.
Somewhere after we crossed the state line into Utah a call came through her Bluetooth.
“Here we go,” she said, grinning, turning down the music.
My entire body froze at the screen. “Duke calling.”
Despite the fact I’d stolen his phone, Rosie had somehow either known he was going to call from another number or was in fact, a very powerful witch.
“What’s up, cowboy?” Rosie answered, winking to me.
“Where is she?” Duke clipped, his fury carrying through the phone and the miles between us.
Rosie put her finger to her lips. “Who?” she asked innocently.
“Cut the shit, Rosie,” Duke snapped. “Anastasia’s gone. I know she hasn’t been taken because I would’ve found her fuckin’ corpse within the vicinity, which I just finished lookin’ for.”
My stomach lurched like I’d been punched in the gut with the pain and haunting in Duke’s voice. He’d woken up and looked around his family ranch for my corpse.
I was such a bitch.
Rosie was not as affected, or not affected at all. She rolled her eyes. “Oh, come on, dude. You don’t give me or our resident hacker much credit.