Sidekick

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Authors: Auralee Wallace

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Sidekick

Auralee Wallace

Sidekick
Auralee Wallace

Heroes
meets Bridget Jones in this brilliant, hilarious debut novel about a girl who just wants to save the world…

Bremy St James, daughter of billionaire Atticus St James, has been cut off from the family fortune and is struggling to survive in a world that no longer holds its breath every time she buys a new outfit. To make matters worse, her twin sister is keeping secrets, loan sharks are circling, and the man of her dreams — a newspaper reporter — is on assignment to bring down everyone with the last name St James.

Things are certainly looking bleak for the down-and-out socialite until a good deed throws her into the path of the city’s top crime-fighter, Dark Ryder. Suddenly, Bremy has a new goal: apprentice to a superhero, and start her own crime-fighting career.

Ryder has no need for a sidekick, but it turns out the city needs Bremy’s help. Atticus St James is planning the crime of the century, and Bremy may be the only one able to get close enough to her father to stop him.

Now all she needs to do is figure out this superhero thing in less than a month, keep her identity secret from the man who could very well be
The One
, and save the city from total annihilation.

Well, no one ever said being a superhero would be easy…

About the Author

Auralee Wallace has played many roles in her life, including college professor, balloon seller, and collections agent. She is now living her dream of writing humorous women’s fiction. When this semi-natural blonde mother of three children (and psychiatric nurse to two rescue cats) isn’t writing or playing soccer, she can be found watching soap operas with lurid fascination and warring with a family of peregrine falcons for the rights to her backyard.

Acknowledgements

First, I would like to express my gratitude to Kate Cuthbert and Escape Publishing for making a home for my offbeat little book. Also, thank you to my parents and all of my extended family for keeping their fingers crossed every step of the way. Much love and gratitude goes to my children for being the happiest mini cheerleaders a mom could hope to have. And finally, to my husband, I can never thank you enough for working so very hard to make all of our dreams possible.

To Andrea, for always loving my writing even when she didn’t. You know I always write for you first
.

Contents

About the Author

Acknowledgements

Prologue

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Eighteen

Chapter Nineteen

Chapter Twenty

Chapter Twenty-One

Chapter Twenty-Two

Chapter Twenty-Three

Chapter Twenty-Four

Chapter Twenty-Five

Chapter Twenty-Six

Chapter Twenty-Seven

Chapter Twenty-Eight

Chapter Twenty-Nine

Chapter Thirty

Chapter Thirty-One

Chapter Thirty-Two

Chapter Thirty-Three

Chapter Thirty-Four

Chapter Thirty-Five

Chapter Thirty-six

Bestselling Titles by Escape Publishing…

Prologue

As a kid, I had a recurring dream where my identical twin sister and I flew matching Wonder Woman jets up to the stars. Nothing could stop us in those dreams. Pure freedom. Pure power. I had the dream again about a month ago, but this time I was flying alone towards a distant planet. As I got closer, the massive orb turned, and I realized I had made a mistake. It wasn’t a planet at all, but a giant balloon with my father’s face on it.

I did the only thing I could.

I blew it up.

And Luke thought he had daddy issues.

Chapter One

“Little Bremy, do you have my rent, or will I cut off your fingers and wrap them in pastries like those little…what is the English name?”

“Pigs in a blanket?”

“Yes! The little piggies,” the thickly accented voice sounded through my phone. “You are so helpful, little Bremy.”

There are some conversations you never imagine yourself having.

This was one of them.

“Mr. Pushkin—”

“Please, call me Mischa.”

“Um, right, Mr. Pushkin, you see the thing is—”

“Oh Bremy. Oh no. Do not tell me this
you see the thing is
. I hate the
you see the thing is
. The only thing is money. You agree, yes?”

Hard not to given my upbringing.

I did have some money. In fact, I had nine hundred dollars. Unfortunately, I owed Mr. Pushkin a thousand. Not that far off, right? I mean, what’s a hundred dollars? But in the brief time I had known Mr. Pushkin, I had learned a few things. One, he had six fingers on his right hand. Two, his brother dug out his left eyeball with a fork when they were kids—a custom-made marble now rolled around in his head. But the most important thing I had learned about Mr. Pushkin? He did not have a reasonable bone in his body.

Maybe his brother dug that out too.

“Mr. Pushkin, it’s just—”

“Just! Just! This is another English word I hate. Mafia business is tough business. If I let all of the little girls get away with
just
, what would the other tough guys think? No, no, Bremy.”

“Well, you don’t have to cut off my fingers,” I said trying not to sound as panicked as I felt. “You could just kick me out.”

The words escaped before I could stop them. Even if my apartment most closely resembled a walk-in closet, and I knocked my head on the side of the toilet every time I rolled over in bed, I needed this place. Then again, I also needed my fingers.

I looked to my bedside clock. Seven in the morning. Why did bad days always start so early? Didn’t tough guys sleep in? I could have sworn I caught a whiff of last night’s vodka coming through the phone.

“There is no fun in this kicking out. Then all of those dirty street rats think they can use my establishments as squattings. A month here, a month there, and they still have all their fingers? No. This does not work.” He sighed heavily. “Where are you from, little Bremy?”

“I’m—”

“Never mind, it doesn’t matter. You see, you remind me of the children of the ice plains not far from my home.”

“Oh, um, thanks. But Mr.—”

“No thanks. You would be dead before you could walk. Frozen. A little blue popsicle-child.
You see the thing is
you have to find your way in this disgusting pool of filth. This city, it is broken, rotten,” he said, voice growing louder. “It hums like huge, black juggernaut, and you, little Bremy, will be crushed in teeth of its giant wheels. The dust of your bones will scatter over the streets then collect in gutter with other human garbage.”

“That was very poetic, but—”

“Yes, in my homeland we are raised on books size of three dictionaries, not stories of boy witches.”

“I see. Now about the money—”

“Do you have a job, little Bremy?”

“Not at the moment. I—”

“I have friend. He owns club. Maybe you see it? It has funny pink sign of animal in the neon. What is it called?”

“A beaver?”

“Yes, the beaver. I do not understand this. Some girls at club have no teeth, but not big teeth that eat tree. The beaver is not an animal for the sexy.”

My jaw dropped. No amount of money or threat of bodily harm would get me to explain that one.

“A nice, pretty girl like you would make the money, even with your small beebies.”

“Boobies.”

“Yes, boobies. Such a helpful girl.”

“Oh thank you, but—”

“Do you have my money?”

“Um, yes, but—”

“Okay. Now we can do the business. I come by at four o’clock. I have to go to court.”

“Oh really?”

Please be for unpaid parking tickets. Please be for unpaid parking tickets
.

“A misunderstanding…with a machete,” he said. “My machete fell on a man’s wrist and took off his hand. A misunderstanding—this man, he says so himself—but police, they have nothing better to do in this city than bother legitimate businessmen. Anyway, that business should be done by two, then after I go to plastic surgeon.”

Please be for Botox. Please be for Botox
.

“For Botox…and to have my tattoos removed.”

“Oh,” I said, definitely not in the form of a question. “Well then—”

“You see, I have little tattoos on each knuckle finger, all eleven, for every man I kill back home. You know, the kid stuff.”

“Right.”

“Now you be a good girl, Bremy, and have my money. I don’t want to get new set of tattoos for little girls who don’t want to show beebies to pay rent.”

“Okay,” I said trying not to choke on the gulp making its way down my throat. “I—”

He hung up with a beep.

I collapsed back into the little cot I called a bed and yanked the thin quilt over my face. Sadly, I could still see blue popsicles and finger-shaped wieners in my head.

***

I hurried down the street under the steely clouds gathering overhead as the smell of exhaust and rotten vegetables filled my nose. I hated walking in the city.

Exactly one month ago, my life was perfect. Well, a lot of imperfect, horrible, evil stuff was going on behind the scenes, but I didn’t know that—so to me, it was perfect. I lived in my pick of mansions, I had a horse for every day of the week, and my identical twin sister Jenny and I spent our days by an Olympic-sized swimming pool, drinking experimental margaritas, and planning our classes for the upcoming semester.

Now I spent my days scuttling around puddles of urine in inappropriate footwear, trying to find a job to pay my rent.

Still, no good would come from cowering in my bed by the toilet. I had a hundred dollars to make appear out of thin air, and I had to do it by myself. Something I didn’t have much practice at.

Right on cue, my pay-as-you-go phone chimed. Jenny. I didn’t even have to look at it. She knew I was thinking about her. Stupid twin powers.

Where are you?

Please talk to me
.

She sent me the same message every morning. I thumbed in my same reply, ignoring the pain in my chest.

I need a little more time
.

Please trust me
.

A second later, my phone chimed again.

Douche
.

I smiled. People didn’t expect Jenny to say things like
douche
. When they saw her wheelchair or heard the robotic voice that speaks what she types, they somehow just assumed she didn’t have a personality. She handled it better than I ever could.

I picked up my pace.

If for no other reason, I would make this work for Jenny. I had taken too much from her already.

***

“How do I go about getting a hundred dollar loan?”

A teller with faded red hair stared at me from underneath droopy eyelids. I was pretty sure her expression would have stayed the same if a stray cat jumped on the counter and puked on her keyboard.

“You want a hundred dollar loan,” she finally answered, revealing a bit of purple lipstick smeared across her teeth.

“Actually, two hundred would be better.”

“We don’t give out loans for two hundred dollars.”

“Why not?” I asked a little too loudly, sending my words echoing up the bank’s marble columns. A few people turned to look.

“Because that’s stupid,” she replied disinterestedly.

Huh, she obviously never had a mobster for a landlord. “Okay, well, what does one do in these types of situations?”

“Don’t you have a credit card?”

Oh, at one time I had enough credit cards to fill a private jet. I used credit cards for bookmarks. I, I…

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