Layla’s POV“Sorry,” I said.I was not sorry.I was trying very hard to stop laughing at the man sitting across from me — which was proving more difficult than it should have been, given that the situation was objectively not funny and I was objectively supposed to be taking it seriously.But the expression on Ian Lawson’s face when I laughed was something I had not been prepared for. The complete, unguarded bafflement of a man who had said something he intended to wound and had received laughter in return — it was, in the most inconvenient possible way, extremely funny.I pressed my fingers to my lips and breathed through it.He was still staring at me.I looked back at him across the table and thought, not for the first time since my grandfather had dropped his bomb, about the night in Manhattan. About what Ian Lawson had said. About the specific words he had chosen in the heat of that sidewalk confrontation — the ones about my mother.I had insulted his mother too, in return. I was
Dernière mise à jour : 2026-04-11 Read More