3 Mia

It was a mistake to let Andy leave Mystic Spring for Los Angeles, and I'd known it the moment he told me he'd be going.

"Better job prospects there," he'd said. "Friends of mine promised to find me a good one."

A good one to Andy meant a job that would offer very good pay and didn't require any university qualifications since he didn't have any. I wasn't one to argue though since I didn't have any either, and working as a kitchen hand in a restaurant at minimum wage wasn't something both of us planned for the rest of our lives. Andy wanted to study business and, one day, own his own big corporation with hundreds of employees and a very cool office with an outstanding view, high in the building. Me, I wanted to teach.

"You won't have to work those shitty, long hours anymore, Mia. We won't have to worry about money. You can quit that pathetic job and say good-bye to that asshole boss of yours."

"Pathetic job," I murmured under my breath as I stared out the small window to my right. "Asshole boss." I hugged myself tight as I gazed at the view.

It was beautiful, with bright gold and blues, and just below the plane, there were thick white clouds all along the endless horizon. I'd always wanted to see this exquisite scenery for real since I'd spotted it in a beauty magazine I bought from a secondhand bookstore. I even had the picture glued in my notebook of places I wanted to go and things I wanted to do and accomplish before I die. I'd also wanted to be in a plane too.

At the moment, however, both were the furthest from my mind. In a few hours, the plane would land and I'd be in Los Angeles, California—a place I'd never been to before and hadn't even wanted to visit. Paris, Tokyo, and Rome were the cities I desperately wanted to see. Not Los Angeles. Never Los Angeles. And the fact I didn't know where I was going or what I'd be doing there really worried me. No, that wasn't true. What really worried me was I wouldn't know whom I'd be facing and how the hell I'd be getting Andy out of his mess.

During the next few painstakingly slow hours, I remained paralyzed, seized by fear of the unknown. Fear of what would happen to Andy if I couldn't help him.

"Andy," I murmured. "Why?"

He'd been such a good little brother. I understood it had been hard for him since the death of our parents, as it had for me. Understood shit happened in everyone's life, though it seemed to happen a lot more for us. But we had to carry on living, didn't we? And Andy? He was just that gullible, more than the most gullible person on the planet. I'd known that, yet I'd let him go. Allowed the wolves to have a taste of him, to play and dance with him. And now he was stuck, and I didn't know how I could save him.

At the moment, I knew I was charging forward blindly. The wolves, those billionaire businessmen who didn't hesitate to play dirty, were whom I would be dealing with.

"Maxwell," I said the name softly under my breath, a shiver passing down my spine. Even the name itself radiated power, and it scared the hell out of me.

All I'd gotten was a phone call from Andy and then an e-mail—a threatening e-mail—from a man simply called J. Maxwell. That e-mail was short and to the point. Even now I felt a little dizzy thinking about it.

Ms. Donovan,

I would like to inform you that your brother, Andy Donovan, has done a very unwise thing. He and his friends have swindled and lost two million dollars of mine in a gamble. He is currently under our protection. Negotiation between us is prudent, and I urgently advise you to make an appointment to meet me.

J. Maxwell

The bastard had made it sound like he was the police with the words protection and negotiate. But then again, Andy and his so-called friends had swindled millions from the billionaire, and now it was my job to replace them. Once again the number of zeros following that two made my head spin. How the heck was I supposed to supply two million dollars?

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