“We’ll cross paths again, Sawyer. Life has a funny way of throwing people into your path when you’re meant to collide. It’s up to you to choose to make it permanent.”
“Permanence,” I mutter, tasting the foreign word on my tongue. “You’re already permanent, Simon, just as much as this tattoo.”
He smiles at me, a knowing twinkle in his eye.
“Then I’ll see you soon, won’t I?”
Feeling a tad better, I pick up my plastic bag, and the rustle of its contents reminds me of what else is in it. The small grin on my face slips. Simon will no longer distract me from my impending situation, and suddenly, I’m really dreading this ride alone.
“I hope so. Nice meeting you, Simon.”
And then I turn, my thigh burning as I make my way onto the bus. I put my coins in the slot and find a seat far in the back. The faux leather is hot and sticky against the backs of my thighs, but I hardly notice.
I face the window, getting one last glimpse of Simon waving at me before the bus takes off.
At least I didn’t have to go to a shop and use a credit card or take out any more money. I’m only giving myself a couple more days before it’s time to grab a drink.
Then, I’ll start over as someone else.
Not Sawyer Bennett, but someone who wishes they never met her.
Chapter 2
Sawyer
Jamie Harris.
I stare at the ID for a brief second before sliding it over to the bartender. He glances at the card, back to me, and then at the card again.
“You’re American,” he notes.
“Unfortunately,” is my answer.
“You don’t look twenty-nine,” he comments, before returning the card. That’s insulting because I’m only a year younger than what the ID says.
I force a smile. “I’m terribly sorry for not passing your standards on what a woman of twenty-nine years should look like. Thank my skincare routine. Can I have my drink now?”
The bartender rolls his eyes before moving away to make said drink. The second he steps away, I deflate. My chest is tight with anxiety, but I don’t dare let that show.
That’s my face on the ID, but not my name.
Jamie Harris is a successful business owner in Los Angeles, California, has a stellar credit score, and a credit card limit of a whopping fifty-thousand dollars.
He’s also a man and doing quite well for himself.
Well, I suppose it’smethat’s doing well for myself now.
However, I have no plans to spend all that money—not more than absolutely necessary. Before flying here, I took out enough cash to last me a while.
All of my victims are men, and most of them have unisex names, making it easier for me to impersonate them. I’ve also slept with almost every one of them. Some… I didn’t really want to, and my skin crawled with every touch. But it was necessary to take what I needed.
I don’t have the skills to do it online, so the good old-fashioned way is my only method. And in order to get close enough to obtain their private information—they have to take me home.
I could get a job, but that would mean either stealing the identity of a dead person that no one knows is dead or using my real name, and both make me want to fucking vomit. If I’m being honest, stealing other people’s lives, to begin with, makes me want to die.
I’m a shit person, no doubt about that. But I’m not a sociopath, either. I don’t lack empathy, and I’m not guilt-free.
Nevertheless, no one can know where I am.WhoI am.