“I just think she’s unpredictable and she’s gonna end up hurting you, I can feel it.”
“Well, look, Clare. I’m a big fucking boy, OK? If she does take off, you can rest assured that I can handle it. She’s not gonna, by the way. She won’t.” My phone buzzes and I take it out of my pocket and check the message. “Someone’s here to see me, so is this all clear, then?” Her look is defiant but she keeps silent as she nods her head. “Good, then let’s go.”
We walk back downstairs and as soon I spot my visitor near the front door I know what’s up.
FBI is back.
Fuck.
I don’t look at Clare but I know she knows what’s up too. I just hope our little moment doesn’t come back to haunt me in the form of her talking to the fucker in the black suit when I’m not looking. I straighten up my back and head over to him. “Mr…” I trail off like I forgot his name.
“Abelli,” he adds to my silence. “Agent Abelli.”
“Right, I knew that.” I smile at him. “What can I do for you?”
“Well, Mr. Flynn, we’ve been noticing some discrepancies in your statement to the Denver police and we’d like you to come down to the station and take a polygraph. Do you think you could oblige us with that?”
Aaaaannnd… game starts now.
I widen my smile. “Oh, absolutely. I’d be more than happy to.” I grab my leather jacket from a hook near the door and wave him out of the studio. “I’ll meet you down there.”
“Actually, my partner dropped me off, so if I could catch a ride with you, that’d be great.”
“No problem. What’d he do, go grab some donuts?”
Abelli laughs but the tension lines on his face tell me it’s forced. “No, he just needed to get back to the station and set up the machine.”
“Just messing with ya, dude. I know you’re not really donut eaters.”
He shuts up after that and I just unlock the doors to my truck and we both slide in. The drive down to the station only takes a few minutes since it’s mid-morning and traffic is light, but it feels like an eternity as we sit and listen to the radio. What the fuck could this be about? It can’t be Jon. I had nothing to do with any of the hacking. And Rook would’ve called me if they had Ford in custody, even if Spencer wouldn’t. No, it’s not about Jon. I didn’t even really have to lie when I gave my statement. The only thing not true was the text message. And even so, it was present and legit by the time the cops checked the phone.
No, this isn’t about that asshole, but beyond that I have no other info. But I will. Because they’re fishing for answers with this polygraph, which means they have to tip their hand with the questions they ask.
Well, bring it on. Because as Spencer said last summer when he was painting Rook, everyone has one God-given gift.
And mine is lying.
Actually, it’s acting, but what’s the difference, really? My time in India was not wasted with trips to the Taj Mahal with the tourists because there was another American artist in the hotel with us and this guy was filming a documentary about poor kids. Kinda like Slumdog Millionaire except it was supposed to be real. But no one wanted to talk to this guy or let their kids be manipulated into revealing how horrible their lives were, so he hired me to be his star poor kid even though I was an American living in a five-star hotel.
Turns out the guy was quite the liar himself and he set the whole thing up to be believable.
Let’s just say it was an elaborate plot with parents being robbed and killed on vacation and me running for my life from the Mumbai underworld after witnessing it. He did get caught faking the documentary but he played it off like it was sort of a Blair Witch thing, right? And this is when I discovered I was a fucking natural liar. Actor. Same thing.
I saw the movie a few years later—he won some independent film award for it, even. I would cry and look desperate and beg people for money on the streets, and I told a story that had Elise uncontrollably sobbing, that’s how fucking sad I made it.
But that guy never did out me. That was one of the terms in the contract Elise signed. No one would know it was me and I got a stage name. I got five thousand dollars for lying while we were in India. Which was a lot of fucking money to Elise and me at the time.
Then the modeling gigs started coming in and they wanted me to act but not speak. So I learned to talk with my body and facial expressions.
And this is how my gift works in a nutshell. You wrap your mind around a scenario, you believe that scenario with all your heart, and then you just react—body and mind together. It’s not hard at all, not really.
I never did any acting in the States because by the time we settled back down and I was in an actual school full time I was too cool for that theater shit. There is no record of Ronin Flynn ever being an actor. And if there’s no record of it, it never happened.
So polygraphs? No problem. This asshole has no idea what’s coming.
Chapter Twenty-Eight - ROOK
“Done yet?”
“You just fucking asked me that twenty minutes ago, Ford. No, I’m not done. I’m not quick at this shit like you are, OK? Just let me think it over.” I drum my fingertips on the coffee table and try and come up with three reasons.
“Rook, the application must be in by Friday or you’ll have to wait another semester to get into Boulder.”
Maybe I don’t want to go to Boulder, did that ever occur to him?
But I don’t say that out loud because he’s just trying to help me. Instead I chew on my thumbnail as I try and think of how to start. It’s an application essay. I’m just a few weeks into community college writing, so yeah, I’m not that good at this shit yet. I’ve barely mastered the topic sentence. Ford eyeballs me as he drinks a beer in the kitchen. “It’s a little early to start drinking, don’t you think?”
“You drive me to drink, Rook. What’s the hold-up? They want to know why you want to go to school. Surely you can handle that?”
I sneer at him and take my attention back to my laptop. The problem is I might be lazy. Now that I have all this money I don’t have the same drive to push myself in this area. Would I be a waste of space at this school? I’m pretty sure there are people a lot more deserving than me who could use a shot at this education that I’m not fully appreciating.
The cushion sinks as Ford sits next to me. “What’s going on?” he asks softly. “You’re not interested?”
I lean back and sigh. “I’m just not sure, Ford. This school stuff is not easy.”
“I’m not following. You thought it would be easier or it’s harder than you expected?”
“Both, I guess. I’m not super smart like you guys, but I’m not stupid, right?” He puts an arm around me and I almost have a heart attack. “What are you doing?”
His eyebrows go up. “Comforting you. Am I doing it wrong?”
A laugh bursts out and I just shake my head. “No, this is correct, I guess.”
“Do you want to quit school, Rook?”
“Am I a failure if I do?”
“Yes,” he says with zero emotion.
I laugh again. “Fuck, Ford. What the hell? I thought you were comforting me!”
“Do you want me to tell you the truth or lie?”
“Lie!”
“I’m sorry, I’m the honest one, remember? You are smart but you have almost no education. You should be embarrassed by that.”
“What the fuck? That’s enough comforting, thanks.” I finagle my way out from his embrace and try to get up but he grabs me and pushes me back on the couch. “I’ll do it in my room. Let me go.”
“No, we’re writing this essay and you’re turning in the application. You have brains, you have money, you have people supporting you. A few weeks ago your dream was to go to film school so I’ve pointed you in that direction and you’re staying on that trajectory and seeing it through until you have a damn good reason why the dream has changed. If you get in, then you can decide if you want to go or not. But you don’t get to give up before you try just because it’s hard. That’s unacceptable. You have thirty minutes to write this essay or I’ll ground you.” And then he winks. “And if I was Ronin I’d spank the shit out of you and make it hurt for being such a brat.”
I scoot over to the other side of the couch and kick him with my socked foot. “You’re dumb.”
“You’re juvenile. Now give me the three main reasons you wanted to go to school.”
“If it was that easy—”
“Just the top three, Rook. It’s not brain surgery. Off the top of your head, right now.”
“Money.”
“OK, you don’t really need that anymore. What else?”
“A cool job.”
“You have that as well. Or you could if you wanted, but you decided to take a boring one. You have options, should you ever want a cool job again, though, right?”
“Yeah, I guess.”
“So give me an internal reason. Something you can’t have, something you will feel. Like pride. Will education make you feel proud?”
“Sure.”
“What other internal things?”
“Well, respect, I guess.”
“Respect from whom?”
“I’m not sure. Me? I think I am capable of more than I’ve been doing with my life, so getting a college degree would make me feel like I’m fulfilling my potential. Does that make sense?”
He smiles and puts his arm around me and this time I lean in. “Yes, that’s a great reason. You should write that down and tell the admissions people all the reasons why you believe you have potential and what it means for you to live up to it.”
“You’re sneaky.”
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