Page 1 of Daddy's Obsession


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Chapter 1

Raquel

BOOM!

The ceiling shatters and the walls crumble, burying me beneath thick dust, chunks of concrete, and splinters of glass. I hit my head hard against the cracked tile floor, unable to tell if the ringing in my ears is the building’s alarm system going off or if I’ve blown an eardrum.

Knowing my luck, probably both.

I suppose it serves me right for getting my hopes up. The gods of thievery are fickle bitches, and I’ve apparently done something to piss them off today. Months of planning —literally— up in smoke, and in under five seconds. I’ve probably just made the world record for fastest time for a heist to go tits up.

Somebody better call Guinness.

“Rocky!”

Dad’s voice reaches me, a muffle against the foggy haze clouding my mind. It’s too hard to concentrate, black encroaching on the edges of my vision. Which way is up, and which way is down? It’s anybody’s guess. I’m tempted to close my eyes and go to sleep, the crushing weight on my chest easy to succumb to, but a pair of strong hands pulls me out from beneath the rubble.

“Rocky? Talk to me.”

“What happened?” I croak. My throat is painfully dry and scratchy. I wonder if I accidentally breathed in some of the glass.

Dad helps me to my feet in a hurry, slinging my arm over his shoulder for support. Everything hurts. If I manage to walk away today with a couple of fractured ribs, I’ll count myself lucky. I ignore the salty tang of blood on my tongue and force my feet forward.

“We have to get out of here,” he says, leading me away.

In the distance, police sirens wail. Even in my concussed state, I know we have to get the hell out of dodge. Thieves and cops mix like oil and water. It’s best to avoid them at all costs.

As Dad drags me over to the window, I blink away my confusion to take in the mess. The rest of our crew is buried underneath the destruction. I can see Martin’s foot sticking out from under a fallen support beam. Harry’s unconscious on his side, his face painted white from disintegrated drywall. I can’t see Laura, and I worry she’s caught under the heaviest of the debris.

“We can’t leave them here!” I rasp. “We have to go back!”

“There’s nothing we can do,” he snaps, kicking open the window to stick his head out.

The thick Parisian air wafts into my nose, bringing along with it the smell of cigarette smoke, car exhaust, and the faintest hint of pastries from the bakery about a block away. It’s nighttime, but a crowd of curious and startled pedestrians is forming. I know as well as anyone that we need to get away without any witnesses; otherwise, it’s game over.

“Where the hell is Lucius?” Dad hisses under his breath.

Lucius, our getaway driver, had very specific instructions to block off the main road with a boosted box truck to give us extra time for a hasty exit. Now that I can see the blue flash of police vehicles, something tells me he didn’t hit his mark on time.

I’ve only been a part of the Red Raven crew for a little over three years —Dad wouldn’t let me join until I turned eighteen— but I know enough about the business to tell when we’re royally fucked. We couldn’t steal the painting —which was our whole reason for being here in the first place— more than half the crew is out for the count, I’m pretty sure I bruised my ribs in the explosion, and we have no escape route. Everything that can go wronghas, so I don’t think anyone can really blame me when I start to panic.

Like I said,royally fucked.

“What do we do?” I ask Dad, frantic.

In the blink of the eye, he pulls something out of his jacket pocket. He hastily places a black flip phone in the palm of my hand and closes my fingers around it tight.

“Listen to me very carefully, Raquel,” he says.

My body tenses. He never uses my full name unless he means business. We always use code names while on a heist to protect our identities. He quickly spouts an address which I commit to memory with ease. Even in my shell-shocked state, my photographic memory will never fail me.

Dad taps the phone in my palm. “Go to the location I gave you and find Gabriel Lacroix. Tell him this exact phrase:it’s raining in the Sahara. He’ll know what it means.”

I frown, my brows knitting together. “I don’t understand.”

“He’ll keep you safe,” Dad continues. “Lay low and wait for my call.”

“Lay low… You’re not coming with me?”

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