Reign of Brayshaw (Brayshaw High 3)
Her glare intensifies, but I let her get her look, search for whatever it is she feels the need to find.
She lets go, stepping past me, so I wrap her up by the waist and bury my face in her neck.
“Me and you, baby,” I remind her, nipping at the soft skin there.
She drops her head back a split second before pulling away.
We meet my brothers at the landing, our dad a few feet away, balanced on the edge of the couch.
He takes in Royce and Captain’s wide feet and squared shoulders and the slight edge forward I have over Raven, who stands beside me, chin held high.
Discontent clouds his eyes but it’s gone with a single blink, his focus on Raven in the next second.
“I’ve had Ravina’s old account unlocked and switched over to you. Everything from your grandfather’s personal account has been transferred into it, along with fifty-one percent of all Bray earnings from the day I discovered you existed to last month. It’s calculated and dispersed monthly, so you’ll see a fresh deposit by the fifth of every month.” He holds out an envelope and her muscles lock at the sight – same shape, size, and color of the one Donley gave her. “Few papers need signed by you. Your card and some on-hand cash are in here.”
She shakes her head. “I don’t want your money.”
“This is your money. I have my own.” He lowers his hand, gauging her.
“I don’t want it,” she refuses.
He pushes to his feet and all three of us naturally inch closer to her. He doesn’t miss the move, and anger tightens his eyes.
He calms himself. “It belongs to you. You will take it.”
“Yeah, and how do you plan to make me?” She bounds forward, and I quickly slide between her and my dad, blocking him from her view.
She looks up at me, so fucking feisty. Testiness burns in her eyes but the more she stares at mine, the more it eases, and a small smirk finds her lips. She gives a bratty blink, so I step back.
My dad’s questioning gaze moves from me to her.
“Look,” she starts, calmer this time.
He stands a little taller, thinking he’s got her, but he doesn’t know Raven.
“I’m not intentionally pushing you at every fucking corner, but you keep throwing stupid shit my way. I need you to chill out a little, especially with this stuff. It’s ridiculous. I won’t take the money from a man I never knew and who never even knew I existed. It’s not right. You knew him. He trusted you enough to hand this all over in the first place, so it’s yours.”
His brows draw in, but not in anger. “That’s not how this works, Raven. It belongs to you.”
She shrugs, her brows lifting. “Yeah well, I’ll sign it over or whatever if you’re worried about logistics.”
He stares at her, a little in awe, a little in shock, while Cap and Royce wear soft smiles, and me, the organ in my fucking chest beats like crazy.
She’s fierce despite her weak mother.
Loyal despite her inability to trust.
Honest even when it hurts her.
She’s Brayshaw even though she had no idea what it meant to be one.
With zero guidance or push.
She proves it more and more every day.
Our dad slowly steps closer. “I will not take something I am not owed.”
Raven lifts her chin, her long, dark hair brushing against my wrists. “Which is why you paid for me, yeah?”
“I agreed to pay for you because I thought, in giving her money, it would provide a more stable life for you when I knew it wasn’t time to bring you home,” he snaps. “I didn’t know she would blow it all on drugs and more. I have no idea how she could have possibly gone through so much. She not only got money from me, but the state, and, of course, her clients. Yet still, she couldn’t keep your house clean, warm, or full of food.”
Raven shrugs, but it holds less pop this time. “Tales of an addict, Rolland.”
“Right.” He nods, his frown matching hers, a hidden something passing between them. “The money is yours, Raven. I know you’re running out if you’re not out already and the warehouses are not an option for you anymore. There must be things you need or will soon, hygiene products and such. Perhaps you’d like a phone or even a car.” He holds out the envelope again, and when she takes another step away, he announces something that has her freezing in her spot. “There’s an identification card in there, social as well. Your mother informed me when you started tearing your trailer apart searching for them. They’ve been in my possession since I found you.”
I tense beside her and her eyes fly to mine.
ID card. In her mind, that was all she needed to run, she said herself, without one she couldn’t get a real job or function like she wanted. This was all that was holding her back from the normal life she craved, the life she wanted before us.