Page 53 of Hateful Promise


Font Size:  

I pace away, pretending to consider, but there’s no real choice. I could push him to let me do a different work, but that won’t matter—no matter what, he’ll make me forge one of the great masters, which means I’ll have to push myself to the limits. Anything else wouldn’t be worth the effort.

I stop and face him.

“I think this sucks.”

“Fair,” he says, not smiling, giving me that neutral stare.

“But I can do it.”

“I knew you could.”

“You have so much faith in me, but I don’t really know why.”

“You proved yourself already. Twice, actually.”

“What if I got lucky?” I tug at my hair, straightening it. “What if this one isn’t as good?”

“You’ll make it good. You’ll make it better now that you have more practice.”

I glare at him and turn away. “What happens if someone figures out that these are fake? It gets traced back to me, doesn’t it?”

“No,” he says. “It gets traced back to me and Frost. Well, back to me, since I’m sure Frost will throw me under the bus the first chance he gets.”

“And what will you do?”

He shakes his head. “Nothing.”

“Sorry, you do realize this is fraud? I’m pretty sure forgery is a crime.”

“Yes, you’re true, but nobody will prosecute me. My family has too much power, and besides, nobody will care that I fleeced a bunch of rich assholes.”

“That seems like a big assumption.”

“If you’re worried that I’ll give you up, I promise you, I won’t.”

I suck in a breath through my nose and blow it out. I stare into the darkness, out at the desert, and imagine I can see the outcroppings, the mesas and the striated patterns in their rock faces.

“You remember when we started this and I refused because I didn’t want to be like my father?”

He grunts in reply. “I recall something like that.”

“Dad was always trying to get me in on his schemes.” I close my eyes and smile at another one of his lessons.Make them trust you. “He taught me a lot, you know.”

“I’m sure he did.”

“But I saw what it made him. Bitter, angry, so smart and talented but always using his talents in the worst ways. He wasted himself because he couldn’t fit in anywhere, and I’ve always felt that in myself.”

“Is that why you turned to art?” he asks, and I’m surprised by the question. It’s smart, already a step ahead of me, and I feel like he’s seeing something he shouldn’t.

“Maybe,” I admit. “It was a way to express myself at first. Sort of therapy too. Dad’s always been a mess, and when I was young, it really bothered me, so Grandma would buy me paints and paper and encourage me to make stuff. I’d spend hours drawing, painting, whatever, just to forget that my dad was locked up, or my dad was wanted by some nasty people, or my dad had gambled all his money in the casinos again. I hated him so much, and I loved him just as much, and I promised myself I wouldn’t become like him.”

“Now here you are.” His voice is close. He’s standing only a few inches behind me.

I stare at his reflection in the window superimposed above the vague outline of the landscape.

“Now here I am, forging art, something I bet he’d love.”

“You’re not your father.”

Source: www.allfreenovel.com
Articles you may like