Kerry Lonsdale

Kerry Lonsdale

Kerry Lonsdale is a Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, Amazon Charts, and #1 Kindle bestselling author. She writes standalone and series based emotionally charged domestic drama and her stories have been translated into twenty-seven languages. She resides in Northern California with her husband and college-aged kids where she spends her mornings writing and afternoons herding cats, literally.


No More Secrets

For a last shot at redemption, a young man must finally face the past in the third novel from the No More trilogy.

After serving six months in a juvenile detention center, Lucas Carson returns home irrevocably changed by what happened there. Traumatized, Lucas shuts himself out from everyone he loves, even his younger sister, Lily, who ran away from home when she was pregnant at sixteen. When Lily resurfaces years later, Lucas can’t cope with his guilt about not being there for her. He takes off, only to cross paths with Shiloh Bloom—fifteen, homeless, and, like Lucas, escaping the past.

All Lucas sees in her is the little sister he neglected. Believing this is his chance to absolve past mistakes, he takes Shiloh in. He gives her food and shelter. She gives him a purpose. Together they invent a background for her and form a bond. But the risk of discovery grows. Lucas’s sisters aren’t the only ones looking for him. So are Shiloh’s mother and the police. If Lucas wants to heal and have a future, he must stop running and face everything he’s left behind.

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CHAPTER 1

Lucas Carson rolls onto his back and stares at the ceiling fan rotating on low, blades spinning faster than a clock’s second hand melting his waste of a life. As if the Mojave Desert hasn’t already done so.

He takes a mental assessment, digging up the motivation to get out of bed. His head pounds from the six-pack of empty beer bottles on the nightstand. More from the shots of tequila. The crust around his eyes that caked overnight stings. He scrapes it off. His body aches, his right calf especially. He must have tweaked it last night when they were going at it.

He drags his hands down his face, the stubble chafing, and drops an f-bomb into his cupped palms. Faye came knocking after midnight. He shouldn’t have let her in.

She stirs beside him, her body going taut as she stretches her arms overhead and purrs. The sound drips with enough innuendo that Lucas can’t believe it isn’t intentional.

Her eyes slide open, revealing the stunning green that gets him every time she shows up at his door in a skimpy dress, mountain-high heels, and legs that go for miles. She has ten years on his thirty-three, but it doesn’t show anywhere on her. She’s a knockout. And he’s a fool for a no-strings-attached lay.

He sits up in bed. She smiles, catlike. He swings his legs over the side. She reaches for his wrist to keep him close. He pulls his hand away and shoots up from bed, moody about when and how he’s touched. She pouts because he’s slipping away. Body, mind. Interest. Until next time, at least.

“Baby.” Faye’s plea is breathless, heavy with the dregs of sleep.

“Got to get to work,” he says gruffly, clearing his throat of morning phlegm. He grabs the orange Home Depot bucket he uses for trash and slides the empty bottles in with one swipe of his forearm. The noise shatters the morning’s calm.

Faye flops onto her back with an irritated groan. “Lucas,” she whines, now fully awake. She drags the pillow over her face.

He drops the bucket on the floor. The bottles clatter. “You should go. Rafe returns tonight.” Her husband.

She groans into the pillow, then dramatically tosses it onto the floor and rolls to her side, propping up her head. She lets the sheet slide from her shoulders, revealing perfect breasts, thanks to some fancy surgeon in the Valley. “He doesn’t leave again for weeks. Skip work. Spend the day with me.” Her bottom lip pops out.

“Can’t.” He hobbles to the bathroom, stretching his cramped calf.

“She’s lucky.”

“Who?” He lifts the toilet lid and seat she’d put down. They bang against the tank.

“Izzy.”

“Ivy,” he corrects. His seventy-nine-year-old landlady and boss. She owns the four-apartment complex along with the market on the first floor. He works where she tells him, and he’s already running late. He overslept and has the hangover to blame.

“She’s all you care about.”

He grunts and takes a piss without bothering to shut the door.

“‘The simple act of caring is heroic,’” she recites.

Lucas rolls his eyes, no idea what she’s going off about. He flushes the toilet, washes his hands, and splashes cold water onto his face. He leans on the sink and stares at his reflection, rallying the will to clean up and show up. His eyes are bloodshot, the skin around them mottled. He hasn’t cut his hair in months. It falls shapelessly around his head, the cowlick he’s had since birth more pronounced from Faye messing with his hair. He swears she pulled out strands when he was pounding into her. She can’t keep her hands off his head.

I need you. She palmed his face, his neck, begging for the intimacy.

He rubs a hand over his scalp. There’s nothing intimate about them or what they do in the dark.

The switchblade he keeps on the toilet tank demands his attention as it does every morning since the day he arrived here feeling the lowest of lows. He scowls at it, his gaze sliding to the tub. A memory from when he was sixteen of a bathtub like this one filled to the rim with lukewarm water, him in it, fades in and out.

“Edward Albert.” She’s prattling on about whatever from his room.

He’s never heard of him.

“That actor. He was in Falcon Crest and a movie with Goldie Hawn. He won a Golden Globe.” Her tone tells him he should know who this guy is.

Lucas shakes his head, totally uninterested. He turns away from the blade and grabs his toothbrush, smears paste across the worn bristles.

“Baby, I ache. Be a hero and come back to bed.” Her voice goes all singsong on him.

He could crawl back into bed. To hell with his responsibilities.

He could also show her exactly how unheroic he is and ignore her.

He spits foamy paste into the sink. “Go home, Faye.” He shuts the bathroom door.

A muffled “Lucas” penetrates the hollow barrier before he turns on the shower, and when he’s finished and has wrapped a loose towel around his waist, the front door slams.

He yanks open the bathroom door and spills out with a cloud of steam. Faye isn’t in his bed, and she isn’t excavating his fridge for spoiled milk and month-old eggs, insisting she whip up a hearty scramble because he subsists on Coronas and Cuervo.

The air conditioner hums. The ceiling fans he installed yesterday in the front room and his bedroom spin.

She’s gone. Thank fuck.

Hands on hips, he surrenders a relieved breath.

#

The Dusty Pantry is a convenience market located on a large parcel of barren land in California City, a town that never lived up to its founder’s hype of growing bigger and more vibrant than Los Angeles. Miles of paved roads lead to nowhere, baking in the desert heat. After a postwar real estate boom, its growth tapered off until it was virtually a ghost town, which is exactly why Lucas has found himself here.

He feels like a ghost, drifting through life with no purpose. He can’t figure out why he’s hanging on when he doesn’t have a reason to.

It’s been eight months since he ditched Seaside Cove, the gated community on the Central Coast he called home, along with his older sister, Olivia; his mother, Charlotte; and the troubles that haunt him.

It’s also been eight months that he’s avoided the police.

There’s a very real possibility he’ll be sent back to prison when the authorities catch up to him. But that isn’t why he ran.

When he got in his truck and drove, tossing his phone out the window somewhere along Highway 58, the market was the first place he stopped. He expected to have one last beer and drive on through. Instead he bought twelve. When the old lady behind the counter turned her back, a Reese’s candy, a pack of Dentyne Ice, and a jerky stick that was probably as old as he was found their way into his pockets.

Ivy Dervish. She and her late husband, Tom, had purchased the land and built the drab multiuse structure of apartments and deli market back in the late sixties. The business has been floundering and the structure falling apart since her husband passed five years back, she told him as he paid for his beer. She’d been working overtime to keep it afloat when she should have retired years ago. He told her he was driving through, that he didn’t know where he was going. He didn’t see a point in hiding those facts. He wasn’t planning on sticking around. But she convinced him to reconsider. There was an apartment above that needed a tenant. She’d lease it to him at half the publicized monthly rate if he helped her around the property.

He toured the sparsely furnished apartment and saw himself sitting on the worn couch powering through the twelve-pack. Then he saw himself draw a warm bath, shedding his clothes, and folding himself into the small alcove tub, and he made his decision. He accepted her offer.

This was a good place to die.

One problem, though.

He hasn’t yet mustered the courage to follow through.

The Dusty Pantry lives up to its namesake. Every morning, Lucas sweeps the stockroom’s floor, pushing fine, blond-toned dirt out the back door. The parking lot isn’t paved, and Ivy’s property in back stretches far enough that he can only see the rooftops of several single-family homes above the waist-high shrubs scattered across the landscape. The only good thing about this place is the night sky. Stars are brighter, more brilliant in the desert, where Lucas can remember he isn’t anything more than a speck of nothingness in the vast universe.

He hears the familiar rumble of Sanchez’s Produce. Mack drives the truck south from the Valley once a week and drops several small boxes of fresh fruit and vegetables Ivy displays in the self-serve fridge along the far wall. The parking brake drops into place, and metal doors clang open.

Lucas shuts the rear door, puts aside the broom, and pushes through the swing door that separates the stockroom from the market. He walks down an aisle of cleaning supplies, past the cash register, and unlocks the front door. He props it open with a brick.

“Hey, Mack.”

“Morning, Luc.” Mack drops a wood crate bursting with apples and oranges onto the sidewalk as Lucas returns to the stockroom to retrieve the empty crates from the prior week’s delivery.

“Got the white peaches Ivy ordered,” Mack says when Lucas hands off the crates. Lucas can smell the fruit’s sweetness wafting from the truck’s refrigerated box. Mack tosses the empty crates onto the truck.

“Thanks, man.” Lucas mechanically bumps the fist Mack holds up before he takes the fruit inside.

“See you next week,” Mack hollers after he slams the rear doors. Lucas grunts over his shoulder, dropping the fruit-laden crate by the self-serve fridge for Ivy to sort when she comes downstairs.

Mack leaves for his next delivery, and Lucas retrieves the other two crates in front. Closing the door behind him, he takes the fruit to the fridge in back. The door separating the stockroom from the market swings wide and sticks, remaining open. Lucas leaves it. His hands are full, and the market doesn’t open for another twenty minutes.

He packs fruit into the fridge, tosses the crate aside, and starts on the next when a bell jingles. “We aren’t open yet,” he hollers. He’s about finished with the second crate when he hears another noise, a can falling off a shelf. It rolls across an aisle.

Lucas sets down the crate, closes the fridge, and scopes the market from the doorway. There, along the far wall, he spots a head of dirty blonde barely visible above the aisle. He opens his mouth to tell whoever ignored him that the shop is still closed. But something stops him.

The figure appears around the endcap, Lucas going unnoticed. She’s too fixated on the products displayed, Snickers bars and M&M’s. Hot Tamales and Lay’s chips. Dirt-smudged cheeks and greasy hair, wearing an oversize hoodie too thick for the Mojave’s heat, she keeps her eyes averted as her fingers trail over the products on the shelf. They skim everything she passes. Every so often, her hand dips to her side.

Lucas’s gaze narrows at her retreating back. He knows exactly what she’s doing because he’s done the same since he was eleven. It started with a Hot Wheels car he lifted that he regrettably let his younger sister, Lily, take the heat for. Next it was a candy bar, then a shirt he swiped from Big 5 just to see if he could do it. Until finally it ended with a six-pack of beer and a gun that didn’t belong to him. His reward? Six months in juvenile detention bunking with five guys in an overcrowded cell who’d committed acts ten times worse than him.

He wasn’t the guilty party, not entirely. But his friends, his football teammates since they were kids, let him take the fall.

He’s still falling. Flailing.

He wouldn’t wish his experience on anyone.

Face hard, he watches her disappear around the endcap. Lucas strides up the neighboring aisle to confront her. Ivy doesn’t have cameras. He needs to catch this little thief in the act with the merch still on her.

She comes around the corner and gasps. Lucas snatches her wrist, startling them both, and flips her hand. Clutched in her palm is a pack of Juicy Fruit. His gaze drops to the loaded kangaroo pocket before flying up to her face. Large hazel eyes, haunted and deep, sit atop a wave of freckles bridging her nose. She can’t be more than fifteen, sixteen at the most.

He lets go of her, stunned.

The girl doesn’t hesitate. She sprints from the store with her loot.


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