Reparation of Sin (The Society Trilogy #2) Read Online Natasha Knight, A. Zavarelli

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Contemporary, Dark, Mafia, New Adult, Romance Tags Authors: , Series: The Society Trilogy Series by Natasha Knight
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Total pages in book: 83
Estimated words: 78006 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 390(@200wpm)___ 312(@250wpm)___ 260(@300wpm)
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I don’t know why his words hurt me. “Abel?”

“Yes?” he asks, tone frustrated.

“Do you use this house?”

“I told you, it’s Dad’s.”

“I just saw papers from the week of the gala, and since Dad’s been in the hospital, I just wondered if it was you.”

“Are you playing detective?”

“No, I just...I didn’t know.”

“Well, remember, don’t touch anything.”

“Is something going on? I mean, why do you need a safe house?”

“Jesus Christ, Ivy. I’m saving your ass at a great risk to my own, I might add, and you’re giving me the third degree?”

“No, it’s not like that. I just was curious.”

“Curiosity killed the cat.”

“What?”

“Nothing. Be ready to go when they come.”

“Can I know their names at least?” I hurry to ask before he disconnects.

“Just be ready.” He hangs up.

41

Ivy

I sit in the living room, flashlight in hand, waiting for the men Abel is sending to get here. I feel on edge since our conversation, but I keep telling myself it’s just how Abel is. He’s under pressure too. I’m sure Santiago has men watching him. I wonder if he’s interrogated him already.

My phone is long out of charge, but I keep it beside me anyway. I pick up another one of the magazines to pass the time and flip through some pages before setting it aside. I get up and pace the room, anxious to leave now, to get to the next phase of this, but it’s barely nine o’clock.

I have decided one thing. I need to talk to Santiago. It wasn’t ever really an option to just disappear out of his life—even if he somehow didn’t catch up with me. I can’t leave Evangeline or the rest of my family behind. I can’t take a chance that he’ll hurt them. I just need a few more days to think before I make contact.

To pass the time, I start to fold up the newspapers and stack them. I wipe off the coffee table, then enter the study to pick up the whiskey glass sitting on the desk and carry it into the kitchen to wash. I set it on the drying rack, then empty the moldy food containers from the fridge. The trash can hadn’t been emptied since before I came, so I pull the bag out of the bin and carry it into the study. There, I take out the empty bottle of whiskey and set it aside, then pick up the bin and turn it over into the bag but only manage to get half the contents in. The other half spills out onto the carpet.

“Crap.” I tie the bag off and set it down, then get on the floor to pick up the things that fell out, pieces of crumpled paper, a paper cup of what was once coffee. I reach my arm under the desk to grab whatever it is that rolled there. When my fingers close around it, I pull my arm out, and I’m surprised to find lipstick.

I look at it. It’s a smooth matte-black tube, simple, like any hundreds of this particular brand that I recognize. And I can’t help but pull the lid off and twist it so I can see the lipstick itself.

Leaving everything, I get up and go into the living room where I have a little more light to study it. To double-check.

It’s just a red lipstick. But I turn it over and read the name of this particular shade. Russian Red.

It’s the shade I wore at the gala.

I find my hands are trembling as I feel for the phone in my pocket, but when I take it out, I remember it’s out of charge. And I remember Abel’s warning to stay inside the house.

But I make my way to the door anyway and punch in the code. Pulling it open, I grab my car keys from the table beside the door before going outside. I fumble with the lock, my hands are shaking, but I get the door open and slip into the driver’s seat. I put the lipstick down and start the car, my door still open as I let it run and feel for the charger cable that’s disappeared somewhere under the passenger seat. It’s still plugged into the power outlet, so I find it and tug it out, then plug the phone in and wait. And while I wait, I look at that lipstick again. It’s used but hardly. And my mind is running with an idea, but it makes no sense. None.

A few minutes later, the phone switches on, and I dial Abel’s number. It rings and rings, then goes to voicemail, so I disconnect and try again. I catch my reflection in the rearview mirror. The light is on since the door is still open. I should probably close it, but Abel answers then.

“I told you not to call me again.”


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