Last Light (21 page)

Read Last Light Online

Authors: M. Pierce

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Erotica, #Romantic, #Suspense, #United States, #Women's Fiction, #Contemporary Women, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Romantic Suspense, #Contemporary Fiction, #Romantic Erotica, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery & Suspense

BOOK: Last Light
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“I think you need to go home, Hannah. Did you drive?”

“Oh no, you don’t.” I stumbled on my heels. The alcohol seemed to hit me all at once. “Is this where you suavely offer to drive me home? Sketchbag.” I snickered at my new word.
Sketchball
+
douche bag
?

“I’ll call you a cab, if that’s what you want. I won’t let you drive like this.”

“Miss Catalano. Fancy meeting you here.”

I turned to see Aaron Snow approaching, his black hair and pale face unmistakable. The faintest scar showed where Seth had split his lip.

“Just the other most person I wanted to see,” I mumbled.

Okay, Seth was right. I needed to get home. The reporter was here, and I could barely speak straight.

Aaron offered his hand. I shook it loosely.

At the cemetery, with his camera and his flailing, Aaron Snow had looked like a weasel. Tonight he looked more formidable. His suit matched Seth’s in cut and color. He was clean, sober, and super alert.

“Back up, pal,” Seth growled.

Aaron flicked a glance at Seth.

“I apologize for the scene at the memorial, Miss Catalano. I acted unspeakably.”

I nodded numbly. All I could think was,
This serves me right for not checking the guest list
. Seth Sky
and
Aaron Snow were invited to the release party? Fucking hell …

“I decked you once, Snow. I’d love to do it again.” Seth moved between Aaron and me.

“Would you please stop being … barbaric?” I said. “Mr. Snow, what do you want?”

“I want to share a theory with you. I’m putting together a new article for my paper.”


No Stone Unturned
?” I laughed. “Not quite a paper yet, is it?”

“We have a print edition. You’re right, though. Mostly we operate online.”

“Must have a massive staff.” My hand flew to my mouth. Wow, I was being an asshole.

“Can we talk in another room?” Aaron said.

“All ri—”


No,
” Seth said.

We all glared at one another.

“Then I’m coming,” Seth added. “You’re not going to be alone with this freak.”

“Look who’s talking,” I muttered.

We moved into one of the libraries, which was more like a sitting room where Pam and Laura stored books by their authors. I left the door ajar.

Aaron went to the shelves and began hunting, and shortly he said, “Perfect, good.”

Seth refused to sit. He stood by the table like a bodyguard, arms folded. Aaron and I settled across from one another.

“Okay, Mr. Snow.” I gestured. “Wow me.”

“Read the draft of my article. Here.” Aaron pulled an iPad from his laptop bag, swiped at the screen, and pushed it over to me.

I kneaded my temples.
Focus, Hannah, focus …

I squinted and began to read.

The title of the article jarred me wide awake.

M. Pierce, Author of
Night Owl

“This is
not
true,” I said. “Whatever you—”

“Keep reading.” Aaron leafed through the books he’d retrieved from the shelf. They were Matt’s books, including
The Surrogate.

I kept reading.

New evidence suggests that
Night Owl,
a self-published erotic romance relating events in the life of Matthew Sky, was written and possibly published by Sky himself.

Since
Night Owl
appeared online in January 2014, readers and critics have speculated about the identity of the author, who uses the pen name W. Pierce.

Sky used the pen name M. Pierce throughout his career.

In a revealing interview with Wendy Haswell of Geneva, New York, a woman named in
Night Owl
 …

“Hannah, are you all right?” Seth touched my shoulder. I shuddered.

As I read on, I saw that Wendy—the woman who transcribed for Matt in Geneva, the woman at the farm—confirmed the details in
Night Owl
as truth.

And there was more. Aaron drew parallels between
Night Owl
and Matt’s other books. He established the time line of events in
Night Owl.
He listed legitimate landmarks: Matt’s apartment, our condominium, the Granite Wing Agency, the cabin in Geneva, Lot 49.

The article was rhetoric, and each point built Aaron’s unassailable thesis: that Matthew Sky, M. Pierce, wrote
Night Owl.

And maybe that revelation wasn’t a big deal, but the last lines of the article were.

This new information leaves readers wondering: Is
Night Owl
fiction or autobiography? Is Matthew Sky alive and publishing under the pen name W. Pierce? Was Sky’s ambiguous death a cover for his disappearance?

No Stone Unturned
continues to follow the …

I pushed the iPad away.

“And look at this,” Aaron said, passing open books to me. “Here, this phrase from
Night Owl,
it’s repeated in
The Surrogate.
Then here, in
Mine Brook
—”

“Stop.” I covered my face. “I’m … I’m too dizzy for this.”

Seth helped me stand and I let him. I needed the help.

And then, because I was drunk and desperate to throw Aaron off the trail, I said, “You’re wrong. You’re wrong because
I
wrote
Night Owl.
I wrote it, you dumb ass.”

Aaron’s eyes widened.

“What?” Seth looked equally stunned.

“I’ll explain
later,
” I hissed. “Let’s go. Take me home.”

At the door, I turned to take a parting shot. Aaron was smiling and calmly shelving Matt’s books. I frowned. It didn’t work. He didn’t believe me. On the contrary, my rash statement seemed to have given him some private pleasure.

“And if you publish what I just told you, I’ll sue your stupid magazine. I have a good lawyer.” I swallowed. “And you better not publish that article either, because it’s … er … defamation. Haven’t you had enough of your stupid online magazines shut down? Give up.”

Seth guided me out of the agency to my car. I slumped against the door. My heart was leaping in my chest.
Fuck.
I had to tell Matt what just happened. I had to get home.

“Drive me home,” I said.

Seth didn’t move. He stood on the sidewalk, hands in pockets and eyes narrowed.

“You lied to me,” he said. “You told me you didn’t write that book.”

“Oh, get over it.” I wanted to scream. “I didn’t publish it, okay? I
wrote
it. It was stupid, silly, whatever. And yeah, it was kind of influenced by Matt’s books. I never meant for it to get online. My e-mail was hacked. I … I e-mailed the story to myself. For backup.”

Seth frowned. Zero belief in that frown.

“That’s what happened.” I groaned. “I didn’t tell because it’s embarrassing, okay? That story was meant for me and Matt and no one else. I don’t care if you don’t believe me, just drive me home or—or don’t!” I threw a hand in the air. “I’ll call a fucking cab.”

I rummaged through my purse hysterically.

“Get in the car,” Seth said. He snatched my keys.

Finally.
Seth Sky doing something useful.

I gave drunken directions to the condo and Seth drove in silence. After a few wrong turns, we pulled into the lot.

He climbed out of the car with me.

“Wait—what are you doing?” I backed away, bumping into another car.

“Walking you to your door.”

“No, no, no.” I staggered away from Seth. “I appreciate the ride, but—”

“Would you quit your whining?” Seth seized my shoulders and hauled me toward the complex. I stumbled along.

I told Aaron Snow that I wrote
Night Owl.

Matt was in my condo.

Seth was walking me to the door.

And I was too drunk to process the implications of all this. My mind stalled.

I started to laugh. Everything was so fucked-up. So many lies. A castle of lies. And Matt was its king, and I was the queen, holding together our elaborate deception.

“Darling, you’re going to be feeling this tomorrow,” Seth said. He helped me up the stairs to my door and unlocked it for me. My fine-motor skills were gone.

“Hey, so…” I blocked the doorway. “What—how much longer are you in town?”

“I’m leaving tomorrow. Our show was last night.” Seth peered into the condo. “Hannah, did you leave candles burning in here?”

“Huh?” I turned.
Oh, shit.

Matt was nowhere in sight, but he’d lit a dozen candles on the coffee table and several more in the kitchen. The prelude to a romantic evening, under any other circumstances.

“You’re crazy. You could burn this whole fucking complex down.”

“What’s up … what’s up with your tattoos anyway?” I braced my hands against the doorframe. Seth didn’t seem to notice me grasping at straws. He kept looking into the semidarkness of the condo, then looking at me.

“Goldengrove is … from a poem. So is ‘the penny world.’ It’s nothing.” Seth narrowed his eyes. “It’s about stuff we leave behind.”

“Stuff?” My voice trembled. I wanted to slam the door in Seth’s face, but I felt that if I lowered my arms, he would walk right into my condo.

“Yeah, stuff. Youth, innocence, ignorance. The best times, like—” He hesitated, his dark eyes fixing on my face. “Like when my parents were alive, and our family was normal.”

“Normal but loaded.” I laughed shakily.
Wow.
Inappropriate Comments 101.

“Hannah, did … did you do all this for me?” Seth nodded toward the candlelit living room. “Did you know I would be at the party tonight?”

“What? No. God, no.”

“You did, didn’t you? And that’s why you’re drunk. A little too much liquid courage, right?” Seth smiled, wonderment and disbelief on his face. “Hannah…”

He leaned down and crushed his lips to mine. The kiss stunned me to stillness—the heat and hunger of it. The loneliness behind it.

“Kiss me,” he mumbled, pressing me into the condo with his body.

When Seth slid his tongue between my teeth, I bit down—hard.

“Fuck!” He reeled away.

I backed into a wall.
Oh, shit.
I could see the night cohering into Seth’s deluded reality: I was the oversexed author of
Night Owl,
I was falling for him, and I was sending him signals with my drunken bumbling and candlelit condo.
Shit, shit …

Seth cringed and touched his mouth.

“What … is going on here?” At the sound of Matt’s voice—dry, measured, and low with rage—I collapsed. I slid down the wall as he materialized from the hallway. He looked like he could kill.

Seth blanched. His expression was horrible to see. First emptiness—a face devoid of emotion—unable or unwilling to comprehend. Then hurt and a flash of confusion. How could this be? Eyes wide, mouth open in fear.
Am I seeing things?

Finally, anger and understanding. Seth’s features resolved into a mask of hate.

“You son of a bitch,” he said. His voice shook with emotion. “You son of a bitch.”

Shadows darkened Matt’s face. He looked around, as if there might be a fourth guest, and then between me and his brother.

“What is this?” he said. “Don’t touch her. Don’t you fucking touch her.”

“Matt, it’s nothing,” I said. “Seth just—”

I don’t know who moved first, though both men were on the edge of violence. Hands clenched. Jaws tight. Eyes wild.

Someone swung and they began to grapple. Matt got Seth around the middle and slammed him into a wall. A picture fell. Glass shattered. He hit Seth across the face once, twice, then Seth kicked and Matt fell. He kicked again, driving his foot into Matt’s gut. Matt groaned.

Matt rose and they collided, huffing and shouting as the sickening thump of blows filled the room. “Stop it!” I screamed. “Stop it, stop!”

I scrambled to my feet and launched myself at the brothers. Between inebriation and the flashing candlelight, I couldn’t see a damn thing. I hit hot muscle and tangled limbs.

“Stop!” I shrieked.

A fist plowed into my face. My head belted back. I heard a wheeze and a crunch like the sound of a broken accordion. White spots exploded before my eyes.

Someone said, “You hit her! You son of a bitch, you hit her!”

Another voice. “
You
hit her! You fucking hit her!”

I tried to protest, and then the world went black.

 

Chapter 30

MATT

I sat in the back of the Civic with Hannah on my lap.

“Little bird,” I whispered, “wake up.”

I stroked her hair and cradled her head. Shallow puffs of breath told me she was alive, but the muscles of her face were lax. Her breath hitched as the car went over a bump.

“Slow down,” I spat.

“Fuck you,” Seth said.

He was driving Hannah’s car, the nearest vehicle at our disposal.

The tires squealed as he swung into the ER parking lot.

He leapt out of the car and opened my door.

“Give her to me,” he said, reaching toward us.

“No, I’m taking her in. Get out of my way.” I clutched Hannah’s body.

“You’re wasting time!”

“Go fuck yourself.” I scooted along the seat with Hannah. “You’re going to tell everyone I’m alive anyway. I’m taking her in.”

Seth blocked the open door.

“I’m not saying jack shit about you being alive, Matt. I
wish
you were dead, all right? Why don’t you fucking die for real and do me a favor? You think I’m going to tell Nate and Uncle and Aunt Ella you’re alive and break their fucking hearts, you stupid shit? You’ve fucked with this family enough.
Be
dead, if that’s what you fucking want. Give her to me!”

I hugged Hannah’s warm body to my chest and nuzzled my nose into her hair.

Be dead,
Seth said.
Die for real.

An ambulance blew past us, wailing and flashing.

“Matt, for fuck’s sake!” Seth crawled onto the backseat and clasped Hannah. I let her go.

Seth was going to keep my secret; I could see, even through his rage, that he was telling the truth. And it hurt that he wanted me gone for real, but I deserved it.

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