
Gideon Book 2
Autor:in
Nicole Riddley
Gelesen
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Kapitel
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The Bracelet
LAYLA
I have the bracelet in my pocket, weighing it down. I resist the urge to take it out and look at it on the bus.
It would get some looks, thatâs for sure. People wouldnât think it was real; itâs that bling. Theyâd just think Iâd bought myself some show-off rhinestones.
No one would know anything about it, where it came from, or what Iâm about to do with it.
Sarah deserves this money more than Helen ever deserved this gift. Iâm glad sheâs dead.
I probably should have put the thing in a box. No matter, though; nothingâs going to scratch its huge diamonds.
And I hope the shop Iâm taking it to will see how valuable it is. I mean, Gideon said his PA spent a hundred and fifty grand on it; I should get a decent stack of cash.
She told me that he was her man when I knew he was my erasthai. The bracelet was a symbol of her thinking he was hers.
Getting rid of it is like a ritual. He is mine; he never was hers.
The gang thought it was a little morbid of me to keep it until I told them why I wanted it.
I get off at my stop and walk a few blocks to the high-end jewelry reseller that seems like the right place to go.
I press the buzzer and an old man comes to the door. Heâs wearing a suit, his thin hair combed back.
âHi, I have something Iâd like to sell?â I say, unsure of myself. I mean, that is why Iâm there, but I wonder if I was supposed to say something different.
âCome in.â
He waves me into a quiet room with a plush beige carpet. I feel way too casual to be in this place, dressed in jeans and sneakers.
There are glass cases with huge, glittering pieces of jewelry in them. Diamonds and rubies and sapphires twinkle from behind the glass like theyâre having a sparkle competition.
Who wears this stuff?
Another man in a suit is standing in front of a case, looking at a diamond necklace like heâs thinking very hard about it.
âWould you care to show me the piece in private?â says the shopkeeper.
âItâs okay,â I say, not really sure what the rules are for this kind of thing.
I take the bracelet out of my pocket and hold it out toward him.
The other man canât help but look over at us as I show the shopkeeper. I can see heâs interested nowâhe moves closer.
Heâs tall, for a human. Blond hair and blue eyes.
The shopkeeper holds the bracelet up to the light to look at it. Its massive oval stones catch the light and send rainbows onto the walls as it swings from his fingers.
âWhat a magnificent piece,â he says.
He looks at me suspiciously. For a second, I think heâs going to ask me where I got it; I can see him wondering how someone young has got a hold of something like this.
Please donât ask me where I got it.
The man in the suit has come over to look.
âMay I?â he asks the shopkeeper.
The man holds the bracelet in his hand lovingly, staring down at it like it was his first-born child.
Weird.
He extends his hand to shake mine.
âAlistair. Nice to meet you,â he says.
âLayla.â
âBeautiful bracelet.â
âIf you like that sort of thing.â
âYou donât then, I take it?â Alistair asked with a smile.
âIt belonged to someone who really didnât like me.â
âAnd yet now you have it.â
âYes. But not for long.â
He laughs at this.
âIndeed.â
Thereâs an awkward silence. Alistair seems like he wants to know more.
Iâm not sure where this conversation is going. Iâm not just going to tell him my boyfriend bought this bracelet for his ex, but he had to kill her because she tried to kill me.
That really doesnât make any sense in the human world. Humans donât just go around killing people. Well, when they do, itâs not considered normal.
Iâm sniffing, aware that Alistair might not be what he appears. As far as I can tell, heâs human.
Weird though, I canât smell him as well as I should be able to.
The shopkeeper is about to say something when Alistair speaks.
âWould you consider taking an offer from me on the bracelet?â
âSure.â
âIâll give you fifty grand. Iâll also compensate you, sir, for facilitating the sale,â he said to the shopkeeper.
âDeal,â I say.
Iâm happy with the moneyâenough to get Sarah through the end of her studies.
I wait in the shop while Alistair goes to get cash.
Damn.
I feel like Iâm in a music video or something. Iâve never seen so much money in my life.
The old shopkeeper has a money counterâa gray plastic thing that looks like computers from the â90s. He puts it down in front of me like heâs proud of it.
His eyes are twinkling, and I think heâs getting a kick out of the fact that Iâve obviously never seen a pile of bills like this.
The counter ticks away. We bundle the stacks of bills with elastic bands and put them in a big envelope.
The shopkeeper gives Alistair a black velvet box for the bracelet. Alistair puts it in the inside pocket of his navy blazer, then pulls out a business card.
âIt was great to meet you, Layla. Hereâs my card.â
I take it, not sure what I would use it for.
Alistair Pembroke
His name and contact details are on it in fine serif letters.
I didnât bring a bag, so Iâm really self-conscious leaving the shop. I donât want to look like Iâm holding fifty thousand dollars in an envelope.
Iâm afraid people can see it, like they somehow know there are all these hundred-dollar bills right here in my hand.
I keep squeezing the envelope to make sure I havenât lost it. I can hardly fumble for bus change; Iâm so focused on my envelope.
I can smell the money.
I just hope no one else can.
Now that Iâve gotten rid of the damn bracelet, I feel lighter. Helen and the whole mess are just a little bit further away.
That bitch had a very fancy bracelet, and she was fucking proud of herself for getting it from Gideon.
But now sheâs dead, and she couldnât wear the damn thing if she wanted to.
It doesnât change what happened. But it helps.
And now I get to do something really good for someone who has always been a good friend to me.
I feel bad Iâve neglected my friendship with Sarah since I met Gideon.
She doesnât know about the whole werewolf and lycan thing. It feels super weird telling humans about that if they donât already know.
Iâve never tried it, but if I hadnât grown up in a werewolf pack and someone told me they were a werewolf, Iâd think theyâd lost their minds.
So Iâm not going to tell her. I still havenât decided how Iâm going to explain the wad of cash I have for her.
I walk up to the front door of her small house, with her battered car sitting outside it. She says sheâs had it since she was a teenagerâand I can believe that.
I knock on the door.
Sarah comes to the door.
âLayla! I wasnât expecting you!â
âSorry, I shouldâve called.â
âNo, not at all, itâs great to see you!â
âYou sure nowâs a good time?â I say as I see Charlie and a friend of his playing in the front room.
âOf course. The boys donât mind. Charlie, Jason, say hi to Layla.â
The kids say hi and turn back to their toys.
âYou want a coffee?â
âOnly if youâre making some.â
She puts the coffee on and comes to sit down.
âI havenât seen you in the longest timeâwhat have you been doing?â
âWell, I met a guy. Weâre living together now.â
âWow, so soon! Tell me all about him!â
Well, heâs a lycan, an adviser to the lycan royal family. Lycans are like werewolves but more powerful, and heâs got loads of money that Iâm now living onâŠ
~âOh, erâŠheâsâŠreally handsome. His nameâs Gideon.â
âCool name. Sounds like a lord from a history book. Show me a picture!â
Kind of is like a lord from a history book. Heâs a couple hundred years old but looks much younger.
I show her one of only a few pictures I have of Gideon. Heâs not super into having his photo taken.
âDamn, those muscles! He must spend a lot of time at the gym. Is he like a model or something? Did you meet him taking photos? Please say you met him taking photos of him shirtless!â
âI wish! No, he was one of the cleaning customers. Real fancy apartment.â
âGet out of here! Cinderella, you have done well!â
I love that Sarah is so excited for me. Her face turns concerned.
âWait, youâre still doing your photography courses, right? Never drop out of college for a man.â
âNo, donât worry, Iâm still at school. Iâm going to try and get some work experience soon, maybe at a newspaper or something.â
âThatâs greatâgood for you.â
âHowâs things with you? Youâre still studying, right?â
âAnother year to go. Weâre doing okay. Iâm working a lot, though. Luckily, Jasonâs mom watches Charlie.â
I can see the tiredness in her face as she says it. How do you tell someone you have fifty grand for them in cash?
âSo, about that⊠This is probably going to sound pretty weirdâŠâ
Her expression is confused.
âI have something for you.â
I put the envelope on the table in front of her.
âWhatâs this?â
She looks inside and gasps.
âLayla, where did you get this?â
She looks around and whispers, as if someone might see us.
âThis new boyfriend of yours, is he a drug dealer or something?â
I laugh quietly.
âNo, of course not. Look, how I got it is a long story. I had somethingâŠan heirloom, kind of. I didnât want it because it reminded me of some stuff I donât want to remember.
âSo I sold it. And I have some of the money, and I want you to have some too.â
I told a tiny white lie about keeping some of the money, just to make her feel like I wasnât giving it all to her.
âI canât accept this. I mean, you need money too.â
âDonât worry about me; I have enough.â
âHow much is it?â
âFifty.â
Her voice drops to a whisper again and her eyes are wide with shock.
âFifty thousand dollars?â
I nod gently.
âLayla, I donât know what to say. I canât accept this.â
âLook, Iâm not trying to make you feel like a charity case or anything. Give it to your mom if you prefer, or spend it all on Charlieâs education. But Iâm not taking it with me. The envelope stays here.â
I gently push the envelope toward her, then offer a hopeful smile.
She looks at the envelope sitting on the table. She picks it up and holds it to her chest, on the brink of tears.





































