Page 14 of Beneath the Burn
In the two weeks that followed, the penthouse had taken on a kind of tense stillness. Maybe because Charlee’s perception was limited to the confines of the stockroom, bedroom, and office, with Roy and Salvador as her only visitors.
She perched on the floor beneath Roy’s desk, her back pulled against his leg where he sat in the chair above her. She tried to tune out his conversation and focus on the drawing in her lap. If she could recall Jay’s scars better, she could perfect how the sketched flames should lick and curl around them.
What she did remember, however, had bound her to Jay those long painful months. Her mind remained whole, strengthening even, amidst the flames and steel of a man she hoped had gone on to fulfill his dreams. She clung to the vision of someday finishing his tattoo and seeing it displayed on stage for thousands of worshipping eyes. He deserved no less for saving her.
“I don’t care how long the company has been in your family.” Roy’s hand settled on her head and stroked her hair.
She leaned into the touch, craving the affection, despite the source.
“Sentimental shit is why you are drowning in debt.” Roy coiled a finger in her short strands and yanked, making her eyes water. “Take my offer, sell me the business, or I’ll make sure your competitors push you into bankruptcy.”
“I didn’t want to resort to this, Mr. Oxford.” The voice on the speaker shook, coughed. “Does the name Craig Grosky ring any bells? How about his daughter Charlee?”
The hand paused, stroked again. “I don’t hear any bells, Henry.”
“I hired an investigator. I know what that girl looks like, and I know what you did to her. I have proof.”
She stared at her sketchbook, hid behind her calmest expression, and tucked all her nerves deep inside.
“Are you attempting to blackmail me, Henry?”
“Yes.”
The stillness in the room convulsed. “Show me the evidence. This pointless conversation is nothing more than a poor attempt to weasel out of the hole you’ve dug for yourself. Until you have something useful to say or prove , we’re done here.” His fist hit the phone, and it flew off the desk.
She held herself immobile, invisible.
“How the fuck does he know anything about the Grosky’s? Charlee doesn’t even look the same.”
The air crackled with his bellow, and she wasn’t sure who he was addressing.
He rose from the chair and sent it wheeling into the bookcase. “Unless he used my facial recognition software, my fucking design when she was out fucking around for four years.”
She curled into herself. His fury would seek her out, eventually.
He paced the room. “No, that’s not it. The evidence he’s insinuating would’ve come from inside the penthouse. A witness.” He stopped, whirled. “We have a mole, Salvador. It’s the only explanation. No one has access to the video storage, so it must be one of the men monitoring the cameras.”
I’m working on an undercover case…My client gave me a photo of a girl.
Dammit, Nathan. Was he leaking information to this Henry guy? How would she get a message to him when she hadn’t seen him since the night in the dining room? Could she signal something to the cameras? But how would she know who was watching? Roy didn’t miss anything.
The Craig shifted his weight. “Yes, sir.”
“I won’t cancel our trip to Newark tomorrow.” Roy approached her, hands in his pockets, eyes boring into her. “That worthless Russian running the Dinmore shipment cannot be trusted with this job. There’s too much on the line with this one. I have to be there.”
“Understood, sir.”
“Charlee will go with us.” He patted her head. “How’s that sound, beautiful girl. A trip to New Jersey?”
Like she had a choice. Leaving Nathan’s vigilance rammed her heart to her stomach. She suspected he’d watched her on the cameras over the previous two weeks and that knowledge alone had made her feel protected and less lonely, despite the depraved situations he must’ve witnessed. “Yes, Sir.”
“Very good. Salvador, make the preparations and find that fucking mole.”