“Probably not, I’m sure. I wouldn’t really be stupid enough to try and take something from your man, Sloane. I like my body the way it is. Intact.”
He slaps Cade on the back, and then the other man hobbles off, giving me a brief wave as he heads into the closest building, where loud rock music is blaring out into the courtyard.
“I’ll come see that leg before I go,” I call after him.
“He’s got eighteen pins in there. He can barely ride anymore,” Rebel informs me.
“What? He should be in physical therapy, surely?”
“Oh, don’t you worry your pretty little head, Doc. Cade’s receiving PT alright.” There’s a smirk to Rebel’s voice that I might not be able to see with his back to me, but I can hear it all too well. There’s obviously a story behind that comment, but I’m sure as hell not going to ask what it is. “Soph’s in the bar. I’ll show you where that is and then I’ll leave you two to it.”
I don’t question why the hell my sister’s in a bar already and it’s only eleven a.m. I’m learning not to question a lot of things. Rebel leads me across a broad patio toward a low-lying building with cracked plaster, painted a very pale sunshine yellow unlike the industrial grays and blacks of the other buildings.
“Is that your clubhouse?” I ask.
Rebel looks over his shoulder, face drawn into a look of horror. “What about this building screams Widow Makers HQ to you?”
“The charming décor, obviously,” I grumble.
“Our clubhouse is downtown. We run an ink shop out of there, too. Gotta keep things looking legit for the tax man, right?”
“So what do they think this place is then?”
“Running bets are on religious cult or free-sex community.”
“Oh.” Not much I can say to that, really. Rebel gives me a grin that’s only half as wicked as normal. He opens the door to the bar and stands back so I can enter. “Good luck,” he whispers. And then the door is slamming behind me.
Motherfucker. So much for letting Lexi know I’m here. Guess that’s all on me. My eyes struggle to focus in the sudden dimness of the room. It smells of sticky, syrupy liquor and fried food. The kinds of smells you’d associate with any normal bar. Except there’s a chemical bite to the air in here as well. Something unfamiliar yet recognizable at the same time. It hits me at the same time my eyes manage to adjust to the darkness. Paint. It smells like wet paint.
“Sloane?”
I spin around startled by the voice behind me. And there she is, my sister, dressed in what can only be an oversized man’s dress shirt, though where she got that is anybody’s guess. Seems as though it’d be hard to find a guy around these parts who frequently wears anything but a black T-shirt and a leather cut. Alexis shakes her head slowly, as though she can’t actually believe her own eyes.
“Did he tell you I was dying again?” she whispers.
“No. He didn’t. I just…I thought…”
Alexis walks toward me, her eyes locked on me like she thinks I’ll vanish if she even blinks. “You came to see me,” she says simply.
“Yes.”
“Oh.” She puts something down—a paint palette. The object looks odd in her hand. I’m used to seeing her with a textbook pinned under one arm and a cell phone in her other, but a paint palette? Yeah, I’m having trouble making sense of the image. The shirt she’s wearing is actually covered in paint—small splashes and long laces of color that stain the white fabric from collar to cuff. “Um,” she says, and the two of us just look at each other. “Is everything okay with Mom and Dad?”
“Maybe you should go visit them. I’m sure Mom would love to see you. It’s been a long fucking time since she laid eyes on you, y’know?” Since running into Dad with Agent Lowell, I’ve spoken to him twice on the phone—once to let him know I was back at work, and a second time when he called me to let me know he’d told Mom. Told her the truth. Since I knew Alexis was alive and things with the DEA had come to a head, he figured it was okay for Mom to finally hear the truth—that her daughter hadn’t been in a horrific car crash and forgotten who she was. That instead she found herself involved in a dangerous court case that had swept her as far from her family and her old life as she could get.
“I just don’t know…what to say to them.” She paces around me, a look of anxiety pulling on her features. She’s different now. The last time I was with her, I didn’t take the time to look at her properly. I was too busy exploding at the news that she was married. Now that I’m seeing her in this environment, the subtle differences and the changes in her are plain to see. Even though she’s stunned by my sudden arrival and clearly on edge, she carries herself with a confidence she never really possessed before.