The Circle – Shape of Love Read Online J.A. Huss

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Mafia, Suspense Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 109
Estimated words: 103620 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 518(@200wpm)___ 414(@250wpm)___ 345(@300wpm)
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“Eliza,” I say, slowly, letting her name slip from my lungs on a sigh, “I’m not sure I understand myself.”

I nod at her, she steps back, and I walk over to the driver’s side door of the van.

I open it, step in, sit, pull the door closed, place the key in the ignition and think for a moment about how much easier things would be if the car just exploded right now. If someone had rigged it in some way and I was just blown to smithereens in this moment. How much better off would the world be if that happened?

And then the voice in my head returns.

No. That would be too easy. Better to have it happen the hard way. That’s how it happened for Lars. It’s how it should happen for you.

It is quite frustrating, the voice. Not because it’s wrong, but because I did not invite it and I do not appreciate it intruding and taking the place of my more common thoughts. Everyday thoughts like how does this shirt look on? Or may we fuck now please? Or do you have any last words? These are the thoughts I’m comfortable having. This self-reflection business is… well, it’s just unpleasant.

I truly hope that this isn’t what I’ve heard referred to as a “conscience.” I think that would annoy me to absolutely no fokken end.

I don’t look back over at any of the group—but especially not Christine or Danny—as I turn the key, listen to the engine turn over (no explosion follows), place the van into drive, and pull away.

Alec?

“What?” I actually shout aloud in response to my brain.

Be confident.

“I’m always confident, you fokken doos! Confident about what?”

Confident that no matter what happens next…

“Yes?”

… you will have earned it.

Well, that’s just a fokken lekker thing for the voice in your head to say, isn’t it?

CHAPTER TWELVE

TODAY. MIDDAY.

“Mister Fortnight, how are you, bro?” My old friend welcomes me into his shop, his New Zealand-sounding accent putting me at ease as always. Something about it just feels… I dunno, friendly. His dark skin and wide, easy smile don’t hurt either. He just projects a sense of… what’s that word that…? Oh. Bonhomie. Think that’s what you call it.

“Oi, William. How are you, mate?”

“Fit as a fiddle, thanks. What can I get you?”

“I need ten more bags of ice.”

“Yeah? Big event it’s going to be then, is it?”

“I mean, bonfires always seem to draw people out. We’re having a bonfire. I told you that, yeah?”

Bonfires are technically forbidden on the beach, but I pulled some strings and got the town council to allow it—after, of course, we agreed to help fund the much-needed rebuilding of the local town hall. We would’ve helped out anyway, but when they said, “If there’s anything we can do for you in return…” I wasn’t going to let the offer slip.

“Indeed, bro. Good times,” William says, giving a polite smile and knowing wink. One of the things I love most about this place: Nobody gives a shit about who we are, what we do, or what we may have done before we got here. There’s a real live-and-let-live vibe that makes it easy not to be an asshole. Which, I have to assume, also explains much of why we want to be here and never want to leave.

“Ten bags of ice,” William repeats, heading into the back cooler. “Anything else?”

“No, I think that’s it for now. You gonna stop by later?”

“Wouldn’t miss it, bro. Not for the world.”

As he steps out of sight, I look after him and catch a glimpse of myself reflected in the mirror he keeps behind the counter. I think about the face looking back at me, the one that I’ve looked at every day of my life. It’s changed, sure. It’s been transformed by time and experience and so many other things, but it is still mine. I’m still me. And that I’ve been able to hold onto to myself and land here, in this place, is nothing short of miraculous.

So, I turn away from the mirror and look around to appreciate where I am. It’s paradise. Truly. Not somewhere I could have ever imagined myself, nor a place I’m sure I deserve to be. Given all the horrible shit I’ve done in my days, I’m not certain this is a fitting world for me to have landed upon. But, then again, I can’t change the past. All I can do is try to be accountable to it and try to be better now and in the future.

And, of course, the most important thing I can actually do is try to be a good—

“Ten bags, ten dollars, please, Mr. Fortnight, sir,” William says, hauling them in on a dolly and rolling them beside me, the condensation dripping off the plastic on the sides and working its way into the weathered wood of the ancient floor.



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