Angel of Redemption (37 page)

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Authors: J. A. Little

BOOK: Angel of Redemption
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Oh, that

s a doozy. I think I

d have caved, too, if I were you.


I know, right? I mean, what

s a little extra promotion, menu
finalization, and follow-up phone calls compared to an entire week with nothing
to do but my husband. I made a good deal, didn

t I?


I think you made a very good deal,

I assure.

Anything I can help with?


You want to come over and help me with the programs this
weekend? I

ll order in some food, and we can have
wine.


Uh, Sara and I were going to hang out
and watch movies,

I say hesitantly.


Bring her,

Emily says happily.

We
can do a girls night. It

ll be fun. Aiden and Dean are having dinner at their
parents

and taking the kids, so it

ll just be us. You guys can stay the night if you want to.
We

ve
got plenty of room.


All right,

I agree.

Let me talk to Sara and I

ll text you.


Great! So, here

s the other thing, which is more important but not nearly
as fun. I just got a call from Matty

s school counselor. She wants to have a meeting at the
school next Tuesday about the possibility of setting up an IEP for Matty.


Really?

My heart sinks.


Yeah. His grades are tanking, which I don

t quite understand. I know he

s doing his homework. Aiden, Dean, and
I have all checked it. I don

t know what

s happening between the time we go over it and the time he

s supposed to turn it in, but it

s not always making it into his
teachers

hands. On top of that, he was caught cheating on his world-history test this
morning.


You

ve got to be kidding me.


Nope. I called Dean, but got his voicemail. He had to take
Edgar to a couple of appointments, so he probably has his phone turned off.
Aiden said he would go if Dean wasn

t able to.


How

s Matty been doing at home?

I ask curiously.


He

s okay. He still doesn

t talk much, but I get the impression he never really did, right?


No. He

s not a talker.


He sits with Dean a lot. Just sits. Usually when Dean

s reading or working in the den, Matty
will sit with him.


How about Logan?


He

s good. We went to the bank and set him up with a training
account. He can write checks, and he

s got a debit card. He got his first paycheck, so he

s excited. Aiden

s going to take him down to pick out a
cellphone.


Oh God. I

m not sure that

s a good idea,

I groan.


Kayla, really? He has to learn responsibility. He wants to
buy a car. If he can

t handle a cellphone, how

s he going to handle a car?


He

s not ready for a car, either,

I panic.


Of course he

s not. He

s got two hundred dollars. It

ll be awhile.

I

m about to start hyperventilating. I keep picturing Logan
as the smart-ass eleven-year-old whose first words to me were,

Go fuck yourself!

That was right before he broke down
crying because he thought we were going to separate him from his brother. I
also picture the thirteen-year-old who drove his foster parents

riding lawn mower through their fence
and into a ditch because he was distracted by the teenage girl next door.
Picturing him behind the wheel of a car all by himself is highly disconcerting.


Be proud of him, Kayla. I don

t know what switch flipped, but he

s doing a good job.


I am proud. I

m just scared.


Of what?


I

m afraid that when he figures out what succeeding means, he

ll let himself fail.


Succeeding doesn

t mean he has to leave Matty behind,

Emily says gently, reading my mind.


We need to make sure
he
knows that.


Have you seen them this week? Logan picked up a Saturday
shift to work with the owner, Santiago, so he

ll be home tonight.


No. I need to. I

ll stop by on my way home and talk to them.


Oh good. You can meet Simon,

Emily chirps.


The new guy?


Yep.


How

s that going?


Uh, well it depends on who you ask. He

s okay around me and Aiden, but I
think he

s trying to prove himself to Dean.

Emily laughs abruptly.

I think he feels like he needs to be
more badass. Some of the shit he says is absolutely ridiculous. I don

t think Dean likes him much.


Surprise, surprise. He didn

t want to hire anyone to begin with.


Yeah, but we really needed to. Dean needs to distance
himself a little. Aiden literally has to push him out the door. Pretty soon, he

s going to stop leaving entirely.

She pauses.

So, what do you want me to tell the
school about Matty?

Emily switches gears again.


Tell them to send me an email with the details, and I

ll be there.


Sounds good. I

ll see you later.

I hang up the phone and take a deep breath.


What

s wrong, honey?

Dana asks when she walks in the room to find me almost
asleep at my desk.

I
look up at her through tired eyes.

I need a vacation.


Don

t we all?

she laughs.

Oh, I got the information you requested.

I perk up immediately.

Frances says Jaxon was placed in the
Catholic Charities RTC in St. Cloud.


Is he in the lockdown unit?

I ask.

Dana
shakes her head.

No.
He

s
been on watch since the weekend, but so far, so good. That

s all she told me.

I
nod.

Thanks,
Dana. I appreciate it. How are your cases going?

Dana
rolls her eyes.

I

m about to kill Lizzie Turkins.


How come?


She

s got a new boyfriend. She says he

s not living with her, but I

m pretty sure he is.


Did you meet him?


Yeah.

Dana wrinkles her nose and scowls.

He promptly informed me that the state
has no reason to keep Garrett away from his mother anymore and that we need to
return him ASAP.


Okay,

I laugh.

And what did you tell him?


I told him I

d get right on that.

Dana
and I chat for another half hour before I have to head to my biweekly case
update meeting with Kate and then out for a visit before seeing the boys.

 

* * *

 


Cheating, Matty? Really?

I

ve been at Wyatt House for about
twenty minutes. I spent several minutes with Emily before she left, then
grabbed Matty and sat him down in the den. Logan followed.


I wasn

t cheating.

From the corner of my eye, I see Dean appear in the
doorway, leaning against the frame.


Oh yeah? What do you call writing answers on your wrist,
then?


I wasn

t looking at it!


It was just there in case you needed it?


Yeah.


That

s cheating.


Whatever.

I
hear Logan snicker and glare at him.


If you find this funny, you can leave,

I warn. Logan holds up his hands and pretends to zip his
mouth. I huff in frustration and return my attention to Matty.

Are you trying to flunk out of school?

He shrugs. I

m about to throttle him when Dean walks over and sits down
next to me.


Matthew, this is serious,

he says firmly.


It was a stupid test.

Dean
frowns.

It was your midterm. And you got a
zero on it. The best you can get in the class right now is a
C
. You

re lucky they didn

t automatically fail you for the
entire class.



Cause the world would end if I failed
U.S. History,

Matty says sarcastically.


What

s the matter with you?

I beg.


Nothing,

he insists.

I just don

t get what the big deal is. It

s not like I

m out drinking and messin

with girls I shouldn

t be.

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