Kenton

Read Kenton Online

Authors: Kathi Barton

Tags: #paranormal romance

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the

author’s imagination or are used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any

resemblance to actual events, locations, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is

entirely coincidental.

World Castle Publishing, LLC

Pensacola, Florida

Copyright © Kathi S. Barton 2016

Paperback ISBN: 9781629894386

eBook ISBN: 9781629894393

First Edition World Castle Publishing, LLC, March 7, 2016

http://www.worldcastlepublishing.com

Licensing Notes

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner

whatsoever without written permission, except in the case of brief quotations embodied

in articles and reviews.

Cover: Karen Fuller

Editor: Eric Johnston

Editor: Maxine Bringenberg

Table of Contents

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

About the Author

Chapter 1

“I need you to tell me what this is worth.” Emma looked up at the man that held

out a little box to her. If it was in her power, Emma would gladly have punched him in

the nose. But she also knew that he’d hit her back, and it would be ten times more

painful than anything she could do to him. “Now, Emma. And he said for you not to

dally. He needs it now.”

“So, you do it. I’m in the middle of something else you told me to do.” She knew as

well as he did that Bart could tell the worth of an item almost as well as she could. Not

quite as good as she could; practice had made her better and faster at it. But they’d both

been trained to know how to do it. “I’m in the middle of—”

She should have known better. Whenever she pointed something obvious out to her

brother, he would resort to violence if he didn’t care for her answer. Which was usually

all the time. Emma wondered if she’d ever learn and doubted it. Now she found herself

on the floor with her mouth bloodied and her head hurting. Not the first time for that

either.

He put the box on the desk, then pulled out his gun and laid it on her desk with it

as if that was all he needed to make her comply. The punch to her face had done that

pretty good, she thought. Emma wished she could pick the gun up and blow his

fucking head off. Instead, she lifted her hurting body up and got back to her desk.

Emma didn’t even bother wiping the blood off. He’d just hit her again to show he

could.

Picking up the small box, she opened it. Inside was a small blue bag, tied at the top

with an equally blue string. There were no markings on the bag or the box, but she

knew quality when she felt it. And this bag wasn’t it. She started to ask Bart what kind

of joke this was when she realized that he’d not answer her. He’d more than likely do

what she’d wanted to do to him and shoot her. She’d be dead and he’d be standing over

her demanding that she get up and do what he’d told her to do. There was no love lost

between the two of them, and hadn’t been for a very long time.

Dumping the contents out into her hand, she was first surprised at the weight of the

ring, then at how big it was. But the ring itself was what had her holding her breath. It

was simply the most beautiful thing she’d ever seen. The work on it—and there was a

great deal of it—had been done with a steady hand and an even better eye, for the art

looked to her like the person who had made this loved the person who was to receive it.

For a second she wondered if she would ever have someone love her that much. She

looked up at Bart when he snorted at her. He looked pissed.

“It’s just a band. Nothing but a damned gold band that is worth less than my

fucking shoes. I wonder if it’s even gold plated. Fuckers.” She looked at the ring, then

back at him as he continued. “Fucking bastard said it was worth millions. It’s not even

worth the box it came in. Why the hell do I even bother with robbing people if they’re

going to lie to me about what I’m taking? Huh? And then to have fought so hard to

keep it? As if it was worth his own life? Dumbass probably believed that it was worth

the money I was told it was.”

“Are you kidding me? This isn’t just a band, dumbass. This is a work of art.” She

started to show him, but Bart picked up his gun and slid it back into his holster before

slamming his hands down on the table, his face level with her. She leapt back from him.

Which, she supposed, was what he had wanted her to do anyway. Then he laughed at

her. “Don’t hurt me, Bart. Please? I’ll tell Daddy.”

“Like he gives a shit about you. I mean, look where he has you working. In the

basement of a piece of shit building that has nothing to go for it but a toilet that is ten

feet away.” He snorted again. “Go to him, Emma, see if I’m not right. And when he tells

you to go away, I’m going to come back down here and blow your fucking brains out

for bothering him. We have more important things to do than to listen to you whine

about how badly you’re being treated.”

After he left her, she put the ring back in the little bag and started working on the

chains that had been tangled up when Bart had simply tossed them into a bank bag.

He’d told her when she asked him that it wasn’t his job to make sure that things were

neat and tidy, that she would be out of a fucking job if he did. She estimated that she

had about ten hours in untangling the chains so far and she wasn’t any closer to getting

them straight than she had been before. Emma was pretty sure that he’d done it on

purpose. It was something he loved doing, making her job more difficult.

Her father and brother had dumped her down here six years ago, pulling her from

college and telling her that she had to earn her keep. Of course Emma hadn’t seen her

father in all this time. Words, harsh and mean, had come from him via her brother. She

was going to have to find another job soon. This one just wasn’t making it for her any

longer. Of course, she blamed that on Bart too. He took money from her cash envelope

every week, and he was taking more and more all the time. He called it a living tax. If

he didn’t get it, she didn’t live. And she believed him too.

The ring called to her. She knew that was silly. Rings or other things didn’t talk, but

she could almost hear it telling her that it didn’t belong to her and that she needed to

return it to the owner. She would love to do that, but she wasn’t going to. Not that she’d

have the chance to get out of this place with the thing. Being patted down and wanded

every time she left would have made it impossible, but she knew that if found out,

she’d be dead. Emma looked over at the desk next to hers.

Sebastian Logan had been her friend and co-worker, and the nicest man she’d ever

known. Polite, hardworking, and a man who had loved his family more than he did his

own life. And it was what had gotten him killed.

A diamond ring had been brought in a month ago. Bart, of course, had deemed it

unworthy and had told her and Sebastian they could have it. She’d thought it was

pretty but thought that Sebastian could sell it for a few dollars, and knew that it would

help out in their situation. His only child was sick and that money would have gone a

long way in helping him. So he’d taken the ring home to sell.

He’d come in the next day, saying that he’d gotten enough to buy a prescription

that was much needed, and they had both sat down to work. An hour later, Bart and his

friend, Mark Whitaker, had come in to question Sebastian about it. Apparently a fence

that they knew had mentioned that Sebastian had brought it in.

“You said I could have it. You told us it was worthless and that we could have it.

Tell him, Emma. Tell him he said that.” Bart, of course, denied that, and even told

Emma that their father wanted to make an example of Sebastian. Bart had pulled his

gun free and had killed her friend right there in front of her, despite her begging him to

let it go.

Blood had sprayed over her face and clothing. Bart had set Mark in front of her for

the rest of the day while Sebastian was lying in his own blood, and told her that if she

wiped her face he would put the blood back. But this time it would be her own.

All Emma wanted to do was get out of there and be her own person. Live her life as

she wanted on her own terms. As soon as she could save enough money to get away,

anyway. Looking at the ring again, she wondered what would happen if she were to get

it to its owner. What sort of reward would there be? Because at the rate she was saving

money, she’d be too old to run when she did manage to get enough to go on.

At ten after twelve, she pulled out her lunch. It was only a jelly sandwich; the

peanut butter had run out a few days ago. Emma wanted to cry about what her life had

become, and knew that it was as set in stone as the sword was that she’d read about so

long ago.

“Put that shit away. I want you to look this over.” She only glanced at the

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