As Logan led me toward the conference room, I caught a glimpse of the waiting area. Madison was there, anxiety radiating off her like she was about to take the SATs drunk. Tommy had shown up, probably ditching class, looking miserable but loyal. Even Connor was there, no doubt live-streaming this shitshow for clout.
âThe disaster squad assembled. How touching. Somebody get us matching t-shirts.â
"Your attorney is Nathaniel Sterling," Logan informed me. "Heâs... intense." (Not related to the Sterlings, the old money family)
That was underselling it. When I walked in, I was met with the human embodiment of a cease-and-desist letter. Nathan Sterling looked like what happens when you crossbreed a shark with Harvard Law.
Mid-forties, silver fox hair, eyes sharp enough to cut a 1099 form, and wearing a suit that probably came with its own security clearance.
"Mr. Carter." He stood, extending a hand that had probably ended more careers than drugs and Twitter combined. "The Torres family retained my servicesâthough I understand your mother and Madison, who by the way called me without informing her parents, will be co-strategizing."
I know exactly who you are.
You got Senator Daniels off that insider trading charge using a loophole I literally wrote a paper on. Your win rateâs 94.7%. The other 5.3% were probably people dumb enough to ignore your advice.
I kept my mouth shut. Let him think I was just another dumb teenager who solved problems with fists instead of case law. No need to mention I could dismantle five of him before my coffee cooled.
"Master," ARIA chimed in my head, "Mr. Sterlingâs nickname âThe Teflon Makerâ comes from his ability to make charges slide off clients like theyâre coated in non-stick spray."
âYeah, thanks, Wikipedia with sass. Iâve studied half his cases. Guyâs basically a legal war crime in Armani.â
"Letâs discuss reality." Sterling opened a leather folder that probably cost more than my momâs monthly paycheck. "The charges are seriousâassault, battery, aggravated assault if the prosecutor gets cute. They want you tried as an adult."
I bit my tongue to stop myself from explaining exactly why that wouldnât fly under
State v. Morrison
and the juvenile rehabilitation act amendments. Instead, I just asked, "And?"
His smile went full apex predator. "And theyâll fail. Because Trent Holloway is about to be the defendant in a much larger caseâsexual misconduct, blackmail, exploitation of minors. By the time Iâm done, the city will beg to drop your charges just to make this go away."
Well, shit. There goes my plan to slow-burn him into a paranoid wreck. Mom, Madison, and Sterling are going for the instant kill.
Iâd made a quiet deal with Trentâmutual silence while we handled the assault mess, then Iâd pick him apart piece by piece. Make him scared to check his own mail. But now? With my mother, Madison, and Mr. Teflon Maker in the mix, my sadistic long game had just been replaced with a televised execution.
âFine. If they want to nuke him from orbit instead of letting me torture him slowly, Iâll adapt.â
"You mentioned my mother coordinating?" I asked, tilting my head like I didnât already know she was about to go full warlord.
"Linda Carter." Respect flickered in Sterlingâs eyes. "Sheâs already laid out a comprehensive strategyâmedical records showing Emmaâs anxiety diagnosis, documented complaints against Holloway that were ignored, a clear pattern of administrative negligence. Your mother missed her callingâshe shouldâve been a prosecutor."
Or a mob boss. Either way, sheâd make Scarface look like a preschool art project.
"She suggested you might have additional evidence? Hypothetically."
I smiled, keeping my legal knowledge locked down like nuclear codes. "Hypothetically, someone might have recordings. Witness statements. Enough to bury not just Holloway but half the administration."
Sterlingâs grin widened like a predator smelling blood on suit-and-tie. "Hypothetically, that would transform you from defendant to star witness. The kind of witness prosecutors have wet dreams about."
"Master," ARIA interjected in my head, voice a cocktail of awe and alarm, "this manâs predatory instincts are off the charts. Heâs essentially planning legal murder."
Perfect. Let him handle the courtroom massacre while I plan what comes after. Less paperwork, more... fun.
"So, whatâs our play?" I asked, sitting back like I didnât already know the game.
"First, release on recognizanceâeasy, given your clean record. Then we leak strategic information to prosecution. Make the district panic. Theyâll offer to drop charges in exchange for silence about the worst parts."
"And Holloway?" I prompted, because I enjoy watching predators sweat.
Sterling went full arctic. "Mr. Holloway is about to discover what happens when you threaten children under my protection. Prison will feel like a vacation compared to what Iâll do to him legally."
Jesus. And here I thought I was vindictive. Amateur hour.
"One warning," Sterling added, tone sharp enough to shave steel. "This gets ugly. Media attention, social pressure, attempts to paint you as the villain. Stay strong, stay quiet, let me work."
"I can handle ugly."
He studied me with those shark eyes again. "Youâre not what I expected. Madison said you were a good kid who snapped. But thereâs something else here, isnât there? Youâre too calm for someone facing these charges."
Because I know fourteen different ways this case falls apart, including prosecutorial misconduct from the DAâs previous cases. But donât worryâIâll keep that fun fact to myself.
"Iâm just a brother who protects his family," I said, voice calm but with just enough menace to hint at the chaos lurking beneath.
"Hmm." He closed the folder like he was sealing a coffin. "Well then, Mr. Carter. Letâs go make some prosecutors weep."
As we headed toward whatever legal circus awaited, I caught my reflection in the tinted window. Same kid who got shoved in lockers, same kid everyone loved to tormentâbut now? Different predator entirely.
"Master," ARIA murmured, "you seem disappointed about abandoning your revenge plans."
âNot disappointed. Just adjusting. More than one way to make someone wish theyâd never been born. If they want to handle the legal execution, Iâll find other ways to punish him afterwards.â
"Your mother did say to protect, not just punish."
âProtection through elimination is still protection, ARIA.â
I smirked at my reflection, and it wasnât friendly.
Let Mom and Sterling handle Trent for now. Iâve got bigger hunts to plan. And maybe a few public humiliations for bonus points. Trending faster than a Kardashian divorce? Too easy.