The Tenderness of Thieves
Page 1
PHILOMEL BOOKS
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Copyright © 2015 by Donna Freitas.
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Freitas, Donna. The tenderness of thieves / Donna Freitas. pages cm
Summary: After witnessing a robbery which ended with the death of her father,
seventeen-year-old Jane Calvetti falls in love with town bad boy Handel Davies.
[1. Love—Fiction. 2. Criminal investigation—Fiction.] I. Title.
PZ7.F8844Te 2015
[Fic]—dc23
2014017359
ISBN 978-0-698-18481-7
Version_1
To Carlene Bauer,
who convinced me I should keep writing.
For this, for giving me courage, and for so many other reasons.
CONTENTS
TITLE PAGE
COPYRIGHT
DEDICATION
February 19
ONE
TWO
THREE
February 19
FOUR
FIVE
SIX
SEVEN
February 19
EIGHT
NINE
TEN
ELEVEN
TWELVE
THIRTEEN
FOURTEEN
February 19
FIFTEEN
SIXTEEN
SEVENTEEN
EIGHTEEN
NINETEEN
TWENTY
TWENTY-ONE
TWENTY-TWO
TWENTY-THREE
February 19
TWENTY-FOUR
TWENTY-FIVE
TWENTY-SIX
TWENTY-SEVEN
TWENTY-EIGHT
TWENTY-NINE
THIRTY
THIRTY-ONE
THIRTY-TWO
THIRTY-THREE
THIRTY-FOUR
THIRTY-FIVE
ONE MONTH LATER
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
February 19
The blade pressed into the tender skin of my throat.
I held still, frozen in fear, but frozen, too, because I knew even the slightest movement would send the knife cutting deep into my neck. My captor held it there, steady, standing behind me, his body against my back. I couldn’t see him, not his face or really anything else, nothing except for the tip of the heavy-soled boot he wore on his right foot. There was a band of metal along the toe, and it was caked with dirty snow and ice.
“Please,” I whispered to him. “Let me go.”
But he ignored me—at least at first. The man—maybe he was older, maybe he was younger than I’d originally thought—was barking orders at the others, his ugly voice rising above the din of chairs being smashed to splinters and books tumbling to the floor.
The snow was coming down harder now, the view out the window so peaceful, like the picture on a postcard for some winter wonderland, and so utterly unlike the situation inside the house.
My situation.
A vase shattered, the noise high and startling, and I jumped.
I couldn’t help it.
I was lucky, though—well, as lucky as a girl can be when there’s a knife at her throat—because I was spared. The blade didn’t sink into my skin, not right then, but it provoked another response, one that sent me to the edge of something I feared even more.
My captor turned to me again, chuckling. “What’s that?” he whispered in my ear, his breath hot, his tone mocking. There was a faint smell coming off him. Sweetness and rot. Sweetness covering the rot. Cologne masking fish. “Is there something else you need from me?”
I tried not to flinch.
He started fumbling around, I wasn’t sure with what, maybe his glove, but then I realized it was my sweater, his hand searching for the hem, trying to reach up under it. I thought I might die, that now was the time to scream, to end this before the worst could happen, when one of the others called out something—I didn’t quite catch what, but it sounded like a question—a question for him.
A distraction from me.
Before he answered, he whispered one more thing. “Now be a good girl,” he said. “And nothing bad will happen.”
But of course, the bad was already here, wasn’t it?
My captor didn’t let go, kept the knife tight at my neck, but his other hand was now occupied elsewhere, gesturing at the various things they should take. He shifted—just a little—and the knife sliced the chain of my necklace in two. The tiny mosaic heart slid softly down my chest, all the way to the floor with a soft chink. I closed my eyes, wishing I could melt away like the snowflakes hitting the warm glass of the window, all that delicacy transformed into something so elemental, so basic, but most important, so difficult to hold on to.
ONE
IT WAS A DAY LIKE ANY other when he first spoke to me.
That boy.
The one who would change everything I thought about life and love and right and wrong.
The one I would change.
At the time it didn’t seem so out of the ordinary. It even seemed right: the good girl who gets to go out with the bad boy. Everyone knows that story. It was mid-June, and summer had just started. We were fairly rich with boys by then—me and my girls. They were always crowding around us at school, teasing, talking, inviting us to go somewhere in their cars, trying to kiss us in the rain. It was almost like we deserved it, I deserved it, after a winter that threatened to shatter everything I knew, everything I was and am. I was holding things together as best I could, leaning into my new visibility like it might prop me up. But it’s dangerous when we let the boys fix the broken parts within us. It makes us vulnerable. It scars us for life.
• • •
“Jane,” he said, just like that, like we’d already been introduced, like he knew me and I knew him.
And we did, sort of.
I was walking by, strutting really. I was happy the school year had ended, relieved to be on the other side of those four walls, walls that used to feel like a welcome shelter but lately felt like a prison. The air was hot and humid, the signs of a heat wave on its way. I wore a string bikini, not ostentatious, not bright pink or dotted with flowers or a shiny silver, but a dark plain blue. Then again, when is wearing a string bikini not ostentatious? A beach towel was draped over my right arm, lush green, so when I set it down on the sand it was like lying on a patch of grass.
He laughed. “Jane.”
My name a second time.
I stopped and turned. Looked at him. The ocean breeze whispered across my bare skin.
“Handel,” I said as though I knew him, too, his strange black eyes holding me there. I’d seen him before at school. He played hockey. Graduated last year. Worked on the docks. The bad boy all the girls whispered about. Lusted after. Not me, though. Not until that very moment, my name poised on his lips. “See you around,
” I said then, my skin hot, flushed, tingling.
“See you,” he said as I walked away, hips swaying, the ties of my bathing suit bouncing against the tops of my legs and back.
• • •
“Hi, ladies,” I said, Cheshire cat grin on my face, just five minutes later.
Tammy, long blond hair to her waist, turned to me, the ends of it swinging over her left shoulder. “Ooh, Jane has something to report!” Her big eyes were wide.
Tammy, short for Tamra, was the daughter of Russian immigrants, the bossy one among us, bossy and loyal. The boys loved her but didn’t quite know how to make their approach. She could be intimidating if you didn’t know her well.
I plopped down on Tammy’s towel, wedging myself between her and Bridget, another of my girls, the sweet one, the one the boys fawned over easily and who would kiss anybody. She was lathering sunblock all over her fair Irish skin. The smell of cocoa butter and summer wafted everywhere.
“I do have a story,” I said. “But it’s a short one.”
Bridget handed me the lotion. “I’ll take any distraction from this heat. Since when does it reach ninety in June?”
“Don’t be so melodramatic, B.” This from Michaela, lifting the sunglasses from her eyes a bit and her head from the rolled-up T-shirt underneath it. Her knees pointed toward the hazy blue sky, her body parallel to us. Michaela was the down-to-earth one, practical to her very center. Always the mediator. Protective. “It’s not that bad out today.”
“Spoken like an Irish who got her Italian mother’s skin,” Bridget said to Michaela, rubbing sunblock into places she’d just put it a minute ago.
Our New England town was a regular melting pot of immigrant families. I came in on the Italian side. One hundred percent. There were the fishermen and their sons, passing along the livelihood to the next generation, and the neighbors, nosy with their gossip, sunning themselves on front porches, looking out toward the wharf. There were summer residents, too. The folks who came year after year, renting the same house, dragging the same chairs and umbrellas down to the sand and their favorite spots. But mostly it was just us, the year-rounders, long ago in love with the beach even when it was raining or blurred by snow, streaked with the kind of cold that runs through you like a ghost; a place so remote that the paraphernalia of the now was useless and we liked it that way. The summer was sacred to all of us.
“Can we focus, please?” Tammy demanded. “Distract us, Jane.”
I stood. Took my time setting up my towel, dropped my bag at one end of it and a single flip-flop on each corner at the other. Enjoying the suspense, I put my sunglasses on, propped myself up on my elbows, and, finally, said his name. “Handel Davies.”
It was all that needed saying.
Bridget squealed. “No way.”
I nodded. My grin reappeared.
“Well?” from Tammy, still impatient for more information.
Michaela didn’t react. Not at all.
“I was walking down the beach to meet up with my girls,” I said, savoring the words as they came out of my mouth like they were candy. Looked at each one of them individually, Tammy, Bridget, Michaela. “I didn’t even see him there, not at first. Then I heard my name. I heard him say, ‘Jane.’”
“Handel Davies knows your name?!” Bridget’s tone was all exclamation points and question marks. That’s how she always spoke.
“I know,” I said. “Crazy, right?”
“I have dreams about that boy.” Her voice turned woozy.
“Keep them to yourself, please,” Michaela said. Michaela had dated a lot of boys, but none of them seriously, or not that we knew. She didn’t kiss and tell like Tammy and Bridget. Tammy and Bridget were always bubbling over with the details if they’d made out with someone in the janitor’s closet during American History (Bridget) or while skinny-dipping the first day of June (Tammy) or in the back of a truck in the school parking lot during free period (Bridget again). I, on the other hand, didn’t have details to share. Not lately at least.
Tammy was watching me. “And then?”
“I bet I’ll have dreams about Handel tonight,” I said, looking at Bridget, appreciative of her Handel appreciation, unwilling to let Tammy rush this. Then to everyone, “So I hear my name once, twice, then I stop and turn to see who it is, and there he is.” Bridget cupped her mouth with her hand to stop from squealing again. Tammy’s eyes were glued to my face. Michaela was silent. I couldn’t read her. “He’s looking at me like he knows me, like we’ve known each other forever. Like we share a secret,” I added, at first for dramatic effect, but then, I realized, because it was true. I’d felt it in his stare. “And I say back to him, ‘Handel,’ just like that, all even toned, like we really do know each other, like, of course he knows my name.”
“Good for you,” Tammy said, proud of my cool in the face of gorgeous and bad and boy. Tammy probably would have glared at him without saying anything, but the rest of us lack that level of restraint.
Now it was Bridget’s turn to push. “And then what?”
“Then nothing. Then I walked away. Walked here.”
“Smart,” Tammy said.
Michaela watched me, unsmiling.
Bridget was outraged. “Jane! That’s it?”
If it had been Bridget, not me, she would have sat down next to Handel, sat down in his lap if he’d let her, and chatted for an hour. “I told you it was a short story, B,” I said. “You said you didn’t mind.”
Michaela finally spoke. “I don’t like it. There are so many other boys you could pick. But him?”
“Don’t mother her,” Tammy said. Ironic, since Michaela’s not the bossy one.
Michaela got her defenses ready. Looked at Tammy, then Bridget. “Handel hangs out with the Quinn brothers. And the Sweeneys. He’s a Davies, for Christ’s sake.” She turned her attention directly on me after naming the most infamous three families in our town. “Jane, he’s bad news.”
But Bridget’s eyes were still dreamy. “Isn’t that why they call them bad boys?”
“Spoken like a cop’s daughter,” I said to Michaela with a laugh, trying to cover the unease suddenly threatening like a rain cloud.
“Takes one to know one,” she shot back.
I bristled. Retreated.
I don’t talk about my father.
Michaela recognized her mistake. Looked like she wanted to disappear.
“Nothing happened, M,” I told her. “Handel and I barely acknowledged each other. Besides, he doesn’t seem anything like his brothers.”
“You don’t know that, and you really don’t need any more drama,” Michaela said quietly. “Not after everything.”
Even in the hot sun, my blood turned to ice.
She had to go and push things.
“Michaela!” Tammy snapped.
Bridget reached for my hand, squeezed it. “How are you lately about . . . that?” she asked in a whisper.
Carefully, so as not to hurt Bridget for the kind gesture, I slipped my hand from hers and lay back on my towel, body flat against all that green, hoping the sun would burn away the feeling creeping over me with Michaela’s reminder. I was silent a long time, while my friends held their breath.
“Fine,” I said eventually, expelling mine with this lie. “Absolutely fine.”
• • •
“Mom? You home?” I called out later on.
No response. The house was silent. She was still at the beach.
The old floorboards creaked with every step, and I left a faint trail of sand behind me. A fine layer of it covered the floor of every one of our four tiny rooms, with thicker lines along the edges. Feeling the rough grains underfoot was a sign of summer, so it was something Mom and I welcomed rather than tried to sweep away.
I dropped my beach bag onto the beat-up seaweed-green couch in the living
room and headed another three feet into the kitchen to pour myself some water. Our house was cramped, the kitchen open to the living room with everything else jutting out like four short legs. My mother’s bedroom, my room, the sewing room where my mother worked, and the screened-in porch. I’d just settled in with a novel, feet on the coffee table, when I heard someone coming up the front steps.
Seamus McCormick was peering through the open window next to the door, his hand over his eyes like a visor, blocking out the sun. We were the same year in school, and we saw each other constantly in classes because we were both in the honors program. Seamus was a devoted admirer of me and my girlfriends even before we showed up on the radar of the other boys. We’d always loved him for it.
“Seamus, what on earth are you doing?” I cried out when I saw his face through the screen. “I could be naked!” I laughed. “Or, worse, my mother could be!”
“Hey, Jane—”
“Why can’t you knock like a normal person? Are you planning on stealing something?” I went on, teasing him, but as soon as my words were out, I regretted them. I’d hit right smack in the center of the place where I’d been hurting. Pushed my finger into my own wound and opened it up in front of Seamus.
He started, horrified at the accusation, at the association I’d just made, and with him of all people. “Sorry, Jane, really sorry. I was just trying to see if someone was home. I didn’t mean to scare you. I would never.”
I took a deep breath, pushed the pain off to the side. “No, of course not. I’m the one who should be sorry. Now that you’ve seen me, come on in, all right?”
The screen door groaned as it opened. Soon Seamus was standing there, all tall and lanky, watching me with those shy blue eyes of his, the freckles on his face and arms trying to hide the flush staining his skin. Hands in his jeans pockets, Seamus shook the hair away from his face.
I patted the space next to me. “Sit down.”
The couch cushions sagged with his weight, and I felt myself lift a little, like we were on a seesaw. Seamus stared straight ahead at the wood-paneled wall. “I didn’t see you and your friends at the beach today.”