direction. âDid you tell him to go fuck himself?â
Georgia rolled her eyes. âI wish. I wanted to tell him who and what I was, but couldnât bring myself to break the rules.â
Telling a target the truth could lead to panicâand panic from a target could be a dangerous, even life-threatening, thing. âSo what did you do?â
âI made sure he wonât be getting in anyoneâs pants for a while, maybe not even his own.â
Jillian patted her friendâs knee in approval. Theyâd both taken self-defense lessons after joining the agency, courtesy of Anne. Anne refused to pay for bodyguardsâthey were too expensiveâso the girls were on their own when in the field. Jillian actually preferred it that way. She didnât want to rely on a man/lying piece of swine for her safety. Her Mace acted as her hired muscle, bringing down the strongest of opponents.
âAnne showed his wife the video earlier and the woman burst into tears. I know because I stupidly watched on the screen in the conference room.â Georgia expelled a slight puff of air, as dainty as the woman herself. She drummed her perfectly manicured nails against the desk.
Jillian didnât mention that sheâd seen the wife, too, just as the woman was leaving the office. Those tearstained cheeks had almost made Jillian cry. Poor thing. She had a tough road ahead of her.
Victims were always told the day after the evidence was gathered. No reason to put it off and prolong the torture. The criers always caused Jillianâs chest to ache. The punchersâwell, they might hate her and the other bait now, but theyâd thank them later.
Still. Maybe she and Georgia needed to start coming in late the day after an assignment.
âI despise that part of the job, you know?â Georgia said. âJust once, Iâd like to see a happy ending, a man who doesnât care about a pretty face. A man whoâs happy with what he has at home, even if sheâs gained weight or acquired a few wrinkles.â
âMe, too, but we both know the odds of that happening. And women are better off learning the truth now instead of later,â Jillian said, her tone firm with conviction. After all, she should know. Years ago, her dad had cheated on her mom and her mom hadnât known, hadnât suspected at all. But little Jillian had knownâher dad had taken her to the neighborâs house to âplay with the cat.â Sheâd chased that stupid tabby all the way into the bedroom and gotten an eyeful.
Her dad hadnât explicitly asked her to keep quiet, but he had to have known she would never speak of it to her mom, too afraid her parents would split.
The guilt of not telling her mother had eaten at her.
A few months later, the knowledge had become too much for her to bear and sheâd confided in her older brother and sister. They had begged her not to tell Mom, not wanting to cause their parentsâ divorce, either. So sheâd kept quiet. Again. Pretending her dad really was going to the grocery store when he sneaked next door.
Sheâd been the only seven-year-old with an ulcer.
About six months after that, her mom flew off to visit her sister. But then Evelyn decided, for whatever reason, to come home early. Thatâs when she found Jillianâs dad in bed with the neighbor. Her mom had been shocked and devastated, and the truth had finally spilled from Jillian.
The next morning, her mom tried to kill herself.
A familiar rage kindled inside of Jillian, images of her bleeding and unconscious mother flashing through her mind. Sheâd been the one to find her. Not her brother, Brent. Not her sister, Brittany. Not her dad. Sheâd been the one to cry over her momâs bloodyâJillian quickly shoved those memories away before she punched a wall. She didnât like thinking about those worry-filled weeks, her mom teetering between life and death.
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