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“God knows why,” I said. “If you want to waste your money on them.” I turned to the man in the door. “Do you have anything that will shut him up? I don’t even care if it’s good.”

The guy made a face, pouting his lips. “We already have another buyer.”

Who was buying this? I recalled Blake had said someone else had returned to buy more. Probably some crazy stupid kid? Or maybe this stuff didn’t give whoever was buying the same side effects.

I slid a look across at the street, as if checking to make sure no one was around. I leaned into the door. The man inside willingly inclined forward to hear me out.

“We’ll take it off your hands right now. Whatever it is, he’ll probably pay double the price you were going to sell it for. They’re a bunch of rich snobs from the peninsula. In my opinion, it’d serve them right to get the fake stuff.”

He glanced once at Blake and then at me. “You don’t tell them where you got it?”

“I’ll tell them it’s a smoke shop blend,” I said. “Bath salts or whatever they’re calling it now.”

He laughed and opened the door wider. “That shit will kill you.” He side stepped away from the door. Blake followed behind me. Smart. He was willing to let me take the lead.

The inside of the warehouse was a barren space. There were two chop shop cars sitting around with the hoods up. The tops of the cars were dusty, though, and I suspected it was the front used in case cops did come poking around.

The man walked up to one of the cars, inserted a key into the trunk, and opened it up. “They even prepackaged them,” he said. He lifted out a tiny bottle that looked like it was supposed to hold eye drops but without the label. Inside was a half a teaspoon of crystal-like grains, like clumpy sand. “These kids only buy twenty to a hundred dollars at a time. It’s all they can come up with.”

“Must be slow business,” I said, sidling up beside him and glancing into the trunk. There were cartons full of these little bottles, and all stacked neatly together, and the trunk was packed. “Oh wow, there is a lot.”

He shook the bottle in his hands again and then passed it to me. “Do you need to test?”

“Never touch the synthetic stuff,” I said. I held the bottle between my fingers and became temporarily dazzled by how the light reflected off of the tiny crystal particles. Deadly and beautiful. “I don’t really get the big deal.”

“Me neither,” the guy said. “But I’m just a distributor. We don’t get to touch the merchandise.”

I nodded. “Is this it? Is this everything?”

“The other trunk is full, too,” he said.

I turned to Blake. “Do we need that much?”

Blake grimaced, planting a palm on the back of his head and rubbing at his hair, looking sheepish. “Might as well. I won’t have to make another purchase later. It was hard enough to find.”

I rolled my eyes, angling toward the drug dealer guy conspiratorially; he leaned in to hear me out. “He’s still new to this.”

“I can tell.” He straightened. “If you really want the whole set, you’re looking at $25,000.”

I bit my tongue to hide my shock and steadied a stare at Blake.

Blake shrugged. “That’s a lot for a bunch of cartons.”

“You wanted to double the price,” I said.

He nodded and then turned to the man in the hoodie. His face changed into something more professional, businesslike. “I’ll tack on an extra five grand if I can get someone to deliver.”

“Where to?” the man asked.

“There’s a yacht at the City Marina,” he said. He reached into his front pocket, pulling out a business card. “Pack these bottles into food boxes, but closed and use packaging tape to seal them. If someone stops you, give them this card. There’s a dozen deliveries made to those yachts every day. You won’t be noticed.”

“A yacht?” The man sucked saliva through his teeth, making a clicking noise. He turned to me. “Is this joker serious?”

I waved my hand in the air. “That’s what I said.”

He shrugged, rubbing his fingers over the back of his head. “Alright. You’re lucky this shit isn’t illegal yet.”

Blake nodded. He reached into his back pocket, pulling out a wallet. “I’ve got five thousand now.”

“Five thousand? Bitch, you said thirty.”

“Five thousand on hand,” he said. “What do I look like? A walking bank? When you deliver, the rest will be in cash on the yacht. It’ll be in the fridge. Place the cartons on board, take out the cash and walk away with it.”

“Make sure that shit is in twenty dollar bills.”

Blake rolled his eyes. “You guys need PayPal.”

“You guys will get into shit if you leave electronic trails. Paper’s the only way to go.” He took the cash from Blake and tucked it into his back pocket. “When do you want it?”

“Deliver it tonight if you can. There won’t be much in the way of security at the marina. Just a girl stationed in the boathouse. Look like you belong there, and she won’t give you any problems.”

“How come this sounds like more trouble than it’s worth?” he asked. He looked at me. “Maybe you should go with Tucker.”

I smiled and shrugged. “I keep telling him...”

THE REAL KATE

Within less than an hour, we managed to get back to South of Broad and back to his house. Rain followed us the entire way. It fell in sheets by the time he was parked in his drive as close to the front door as he could get. Blake ran over to open the door to his house first, before he came back to open my door. It was pointless. By the time we were inside, we were both drenched, anyway.

My heart was still pounding in disbelief. I couldn’t believe this whole time the boys had been worried about Blake, and Blake was really actually helping out. He might not be doing it exactly perfect. If it were up to me, I’d probably have worked out a deal another way. But Blake was probably right. This way, this dangerous drug gets off the street quicker. It sounded crazy, I didn’t think the drug pushers would stop. They’d get a new batch of bad stuff at some point. Then what?

“What do you do now?” I asked him as I stood in the foyer of his house, dripping. I shivered at the cold water making my shirt and shorts stick to my skin.

“Right now, we get a towel and change our clothes.” He motioned to the stairs and started toward them.

I followed, stepping up the stairs behind him and trying to keep up. I tugged my shirt away from my body but it fell back heavily against me and clung. “I mean where are you taking the drugs?”

“I’m about to make anot

her trip. I’ll dump it all in the ocean somewhere along the way. It’ll be gone, and no one will know.” At the third floor, he turned down the hall, opened a door, and I recognized the bedroom I had been in earlier. He went to the closet, turning on the light. It was huge, with racks of clothes hanging up on either side, more than I thought he could ever wear in years.

I stepped onto the black rug, only feeling mildly guilty about dripping on it. “Will you go to Europe?” I asked, trying to ignore the size of his closet.

He shrugged and grinned opened mouthed at me. “I don’t know. Why? Want to go?”

I blinked at him. Was he serious? Now that the charade was over and I knew what he was up to, reality had settled in for me. I was a creepy girl who had invaded his party, his life, to find out he was actually a good guy. “Blake...”

He started unbuttoning his shirt, letting it slide off his body and onto the floor. Underneath was a white-ribbed tank shirt. He caught the hem at his neck and pulled upward, revealing fit abs and then his tight muscled chest. His tan was perfection along his skin, all the way down to where his jeans hung low on his hips. He crumpled the tank shirt. “Kate, are you telling me you still think of me as the bad guy? After everything I’ve just showed you? After everything you’ve helped me do tonight?”

I couldn’t answer him. I didn’t feel like he was the bad guy. We had possibly stopped kids from dying. And my brother was safe. I didn’t have to hide anymore. This was what I wanted.

Wasn’t it?

The only problem was, what was I supposed to do now? I was eager to go back to the guys. I wanted to go back to my brother and let him know I was okay. I wanted all the promises the boys made about getting Wil into college and maybe, finally, for once, having a normal life. I wanted to apologize to Marc. I wanted to go back to Corey and Brandon. I even wanted to play with Raven and Axel.

I also wanted to stay with Blake. I was afraid to go back. I was afraid once this job was done, the boys would send me back to my hotel room, or even if they kept their promises and helped me get an apartment, maybe with a job at the pretzel stand or elsewhere, I wasn’t sure if they would want me hanging around. And Blake wanted me, but I wasn’t sure what he wanted from me, either. I’d still just met him.

Source: www.allfreenovel.com
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