Font Size:  

His blond eyebrow arched. "What repercussions? From me? What kind of person do you think I am?"

I stared at him. I didn't know and didn't have an answer for him. Not until I could figure out what he was doing, and why Raven, and Marc, and Axel, and everyone else had pleaded so vehemently with me to stay away from him.

He shoved a palm at his face. "Fine. I can't win." He checked his watch. “Are we ready?”

“For what?”

“For you to discover my bad side.”

A FINE LINE BETWEEN SNOOPING AND SPYING

Blake drove out of downtown Charleston, taking I-26 out past the Mark Clark Expressway and pulled off into Hanahan. It’d been a while since I’d been that far out. Hanahan was a sprawl of middle class. To me, that was the high life.

He took a couple of roads until there was nothing around us but green trees.

“Where are we going exactly?”

“I’ve got to go see someone.”

“Who?”

He smiled, and swung his head around to look at me. “Someone with information.”

“Who?”

“Someone with important information.”

“Who?”

“You sound like an owl,” he said. “Relax, sugar. You’ll see in a minute.”

I crossed my arms over my chest, hoping this wasn’t the part where I was taken into the middle of the woods and shot. If it was, I would have been ticked my last meal was frozen hamburgers.

Blake finally turned off the road onto a dirt driveway that led to a two-story old farmhouse at the top of a hill. Down the slope were a couple of crumbling, weathered wooden barns, and a smaller shed in the same disrepair, leaning precariously.

What surprised me was the amount of antennae and satellite dishes surrounding the house, and littering the front lawn. You could almost feel the radio waves getting sucked into the space, drawn in by the electronics. Cancer central.

Blake opened my door before I could finish staring. “Where are we?” I asked.

“I think we’re still on Earth,” Blake said, grinning. He snagged my hand and tugged me forward. “Come on, spy girl. You’re the one that wanted to be nosey.”

The smell of cigarette smoke was thick, even as Blake led the way up the steps and to the wrap-around front porch. He let go of me to knock sharply once at the screen door and opened it. The front door was already hanging open, revealing a barren living room, with a single faded couch against the wall and nothing else.

“No one’s home,” I said in a low voice, feeling really creeped out.

“Oh he’s home,” Blake said. He walked in, stretching his neck out and looking right. “Doyle!”

“Aye!” a voice shouted from the back, beyond an archway on the far side of the room.

I tiptoed behind Blake as he crossed the living room. To the right was an open archway with a kitchen, the counters littered with pizza boxes and empty bottles of soda, and more than one ashtray overflowing with cigarette butts.

Beyond the living room was a hallway with a set of stairs to the second floor, and a parlor ahead, with glass doors that were open.

The parlor was clustered with a variety of desks of different sizes, and computers, AC radios and mechanical things I didn’t know the use of. It was all stuffed together on top of old tables and some coffee tables and couches. It was like all the furniture had been shoved into this one room just to hold up equipment.

In the middle of the fray was a guy, maybe twenty-five, with an unruly mop of brown hair, a dimpled chin, and heavy, tired brown eyes. He had a corded phone stuck to his ear, propped up by his hunched shoulder as he tapped at a keyboard. His eyes were fixed on the dual monitors each projecting moving texts and screens that changed so fast that I couldn’t tell what he was doing.

“Doyle?”

The man ignored Blake, staring intently at his computer screen. Doyle had a lean figure under his thin T-shirt and was narrow at the hips. His jeans were a little short at the ankles and the material was a bit faded.

Blake inched closer, stuffing his hands into his pocket and leaning over the desk that separated them. “Doyle!”

Doyle let out an exasperated breath, snatched up a yellow sticky note pad, and a Sharpie. He sketched out something on the paper, lifted the paper and stuck it to his cheek within our view.

On phone.

Blake grunted. I fidgeted behind him, feeling odd in this particular rabbit hole. I was also trying not to breathe. The thickness of smoke hovered like a fog in this room, tickling at my already dry throat.

Doyle started scratching additional notes on a pad of paper. When he finally dropped the phone onto the cradle without another word, Blake planted his palms on the desk and leaned over it. “Doyle,” he said. “I need the last one.”

Doyle lifted his eyes from his paper and locked on me. “Who’s she?”

“That’s Kate,” Blake said. “She’s working with me now.”

“Is she?” Doyle tilted his head as his gaze dropped to my feet and back up to my head. “Blake Coaltar never works with anyone.” His accent was thick, and decidedly Irish.

Blake sidestepped to block off my view and his. “I need a name, Doyle.”

“Everyone needs a name,” he said. “They need a name, and an address, and a phone number, and a bank account, and a new ID, and cold medicine, and an elephant, and Elvis Presley.” He shoved his chair back, standing up, nearly matching Blake’s height. “You, sir, are too nosey for your own good.”

“What do you want?” Blake said.

“I need a new maid. The old one left.”

Blake’s eyebrow rose. “Left? Old Mrs. Jennings? She said she needed the money.”

Doyle zipped his hand back and forth in the air as if to cut off the conversation. “Left. Died. Whatever. Same thing. This place is disgusting.”

“Fine,” Blake said. “I’ll send someone over.”

“A good proper Irish woman,” Doyle said. “None of those local mammies they’ve got around here.” He pointed a finger at me. "Or that one. I could deal with one of those. Does she come in a maid outfit? One of those short miniskirt ones?"

I was about to open my mouth and probably throw in a middle finger, but Blake cut me off. "Stop talking about her like that. She's not a maid. Real or prostitute."

"Yeah. You're probably right. She's not my type anyway. What with the hair, and the legs, and the face and all."

"Doyle," he said in a sharp tone. "Her name is Kate. She is with me." His eyes darkened and his face stiffened like he was holding his last bit of patience. "Can you please stop?"

Normally, I would have stopped him there. I didn't need anyone's help in defending myself. This, however, struck me. Blake seemed to have no problem teasing me. It was kind of cute he had a problem with his friend doing it.

"Oh, it's please, huh?" Doyle nodded in my direction. "Did you hear that, Kit? Three years and he's never said please for anything."

"Her name is Kate."

"Kid. Kate. Bubba. I don't care."

"Just give us the last location, or I may slip a little tip to the FCC about some Irishman infiltrating phone calls."

"See, now that's just mean." Doyle returned to his desk, and sorted through a collection of notes. "You make me sound like some sort of perverted phone hacker. I can do more than intercept phone signals, you know." He selected one of the pieces of paper and read from it. "The last batch is in an abandoned house in Moncks Corner. A few bits have already been sold off, but they are having problems selling the rest. They've only had one buyer return for more."

"Surprised anyone wanted more."

"Yeah, well it's a low ranking cell that caters to the high school kids. Kids are stupid."

I coughed once. "What's going on? What kids? What high school?"

Blake started shaking his head but Doyle turned on him. "What's this? I thought you said she was working with you now. She doesn't even know why she's here?"

"Still showing her the ro

pes," Blake said. He reached out for the piece of paper with the information he wanted.

Doyle jerked his hand back to hang on to it. "Wait a second. Who is she? When did you meet her?"

"It's a long story."

Source: www.allfreenovel.com
Articles you may like