“Stop,” I said.
He automatically halted and turned toward me the way he always did.
Something inside me wondered if maybe things weren’t completely fucked between us yet, even though I wanted to tear my hair out wondering what the fuck was going on.
“What’s your role in all of this? Who do you work for?”
Jett hesitated, and I could see the gears turning in his head. “I can’t tell you, but please believe you weren’t ever a target. I’m here because I wanted to be here. I wanted to be with you.”
I thought back to when I’d first encountered him. At the Candy Bar, when I’d only shown up there to give a dock boss a piece of my mind.
We’d met almost four years ago.Iwas the one who’d invited Jett here. In fact, at every single stage of our acquaintance after the Candy Bar, I’d been the one to pursue him.
The night at the steak house. The hotel bar in Amsterdam. Handing him my card on the airplane.
The indecent offer to come with me to Italy.
He’d initiated exactly none of it.
“Whoisthe target?” I asked in a low voice.
“No one. I told you, I don’t have a target. I’m here for you. I…” He huffed out a laugh. “I genuinely thought you were bringing me to a chess tournament.”
He looked regretful, sad, even a little scared.
“Are you in trouble?” I asked. “Do you need help? I can help you. Just tell me what’s going on.”
Jet shook his head firmly.
I imagined him under the thumb of one of the men who’d owned him before me. Someone who’d used him to gather information about other power players. Was that what this was?
“The explosion in the canal was an accident,” I blurted, breaking the rules of the game. “No one caused it.”
He slumped. “I know. I’m sorry I blamed you.”
“Wait,howdo you know? Who’s your source? I don’t understand any of this.”
Jett’s arms flapped from his sides and back down again. “That makes two of us. You won’t tell me everything, and I can’t tell you anything.”
His phone buzzed in his pocket. He pulled it out and swiped it open. Before he even had time to read it, I was moving, lunging in his direction.
There was one message on his text screen.
You are in danger. Get out of the house now.
He wrestled me for the phone, but it was too late, and my arms were longer. “Who’s this text from, Jethro?” I growled, seeing it was from an unknown number.
“Come with me,” he said in a panicked voice. “We’ll both leave, and I’ll explain what I can. Please.”
I shook my head. “It’s my house. And I haven’t done anything wrong.”
This was a lie. I’d broken the rules of the game, just like al-Qadiri might have.
And every player knew the punishment for breaking the rules. Death.
I handed Jett’s phone back, suddenly tired of all of it. I hadn’t even made it through my first Paxis tournament before epically fucking up my grandfather’s legacy.
Whatever my fate was, I would face it the way I’d faced so many things already this year.