The Vampire Diaries: Trust In Betrayal (Kindle Worlds) (In Time We Trust Trilogy Book 3) (55 page)

 

So I clear my throat uncomfortably and say, “When I was younger, my family used to go to church.”

 

Ric looks up at me, the surprise in his eyes almost hiding the pain that still lurks in the set of his shoulders.

 

“When I was six or so, I remember getting frustrated with the whole praying thing. I asked the pastor what I was screwing up, because I prayed every night like I was supposed to, but I never heard anything back. I pretty much figured God was giving me the silent treatment, just like Father did when he was pissed off.”

 

“Your dad was a moody prick,” Ric pronounces, just like he always does when Father comes up in conversation.

 

The corner of my mouth tips up. “No shit. Runs in the family.”

 

Ric almost smiles. “So what did the pastor say?”

 

I scratch my ear and look away. “He said if I thought God hadn’t answered, I hadn’t listened long enough.” I shrug twitchily. “At the time, I figured he was just trying to get rid of me, keep me busy so I wouldn’t bug him with more questions.”

 

Ric’s quiet for a minute. “And now?” he asks, his voice rough.

 

I listen to the sound of Elena opening and closing kitchen drawers in the room above. It sounds like she’s humming something, but I can’t make out the notes from here. “These days,” I tell my friend, “I’m not so sure anymore.”

Epilogue

 

Three Years Later

 

JEREMY

 

I’m toying with my glass as I read, pushing it idly back and forth until it catches in one of the deeply carved
letters in the wooden table. I glance over with a slight smile.

 

Darla ’89. She either had a sharp knife or a little too much enthusiasm. I’ve knocked over two Cokes and a Seven and Seven on her account since the semester started.

 

This pub is called Jameson’s, which Cali took as a sign that she needed to apply here for a job when we first moved to Richmond. The way things have worked out, I’m inclined to agree it was fate. The bar has been here for the last forty years and if I had my way, Cali and I would be here for the next forty and keep Darla ’89 and friends for the whole run of it.

 

I nudge my drink to a smoother section of table and kick my feet up onto the bench across from me. My well-doodled notebook rustles as I add a note before flipping to the next chapter in my book, which is a biography of Peter the Great. He was a major asshole, and I’m still not sure if he was also a vampire, but I’m on the case. This book is for class but it’s also a hobby of mine, ferreting out historical figures who were vamps. Sometimes, Stefan and Damon can verify, sometimes not. If Katherine was still around, I bet she could have told me a lot more.

 

Despite Damon’s best efforts, I know she’s not dead. I’d like to find her on the internet, just to see how she’s doing with her new, human life. Unfortunately, Damon refuses to give me the name on the fake ID he planted when he dropped her off with a concussion and no memories at a hospital in California.

 

I just hope her second chance is working out for her and she’s not so busy protecting herself this time around that she forgets to let a few people close. My pencil sags, and as if she knows I need cheering up, I hear Cali’s smoky, relaxed voice from behind the bar.

 

“Do we want drinks or music, people?”

 

A cheer goes up and I chuckle, tipping my head back against my booth to watch as she settles herself on a stool behind the bar and pulls her guitar up into her lap. It is the one Damon and I bought her when we were all on the run. Her “bar guitar,” she calls it now. She has another for shows, for the acoustic songs when her band coaxes her out from behind the drums, and an electric for special occasions, but she still has a soft spot for this one.

 

“Music it is, so y’all can go thirsty,” she says, pointing threateningly out at the crowd.

 

There are no detractors.

 

When she begins to sing, I close my eyes and let the sound stroke down my spine, easing the tension of the week out of my shoulders.

 

Jameson’s is a chill kind of pub, with thickly padded booths and hammocks hung around the edges of the room, couches and fat wingbacks scattered through the center; pool tables in the back.

 

When Cali started as bartender, she used to play the guitar when it got slow. But the more she played, the more business picked up until receipts were running twice as much as before she started and she had to put the patrons on a schedule. Song, then drinks, then song, then drinks for a while longer before she would play again. Pat, the owner, offered to hire more help so she could just be the entertainment, but Cali actually turned him down. She has plenty of time to play these days, and she’s a natural born bartender.

 

She busts everybody’s balls and then sings to them so sweetly that all the men are in love with her and all the women want to be her. Within months of hiring her, Jameson’s went from being a low-key fixture in the Irish pub circuit to being a quirky must-see for tourists and music buffs alike.

 

Of course, Aperture’s growing fame doesn’t hurt any. They are turning down two or three gigs for every one they accept, they just headlined a huge regional music festival and they are in talks with two different record companies right now. They’ll be signed to the big leagues before the end of the year and their second, self-released album already hit the iTunes top 100. Three magazines and about twelve different music blogs have done articles on them as an up-and-coming indie band and every single one boosts sales even more.

 

A frown tugs at my lips as I think about the most recent one. The last magazine reporter came during the music festival, which also happened to be during the week of The Incident. Which means between the pictures for the article and all the exposure for the festival, Cali got way more attention than she’d bargained for and as her boyfriend, I got nearly as much.

 

After the pictures came out, they had to give me two paragraphs in the article just to dispel the rumors of abuse.

 

My head comes up as a sound catches my ear. It is the first chord of my sound, Cali’s musical interpretation of my personality. She dropped it right into the song like a whistle and when I quirk an eyebrow at her, she smiles and tips her head toward table seven in a gentle request without missing a syllable.

 

I drop my pen and shove a hand through my hair as I get to my feet. It’s too long, way overdue for Cali to cut it again, but she takes symmetry a little less seriously than I wished she would, and so I’m still a little traumatized from the last time. Caroline used to do a better job, but she and Stefan are in Milan for a semester abroad that’s already stretched to eight months. Elena doesn’t think they’re coming back for a couple years, but Damon said he gives them until Thanksgiving.

 

Caroline loves Italy, so I don’t know why they’d come back so soon, but whenever Damon puts his money on something, that’s where my bet goes. There’s no point in doing anything else.

 

At table seven, I stop and pick up new drink orders from the out of towners who are indeed looking annoyed because the only waitress in the place is busy on the guitar instead of the taps. I’m not technically employed at Jameson’s, but now that I’m of age, Pat doesn’t mind if I help out, Cali and I share her tips, and I kind of like it. It’s not like a job, it’s more just like…my home.

 

The pass-through creaks as I flip it up and I swing through and take down a pair of pint glasses. I jerk my chin in greeting at Dave, who tilts his bottle in my direction without looking away from my girlfriend.

 

I pull both taps and leave them to fill while I pop the top on a Corona and garnish it with a lemon, not a lime. The chilled bottle slides smoothly down the bar to Dave, and even though he is still a song and a half from needing a refill, he catches it and gives me one of his gruff smiles that looks more like a glare.

 

“Heading out to work tonight, are you?” he asks.

 

Cali cuts the song off one verse early with a discordant twang and gives me a pointed look that could etch stainless steel. I turn off both taps and use one of the fresh bar rags to wipe the bottoms of the glasses dry before I turn to bring them to table seven. Cali kicks one foot out in front of her, propping it on the bar and blocking my way.

 

“Breaking my heart tonight is what he’s doing,” she drawls, her voice an octave lower than usual and husky, still riding the sexy little whisper of the song she was just drumming up tips with. Another one like that and we’ll pay the electric off a week early this month.

 

“It’s a modeling job, Cali, not an escort service,” I remind her, risking a glance down at her shoes to check her mood. High heels, red as sin, peeking out from under dark skinny jeans.

 

I relax. I’m safe enough for now. With those heels, she’ll flirt and tease and pout and probably fuck me right on the bar after closing. If they were the ballet flats, I’d be in trouble. For so many reasons.

 

She drops her foot, letting the sharp heel skim the seam of my jeans on the way down as she gives me a dark look from underneath her eyelashes.

 

“If he’s breaking your heart, honey, I’d be happy to mend it,” Tom chimes in from the other end of the bar. I sidle around the pass-through, and roll my eyes.

 

Behind me, there’s a thump of glass against old wood as Cali makes her high-speed, low-stress round down the bar, refilling for everyone with half the time and twice the panache it might have taken someone else. She only has to stop to take orders twice because if you sit at the bar at Jameson’s, it means you’re a regular and Cali has a memory like a spreadsheet when it comes to drinks.

 

“Tom, you’re lucky I haven’t yanked your heart out of your chest yet,” I call across the room, giving a quick, friendly smile to table seven to take the edge off my threat and save Cali’s tip.

 

Tom is the owner’s cousin or I’d have kicked his ass all the way to Louisiana by now for his relentless flirting with Cali, and the threat is only half in jest. Damon taught me how to rip a heart out of a chest last September, on a bet. Turns out you don’t
quite
have to have vampire strength to do it.

 

Though an iron stomach doesn’t hurt.

 

Cali is at the cash register when I come back; bills and cards filed neatly between each of her fingers as she separates out tabs, opening some and closing others.

 

“What time are you leaving?” she asks me.

 

I fold my arms and give her a level look. “Fifteen minutes.”

 

She groans, though her fingers don’t pause on the keyboard. “A double shift? There better be roses and at least two orgasms in it for me, Gilbert, or you’re sleeping downstairs in the hammock again.”

 

I roll my eyes and sling an arm around her waist, dragging her away from the cash register and back into my chest.

 

She squeaks in protest, squirming against my hold, but I press a kiss into her hair anyway, inhaling the scent of her shampoo before I let her go. I used to be more circumspect when she was at work, but our romance is kind of part of the atmosphere of Jameson’s now. Plus, Cali gets better tips from the ladies on nights when I let myself get away with a little PDA behind the bar.

 

God only knows why. I don’t ask, I just call it a win/win.

 

I shut off the taps over three beers and deliver them while Cali’s busy at the cash register, then knock my knuckle on the bar. Without looking up, she shakes her head no, that she doesn’t need anything from the apartment, and I exit the pass-through on the other end, flipping it back down as I go.

 

Dave ticks an eyebrow up at me and I pause, waiting to see what he has to say. He props his beefy forearms on the bar, old Marine tattoos snaking across his hairy wrists as he digs a five out of his wallet to pay for the beer I passed him earlier.

 

“Don’t have to bribe me,” he says stiffly, looking straight at the wall.

 

I smile. “Not a bribe. Just one on the house because I can.”

 

“We’d look after her anyway,” he mutters, glaring down at his fresh beer. “It was bowling night, is all.”

 

“I know,” I tell him, my smile fading but my chest warming for the old guy. “No worries.”

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