Revenge: A Bad Boy Romance (4 page)

It was like looking at a ghost.

They were so alike.

She’d sat right there in the chair Kara used to sit in while she took notes. They even had a similar posture. If I hadn’t known Kara since we were both kids, I could have sworn the two of them were sisters.

I looked back down at her résumé. Chloe Tamworth. Born and bred in New York. Worked as a receptionist after graduating high school and then transitioned to being a personal assistant where she’d had a number of impressive positions.

Her résumé couldn’t have been any more appropriate for the job. She was the perfect candidate.  

Apart from how she looked.

Chloe was gorgeous, I couldn’t deny that. Her long, brown hair draped down over her slender frame, and she had a stunning smile, although I’d only caught a glimpse of it once.  

And that body. God, what I wouldn’t give to have a go on that.  

Her looks probably opened doors for her, but not this time. Her looks were the problem. She was the spitting image of Kara. I still thought about her every night when I closed my eyes, and I probably would do for the rest of my life. I couldn’t have her doppelganger following me around everywhere.

This had probably been Dad’s sick idea of a joke. Or maybe he thought the best way to replace Kara as a PA, was to bring in a new PA that looked as much like her as possible. Kara had been much more to me than just a PA, but Dad couldn’t understand that.  

I could hardly tell him how I really felt about her death. That would involve showing emotions, and emotions were a weakness ready to be exploited. Roddy Barton knew all about that. That’s why he’d killed Kara; to get at me. Kara was dead because someone thought it would help them replace us as the family in control of this city.

I would have given up everything, including the city, to get her back, but it was too late.  

I picked up the phone and called Dad. I needed to yell at someone.

“Yeah?” he said, as he answered the phone with his usual level of affection for his only son.

The noise of a violent interrogation, not unlike the one I had been a part of this morning, could be heard in the background. Dad liked to show his face occasionally, although he rarely threw the punches these days. He wasn’t in the best of shape anymore, and even throwing a few punches left him out of breath. Not that he’d ever admit as much, and he’d kill anyone who dared insinuate it. Even me.

“Was that your idea of a joke?” I asked angrily. It never paid to be soft or deferential with Dad. He’d only see it as a sign of weakness.

“Get to the point, Denton. I’m kind of busy right now.”  

As if to emphasize his point, a man groaned loudly as the air was forced from his lungs following a punch to the gut.  

“I’ve just interviewed a young girl for a job as my new personal assistant.”

“Good. About time you got a new one.”

About time? Christ, Kara had only been dead a couple of months. Was the official mourning period over already?

“And you thought one who looked like Kara would be a good replacement?”

“What? How the hell would I know what she looked like?”

“I assumed you scheduled the interview.”

“I have more important things to worry about than what lucky girl gets to be your PA and bed warmer. She probably went through the usual channels.”

Even now she was dead, Dad didn’t treat Kara with any more respect than he would afford to one of his mistresses. He was nice enough when he wanted something from them, but a piece of shit otherwise.

“Whatever. I showed her the door.”  

“You need a PA, son. You’re a fucking shitshow without someone telling you where to go and when.”

“I’ll find one myself, and I’ll take as long as I want.”

“If you pull some shit like you did with the Mitchell brothers that time then you’re going to get more than a thrash around the ears the next time I see you.”

Would he ever let me forget that? I’d hooked up with some chick and spent the night screwing. I missed a debt collection, and the guys skipped town, never to be seen again, along with about twenty thousand dollars.

“Good speaking to you too, Dad,” I said, as I hung up the phone.

Maybe I was just being paranoid. Chloe and Kara were both in their early twenties with long brown hair and relatively slim builds. They were hardly the only people in Chicago who fit that description. The likeness might have been entirely in my head.

It had been a long morning. The one lead I had on Kara’s killer had proved to be a dead end just like all the others. I would get him in the end. Roddy Barton was living on borrowed time.  

I looked down at my hands and realized they were covered in dried blood from my little breakfast networking event this morning. That must have been there during the entire interview, but Chloe had never batted an eyelid at it.

What was that she said about her dad? Killed by the police. She looked all sweet and innocent on the outside, but perhaps her upbringing had a little in common with mine. A little, not a lot. No one’s upbringing could be quite like mine.

I went to the bathroom to wash my hands, and splash some cold water on my face. Looking myself in the mirror afterwards was always the hardest part. When the rage hit, I could roll with the punches, so to speak, but when the adrenaline had left my system I often found myself haunted by my actions.

Not that I regretted what I did this morning. I’d have done anything short of killing that man if it gave me even a one-in-ten chance of finding Kara’s killer.  

But not regretting it didn’t make it any easier to live with my actions. At least I hadn’t been beating up random men who owed my dad money. I hated it when he left me in charge of the dirty work.  

I didn’t have to do it myself, that’s what the hired thugs were for, but I didn’t feel right asking people to do something I wouldn’t do personally. That was my dad’s
modus operandi
and I was determined not to take after him, even if it did look inevitable that I would take over the family business one day.

At this point, the family business
almost
looked like a legitimate operation. Most of the money now came from our food packaging business. We even had one of the big accounting firms signing off on the accounts each year. Best not to think too much about the source of the start-up capital though.  

We ran other businesses that dealt in cash and served as a decent way to launder money that otherwise would look suspicious appearing in our bank accounts. I didn’t work with those on a regular basis, but I couldn’t deny profiting from them.

Once I’d washed the dried blood from my hands, I went back to my office and tried to get my mind focused on the job. As much as I hated the ‘beating people up’ part of the job, I wasn’t exactly cut out for office work either.  

I typically made it through about two or three emails at most before my mind started to wander and I picked up my phone or browsed the Internet. Corporate work was just so fucking boring, but I needed to keep on top of things. If I wasn’t seen to be running the business then people would start getting suspicious. Appearances were important.

Appearances. That reminded me of Chloe, except this time I didn’t just think of her as the girl who looked like Kara. Chloe was attractive in her own right. In fact, she was far more than just attractive. The girl was stunning.  

I closed my eyes and pictured her sitting opposite me, looking up at me with a nervous, deferential look on her face. It wasn’t unusual for women to act nervous and awkward around me; I had that effect on them. Always had.  

But Chloe wasn’t looking at me like that. She acted more concerned with the job than me personally, which wasn’t something I was used to. Women at this company had quit their jobs just because I’d told them I don’t like dipping my pen in the company ink.

I sat there for an hour as I tried to accomplish something that would take my mind off what happened this morning. The only way not to think about my failed attempt to track down Roddy was to think about Chloe, and that didn’t seem to be much better.

She deserved better than having me reject her so abruptly. I sent out a few emails to the few legitimate business acquaintances I still had, and asked if they needed a personal assistant. It was the least I could do for someone so talented.

By the time my stomach started growling at me and demanded I eat something, all I had accomplished was signing off on next month’s budget, which just involved me sanity checking it and telling Joan that I approved. I didn’t understand most of it, and I didn’t care to learn. I knew jack shit about finances, but I knew how to hire good people and that was far more important.

I stood up and started to head out for lunch, but the phone on my desk rang before I made it to the door. I could just ignore it, but people needed me to make decisions and at least that way I could be of some use.  

I pressed the button to answer the call on speaker, and simultaneously pulled my cellphone out of my pocket to give myself something to look at when the conversation started to bore me as it inevitably would.

“Denton, where the hell were you this morning?” James asked before I could even say hello.

“I’ve been in my office all morning, James,” I replied. “Some of us have to work for a living, you know?”  

“Bloody hell, Denton. You were supposed to come down to the docks this morning, remember?”  

“The docks?”  

“Yes. We had a collection to make.”

A collection. That was James’ way of saying that we needed to go kick the shit out of some people who owed us money. I doubted anyone was listening in to our telephone calls, but it paid to be paranoid in this line of work.  

“I don’t remember any collection this morning,” I replied, as I frantically tried to open the calendar on my computer.

Jimmy sighed. “Denton, you’re the boss’ kid so it’s not like I can tear you a new one, but I’m seriously tempted right now.”

The calendar opened and I saw it--I should have been there an hour ago. The calendar entry was described as a “sales call,” but I didn’t recognize the name of the business. The order had come directly from Dad, and I never questioned those.

“Was it important?” It was a stupid question. If it wasn’t important, James and I wouldn’t have been going personally.

“Yes, and you left me in the shit. Fortunately I’d brought a few additional heavies along, but if they weren’t there then things could have gotten nasty. For me, not the debtor.”

“But you handled it?”

“I handled it, but if you leave me in the lurch like that one more fucking time, I swear to God there will be consequences.”

“Sorry, James, that was my bad. Won’t happen again.”

James sighed, and I sensed the anger fade. He’d slipped back into close friend mode. James was a close friend of Dad’s, but he’d been around so much he was more like an uncle.

“It will though won’t it,” he said, his voice heavy with resignation. “You need an assistant. You were always shit at organizing your schedule.”

“I’ll hire someone soon,” I lied. I wasn’t ready to hire anyone just yet.

“What about that girl from New York? She had an excellent résumé.”  

“How do you know about her?”  

“Who do you think is vetting all the applicants? I know how picky you are, so I’m only letting through the very best.”

“Chloe didn’t work out,” I said, not elaborating.

Jimmy stayed silent on the other end, and for a brief moment I thought the conversation might be over. No such luck.

“You have to replace her eventually,” Jimmy said softly. He knew this was a touchy subject and hoped that sounding like a kindly uncle would make it easier. It didn’t.

“Kara cannot be replaced,” I replied defiantly. “Not by anyone.”

“How long did you know Kara?” Jimmy asked. “Fifteen? Twenty years?”

“Since I was about five years old,” I replied. “So twenty years. Listen, is there a point to all this? Or do you just want to rub salt in the wounds?”

“That’s not what I’m trying to do, Denton. Listen to me. When you think of Kara, what do you think about?”

Pain. Despair. Death. Utter abject misery. But it hadn’t always been like that.  

“She was my best friend. Loyal to the end.”

“So you don’t think of her as your PA?” James asked.

“No, of course not. She did that to help me out, but she was my friend first and foremost.”

“Exactly. By hiring a new PA, you’re not replacing Kara. You’re replacing one of the many things she did for you, but you’re not replacing
her
. She’ll always be the best friend you had from childhood. No one can change that.”

I let James’ words hang in the air for a few moments while I did my best to let them sink in. Kara had been the perfect assistant, because I trusted her implicitly. Whoever took her place would need to be just as trustworthy.  

“You are good at making speeches,” I admitted.

“Just remember that when you get married and need a best man.”


If
I get married, you can definitely do the job.”

It was an empty promise, given that the likelihood of me getting married was about the same as Dad giving up on a life of crime and giving all his money to charity. A
real
charity, not the phony ones he ran to claim a tax deduction.

Other books

The Documents in the Case by Dorothy L. Sayers
Black Tide by Peter Temple
Dance of Demons by Gary Gygax
The Prince of Powys by Cornelia Amiri, Pamela Hopkins, Amanda Kelsey
Surrender The Booty by Carmie L'Rae
Yes Man by Wallace, Danny
The Choices We Make by Karma Brown