Flight Risk (Antiques in Flight) (8 page)

BOOK: Flight Risk (Antiques in Flight)
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Trevor was rendered speechless, but he wasn’t fooled. Shelby was up to something. He didn’t have a clue as to what, but all his best undercover training told him to go along with it for the time being and investigate later.

“Okay. I’m glad to hear that.”
I don’t believe you for a second, but good try lying.
“I’m sure Callie and Em would be glad to help you, but isn’t dress shopping something you’d want to do with your friends?”

Shelby stopped her work on the counter and turned her back to him under the guise of checking on her cookies. “They already have their dresses.”

Out of the corner of Trevor’s eye, he noticed Dan looking over his shoulder at Shelby and frowning almost worriedly at her.

Hmm. “You’re sure you want to ask Em and Callie?”

“Actually, I was hoping maybe you’d ask them for me.” She looked up, smiled hopefully, but she twisted her fingers together, a sure sign there was more to this innocent act.

“I see.”

“I’m free all weekend,” Shelby added.

“Uh huh.”

“And it doesn’t have to take a long time.”

“Right.”

“Trevor.” She worked on her best pathetic pleading look. “Please.”

“Why can’t you ask them?”

“Because, like you said, I barely know Em, and Callie and I aren’t exactly friends.”

“Which is why this makes no sense to me. It’s not that I think it’s a bad idea. I just don’t get it.”

Some irritation crept onto her face and her pleading look turned harder, more frustrated. She definitely had a plan. One she didn’t want him to know about, and she didn’t like him not giving in and playing along without a few questions.

“It’s weird, but I need an opinion besides my own, and my friends are busy.” Trevor could tell she wanted to say something other than busy and began to wonder for the first time if she was having problems at school. She hadn’t talked about her friends much since he’d been back. Maybe there was something to that.

He grimaced at the thought of trying to navigate the twists and turns of the teenage girl psyche. Maybe it’d be best to leave that alone and let Callie and Em deal with it.

“They’re older and have done the prom thing. Em’s always nice, and Callie…” Shelby frowned a little. “Like I said, I want to start over there. Maybe she’s not as bad as I thought.”

Trevor watched as Shelby struggled to spit out the words. Shelby was a halfway decent liar, but not good enough to hide the fact she still didn’t like Callie and struggled to lie about it.

“I’ll ask them.” He didn’t think denying her request would help him figure out what she was up to. Better for Shelby to think he was fooled into complacency.

“Maybe you could go call them. Like, right now?”

Trevor frowned, but quickly smoothed it out into a casual smile. “Sure. Just make sure to save me some cookies.” He pushed off the counter and gave Dan the once over while the teen pretended to focus on the physics book in front of him.

Trevor left the kitchen. On the one hand, maybe Shelby was being genuine. Maybe she was that desperate for a female role model or whatever, and if she was having problems with her friends, maybe it was prompting her to look at the way she treated people. It was a plausible enough explanation for a turnaround when it came to Callie.

Trevor didn’t buy it. Shelby had something up her sleeve, something he wouldn’t like. Trevor sank onto his bed. He had some investigating to do, but where to start?

A few minutes later, his thoughts were interrupted by hesitant footsteps and then the squeaky voice of a teenage boy. “Mr.… Tr… Mr. Steele?”

Trevor looked over at the poor kid hovering in the hallway, vibrating with nerves. “Yeah?”

“Um, I told Shelby I had to go to the bathroom so I’m just going to come out and say this. Kiley and Sarah had this big mother-daughter prom extravaganza thing last weekend so, I think Shelby’s feeling a little weird about things, you know? That’s really why she doesn’t want to ask them.”

Trevor looked at his tapping fingers for a moment, that old familiar guilt cropping up. “That explains a lot.” But not everything. Certainly not the one-eighty with Callie.

“And, um, I figure Shelby said I don’t have to, but I wanted to make sure it was okay I take her to prom. I mean, okay with you. I mean, I’m a good kid,” Dan finally managed to squeak out. “And I have to be home by one prom night, so I’ll have her home by twelve thirty, unless you want her home earlier. I mean, you’re her brother, but you’re also her guardian so even though she doesn’t think… I think… “

“Relax, kid,” Trevor muttered. He felt for Dan, but he also didn’t like the idea of being anyone’s guardian. Especially when it came to prom night stuff. Too weird. Too uncomfortable. “Twelve thirty is fine.”

Dan smiled and Trevor thought about his own prom night. He’d finally gotten into Tina Lavina’s pants after the dance, and then they’d gotten really drunk in her parent’s basement. One of his few forays into breaking the rules.

“Thanks, Mr. Steele,” Dan was gushing. “I’ll make sure to show Shelby a good time.”

The thought of good time had Trevor changing his tune a little. Maybe he couldn’t do the emotional, feminine guardian crap, but he could certainly play the role of protective guardian.

Trevor stood from his bed, leisurely made his way over to Dan, but kept his stare fixed on the kid until Dan’s smile began to wilt. “No drinking, no drugs, you lay a hand on my sister and I’ll break it.” Trevor offered a sunny, pleasant smile. “Also, please remember, I own many, many guns.” Trevor patted Dan on the shoulder. “See ya ’round, Dan.”

The role of guardian was enjoyable for the first time. Now, he had to figure out what Shelby was up to, and maybe he’d start feeling like he was doing the right things.

Chapter Five

Callie tapped her foot on the tile floor. A buzz of activity swirled around her. Women wrangling children, teenagers in giggling packs, old couples walking slowly just to walk.

She hated the mall. Hated the continuous hum of noise and the different places and all the bright lights and colors. It was too stimulating, too overwhelming.

Adding Em’s enthusiastic prom dress talk, Shelby’s creepy alter ego trying her damnedest to be nice, and a trip to the mall was worse than normal. Callie’s foot tapped harder. She wanted to go home, wanted to go to her shop, where she could lose herself in some rock music and the relaxing comfort of banging on metal for a while.

“Which one do you think she’ll pick?” It had been Em’s suggestion to give Shelby some alone time in the store after their hour of shopping with her. All so Shelby could make her own decision without “feeling any pressure” and then meet them in the food court for lunch.

“I could give two shits.”

Em frowned. “Oh, you have to admit it was kind of fun.” Her smile was immediately back in place. “Besides, she was actually considering that bright blue one you picked out. It looked great on her. Who knew you had a knack for this?”

“I don’t.”

“Don’t you think she had fun?”

“I think that kid is up to something.” Callie drummed her fingers on the sticky table in the same cadence of her foot tapping. This whole trip idea had been weird enough, Shelby spending an entire hour and a half being nice to her? That was downright alien invasion material.

“You’re being paranoid.”

“She hates me. She has always hated me, and there is absolutely no reason for her to have stopped hating me unless she is up to something.”

“Maybe she realized—”

“Nope.” Callie refused to believe Shelby had changed overnight, refused to believe there wasn’t still some of that age-old hostility in Shelby’s responses before she ironed them out with niceties. “She didn’t realize jack. She’s up to something, and I’m going to figure out what it is before I end up shackled in a basement somewhere.”

Em shook her head, hair bouncing in time. “You’re being ridiculous.”

Callie didn’t respond, instead watched as Shelby made her way over to them, hanging bag in hand.

“Which one did you pick?” Em wiggled in excitement.

Shelby slid into a seat and didn’t make eye contact with either of them. “The blue one.”

Those were exactly the kinds of reasons Callie couldn’t get over the feeling an ambush was coming. Shelby didn’t actually want their help, and almost seemed regretful and irritated she’d ultimately picked a dress Callie had suggested. Each time Callie tried to bait Shelby into a nasty response, Shelby would almost take it, but then the angry flash would disappear and be replaced by a creepy politeness.

“Wonderful. Let’s buy you some lunch.”

Callie studied Shelby’s face, but Shelby worked up a smile. “Sounds good.”

They went up to the sandwich place and ordered, retreating to the sticky table, food in hand. Though Em managed to keep the conversation flowing all through shopping, as they sat down to eat their food it seemed as if all topics had been exhausted.

“So.” Shelby offered into the awkward lack of conversation. “Sounds like Trevor is really helping you guys out at AIF.” Shelby bit into her sandwich, looked at Em and then Callie, and then quickly back down at her food when she saw Callie staring at her.

“He’s been a lifesaver,” Em agreed. “AIF is a lot of work for three people, especially in the spring and summer. Adding one person, especially a volunteer, has helped us immeasurably.”

Shelby nodded as she chewed and swallowed, but Callie didn’t miss Shelby’s covert attempt to check the time on her cell phone. “I bet you guys wish he could stay and help past September.”

The picture began to come together in Callie’s head. The purpose for this sudden forced niceness. This odd girls’ afternoon.

“We can get by after the fly-in. Besides, we’re hoping Lawson will be home soon. You probably don’t remember Lawson. He’s our cousin. He moved to California, oh gosh, fifteen years ago.”

“But, what if he doesn’t come home?” Shelby asked, effectively cutting Em off from a long, rambling story about Lawson.

“Oh, well.”

“I mean, if he doesn’t come back, or even if he does, wouldn’t you wish Trevor had stayed?”

Callie shook her head. Up until that moment Shelby had done a good job of keeping her cards hidden, but now they were all out on the table. For a moment, Callie almost felt sympathy. When you lost your parents so young, it was hard to lose anyone else. Callie could understand the desperation in Shelby’s question. She could even empathize with it, but that didn’t make what Shelby was attempting to do right.

“This is why you’re being nice.”

Shelby’s eyes shot to Callie, a flash of guilt in her frown before she smoothed it out. “What do you mean?”

Callie waved an impatient arm. “Drop the act. You’re trying to butter us up so we’ll help you convince Trevor to stay.”

The innocent look immediately left and was replaced by a scowl. “So?”

“So?” Callie shook her head. She’d been this self-absorbed once, and she wished it could make her more sympathetic, but what Shelby needed was a cold dose of reality. “That’s a shitty thing to do. Even for you.”

“Don’t you want him to stay?” Shelby demanded, slumping in her chair and crossing her arms across her chest, the perfect picture of teenage sullenness.

“I want him to be happy.” Callie hoped her voice sounded calm rather than snippy. “If you cared about him like you should, you’d want that too.”

“Why can’t he be happy here?” It was nearly a whine.

“Because he can’t. He won’t be.”

“Who cares?” Shelby spat. “I deserve to have someone at home. I deserve to have him stay. Haven’t I been through enough already? Why does my life have to change? Why does his life get to come before mine? I don’t want to go to Seattle on breaks from school. I want to come home.”

Sympathy petered out, because while Callie could sympathize with Shelby’s loss, Callie had gone through worse. “You don’t own the market on loss,” Callie said through gritted teeth. “Or on getting the short end of the stick.”

“Oh, and you do?” Shelby countered. She leaned toward Callie. “Your mom died when you were a baby. You never had one to miss. You probably don’t remember your dad either. You have no idea what it’s like to lose your parents when you know exactly what it means and exactly what little is left.”

There were tears in Shelby’s eyes now, and Callie had to fight the sting of her own. “You’re a selfish brat if you think making Trevor miserable will weaken the pain of losing your parents.”

“Guys, maybe we should—” But Em’s quiet protests were lost as Callie stared long and hard at Shelby until the sullen teen looked up.

“I lost a lot of people at a very young age, so don’t kid yourself into thinking you know better than me just because you think you’re smarter or superior. Losing means learning, and you need to learn that making other people unhappy won’t make you feel any better.” God, it had taken Callie a long time to learn that lesson. Even now, there were some days it was hard to remember.

Maybe she was taking the harsh road, but if she could impart any of what she’d learned on Shelby it would be well worth it. “I won’t let you sabotage Trevor’s life because you can’t see past your own hurt.”

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