GREED (The Seven Deadly Series)

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GREED (The Seven Deadly Series) Page 30

by Fisher Amelie


  Fuck.

  “I’ll bag this up,” the man said and waved Casey on.

  “I’m sorry,” Casey said when we were out of the room, “I had to tell him. He’d have known I was lying.”

  “It’s okay, Casey,” I said with saccharine ooze. I kissed his mouth then bit his lip playfully. “It would have been the best ride of your life,” I whispered. His eyes blew wide.

  “Wait, what? We can still see each other,” Casey desperately plied.

  “Sure we can,” I lied again.

  “I wasn’t going to tell him about the drugs,” he said again, his voice quivering. “I had only planned on getting you on the party. That would have only been a ticket, a misdemeanor.”

  “I know, sweets,” I told him, “but you still messed up.”

  Casey led me down the winding staircase and I felt as if time was standing still. All my friends, cuffed themselves, looked up at me as I descended over them. I smiled down at them bewitchingly and they almost cowered in my presence. I’d been the one who brought the coke and my smile let them know that if they brought me down, I wouldn’t be going down with the ship on my own. If they squealed like the pigs they were, I would make their lives miserable. There’s a fine line between friend and foe in my world.

  Casey placed me into the back of a squad car when we reached the winding drive and buckled me in.

  “Tell me,” I said softly against his ear near my mouth, “what exactly am I being charged with?”

  “Sarge will probably get you on drugs but if it’s your first offense, you should be able to get off lightly.”

  “And what if it isn’t?”

  “Isn’t what?” he asked, glancing over his shoulder.

  “My first offense.”

  “Shit. If it’s not, there’s nothing I can do for you.”

  “Oh, well, there’s nothing I can do for you then either,” I said coldly, the heat in my seduction blasted cold with a bucket of ice water at the flip of a switch. Casey’s mouth grew wide and he could see that he’d been had. I turned my face away from his, done with my pawn.

  Casey got into the front seat and I could see through the rearview that his face was painted red with humiliation and obvious disappointment in himself that he fell for my game. He stuck the key in the ignition and drove me to the station.

  I was booked, processed and searched. I scoffed at the women who had to search me before placing me in my cell. Stripping naked for anyone of the female persuasion wasn’t exactly what I’d had planned for the evening. They looked down on me, knowing my charges, like they were somehow better than me.

  “My lingerie probably costs more than your entire wardrobe,” I spit out at the short, stocky one who eyed me with disdain.

  She could only shake her head at me.

  “Well it’ll go nicely with your new wardrobe addition,” the dark haired one said, handing me a bright orange jumpsuit.

  This made both the women laugh. I slipped the disgusting jumpsuit on and they filed me away into a cell.

  I shivered in my cell, coming down from my high. I was used to this part though. I only did coke on the weekends. Unlike most others I knew, I had enough self control to only do it at the Holes. It was just enough to drown out whatever crappy week I’d had from being ignored by my mother and father.

  My parents were strangely the only I knew of who married and stayed that way. Of course, my mother was fifteen years younger than my father so I’m sure that helped and she stayed in incredible shape. If you pitched a pic of her then and now, you wouldn’t be able to tell the difference and she’d gifted those incredible genes to yours truly. That was about the only thing my mother ever bothered to give me. My mother and father were so absorbed into themselves, I don’t think they remembered me some days. I was born for one reason and one reason only. It was expected of my parents to give the impression of a family.

  My mom was a ‘housewife’ and I use that term loosely. My father was the founder and CEO of an electronics conglomerate, namely computers and software. His company was based in Silicon Valley but when he married my gold-digging mother, she insisted on L.A., so he jetted the company plane there when he needed to. It was safe to say that one, if not two or three, of my father’s products were in every single home in America. I’d had a five thousand dollar monthly allowance if I’d kept my grades up during prep school and that’s about as much acknowledgment I got from my parents.

  I’d just graduated, which meant I had four years to earn a degree of some kind then move out. I would retain a monthly allowance of twenty thousand a month but I had to earn my degree first. That was my father in a nutshell.

  “Keep appearances, Sophie Price, and I’ll reward you handsomely,” my father said to me starting at fifteen.

  And it was a running mantra in my home once a week, usually before a dinner I was forced to attend when he was entertaining some competitor he was looking to buy out or possibly a political official he was trying to grease up. I would dress modestly, never speak unless spoken to. Timidity was the farce. If I looked sweet and acquiescent, my father gave the impression he knew how to run a home as well as a multi-national, multi-billion dollar business. If I did this, I would get a nice little thousand dollar bonus. I was an employee not a child.

  “Sophie Price,” someone yelled outside the big steel door that was my cell. I could just make out the face of a young cop in the small window. The door came sliding open with a deafening thud. “You’ve made bail.”

  “Finally,” I huffed out.

  When I was released, I stood at a counter and waited for them to return the belongings I had walked in with.

  “One pair of shoes, one skirt, one set of hose, one set of...,” the guy began but eyed the garment with confusion.

  “Garters,” I spit out. “They’re garters. God, just give them to me,” I said, snatching them out of his hands.

  He carelessly pushed the rest of my belongings in a pile over to me and I almost screamed at him that he was handling a ten thousand dollar outfit like it was from Wal-Mart.

  “You can change in there,” he said, pointing at an infinitesimal door.

  The bathroom was small and I had to balance my belongings on a disgusting sink.

  “Well, these are going in the incinerator,” I said absently.

  I got dressed sans hose, returned my ridiculous jumpsuit and entered the lobby. Repulsive, dirty men sat waiting for whatever jailed fool they bothered to bail. They eyed me with bawdy stares and I could only glare back, too tired to give them a piece of my mind.

  Near the glass entry doors, the sun was just cresting the horizon and I made out the silhouette of the only person I would have expected to come to my rescue.

  Standing over six foot tall, so thin his bones protruded from his face, but with stylish, somewhat long hair, reminiscent of the nineteen-thirties, clad in a fitted Italian suit, stood Pembrook.

  “Hello, Pembrook,” I greeted him with acid. “I see my father was too busy to come himself.”

  “Ah, so lovely to see you too, Sophie.”

  “Stop with the condescension,” I sneered.

  “Oh, but I’m not. It is the highlight of my week bailing you from this godforsaken pit of bacteria.” He eyed me up and down with regret. “I suppose I needed to get the interior of my car cleaned anyway.”

  “You’re so clever, Pembrook.”

  “I know,” he said simply. “To comment on your earlier observation, your father was too busy to get you. He does want you to know that he is severely disappointed.”

  “Ah, I see. Well, I shall try harder next time not to get caught.”

  Pembrook stopped and gritted his teeth at me before opening the passenger door for me. “You, young lady, are sorely unaware of the gravity of this charge.”

  “You’re a brilliant attorney, Pembrook, with millions at your disposal,” I said, settling into his Mercedes.

  He walked the front of the car and sat in the driver’s seat.

&nb
sp; “Sophie,” he said softly, before turning the ignition. “There’s not enough money in the world that can help you if Judge Reinhold is presiding over your case again.”

  “Drive, Pembrook,” I demanded, ignoring his warning. He’ll get me off, I thought.

  My house, or I should say, my father’s house, was built a year before I was born but it had since been newly renovated on the outside as well as the inside so although I may have grown up in the home, it barely resembled anything like it did when I had been small.

  It was grotesquely large, sitting on three acres in Beverly Hills, California, it was French Chateau inspired and over twenty-eight thousand square feet. I was in the left wing, my parents’ were in the right. I could go days without seeing them, the only correspondence was out of necessity, usually to inform me that I was required to make a dinner appearance, and that was usually by note delivered by one of the staff. I had a nanny until fourteen when I fired her for attempting to discipline me. My parents didn’t realize for months and decided I was capable of caring for myself after and never bothered to replace the position.

  Freedom is just that. Absolutely no restrictions. I abandoned myself to every whim I felt. Every want I fulfilled and every desire was quenched. I wanted for nothing.

  Except attention.

  And I got that, I’ll admit, not in the healthiest of ways. I won’t lie to you, it felt gratifying...in a sense. I was rather unrestrained with my time and body. I wasn’t different from most girls I knew. Well, except the fact I was exponentially better looking but why beat a dead horse. The only difference between myself and them was I kept them wanting more. I used many, many, many boys and tossed them aside, discarding them, ironically, like many of them did to so many other girls before me.

  This is what kept them baited. I gave them but a glimpse of my taste and they tasted absinthe. They were hooked by ‘la fée verte’ as I was so often called. I was ‘the green fairy’. I flitted into your life, showed you ecstasy, and left you dependent. I did this for fun, for the hell of it, for attention. I wanted to be wanted and my word, did they want me. Did they ever.

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  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Other Books by Fisher Amelie

  Opening Quote

  Prologue

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Chapter Thirty-Two

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  Chapter Thirty-Four

  Chapter Thirty-Five

  Chapter Thirty-Six

  Chapter Thirty-Seven

  Chapter Thirty-Eight

  Epilogue

  Fury by Fisher Amelie

  Pregnant and Need Help

  Greed Playlist

  Sign Up for Fisher Amelie's Newsletter

  More of Fisher's Work

  Vain

  Callum and Harper

  Thomas and January

  Acknowledgements

  Vain Chapter One

 

 

 


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