Chapter 39
Chapter Thirty-Nine
Logan
Sawyer left my apartment at the crack of dawn to meet one of her pro bono clients at the clinic.
Her hours are often scheduled around whatever shift someone else is working.
The time she dedicates to people who couldn’t otherwise afford a service like hers is impressive.
It’s hard to resent her for being so loyal to people who’d be in pain or struggling otherwise.
Months ago, I meant what I said when I told her that what she’s doing for the working class people of Bellerive would have been a game changer for me as a kid for the few times I’d have benefitted from a little extra help.
Last night, it broke my heart to hear her say she wouldn’t consider coming with me, even when I knew it was a long shot. But I couldn’t leave the question mark over my heart for the rest of my life, so at least now I know without any uncertainty where she still stands.
Which is why I got into the car with my driver this morning after Sawyer left, and I asked to be taken to the one place I should not go.
Since I didn’t talk to Sawyer first, I don’t know how she’s going to feel about what I’m doing.
But I can’t leave this island without being sure I’ve done everything within my power to protect her, to keep Dalton from being able to get a grip on her again.
The Tucker family home isn’t a house, and I’m not even sure I’d call it a mansion.
I’ve been in some pretty nice places since I got into the WHL.
This is an estate or, I might even go so far as to call it a palace.
Unbelievable wealth. And while I knew Sawyer came from a lot of money, her lifestyle feels closer to those of my peers in the WHL than whatever is happening in this palatial estate.
When I ring the doorbell, I stand with my hands shoved in the pockets of my shorts. A cooler ocean breeze blows through the front of the property, moving the humid air around. The hot weather is just starting to arrive, and I might be gone before the worst of it. Or best. I don’t mind the heat.
The door swings open, and a classic butler stands at the door in an outfit that’ll probably cause me to chuckle later when I remember. Coattails, a bowtie, and strict black and white. I can’t help a little smile at how pretentious it is.
“Can I help you?” the butler asks, all formality.
“I’d like to speak to Celia Tucker.”
“Do you have an appointment?”
“Nope.”
“Who should I tell her is calling?”
“Logan Bishop,” I say, hoping she’s kept up enough with what’s been happening on the island to know who I am. But then I think better of leaving it to chance. I need in the door. “I’m dating her daughter, Sawyer.”
“One moment,” he says, shutting the door in my face.
I turn around and survey the massive property, and I wonder how much wealth the Tuckers have in land alone. It’s an expensive commodity, since it’s so limited. I’ve heard the family even runs an oceanfront campground, which seems like such a waste of prime real estate.
The door opens, and I turn around. Instead of the butler, a petite woman stands on the threshold.
Her dark hair must be dyed, but she’s aged incredibly well—almost to the point where I’d expect her to be Sawyer’s older sister rather than her mother.
She doesn’t quite have that plastic feel that older people get when they’ve had a little too much work done.
“I’ve seen the videos of you and my daughter in arenas,” she says. “Those types of public displays aren’t to my taste, but they have certainly played well with the types of crowds you seem to attract.”
She says it in such a way that I’m positive it’s not a compliment. But honestly, she could think I was the dirt under her shoe, and I wouldn’t care as long as she can help me to keep Dalton away from Sawyer.
“Your daughter deserves to be treated like she’s important because she is. Very important. The most important.”
Her blue eyes are piercing as they examine me. I’d even go so far as to call them calculating. “She doesn’t speak to me, you know.”
“I know,” I say.
“Come in,” she says. “I’m always intrigued when someone claims love and yet does something so contrary to that emotion.”
I release a little sigh as I follow her into the living room.
Having her lay out this choice in such black-and-white terms gives me a beat of uncertainty.
But the reality is that I don’t have the clout to nail Dalton, and in a few days or weeks, I’ll have even less influence on this island when I’m traded.
From everything I’ve heard, Celia’s influence is endless, which is part of the conflict with most of her family.
She doesn’t know when to tap in or out of that sphere of control.
She gestures to a couch, and she perches on another one. A maid or worker hovers at her shoulder, and Celia flicks her away.
“I heard you’ve been ill,” I say as I take a seat across from her. “Are you doing any better?”
She raises her eyebrows and purses her lips. “The latest treatment appears to be working to reset my kidneys, yes. Thankfully, my youngest daughter has stood by me. She’s never been one to go with the rest of the pack. Never thought that would be something I’d be grateful for.”
“I’m glad to hear you’re getting better.”
“No thanks to the rest of my family.”
A frisson of uncertainty goes down my spine. Maybe she won’t help me, help her daughter.
“Sawyer doesn’t know you’re here, correct?”
“No, she doesn’t.”
A slight smile touches the corners of her mouth, as though I’ve fed her a delicious morsel. “You must need something. That’s the only reason you’d be here.”
“I need help making sure that Sawyer is protected when I leave the island,” I say.
“Sounds rather dramatic,” Celia says, raising one eyebrow. “You know, her cousin, Owen, owns a security firm.”
“It’s not physical protection I need.”
“She’s a Tucker. That’s all the social protection she needs.”
“Maybe,” I say with a shrug. “Maybe not, though. And I’m not one to take chances with people I love.”
“You’re very young for her.”
“Seems to suit her better than the older model she had before,” I say.
That earns an actual smile from Celia. “Oh, I bet it does. Dalton Worthington is a status seeker. A man hungry for power. But you? You play in a whole other arena.”
“Quite literally,” I agree. “He’s the reason I’m here.”
She doesn’t prod. She waits.
“Do you happen to know where Officer Stephen Foster went?” I ask.
“No,” she says, and her poker face is good enough that I have no idea if that’s true or not. I suspect not. Even meeting Celia right now, I find it hard to believe anything she wanted to know would be outside her grasp. “Why do you ask?”
“There was an altercation between Sawyer and Dalton. Officer Foster has documentation—leverage—that we need.”
“Leverage?” She raises her eyebrows again. “What is it that Dalton has that requires a counterweight?”
“I’d rather not say.” I grimace.
“I bet you would, but that’s not how things work when you come to me. When someone needs my help, they play by my rules.”
“Do you have the information I need?”
“In a way, but information isn’t free.”
“Not even for one of your children?”
“You’re not my child. If Sawyer was sitting across from me, of course I’d help her.”
From everything Sawyer has told me about Celia and from what Tamiko said, I wonder whether she’d have helped Sawyer for a fee too.
“But she didn’t come, did she?” Celia continues.
“She won’t come.”
“No, she won’t. She’s the coleader of her sibling musketeers.
She and Nathaniel. Understanding my point of view would be such a betrayal.
” Her tone is bitter. She eyes me for a beat.
“If I give you the information, I want you to tell her you got it from me. I want her to know that I had what she needed. That the only person who could protect her from her poor choices was me.”
I lean forward and put my elbows on my knees. “That’ll fuck me over.”
“It might,” she says without a hint of remorse. “She can be angry with you, and you can have the information. Or she can love you, and you’ll have nothing. That’s the deal.”
Confessing where I got my new lead or information was a possibility I understood when I resolved to come here, so I can’t let Celia’s demand hold me back now.
Maybe what’s coming next—my trade, our breakup—will be easier for both of us if she’s angry with me.
I know it’ll be easier for me if Dalton can’t get to her.
“You’ve got a deal. Tell me how to find Stephen Foster.”
“You don’t need Stephen,” she says, “because I know where he kept all his Tucker family secrets.”
At the police station, I sit outside with my driver, waiting for Sawyer to arrive.
My manager has just sent confirmation that my biological grandparents are thrilled that I’m willing to meet.
Since I don’t know what will happen with the trade, my flight off the island is tonight.
Tomorrow, we’ll have a visit before I fly back here.
There and back. Just enough time to assess them in person with no commitment for more from me in any way.
Part of me wants to tell Sawyer, take her with me, but another part of me is scared to get any closer, to let her in even more when the ticking clock counting down our time together is so loud that I can barely think of anything else.
I also don’t know how mad she’s going to be at what I’ve done. Maybe the clock stops right now.
Sawyer pulls up next to me in her silver BMW i7, and she climbs out of the driver’s seat with a worried expression on her face.
“Are you okay?” she asks when I get out to greet her. “When you said ‘meet me at the station,’ I was worried you’d been arrested.”
“Not yet,” I say with a slight smile.
“What’s going on?” she asks as I lead the way toward the station.