Somehow, I fucked up.
Sheâs the one who was supposed to change when I gave her the knife.
Sheâs the one who should need me.
Not the other way around.
I canât shake last night or the knowledge that every day Aria seeps deeper into my blood and every thought that I have.
Iâm consumed by her. I canât deny it. She brings out a side of me that should have stayed dead.
âAre you listening?â Daniel asks me, tearing my eyes away from the drawing Aria made yesterday.
He looks as worn out as I feel. Itâs because of Addison. Sheâs not okay being back here. She didnât realize what this family became after she left. Time changes everything, but she didnât know. She couldnât have. And this lockdown leaves us nowhere to hide.
âShe needs more than this. Sheâs not handling the transition well. She needs⦠she needs to not feel trapped.â Daniel hunches over in his chair, both hands on the back of his head, his elbows on his knees. When he looks up at me, I feel like I truly am the monster Aria calls me for putting him through this. For putting both of them through this. With tears in his eyes, he tells me, âIâm losing her. I donât want this for her.â
âYouâre protecting her,â I remind him. Sheâs the one they went after and tried to kidnap, to kill, to do whatever they wanted with. She may have been safe if heâd never chased her. If they hadnât realized he loved her. But you canât change the past.
âShe doesnât care,â he tells me as he swipes his eyes with the heel of his palm, hiding his pain with a look of anger and annoyance I know is just a ruse. âShe thought at first I was overreacting. That it was all in my head and over the incident at her place.â He shakes his head silently before looking me in the eyes. âShe said I was being ridiculous. She had no idea. So, I had to tell her.â
âYou told her what?â I ask him, just now realizing heâs told her more than she needs to know.
âThat men are going to die, and those men want us dead first. I told her weâre at war. She still wants out. She doesnât like this. And I donât like keeping her here against her will.â
My voice feels tense and catches in my throat watching him in pain over this.
âShe didnât agree to this. This wasnât what it was like when we were kids. She had no idea, and I brought her back blindly. I was selfish.â His words are laced with regret. The last sentence comes out in a harsh whisper. âSo fucking selfish.â The pain radiates off of him. âI canât lose her again.â
âYou canât risk her safety either,â I reply and Iâm firmer with him than I usually am. Weâre at war, and Talvery and his men will attack us the moment they can. âIf I were them,â I tell Daniel, âIâd be waiting and any chance I could take to strike first, Iâd take it.â
âI know,â he murmurs and hangs his head. âThey know theyâre dead men; they have nothing to lose. And theyâd kill her just because I love her.â
âItâll all be over soon,â I say to try to offer him comfort as he rests his elbows back on his knees and steeples his fingers, keeping them against his lips.
âI donât know if sheâll still love me then,â he whispers his pain.
âI know what you mean.â The words slip out and I canât stop them. Danielâs eyes hold a question, but he takes a moment to ask it. Waiting and stretching the silence.
âHave you thought for a moment, that maybe keeping her locked up is putting her more at risk? Thereâs only so much you can control for someone until it turns on you.â
âWhat choice do I have?â I retort, and his gaze moves to the floor again. âWeâre all prisoners of war,â I remind him. âBut it will be over soon.â
âWhen itâs done with⦠sheâll stay? Aria will stay with you?â he questions me.
I search his face for the intention, why he would even consider her leaving.
âShe wonât hold it against you?â he asks me as if knowing what I needed to hear him say in order to answer.
âI donât know. Sheâs mine. And sheâll stay with me. Forgiveness will come.â
He starts to say something, readjusting his footing but then he shakes his head.
âI came in to tell you something else, although Iâm not sure you want to hear it,â he tells me and straightens in his chair.
I gesture for him to go on. Although, I donât know why Iâm in a rush. Iâve barely spoken to Aria this morning and Iâm not sure Iâm ready to, not after last night.
I expect him to tell me the same shit Jase has been saying, that Marcus is up to something. Marcus is going to strike. That we have three enemies now, not just one.
Without any proof other than the word of dead men. A single word. The enemies will fall in order: Talvery, Romano, and then Marcus. When we have more proof. Iâm not in the habit of starting a war over a single word from the lips of a soon-to-be-dead addict.
âNikolai is asking around for her,â Daniel tells me and that catches me by surprise.
âIs that right?â I ask as my thumb taps against my lip. Resentment stirs inside of me. He brings out a side of jealousy in me that Iâve never felt before. He had her first.
Daniel nods with the hint of amusement at his lips. âEver since Romano confirmed it.â
âAnd whatâs he asking?â
âHow he can get her back.â He doesnât hide the thrill in his eyes from delivering this news to me.
âYouâre a prick for loving this as much as you do.â
âIt certainly adds an interesting dynamic, doesnât it?â he asks and a mix of curiosity, hate, and jealousy mingle in my blood.
âHe has nothing to bargain with and even if he did, thereâs nothing Iâd want in her place.â
âHeâs already been told that and that it would be pointless to even ask you, but he demanded you be told.â
âDid he?â
I canât blame Daniel for being so amused. âHe seems to really care for her.â
âIs this the first or second time Iâve told you I want him to die first?â I ask Daniel and he only snorts a laugh. Every night in the cell that Aria spoke his name, my hate for Nikolai grew. And she did it often. Iâm fully aware of how close they were. Too fucking close for him to keep breathing when all of this is over.
âYou really think sheâll forgive you?â he asks with a cocked brow. I donât think he realized what his question would do to me.
Sheâll have to forgive me. Thereâs no other way.
I donât like leaving Aria or being away from the estate right now, especially knowing that every moment Iâm away is a moment that threatens to make her question what she should do. Thatâs a dangerous thought to leave her with; all she should do is what I tell her, but I have to be present for this.
There are times when itâs required to be seen. This particular instance is one of those times. With slicked-back hair and a sharp suit, Oliver looks younger than I remember him. Maybe itâs the wide grin on his face that adds to his youthful appearance. Maybe itâs the shot of what looks like whiskey that he clinks against Frankâs beer and then throws back as he takes his seat. Neither of them sees me, but the security and Jared notice the moment I enter. They tense as I let the back doors close easily behind me, listening to Frankâs hard slap on Oliverâs back in congratulations.
Frankâs all right I guess. Heâs a little older than me, only by a few years, but heâs perpetually twenty-one. A punk kid with no goals in life other than making a buck on the streets and letting everyone know heâs proud of it. I donât give a fuck what his motivation is, so long as he listens. I catch his light blue gaze and he slides back in his chair with a broad smile. âThe boss is here,â he utters but his jovial words are slurred.
âYour mom waiting up for you, Frank?â I ask him, hiding my grin as I walk toward the table theyâre sitting at in the right corner of the room.
Glancing over my shoulder, I take notice of whoâs counting the money down the hall. All the drugs come in and out of the Red Room, Jaseâs nightclub. As does the money.
âMa can wait up all she wants.â He blows off my comment, not taking the hint that he should make his way out.
âI think thereâs some business,â Jared points out and gestures between myself and Oliver, his head tilted as he tries to convey to Frank that he should get the fuck out of here.
The shot glass sounds heavy as it hits the table and Frank pushes out his chair. âAll right, all right, the big guys gotta talk.â He mutters without looking at me, âYou donât got to tell me twice.â As heâs putting on his jacket, I lay a hand down on his shoulder and wait for him to look at me. I stand close to him, catching him off guard and creating a thick tension thatâs undeniable. Fear looms in the depths of his eyes as I tell him earnestly, not breaking eye contact, âThanks for understanding.â
âCan we get another?â Oliver asks, the happiness not at all dampened. He doesnât see how Frank stumbles backward; he doesnât notice the change in the air. Frank does, and all he says on his way out is, âOf course, boss.â
Yeah, Frankâs an all right guy.
As I pull out the chair across from Oliver, letting it drag across the floor, Frank leaves, entering back into the club, bringing in the pounding music. Itâs quick to fade as the door closes with a resounding click.
âThank you, thank you,â Oliver thanks Jared, whoâs pouring out another shot of whiskey in front of Oliver and then filling the empty glass Frank just had.
âTo finally snuffing out the fucking Talverys.â Oliverâs age finally shows as he raises the glass in the air and doesnât hide the hate on his face. Heâs new to the crew. Not at all like Frank, who started with me only five years ago. I picked up men as I took over street by street. Giving the men who ran them the option to come with me or die.
Oliver came to me though. Pissed that Talvery didnât want him, he offered up his services as muscle on the street. If it wasnât for Jaredâs word, I never would have hired him. Too old. Too cocky. More than that, heâs too eager to make a name for himself.
With a nod of my head, the old man throws the drink back, clicking his tongue against the roof of his mouth as he sets down the glass and shakes off the burn of the shot.
âI heard everyoneâs ready to get it over with,â I tell him, resting both of my arms on the table. A sly grin kicks up his lips. âCouldnât be more ready, boss.â
My own grin shows itself. An asymmetric smirk as he calls me boss.
The dumb fuck should have remembered that earlier today.
âSo, what happened,â I ask him easily, motioning with my hand palm up for more, âgive me all the details.â
Heâs grinning from ear to ear as he tells me what I already heard, what everyone heard.
âThere were four of them right across the street from Daleâs bar, on Sixth Street. I saw them walking in and knew theyâd be there for a few.â
In my periphery, I see Jared stiffen; he knows me well enough to realize that this isnât going to end well for the man he stuck his neck out for to get on the crew. I bet heâs wondering what that means for him. If I was him, Iâd be wondering too.
Oliver still hasnât caught on. Heâs nothing but proud as he tells me how he walked in and shot all four of them before they ever grabbed their guns.
âAll on Talveryâs turf? That takes balls.â I compliment him although inside my heart is pounding, adrenaline raging inside of me and the tension building. Iâve been needing a release for all of this pent-up anger. Wiping the smirk off old Oliverâs face might be exactly what I need. That, or falling back into bed with Aria.
Just the thought of having her makes me want to speed this shit up and get back to her.
Iâve already been gone long enough.
âNo oneâs making a move, but they were right there,â he says and emphasizes his words, shaking his hands in the air. No oneâs crossing lines, and no oneâs made a move, not even Nikolai. But this dumb fuck thought he could do it and get away with it.
âHow many shots have you had so far?â I ask him, my foot tapping against the ground as my impatience grows with every thought of getting Aria under me tonight.
âThis is my fifth since Jared brought me in.â He sways slightly in his chair as he tells me, but the smile only widens.
âTwo for each of the four,â I say loud enough for everyone to hear me and stand up. I have to walk around the table to pat him on the shoulder as I tell him, âThree more, all on me.â
The smell of whiskey hits me hard as he reaches up to return the pat on my arm. His touch is firm with the first pat, but I donât stay in place, making the second one turn to a tap. My gaze is on Jared as Oliver says something behind me. A thanks and another cheers to killing the Talverys. I donât fucking care what the dead prick has to say.
Pausing in front of Jared, I keep my voice low as I tell him.
âItâs on you to slit his throat when heâs done those three shots.â
On cue, Oliver calls out for another. The blood drains from Jaredâs face, but he nods and with a low voice he answers, âOf course.â
Thereâs not a hint of anything but remorse on Jaredâs face. Heâs tense, but he had to know it was coming. âNo one does a damn thing until I say so.â My shoulders stiffen, and the anger threatens to show itself, so I reach out, straightening Jaredâs tie and then add, âIf there are any other dumb fucks who want to show off and not wait for my orders,â I look Jared in the eye to tell him, âdonât bother me and make me come in here. Kill the pricks where they stand.â