Page 48 of Pincher


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She squeezed my hand, a weird look of hope pooling into her eyes at the same time as her tears.

“Well, the universe placed you in the Sons’ lap for a reason, Dillon. Now you just have to figure out what that reason is.”

I toyed with my phone, dialing my sister’s number before Sienna could say anything else. After the third ring she picked up, her voice hushed and whispering.

“Dillon? I told you not to call me, that it was too dangerous.”

“I need your help, Joey.”

“Help? Help with what?”

“To right a wrong I committed. Can you meet me tomorrow behind the railroad tracks?”

There was a long, hesitant pause before she spoke again. “I can try.”

“Please, Joey. This is important. This might be the only way we can free you from the Artillery.”

I heard a quiet sigh come through the receiver. “Okay, what time?”

“You tell me.”

“It’s going to have to be early, like before any of the guys get up. So, how about 4:30 in the morning?”

“Okay, that works. I’ll see you there.”

I waited for my sister to say something else, but I was met instead with the click of the phone as she hung it up.

Sienna looked up at me with fear-filled eyes. “Do you think she will show up?”

I shrugged. “I don’t know. The sister I knew, isn’t the same girl who answered the phone. I hope she will, but I also might be walking straight into a trap.”

Sienna’s eyes rounded in shock. “Then you shouldn’t go.”

I gave her a weary smile before brushing a single strand of hair behind her ear so I could kiss her forehead. “I have to, Sienna. It’s the only way to make things right again.”

Chapter Twenty-One

There was a frigid chill in the air, one that froze my breath in midair with every cold exhale I took. Sienna had pleaded for me not to go alone, but I didn’t have a choice. I needed to speak with Joey first before involving Zodiac and the Celestial Sons.

“Joey?” I called out after I heard faint footsteps walking toward me down the desolate tracks.

“Yeah, it’s me,” she replied, stopping a few feet away from me.

Her standoffish behavior was more than a little off-putting, so I stayed back, watching her as she nervously kept glancing over her shoulder.

“Did you bring someone with you?”

She shook her head. “No, I’m just worried I was followed.”

“Why?”

“Because the Artillery doesn’t like it when we leave the compound. If they found out I was here…”

“They’d kill you.”

“Yes,” she replied, breathing out a sigh. Her breath puffed out in a cloud of white smoke, one that hung heavy between us.

“Why am I here, Dillon? You said you needed my help, and I’m here, but I can’t stay long.”