He really had, but he was still my dad, so I wrapped an arm around his shoulders and tried to comfort him. “It’ll be okay.” Please don’t let that be a lie.
“Why are you here?” Dad asked, his voice hitching as he stared at me with a wild look.
I grimaced. “It’s a long story, but, I think the better question is, why are you helping these people?”
Dad’s head lowered once more. “I’m so ashamed of myself. You have to believe that I never wanted any of this.”
“And yet, you’re here,” I replied, not ready to let him off the hook. I looked at the computers. “You’re part of this.”
“Not by choice,” he quickly replied. “I tried to get away from them, truly I did. I even met a congressman who was going to help me. But then Jasper and Kent found out. They were already on edge after Gary’s death and Beckett’s disappearance, but when they heard I was planning to betray them, they threatened you and your mother after they killed the congressman and his entire family.”
Not surprising.
I pushed myself up, looking around the small space.
Aside from the desk and the rolling chair, there was a beaten-up wooden coffee table and two vinyl armchairs. A skewed framed certificate proclaiming the factory had once passed inspection was covered in a layer of grime and filth.
“We need to get out of here,” I murmured, going to the window that overlooked the auction floor.
The auction seemed close to starting. People had begun taking their seats, filling the space with noise. To the right I could see the small landing area outside of the office where our guard was. He was picking at his nails, oblivious to me peering at him through the one-way glass. When he turned, using the mirror side to inspect his teeth, I turned away with a grimace.
“What time is it?” I asked.
Dad got up slowly, wincing and touching his already purpling cheek. “Almost eleven.”
“Come on, Court,” I whispered, knowing he had to be close by now.
“Court?” Dad blinked at me. “Court Woods?”
I nodded.
“I wasn’t aware you two were friends again.”
I shot him a baleful look. “Well, Dad, you’d have to actually be part of my life to know who my friends are.” I didn’t bother keeping the acidic bite from my words.
“Becca—”
I held up a hand. “Don’t. Are you really trying to stop Jasper and Kent?”
He nodded.
I looked past him to the screens, realizing they were surveillance feeds. “What are you doing up here?”
“Monitoring the local channels to make sure we have a heads up if law enforcement gets wind of this event,” he replied.
“Auction, Dad,” I snapped, pointing a finger at the window. “They’re selling people down there. So, why not just call the cops now?”
He looked uncomfortable. “Because, Becca, I would be held responsible, too.”
I threw my arms in the air. “News flash, Dad, you are responsible, too.”
He looked at the floor. “I’m not a man equipped to handle prison, Rebecca.”
I gaped at him, wondering how he’d ever been my hero. He had the spine of a jellyfish; no wonder the general was so easily able to control him. “Well, make a decision fast, Dad.”
He gave me a quizzical look.
“Court’s on his way here,” I explained. “He’s coming for me, and he’s bringing friends. The kind with badges and guns and the power to lock you away for a lifetime.”