One Last Rainy Day: The Legacy of a Prince(21)
“How many is too many?” He leers at Clint. “Should we play roulette with your life the way you did with my club? Wouldn’t want you to miss your fix, open up.” Sean shoves the pill in Clint’s mouth, and Clint again spits it out as he sputters useless apologies. “I’m sorry. I’m so fucking sorry. I didn’t mean for it to go this far.”
Sean scoffs. “Tell that to Fatty. Hope this high is the lowest you ever get, man. I truly do. How will I ever be able to trust you with that ink again?”
Tyler steps forward, his expression void of all emotion as he stares down at Clint in full executioner mode.
Clint’s eyes light, hope in his tone. “I can p-prove it. In m-my glovebox is my second burner. You’ll see my text to her. You’ll see the whole conversation. I didn’t talk to anyone else. It was just me and her, I swear. And all I offered her was money. She never knew why.”
“You better fucking pray it’s enough,” Sean spits, exhausting the last of his wrath.
Tyler reads Sean’s budding inner struggle and nudges him aside. “Let me take it from here.”
Sean replies with a nod as Clint screams for him while Tyler drags him to the passenger side of the Honda before shoving him into the passenger seat. Retrieving the phone from the glove box, Tyler hands it to me, and I pocket it. At Clint’s driver’s door, Tyler glances between the two of us as Clint’s screams echo to us, muted by the snap of the car door before Tyler pulls away.
Sean’s Zippo sounds, and I turn to see him scrubbing his face before cursing and hanging his head. I step up to him, knowing his conscience will eat away at him in the days to come.
“This is war, brother,” I remind him. “First fucking battle of many.”
“I know, man. I get it, and we’re counting on the loyalty of the one variable we can’t control . . . people.” His statement lingers, resonating with so much fucking truth as he looks over to me, the toll of what just transpired clear in his posture.
“I was so sure about him, and now . . .” he looks back toward Clint’s retreating car. Sean’s always believed intuition is his greatest gift, and I don’t correct him, because, in that respect, he’s impeccable at deciphering the good eggs from bad. He can read people easily, anticipate their needs and manipulate them for our benefit if necessary. The truth is, he’s an empath to his core. His kryptonite is that he feels every part of what just happened . . . while I can remain objective and detached. This situation won’t affect me a second after I drive away, but Sean won’t forget it anytime soon. He’ll lose sleep over Clint’s fate and carry the weight with him.
“Do you believe him?” I ask as he exhales a long stream of smoke.
“It doesn’t matter if I do, does it?”
For Sean’s sake, I find myself hoping what Clint gave us is enough as we stand side by side, watching his taillights fade until they disappear.
“I’m heading out,” Sean utters low, toting an overstuffed laundry bag down the stairs as I refill my coffee cup. He searches my expression for a verdict on Clint, and I shake my head in response that I don’t have one yet.
My guess is that his excursion for clean clothes is his excuse to escape club business for the day. He’s been sulking since we watched Clint’s taillights disappear a few nights ago. He hit the bottle hard when the headline popped up of a local missing man whose car was found in a busy shopping center. I decide to make it a priority to let him know one way or another as soon as I’ve done my due diligence. As often as Sean and I have collectively pulled the trigger on the deserving, it’s completely different when a fellow bird’s fate is at stake.
“Want some help?”
At the front door, he tosses a hesitant look my way, and I gather that he’s already got help lined up. Dipping my chin, I give him the out he needs. If he wants to bury his grief and dick in Cecelia, it’s his prerogative. When he opens his mouth to speak some useless excuse, I wave him off. “I’ve got shit to do.”
He pauses just after he opens the front door, searching for words that might mean something to me. Just after he realizes they won’t, the door snaps shut behind him.
Taking the stairs two at a time after a late shift at the garage, intent on returning to my passion project, I stop mid-step when a raspy moan reaches me. Through the rails at the top, I find the source pinned to the small patch of wall at the end of the hall between Sean and Tyler’s bedroom doors. Head thrown back, eyes closed, one of her legs is draped over Sean’s bare shoulder as he greedily eats her pussy.
My blood simmers at the sight of it. Just as I predicted, Sean medicated his feelings with Cecelia. In his decision to drown in her, he also opened his bed and our fucking home, which changes things. Fury starts to boil just beneath my skin as I speculate about his motivation. Sean’s Nova wasn’t in the drive when I rolled up, and neither was hers, so how the fuck did they get here?
My guess is Tyler, who probably dropped them off and had sense enough to leave just after.
Sean had to have heard me pull up, but by the way he’s eagerly feeding, he might not have. It’s Cecelia’s cries that break up my circling theories when she grips Sean’s hair and starts to buck against his mouth. Eyes still firmly shut, Sean pulls back, tilting his head up at her while spearing her with his fingers, giving me a glimpse of her exposed flesh.