Page 159 of The Rising


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“Good question,” I say quietly, overtaking Danny and running as fast as my heels with carry me toward her disappearing form.

“Beau!” James yells after me.

“For fuck’s sake,” Danny shouts, just as my wrist is seized and I’m pulled to a stop. I damn the heels; he would never have caught me if I were in my sneakers.

“She’s gone,” James breathes, the sound of screeching tires filling the air. “What the hell are you playing at?”

“If she was a gold digger, why would she be at Dad’s funeral?” I ask. Danny scowls at me. I ignore him and give James my attention. “Well?”

“I don’t fucking know, Beau,” he admits. “I don’t fucking know a lot.”

“We should go,” Danny says, pulling our attention his way. Collins is standing on the edge of the parking lot, observing. “Come on.” He leads the way, and James claims me, marching me back to the Range Rover. “I don’t like her,” Danny says as we pass and her beady eyes follow the three of us.

I think he speaks for all of us.

It’s not the kind of office I would expect the attorney of my father to operate from. It’s poky. Drab. Unassuming and unimpressive. I’m sitting in an uncomfortable chair opposite Mr. Foster, flanked by two men who hardly fit in their chairs, their big bodies shifting constantly to try and get comfortable. “Can I take your coats?” Foster asks.

The vest beneath my trench coat becomes heavier, and James and Danny both lift their asses in unison and pull their coats in a little more. “No, thank you,” I say, swallowing, just wanting him to get on with it.

“Very well.” He starts fiddling with papers on his desk, leaving the room to fall silent.

“You could have waited outside,” I say quietly to Danny, as his cell rings. He reaches into the inside pocket of his coat and pulls it out. I see Rose’s name on his screen. She’ll be worried.

“You know, I think I will.” He stands and connects the call, striding out. “Baby,” he says softly, closing the door behind him.

I feel James’s hand take mine where it’s resting on my knee, and I look down at it, then up to him. I hate the torture in his expression. The helplessness. And yet I am without the capacity to reassure him. How can I when I’m struggling to calm myself? And how can I when I know I’m being kept in the dark? It’s disheartening when we have both fought so hard to be free of darkness. How willing he is to leave me there.

Mr. Foster twiddles with the end of his moustache as he looks over the papers on a poorly concealed frown, like he could be struggling to utter the words before him, so after a few painful minutes, I take the lead. “Mr. Foster, let me make this easy. I would like everything from my father’s estate to be donated to the World Society for Burn Victims.” He would probably turn in his grave... had he not chosen cremation.

When I feel James’s eyes turn onto me, I shrug. I don’t need my father’s money. Don’twantit. My hand is squeezed in support as Mr. Foster looks between us with a bewildered expression.

“Oh, well, that’s very kind of you, Miss Hayley.” He takes a pen and scribbles down a few notes. “I’m afraid I cannot do that on your behalf. You would need to sell the car and send the proceeds from that to the charity in question.”

“Car?” I blurt out.

“Yes.” He’s back to scanning the paper. “A BMW M4 Convertible. Color, red. Year, 2020.” He sets the pile of papers on the desk, and I laugh to myself. He bought me that car for my birthday. I didn’t accept it.

And he delivers yet another kick to my gut.

I absolutelyhatethat I have to ask this, and as I lean forward, closing the space between me and Mr. Foster, I lower my voice. “He left me a car?Justa car?”

“A very nice car, Miss Hayley.”

My God, he thinks I’m ungrateful. I’m not. I’m fucking confused. I look back at James and, thank God, his forehead is a mess of wrinkles, telling me he’s puzzled too. I show the ceiling my palms, asking James what the fuck I’m supposed to do with this. He takes my arm and pulls me back into my seat, leaning forward himself. “Mr. Foster, Beau’s father was a very wealthy man.”

“Indeed, he was.”

“His first wife passed away, his only child is Beau, and he was singl...” James fades off and looks at me, the same thought falling into his head at the same time it falls into mine. “Single,” he breathes, the wrinkles on his forehead back. “Until recently.”

When Amber was exposed as the gold-digging whore she is. I nod, dreading what I’m about to hear. He’d been dating someone else. Just dating, though. “Mr. Foster, who else is named as a beneficiary of my father’s will?” I ask.

“Miss Amber Kendrick. Unfortunately, I am unable to locate her.”

“Oh Jesus.” James rubs at the lines on his head. “Everything?”

“Except the car, of course.”

I stand abruptly, and the tie of my coat unravels, revealing the vest beneath. Mr. Foster stares at it, alarmed. “Thank you, Mr. Foster.” I turn and leave, retying the belt as I go, swinging the door open and bowling through, nearly crashing into a waiting Danny.

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