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“I got you,” he murmured into my hair. “You hear me? Whatever you need, I got you.”

I closed my eyes and held on tighter.

He pressed a kiss to the top of my head and neither of us said anything for a long time.

26

FARAH

The brightness of LA almost gave me some hope—almost. It was hard not to feel good underneath the West Coast sun and palm trees. Seeing the abundance of attractive people was a relief from all the ugliness I faced back home.

I stepped out of LAX and the heat hit me like a slap. Virginia had been cold when I left—gray skies, bare trees, the kind of weather that matched the deadness inside me. But California? California was mocking me with its palm trees and blue skies and bullshit optimism.

A part of me hated it. A part of me wanted to relish in it. It almost made me want to give up my thoughts of revenge, and just go to the beach and enjoy a new life out here. But how? I was dead ass broke.

The car Vivica arranged was waiting at the curb. It was a black Escalade, tinted windows, a driver who didn’t ask questions. I slid into the backseat and pulled out my phone.

Vivica:You land?

Me:Just got in the car.

Vivica:Good. The rental is stocked. Everything you need. Address is in your email.

Me:And hers?

Vivica:Also in the email. Along with her court schedule and the monitoring company’s check-in times.

Me:Perfect.

Vivica:Don’t do anything stupid, Farah. We need to be smart about this. The goal is to get her bail revoked, not to catch a case yourself.

Me:I know what I’m doing.

Vivica:Do you? Because you just buried your father. Grief makes people sloppy.

I stared at the screen, my jaw tight. She didn’t get to talk about my father. She didn’t get to say his name. Vivica Banks was a means to an end—nothing more. Once Zainab was rotting in a cell and Prime was destroyed, I’d be done with her.

Me:I said I know what I’m doing.

Vivica:Fine. Keep me updated.

I tucked my phone away and stared out the window as the city rolled by.

Daddy was gone.

I still couldn’t wrap my head around it. He was a man who built an empire from nothing, who commanded respect from killers and politicians alike, who taught me everything I knew about power and survival. And now he was dead. Losing his son broke something inside him that couldn’t be fixed. He had been dying for months, but his heart couldn’t take that news.

Now, I was all alone and I had absolutely nothing.

Nothing but rage.

The compound in Virginia was being seized. There’s a RICO investigation. Federal agents crawling all over Daddy’s legacy like roaches, picking apart everything he built. The lawyers said I might be able to keep my condo and whatever is in my accounts. But the businesses, his accounts, the connections? Gone. All of it.

Prentice Banks and his family took everything from me.

My ear. My family. My future.

And for what? For some bitch who wasn’t even worth the air she breathed?