Total pages in book: 80
Estimated words: 75015 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 375(@200wpm)___ 300(@250wpm)___ 250(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 75015 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 375(@200wpm)___ 300(@250wpm)___ 250(@300wpm)
Friends like her don’t come around often. But friends like me are a dime a dozen. I’m cheap. Selfish. Hard to deal with. I don’t deserve her. I never have.
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
I couldn’t sleep.
Jayson lay right next to me on the bed, one arm draped over my torso, his soft breaths skating down my arm. We’d just had BLT wraps and fries along with some wine. I pointed the ice cream out to him and told him it was Eve’s favorite.
“So, she was here,” he said.
“Yes, she was,” I answered back. The question was where was she now?
I gently peeled Jayson’s arm away and grabbed my phone from the nightstand before leaving the bedroom. I turned on one of the lights in the living room and went for my laptop.
I couldn’t help looking out the patio doors in the back along the way. The moon was shining on the lake, revealing gentle ripples bathed in silvery white light.
After logging in, I went to my emails, refreshing constantly until the stupid Wi-Fi cooperated. There was a new email from Nico.
Shouldn’t be sending this via email but my text to
you keeps failing.
Details on Castillo attached.
I clicked the doc.
Of course it took forever to download. When two minutes passed and the thing still hadn’t finished, I got up and went to the kitchen to pour a glass of wine. Walking back to the table, I took a careful sip and allowed the flavors to marinate on my tongue. The file was almost done downloading. I tilted my gaze and looked toward the fireplace. The brick and wood design was gorgeous, and I could tell the mantel was a recent addition. There was no TV in this place at all. Probably the best for someone who wants to escape the real world.
My eyes lowered, and I paused on my next sip of wine when I noticed something sparkling in the fireplace. I set my glass down, making my way across the room to grab a poker. I pushed some of the ashes out of the way. When the object became clearer, my chest tightened.
It was a necklace, silver, with a teardrop-shaped sapphire pendant. The chain was charred and the sapphire was damaged.
“Please, no,” I whispered. I picked it up and raised it in the air with shaking hands. A name was etched on the back of it, one I was hoping not to see.
Eve.
“Oh, shit.”
Eve never took this necklace off—ever. Not even when she showered. She’d never have left it here either. It was a gift from her abuela, the only relative she and Zoey had who actually showed them love and kindness. She’d never leave something this cherished and valuable behind. For years, Eve and Zoey had lived with their grandmother, even as she grew ill. Their parents were no longer around and she was the only real family they had left.
My throat thickened as I clutched the necklace in my palm. This couldn’t be. How was this here? Who tried to burn it? I rushed for my phone, trying Eve’s cell again. Just as it had the four or five times prior, my call went directly to voicemail. My legs felt liquid as I sat down in front of my laptop again. The download for my document had finally finished. I gave it a click.
I’d asked Nico to figure out the last time Eve had made a phone call. It was on September 5th at 6:24 PM. That had to be the night before she checked out of the cottage. Zoey said she’d tried calling Eve several times that night. I didn’t start calling until the sixth. According to the location provided, she was still in Sage Hill at the time.
So why the hell didn’t she answer her phone?
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
The curtains draped in front of the sliding doors in the bedroom were sheer. All the lights were off inside and out of the cottage. However, the moon was bold, bright, and beaming right down on it.
I’d finally crawled back into bed after reading the document. The wine had soothed me just enough to yearn for sleep. I flipped onto my side, eyelids heavy, and that’s when I saw it. A shadow passing right by the door. One minute it was there and the next it was gone.
I lay there a moment, blinking slowly, waiting to see if it would appear again.
A deer? I thought.
But deer didn’t walk on two feet.
“Are you sure you can’t stay?” I asked, faking a pout as Jayson slung the strap of his backpack over his shoulder.
“You know I would if they didn’t need me, my Rose.” He stood in front of me with a warm smile. I loved it when he called me that.
“I know, I know. I’m messing with you. I should do some digging anyway.”
“Yeah, about that,” he said, his smile slowly slipping away. “Be careful, aight? You don’t know how people are around here.”