“Yeah, thanks Jeeves,” I mutter to him on my way out the door.
I can see his knuckles whiten on the steering wheel and practically hear his molars grinding together.
I slam the door behind me just to annoy him all the more, and then I head off to class, hoping Jack will be too irritated to pick me up again afterward.
I keep sneaking my phone out during class, to see if my brothers have texted me. Or Cal. I know they’re hunting down the Butcher.
I hope they’re all together, whatever they’re doing. Zajac scares me. I know where he came from. There’s a difference between growing up in a criminal family and fighting your way up in the criminal world. The Butcher is playing this game to win or to die. There’s no middle ground for him.
So I’m glad my brothers aren’t alone in this.
But I’m annoyed that, yet again, I’m being left out of the action. This morning, I demanded Cal to take me with him, but he refused before the words were even out of my mouth.
“No, Aida. We have no idea where the Butcher is or how far he plans to take this. We could be walking into an ambush everywhere we go.”
“Then why are you going? Send someone else. Like Jack,” I said hopefully.
“This isn’t an errand-boy kind of job. Zajac is not fucking around. He didn’t just shoot at us last night, he hit two cops. We have no idea how far he plans to take this.”
“I know people that know his people. I can help,” I insisted.
Callum seized me by the arm, hard enough to hurt. His blue eyes cut into me, narrow and unblinking.
“You’re not going anywhere near this Aida. So help me god, I will lock you in that closet for a month before I let you wander around Little Ukraine, talking to bartenders and strippers.”
Whenever anybody tells me what I can’t do, it makes me about a hundred times more determined.
Callum saw the flare of rebellion in my eyes and sighed, loosening his grip on my arm just a little.
“I promise you, as soon as I hear anything, I will call you.”
“Or text,” I demanded.
Callum nodded.
“I promise,” he said.
So I let him go, and I didn’t immediately slough off my classes and head to Little Ukraine. That’s not where I’d go anyway, if I wanted info on the Butcher. I have a much better lead than that.
But for now, I’m stuck in Comparative Literature, completely ignoring the analysis of feminist characters in Austen’s novels. Instead I’m wondering what Nero meant when he texted me:
We found the shooter. Got a tip on the old bastard, too.
I text him back, but he doesn’t send me anything else.
The class ends abruptly—or so it seems to me as I stare out the window totally distracted.
I snatch up an armful of books, not bothering to stow them away in my bag, then head outside, trotting across campus in the direction of the west lot where I’m supposed to meet Nessa and our detestable chauffeur.
When I’m almost at the right spot, I hear a male voice say, “Do you need help carrying all those books, little lady?”
For a second, I think it’s Callum. I don’t know why—he doesn’t do corny impressions, like some helpful cowboy. When I turn around, I’m met with Oliver’s tanned, grinning face instead. He’s bruised where Callum tuned him up. A dark line down the center of his lip marks the place where it split.
“Oh,” I say, annoyed. “It’s you.”
“Not exactly the enthusiastic greeting I was hoping for,” Oliver says, keeping pace at my side.
“What are you doing here?” I demand. He’s years out of school, there’s no reason for him to be hanging around here.