I would have killed Theodore Hall if she hadnât wrenched me off him.
He would be dead at my feet.
Iâd be a murderer.
And I wouldnât even be sorry.
Because he hurt her.
He put his hands on her.
So why the hell should he be breathing air?
Itâs scary.
Not my thoughts.
How calm I am with them.
How accepting.
Sheâs turned me into a monster. Or maybe I already was and she just makes that monster bold and unafraid of the light.
âYouâre getting blood on your steering wheel,â she says.
âItâs Finnâs car,â I mumble.
Her chocolate eyes land on me. âEven worse.â
My jaw flexes.
She sighs. âShould we have just left him there?â
âAs opposed to what? Taking him for coffee?â
âThe stones are uncomfortable.â
I grunt. âHe attacked you and youâre worried about his freaking comfort?â
âHe might need to go to the hospital.â
âScrew that. Let him bleed out like the animal he is.â
Her teeth dig into her bottom lip.
My eyes drop there. Her lipstick is smudged and it streaks a little at the corner. The collar of her shirt is stretched out. Curls expand all over her head, frizzier than normal.
Holy crap.
Looking at the damage Hall inflicted makes me want to turn the car around and beat him to a pulp again until his brains splatter out of his skull.
Iâm sinking into darker and darker thoughts and I donât realize my fingers are tightening over the steering wheel until I feel a soft sensation on my knuckles.
Greyâs feather-light touch descends on my bloody hands. âYou should probably go to a hospital too.â
âIâm fine.â
âAre you sure all this blood is his?â Her eyebrows quirk.
My stomach tightens in the strangest way. âIâve been beating my drums instead of people for a long time. This isnât anything I canât handle.â
Those soft brown eyes meet mine. âWhy did you come back to school? I heard youâd been suspended.â
I suck in a sharp breath.
She stares through the windshield. Light from the lampposts spray gold and silver all over us.
Her voice is bleak and withdrawn. âDid the fight in the hallway today have anything to do with me?â
Rather than answer that question, I turn down the air conditioning.
âZane.â
âYour mom said your car was in the shop. She was worried about you catching the bus so late at night.â
âSheâs always worried.â
âYeah, Iâm seeing that.â
âYou didnât have to come.â
I laugh, but it sounds brittle. Even I can hear it. âI didnât. I was on my way to a party. I just happened to pass by.â
âYou wear that to parties?â She eyes my hoodie.
âWhat am I supposed to wear?â
She shrugs.
âWeâre not like your generation. No one dresses up to go to parties. Everythingâs chill.â
âMy generation?â Thereâs laughter in her voice.
Thatâs good. Real good. If she kept frowning worriedly like that, I would have lost my mind and turned this car around, just so I could see if Hall was still lying where I left him.
And then I would have run him over with my car.
âMy generation was definitely the superior one,â she muses.
âDid you even have internet back when the dinosaurs were roaming?â
She scrunches her nose. âVery funny.â
I flick the indicator and take a left. The smell of Hallâs sweat and the copper scent of his blood still clings to me. The first thing Iâm going to do when I get home is burn this hoodie.
âZane,â Grey says, going serious again.
âWhat?â
She backs off. âNothing.â
âI hate when people do that.â I flick her an annoyed glance. âDrives me crazy.â
âTo be fair, you seem to live on the edge of crazy. So it doesnât surprise me that such a little thing would set you off.â
I chuckle. âMiss Jamieson, did you just insult me?â
âIâm calling it like I see it.â When she turns her face to the window, sheâs smiling.
I grin too.
Suddenly, she sits straight up. âZane, this isnât the way home.â
Her words startle me and I glance around. The houses are familiar. The driveways. The gated yards.
A growing awareness fills my chest.
I brought her to the place I used to share with my brothers.
This villa has always been home.
And it still feels that way even though I changed addresses.
I start to turn the car around. âMy bad.â
âDonât.â She stops me.
I freeze.
âMy mom canât see you like this.â Her eyes slide over my blood-stained hoodie and knuckles rubbed raw from the fight. âItâs better this way. You can shower and change here.â
I agree and drive into the garage.
Viola greets me with a hug when I walk through the door. I see her eyeing the blood on my hoodie, but she doesnât ask any questions. Given the rough neighborhood she grew up in, she must have learned to keep her mouth shut the hard way.
âHey, kid.â I ruffle her hair.
She smacks my hand away. âIâm not a kid. Iâm almost fourteen.â
âExactly. Youâre practically a baby.â
She sticks out her tongue. âYouâre a baby.â
I press both hands over my heart and stagger back. âOw.â
Grey chuckles, her eyes sparkling in a way that makes my chest tighten.
Viola smiles at her. âOh, youâre pretty. Can I do your makeup? Wait, I donât think I have a foundation that would match your complexion. If you bring your own foundation, I could totally rock a soft glam.â
âUmâ¦â
âForgive her. She barely talks English.â
âI talk English,â Vi says.
âYou talk makeup.â
âMakeup is not a language.â She rolls her eyes and then presses insistently against Grey, inspecting her like a designer with a model. âYou have such thick eyelashes. I wouldnât even have to use my lash set.â
âRein it in, Vi.â I give her a little nudge. âGrey is tired.â
âIâd love for you to do my makeup another time,â Grey says, being way too nice as always.
âWhereâs your sister?â I cross the room to grab a bottle of water for Grey.
âShe and Dutch went to buy groceries.â
âReally?â I arch a brow.
Dutch has never bought groceries in his life. I canât imagine my giant, scowling brother browsing the vegetable aisle, picking out the freshest cucumbers and haggling over salmon.
Love really has changed him.
âZane, how about I do your makeup, huh?â Viola wiggles her eyebrows.
âSorry, kiddo.â I crack the water bottle open and hand it to Grey. âWeâre not staying long.â
Viola doesnât miss a beat. âHow about another collab with me on my makeup channel?â
âThat depends.â
The kid sighs heavily. âIâve been practicing.â
âIs that why you havenât sent in your homework for three days?â
She scrunches her nose. âWhy do I have to practice every day?â
âBecause thatâs the only way youâll get better. Even if you pretend youâre beating your worst enemy, you still gotta do it.â
âFine.â She sighs like I asked her to swim with sharks.
I look up and find Grey watching me with a weird look. âWhat are you two talking about?â
âIâm teaching her the drums.â
Her eyes soften for a second before she quickly masks it with a dry, âOh.â
âIâm not that good,â Viola says.
I shrug. âSheâs getting there.â
Grey smiles. âIâm sure youâre great.â She sticks out a hand. âI donât think weâve been formally introduced. Iâm Miss Jamieson, but my friends call me Grey.â
âI know who you are,â Vi says, casually accepting the handshake. âYouâre Cadeyâs teacher.â
âThatâs right.â
âAre you Zaneâs teacher too?â Her smart brown eyes dart between us. âWhy are you here? Is this, like, a private study session for The Kings? That is so cool.â
Greyâs eyes jump to me and wander back down to Viola. She laughs nervously.
The guilt is all over her face. Itâs like a shadow on her features. Tightening her lips. Chasing the light from her eyes. Itâs almost suffocating to watch.
Damn.
I clear my throat and back away. âIâm gonna take a shower.â
Maybe thatâll clear my head.