Quit Bein' Ugly Vale, Lynn (popular books of all time .txt) đ
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I almost wished he would.
âThere, you see?â Carmichael said, unaware of the volatile stare down between Flint, Dooley, and Bryan. âNo harm, no foul.â
âCarmichael,â Flint replied stiffly. âDonât you have a class to teach at the gym in a couple of minutes?â
Carmichael cursed. âShit, yeah. I do. Camryn, can I hitch a ride with you? My car is low on gas, and I donât think Iâll have time to stop for any.â
âOf course,â Camryn agreed, realizing what Carmichael didnât. âLetâs go.â
Carmichael, for some reason, gave me a narrow-eyed look. âDonât hurt him.â
I wouldnât hurt him. But I wouldnât stop him from getting hurt, either.
âLeave your keys and weâll bring your car to you,â I suggested, holding out my hand.
She reluctantly pulled her keys out of her pocket and handed them to me.
âDonât do anything stupid with it like you did last time,â she ordered.
Her idea of âstupidâ was actually me getting the car detailed. But Jesus, there was only so much of her car I could take. Honestly, I wasnât quite sure how she lived like she lived.
Where her house and yard were immaculate? Her car was a completely different story. It was like she lived out of it.
Gatorade and water bottles littered the floor. Protein bar wrappers. Clothes. Shoes. Groceries that she hadnât gotten around to bringing inside.
If you could dream it, you could likely find it on the floorboard of Carmichaelâs car.
âHe probably wouldnât have enough time to get it cleaned anyway,â Camryn laughed as she latched on to Carmichaelâs hand. âLetâs go. Bye, baby.â
Flint gave a chin lift but kept his eyes focused on the stupid kid in front of us.
âWhat were you not saying?â I asked, fully aware when someone was lying or holding back from me.
I was a criminal defense lawyer. I knew things that most people could only dream of.
I knew without a doubt when someone was lying, which was why I did the type of job that I did.
I would not be the man that got criminals off the hook. I got innocent people off the hook.
There was a major difference.
Take the case that I just finished working, for instance.
There was a young man that happened to be in the wrong place at the very correct time. He saw something he shouldnât have seenâi.e., someone getting killedâand heâd gone to the police with it.
Only, the cop that he went to happened to be dirty. Or, at least, the lead detective on the case was dirty. Fast forward a year, and that young man was serving a life sentence for cold-blooded murder thanks to a cop and a justice system that failed him.
When his family had come to me, Iâd done my level best to figure out everything for them.
And what I had found had led me to a very small potatoes crime syndicate that did business in our area. Business that consisted of some white-collar crimes, no small amount of murder when people got in their way, and a couple of very high-profile businessmen that didnât like when the spotlight was put on their business.
âUmm, nothing?â Bryan hedged, kicking the dirt with his foot.
âListen, kid,â Flint ordered. âThis is going to go a lot better for you if you just tell us whatâs going on. Right now, you have sympathy for how you were raised on your side. You werenât given a good hand in life. I know that. You know that. The system failed you. But, just sayinâ, if you force my hand because you donât tell me everything thatâs going on, youâre not going to like where you end up. Most likely, youâll be charged as an adult. Most likely, youâll be spending some hard time in jail for the assault of a teacher. Most likely, youâll ruin any and all chances that you ever had at making a life for yourself. I donât want that for you. Carmichael doesnât want that for you. And it just so happens that I have a really good lawyer right here thatâll be willing to help you if you need it.â
Bryanâs shoulders slumped.
âDammit,â he grumbled, throwing his head back on a groan. Then he looked around to see whether there was anyone close. âThey follow me.â
Flint stiffened. âLetâs go back into the school.â
I walked back into the school with them and walked with them to Flintâs office that was just a bit farther past the theater building. When we got there, it was to find barely anyone left in the school. The only person that we passed on the way was a janitor that was too busy wiping âfuck you Coach Duffâ thatâd been spray painted on a set of lockers.
âWhoâd Ezra piss off?â I wondered idly.
âCoach Duff banned a couple of seniors off the baseball team this week because he found them trying to assault a girl,â Bryan murmured. âFuckers.â
My eyes met Flintâs over the top of Bryanâs head.
This kid was actually a pretty good kid. You couldnât fake sincerity like that. I could tell that Flint understood that just by the look on his face.
âWhat were they doing?â I asked.
âThey were trying to fuâuh, have sex with her, in the locker room. She wanted it, but she didnât want to do it there. You know? When they told her she was doing it there, she freaked out. Thatâs about the time that Coach Duff came into the room and caught them,â he answered. âHe suspended them on the spot from the team. And theyâre seniors, you know? Theyâre pissed as hell because this was their year to be seen by scouts. So, theyâre doing damage to show how pissed they are.â
I looked at Flint. âYou know that happened?â
Flint nodded. âDealt with that this morning, actually.â
âGood,â I grumbled. âThey shouldnât get to play after that anyway. They suspended from school, too?â
âIndefinitely,â Flint confirmed. âTheyâll now be getting GEDs or going to
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