The Society Karen Guyler (best books to read .TXT) đ
- Author: Karen Guyler
Book online «The Society Karen Guyler (best books to read .TXT) đ». Author Karen Guyler
âBut without the compound. . .â Eva couldnât say it.
He half-shrugged, not important in his scheme of things.
âLike I said, absolute genius. Every other agenciesâ pipes let the agent through, Every Dropâs locked it away. The water they supplied stayed safe. Thatâs why they should never have pulled the pipes down in Tirupudur. They were saving their lives.â
âBut why? Why would you do that, risk all those people?â
âItâs obvious.â He shook his head at her lack of intellect. âStuartâs been laying the foundations that everyone should pay for water, Every Dropâs supply will become the gold standard and theyâll pay handsomely for access to it. My royalties will give me financial freedom.â
His calculation was perhaps the hardest thing to bear until he hammered a final nail into their relationship. âItâs been a long time coming, to get to this point.â He checked his watch again.
âIf thatâs the agent in the flask,â Eva tried to distract, âwhereâs the compound here?â She could read him easily enough then. âSo now youâre committing genocide?â
âYouâre being overdramatic.â
âWhat about Lily? What if she drinks it?â
âIâll tell you where she is and you can make sure she doesnât.â He couldnât be bargaining with her life.
âWhere is she? Itâs not safe for her to be here on her own.â
He looked at the flask.
âCharles, please, donât.â
âCarson has to pay.â
âJed Carson,â Eva concentrated on looking confused, âwhatâs he got to do with this?â
âItâs his fault theyâre dead, Tony, Hunter, Nancy.â The way he said her name hurt. âWe helped him out a long time ago, did things we shouldnât have for him because he was our friend. Heâs overlooked that in his rush to clean house.â
He checked the time again, half-nodded.
Eva placed Lukeâs phone on the polished concrete floor, the starburst still spinning, her video proof going nowhere.
Charles picked up the flask.
Eva retrieved the security guardâs baton from beside the machinery where sheâd been hiding from him, hoping he wouldnât arrive, hoping sheâd completely misunderstood everything.
He unscrewed the top of the flask.
She hit the safety railing with the baton. The metallic clang rang loud in the space, even over the rushing water.
Charles jerked round to her. âWhatâre you doing?â
She charged him, grabbing for the flask, aiming to knock him off balance. Smooth, slippery, he twisted up and away from her, steadying the container, keeping it upright.
âCareful, donât know what will happen if you get any on you.â
âBut youâre prepared for a city to drink it!â She could hardly get the words out, her anger exploded in a red rage. She lunged at him, hitting out with the baton but an agony on her forehead made her drop it. Charles leaning close enough to kiss her in a mockery of the position theyâd been in hundreds of times. But this time, his free hand pressed against her stitches, making her eyes stream.
She twisted away from him, her hands cupping around the pain radiating out from her forehead. The baton clanged on the metallic gangway until Charles stamped on it, ending its chattering.
âDo it again and youâll never know where Lily is.â
âYouâre not, you canât be abandoning her.â
âThatâs your choice.â
How could he have reconciled himself to leaving Lily alone in a strange place where she didnât speak the language, understand the culture? âSheâs eleven, you canât, youâre her father, fathers donât do that.â
âHer or Carson, Eva. Choose wisely.â
He could have just tipped it in, far crueller to throw this non-choice at her. Worse, he handed it to her almost flippantly, the same decision her father had made. Her or a stranger, knowing his Evie was safe thousands of miles away, knowing the stranger in front of him would die if he saved himself.
Daddy, did it feel like this for you? Like your heart had shattered, like you couldnât breathe. Like there was no choice at all?
54
âWell?â Charles sounded almost triumphant. He thought he knew Eva, was at least bargaining on her doing what every mother would.
She pressed the twin of the bracelet her father had held on to when he made his choice against her wrist. Daddy, I understand.
âYou donât need to tell me where Lily is so you canât put that in the water.â Her voice was amazingly steady.
He did a double-take. âYouâre choosing Carson over Lily?â
âYou underestimate me, Charles, you always have.â And sheâd let him. Her fingers worked the knots in her bracelet round and round. âIâm not choosing anyone over her, but I am choosing for you to not poison the water supply.â
âBut youâll never find her without my help, and thereâs a, a reason you need to, right now.â
âYou have resources,â Eva used Noraâs reminder to quash the bolt of panicked dread that hammered through her. If the water wasnât poisoned, Lily would have longer.
âWhat reason, Charles?â She tried to keep her tone even, to not let him know what his decision was doing to her.
âYou need to pick her, Eva, you need to choose Lily.â
âYou need my permission to do this? I donât give it. The water, I choose safe water.â Always you, Lily, I always choose you. This way you wonât be poisoned and Iâll still find you. I promise, Iâm coming, sweetheart.
âYou donât get to take this away from me.â
Eva was moving before he was. The knee brace heâd bought her, his last act of kindness to her, helping her limp towards him, a handful of steps, a mile in slow motion.
He turned away from her, lifting the flask, moving it over the opening.
Eva lunged.
She grabbed for him, reaching for his outstretched arm. In taking a jab at her, he was unbalanced. Charles dropped onto his side, holding the container upright, keeping its contents inside.
âStop, you could get us both killed.â
She leant over him, hands outstretched. âGive it to me, itâs over.â
He shook his head. âI didnât underestimate you, it was your choice to stay small. You could be so much more,
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