Iâm not sure where Sarah is taking me, but I know better than to push back when my boyfriendsâ mother wants me to go with her. Although, the abrupt way we left when talk about the poker game came up gives me a clue.
She leads me to the back of the house. At the jagged turn of the hallway, I get the sense a few walls have been knocked down. Thatâs confirmed when she enters a large ensuite, which is beautiful, but out of place in an older home. I hesitate outside the door, but she beckons me in, stopping at an antique apothecary chest. While she opens drawers, pulling out a small box and a bundle of dark blue satin, I survey the space.
The room is a nice size, with the bed taking up the majority of the space. Itâs massive, and for a second, I get caught up in imagining the three of them in there, all wound around each other like my Dukes were with me this morning.
Iâve heard of some Royal women whose relationships with two or more of her guys extended past their tenure in house leadership. Story and her Lords werenât the first, and they wonât be the last. But thatâs usually just horny college stuff. Guys getting off on the thrill of sharing a girl. Girls getting off on the thrill of being shared. Iâve never seen a relationship like theirs last this far into adulthood. Marriage, houses, kids, careers.
I think about how Sarah sleeps with two menâand I sleep with three.
How did they make it work?
She passes the bed for a set of French doors, opening them to reveal a deck that overlooks the sloped backyard. âLetâs get some air,â she suggests, beckoning me through the doors. Once weâre out there, the space illuminated by a string of lights, she gestures to a couch, eyes wistful as she stares out over the yard. âManny built this about ten years ago. Iâm sure youâll come to see that Perilinis are very handy.â
The cushions are soft and I sink into them, feeling awkward. âOh, I know. Syâs been helping me with a project.â
She takes the bench seat across from mine. Thereâs a table between us, or what I think is a table until she flips a switch and fire ignites from the top. âItâs a little chilly. Do you need a blanket?â
âNo.â I warm my hands over the firepit. âIâm good.â
She sets the two items sheâs retrieved from the apothecary chest on the seat beside her and flips open the box, removing a rolled joint. Sarahâs eyes assess me carefully. âI hope this is okay.â
I straighten. âSure.â
âUsually I just take an edible, but when the weather is nice, I like to sit back here and relax.â She flicks the lighter and burns the tip. The red ember glows when she takes a drag. âWant a hit?â
â
, yes.â I lean over and take it, securing the thinly rolled joint between my fingers. I take a drag, feeling the burn in my chest, and my slight cough makes Sarah grin.
âFirst time?â she asks.
âSarah.â I stare at her. âIâm North Side.â
She laughs, watching me take another hit. âI guess youâd know a thing or two about it then.â
Inspecting the joint, I say, âIronically, growing up, my father didnât allow drugs in the house. I guess after my mother ODâd, he figured heâd keep me and Leticia away from the garbage that killed her.â I arch an eyebrow. âUntil weâd eventually need to organize the mass sale of it, that is.â
Sarah nods, bending to take the joint from me. âBut you kids always find a way, donât you?â
Shrugging, I exhale, watching the plume rise into the evening sky. âI know the guys used to keep weed and stuff in the tower, but ever since Remy got clean, so have we.â
âAh.â She gazes at the joint thoughtfully before taking another drag. âThatâs good to hear.â
As she passes it back, I take the chance to say whatâs been on my mind for a while. âCan I ask you a question?â
She doesnât even pause. âOf course, but let me warn you. If you want to know how to balance the sex drive of three young men, I may need a glass of wine to go with this.â
âUmâ¦â That is what I wanted to ask, but fuck, maybe later.
two glasses of wine. âActually, I was wondering about Saul. Did you ever⦠love him?â
âNo,â she says with zero hesitation, barking a harsh laugh. âWe had some good times, and I accepted him as my third Duke, but Iâm not sure itâs possible to love a man like Saul. I know for certain heâs incapable of loving anyone but himself.â
I think about how bitter Sy was when they first won me from the Lords. He loathed me. He was to me, but I saw his love for his brother and Remy. I knew he had the capacity for it. We just had to tear down those walls.
Sarah takes another slow drag and hands the joint back to me. âNot that any of it was easy. Back then, Davis and Manny wanted two things: to fight and fuck. It was fun, but later, they saw I wanted more. To have a career, to build a family.â Thereâs a dread in her eyes that startles me to see. âSaul always wanted one thing: Power, by any means necessary.â
âSounds familiar,â I say, thinking of my father.
She lifts her feet, resting them on the edge of the pit, warming them. âBut we tried to make it work, and for a while, we did.â A nostalgic smile pulls at her mouth. âSaul was handsome and a strong fighter. On campus and at the gym, we made it seem like everything was fine. We put on a show. But back at the tower,â she waves a hand, âhe wasnât involved in our relationship at all. After a while, he didnât require much from meâsexually speaking. Turns out, he had incredibly specific desires, and I didnât check the boxes.â
âWait.â I pause with the joint suspended halfway to my lips. âIs Saul gay or something? Is that why he doesnât have a Queen or any kids?â Saul has always been a strange Royal outlier. Ashby doesnât have any blood heirs either, but thatâs a special circumstance. To have a child and lose it so youngâ¦
But she shakes her head. âOh no, not Saul. Heâs bolted very firmly to the zero on the Kinsey scale.â Her expression turns pensive. âIt might even be one of the reasons I specialized in sex therapy. I suppose you could say his predilections fascinated me. I wouldnât call Saul deviant, just⦠very particular. Nothing about me fit what he wanted.â She spins her wedding ring around her finger. âSpecifically, I wasnât a Royal daughter or a sweet, compliant virgin.â
My eyebrows shoot up. âSeriously? Saulâs forever alone because heâs just a big, throbbing Royal cliche?â But then I think about what Storyâs told me about the Kingsâ plans for her. She was meant to be their asset until she ran away, leaving me in her place. She was . A sweet little virginal Royal daughterânot by blood, but who knows? Maybe she was close enough. I look up at Sarah in shock. âGod, he really is, isnât he?â
She shrugs. âI thought weâd reached an agreeable place in our relationship. He had the status to get ahead. I had two men that I loved and who worshiped me in return.â
I take another drag before passing the joint back over the table. âI hear a âbutâ coming.â
She gives me a tight smile. âIt was little stuff at first. He was dismissive to me. Demeaning. He wanted me to treat him like a god while he acted like I was dirt on the bottom of his shoe. He trivialized my academic drive. While Davis, Manny and I were taking classes and partying, Saul was making plans.â
My muscles ease, the cannabis seeping into my bloodstream. âWhat kind of plans?â
She tips her head back, exhaling a long stream of smoke. âBusiness plans. Social plans. Setting the frat up for his takeover. For instance,â she says, giving me a significant look, âthe alumni poker game.â
A shiver runs up my spine. âOh. That.â
Nodding, she explains, âGambling and tradition have always been West End vices, but it was Saulâs idea to turn the annual poker game into a networking opportunity. Suddenly, it wasnât just a fun night to catch up with everyone and lose all their money. Heâs the one who came up with the idea of having the cutsluts provide entertainment.â Barking a sour laugh, she adds, âHell, heâs the one who came up with cutsluts. Him and Mama B.â
âReally?â For some reason, a part of me had always figured the cutsluts were an institution as old as the clock tower itself, only now that I think about it, it makes sense.
âOh, yes,â she says, flapping a hand. âOf course, there were always gym girls milling around. They just gave them a name. An identity. A purpose. Iâm sure he pitched it to Mama B as the most feminist thing she ever heard.â
I give her a doubtful look. âAnd now he basically wants me to be one.â Leaving out everything relating to the blackmail, I explain that Saul wants me to be the entertainment.
âHe wants you to perform,â she clarifies, going quiet. I donât like the sting of pity in her eyes, but even worse is the tug of confusion in her brow. âI doubt Saulâs ever ordered a Duchess to do that before. You understand that, donât you? Itâs not your duty.â
Shifting uncomfortably, I say, âHeâs my King now. My duty is whatever he says it is.â She knows this is smoke and mirrors, surely. Iâm Lavina Lucia. I donât take orders from just anyone.
Not unless they have something on me.
âLaviniaâ¦â From her pause, I get the impression sheâs choosing her words very carefully. âYouâre a Royal daughter. The exact thing heâs always wanted.â
âIâm not sweet or virginal,â I point out, scoffing.
âStill,â she says, reaching out to place her hand over mine. âYouâre not safe with him. From one Duchess to another, I need you to know that.â
I raise an eyebrow. âItâd take a truly stupid girl to think sheâs safe with any King, let alone one whoâs competing with her father.â More thoughtfully, I add, âI donât trust Saul, but I trust Remy and your sons. Theyâll protect me.â
Thereâs a light in her eyes that dims with each passing word, until finally, she leans back, taking a steeling breath. âI have a question for you, too. Normally, this is something Iâd ask them directly. I donât like secrets, Lavinia.â Her mouth flattens to a tense line. âUnfortunately, Nick does.â
Squirming under the weight of her gaze, I already know I wonât betray Nickânot even to his mother. Still, I answer, âWhat do you want to know?â
She watches me intently, her words quiet and solemn. âDoes my son intend to take Saulâs crown?â
I lock up, feeling foolish. If she brought me out here and got me stoned just to interrogate me about Nickâs plans⦠âI donât know,â I answer, unable to blame her. âMaybe.â
She gives a slow, heavy nod. âI was afraid of that. Maybe Iâve always been afraid of that.â
âWould it be so bad?â I wonder, searching her expression. Pretty Nick Bruin, King of West End, the way it should be. Yeah, Nick has issues, but heâs no Saul Cartwright. Heâd do right by our house. âTo the victor go the spoils,â I remind her. Nick would have power, prominence, opportunity. Thereâs not a lot of that out there for a guy with his background. Men with facial tattoos donât become CEOs.
She gives me a slow, sad smile. âAnd to the defeated go the casket.â
I feel my face harden. âMy Dukes donât lose.â
âI hope youâre right,â she says, eyes tired and damp as she reaches for the bundle of blue silk beside her. âBut just in case youâre notâ¦â She flips the fabric up, revealing a curvy, silver spike. Noânot a spike.
A .
Itâs about ten inches long, and Iâm so enthralled by the glint of the fire catching on the scales that it takes me a long moment to recognize what it is.
A hair pin.
âIt was your motherâs.â
My eyes fly to hers, heart skipping a beat. âWhat?â
Sarah extends it to me, explaining, âI guess you can say she loaned it to me. It was after one of Davisâ matches.â
I reach out, fingers hovering over the pin, before plucking it from the satin. Itâs heavy and solid, shiny andâ âShit,â I hiss, pricking the pad of my fingertip on the spiked edge.
Sarah nods. âItâs a weapon just as much as an ornament.â She gestures to my hair, which Iâd pulled up into a loose bun for the night. âShe wore her hair like that a lot.â
Iâve seen photos, my motherâs long, blonde hair twisted up into a bun, usually with one of these stabbed through it. The hair pin an ornament, delicate and feminine, and I feel my world reorient itself as I imagine her having held this in her hand.
âShe loaned it to you?â I press, trying not to sound accusatory.
She winces. âI meant to give it back, but it wasnât too long after that we left the belfry for good.â Sarah nods at the pin. âThe night she gave it to me, Davis was fighting her Count. Not your father,â sheâs quick to add. âBut it was a rowdy crowd and some of the Kappas were out for blood. Iâm sure you can appreciate that the wardrobe of a Royal woman isnât always conducive to concealed weaponry.â She smirks at the comprehension dawning on my face.
âThis is a weapon a woman can wear with anything,â I realize.
âYes,â she agrees, watching me intensely. âOr nothing.â
I shudder to imagine the situations my motherâor even Sarah herselfâmust have found herself in back then.
I guess I wonât have to imagine for long.
Reluctantly, I confess, âIâve⦠never had anything of my motherâs before. Anything worth handing down went to my sister, and Lucias⦠well, we arenât much for sharing.â Tearing my eyes away from the silver, I look up, meeting Sarahâs gaze as I spear the pin through my hair. âThank you.â
She responds with a tight smile. âI know my boys would do anything to protect you. I also know theyâve been one of the things youâve needed protection from.â
Frowning, I say, âThings are different now.â
âIâve seen.â She doesnât look relieved. If anything, the crease of worry in her forehead deepens. âBut Lavinia, some things about my sons will never change. I promise you, Iâve tried. These⦠personality traits might make them good Dukes, but I suspect they donât make them easy to love.â
I hesitate, unsure I can tell her what she wants to hear. The way I am with my Dukes⦠itâs still new. âWhat are you getting at?â
âI just hope,â she says, eyes dipping down to her wringing hands, âif youâre ever put in the position, youâll protect my sons the same way theyâd protect you.â
When it finally hits me, I jolt. âOf course I would.â As much as I want to feel insulted by the implication Iâd let them die, I know Sarah couldnât understand. She looks at me and sees the same broken, bitter girl who was sitting in the clock tower before the Baronâs equinox party.
â
â I looked her in the eye that day, telling her nothing but the bare truth of it. â
.â
In the glint of the string lights, I can almost imagine Sarah as she used to be. Young and commanding, beautiful and strongâjust like my mother. Her eyes sparkle as she smiles. âYou really are the perfect Duchess,â she muses, the praise warming me in a way Iâm not expecting. âSometimes I think thatâs why they keep the families competing, you know. A Lucia girl in West End? No one would have entertained it, but here you are, getting ready.â
I blink. âGetting ready for what?â
âTo become a Queen.â Her eyebrow arches meaningfully. â
.â
The words bring me up short. Iâve thought about it before, back when I was nothing but a prisoner. The thought of using Nickâs position as Bruin to climb my way to a place where Iâd have the power to fight back was enticing. But now the reminder makes my stomach flop uneasily.
If Nick becomes King, thatâs what Iâll be.
His Queen.
Iâve spent my whole life trying to escape a boxâmy fatherâs chest, the Hideaway, the elevator. Maybe Sarah managed to make it out, but Iâm not a Bruin. Iâm a Lucia. Iâm North Side.
Where I come from, Royal women always end up in a boxâdead or alive.
âKillian called me into his office after we broke into the Hideaway and tagged Lavinia.â
I freeze just outside the kitchen, overhearing Nickâs words. Sarah had sent me down to pilfer a couple pieces of birthday cake, the weed making us maudlin and hungry, but I pause, straining to hear the conversation.
He goes on, âFor a second, I thought I was busted. Fuck, part of me is still surprised I walked out of that whorehouse alive. Killian might be a jock, but the guy isnât exactly stupid.â
âAnd these are the Lords,â Sy stresses. âNot exactly forgiving of being double-crossed.â
âBut youâre still alive,â Davis says in a confused tone.
Nick explains, âSaul and the Lords have massive beef. Something major went down, but Killian Payne wasnât in the position to handle it himself. Not when he was newly anointed and scrambling to get a foothold in his fatherâs Kingdom. He needed someone he trustedâmore than Saul, at leastâto head up the Dukes and take him out. Iâm a Bruin. Killer knew I had a ticket in, and he wanted to use it.â
Manny sounds incredulous. âYouâre saying you manipulated Killian Payneâa rival Kingâinto giving you their asset?â
Nickâs voice rings out defensively. âI didnât manipulate. I just⦠maneuvered things. Strategically.â
âJesus Christ, Nick,â Davis groans. âWhat the hell were you thinking?â
âHe wasnât,â Sy mutters, but Nick cuts in.
âSaul wanted revenge on the Lords. The Lords want revenge on Saul. I wanted Lavinia Lucia.â Thereâs a long pauseâprobably all of them figuring out what I already know. Nickâs problem isnât that he fails to think things through. Itâs that heâs so good at thinking things through, he can turn bad ideas into weirdly brilliant ones. He scoffs. âGuys. It was a win-win-win.â
âAnd now itâs a cluster fuck-fuck-fuck,â Remy says, voice garbled in a way that suggests heâs in the middle of eating something.
âLet me get this straight,â Manny says. âThe Lords gave you Lavinia in exchange for your position in the belfry, which would be beneficial to them.â
âYes.â
âBut they only did that in light of your⦠uh, initiation ritual,â Manny stutters, which is reasonable. Not many initiation rituals include breaking into the basement of a whorehouse and assaulting their prisoner.
Then again, this Forsyth.
Maybe they do.
Davis says, âSo this videoâ¦â and I feel my face instantly flare with heat. Iâm definitely not stoned enough to survive hearing their fathers talk about that video. âItâs hard, indisputable proof that you knowingly, betrayed the Lords.â
âAnd,â Manny adds, âif Saul were to show it to Payne, theyâd come after you.â
Syâs the one to answer, the words low and harsh. âBest case, weâd start a massive war with the only house whoâs ever shown a willingness to ally with us. Worst case, theyâd hunt us down like dogs in the street.â
Thereâs another beat of silence, and then Davis speaks, the words full of defeat. âThen Remy was right. Heâs got you by the balls.â Thereâs an anger in his tone that surprises me to hear. Itâs not anger directed at Nick, nor does it seem directed at Saul. Davis sounds more angry with himself than anything. âI should haveââ
I stiffen, fumbling my phone from my pocket to silence it, but I know itâs already too late. The kitchen has gone pointedly silent. I read the text notification without really intending to, my face burning in embarrassment at being caught.
And then I see the message.
Itâs only four wordsâbarely a sentenceâbut it might as well be a sledgehammer with the way my chest caves.
âVinny?â Remy calls out. âYou out there?â
Swallowing, I tear my eyes away from the screen, shuffling slowly into the kitchen. Davis and Manny are on the counter, Remy and Nick at the table, Sy standing in the middle of it all with his hands buried in his pockets. The birthday cake is a gruesome carcass, but even if it werenât, Iâve lost my appetite.
âStory just messaged me.â I hold my phone up, clearing my throat. âItâs the Countess.â
All of them are staring at me, but Syâs the one to speak, lip curling in distaste. âLet me guess. Another depressing revenge scheme is brewing in North Side.â
âThatâd be red.â Remyâs up in an instant, searching my eyes. âThis is green.â
Clutching the phone, I explain, âShe ODâd this morning.â The words fall with all the grace of a boulder. âSheâs dead.â
The car ride home is quiet. Remy sits next to me in the backseat, strangely still. Heâs not moving at all, other than to rub his thumb in an idle circuit against my knee.
âAre you okay?â I ask him, after meeting Syâs eye in the rearview mirror.
âYeah.â His inked fingers lift my chin. âAre you?â
Itâs not like I have the right to be anything else. Sutton was an enemy. Her boyfriend was killed by one of boyfriends. My family did this to her. My fatherâs Viper Scratch. His Countâs recklessness. My Dukeâs revenge. Itâs like my name is all over this, but in all truth, I barely knew herânever wanted to.
Still, something dark gnaws at my chest as we arrive back at the tower, and by the time we reach the main floor, it hasnât gotten any lighter.
Itâs not just about Sutton.
Itâs about my sisterâs skull, the only part of her that this town spat back out, sitting in an unmarked grave. Itâs about the woman who sat across from me an hour ago, asking me to save her sons. Itâs about the woman who once loaned her a weapon, even though they were rivals, because my mother knew something Iâm only just figuring out.
Royal women are first and second.
Remy and Sy both disappear into their rooms, but I stand beside the couch, watching as Nick methodically unties his boots. Iâm not sure what makes the question break free. I just know that it emerges like a hiccup, unstoppable.
âWould you let me leave?â I ask.
His back is curved into an exhausted bow as he leans down, forehead creasing. âWhat?â
âIf I tried to run again,â I clarify. âWould you stop me?â
Nickâs fingers go still for the briefest moment, tangled in the laces, before he yanks them harder. His reply comes low and harsh. âWhy would you ask me that?â
My eyes narrow as I watch his stiff, jerky movements, palms prying the boot from his ankle. âWhy arenât you answering?â
His eyes fly to mine, flinty and hard. âWhy are you pretending you donât already know the answer?â
My breath escapes in a punch of shock, although I donât know why it should. Heâs right. Some part of me has been aware of this, too cowardly to face the truth. âSo Iâm still your prisoner.â
âYouâre my girl!â he snaps, bolting to his feet. He extends an arm, jabbing a finger toward my loft. âI told you that night, thereâs no going back for me. You heard meâI know you did. So why are you bringing this up now?â
For a moment, his reaction renders me speechless. His nostrils are flared, shoulders tensed into a hard line. When I finally find my voice, I say, âI thought things had changed.â Thatâs the crux of it. I was arrogant enough to think I was differentâthat thereâs a happy ending in this for us.
, I think.
We all end up in a box.
His eyes widen in disbelief. âLook around you. Everything has changed!â He gestures broadly, and at first, the glint of frenzied rage in his eyes throws me off. âIâm not here for me. Iâm not out there in Northridge chasing down rich kids because I give a shit about their pussy Preston turf wars. Iâm not standing up and leading this frat because itâs some fucked up dream of mine.â He stabs a finger in my direction, insisting, âIâm doing this because itâs what want me to do. And now what? You want to leave me?â
Suddenly, all the fury and weirdly intense panic make sense.
I lunge forward, taking his face in my hands. âNick, no. I didnât say I wanted to leave.â Heâs so tense that he barely budges, not lowering his chin when I strain up, pressing a kiss to his stiff jaw. âI just need to know I could.â
His blue eyes dart down to mine. âYou want to test me? Fine.â Jabbing a fist into his pocket, he yanks out a pair of keys, shoving them into my palm. âItâs got half a tank. That should get you out of the state.â
I blink down at the glimmer of silver in my fist, confused. âSo you would let me?â
âI didnât say you couldnât leave Forsyth.â The response is rough and curt, but I hear with a crystal-clear clarity the words beneath them.
âYouâd come with me,â I realize, chest thudding painfully as I meet his stony gaze. âEven after everything youâve worked so hard to build. Sy, Remy, your parentsââ My words bite off, because Nick loves them. Iâve seen it, felt it. He left them once, and maybe he had a good reason, but it cleaved a part of himself away. Thereâs only one response to this that rings true. âNick, thatâs crazy.â
âOf course itâs fucking crazy!â he explodes, the words hurled so viciously that they might as well be fists.
I couldnât stop the flinch if I tried, stumbling back in shock.
His furious grimace plummets away, leaving a miserable, pleading expression in its wake. He drags both palms down his face. âGoddamn it, Lavinia. Iâve always been straight with you. Iâve never dressed this up into something it isnât. I know you hate hearing it, and god knows youâll never fucking say it back, but I still lay it out there.â He waves a slack hand between us. âI love you. To other guys, that means rainbows and fucking sunshine, but to me, it looks like this.â He holds out his arms as if presenting himself. The aggressive posture. The inked skin. The scars.
Take it or I deflate, wrapping my arms around myself. âYou donât understand. Youâve never had all your freedom taken away. Sometimes⦠the way you are with meâ¦â I choke up, unable to tell the truth of it. Nickâs love can be scary. Itâs been a long time since he locked me up and threw away the key, but I canât shake the feeling that heâd do it again if it meant keeping me.
Nick knows, though.
âFreedom?â A wretched breath of laughter tears through his throat. âYouâve got to be fucking kidding me. Iâd follow you anywhere, put a gun to my head and pull the trigger, leave my family, my friends, my whole fucking world if you asked me to. But even after all these years, you still think the way I love you makes you a prisoner. When are you going to get it?â His jaw tightens, and he reaches up, tucking a lock of hair behind my ear. âYouâre not shackled to me, Lavinia. Iâm shackled to you.â
The defeated frustration in his eyes makes my stomach drop. Unthinkingly, I reach for him. âNick, I didnât meanââ
This time, heâs the one to flinch, turning away with a bowed head. âIâll sleep in my room tonight,â he mutters.
Heâs already slammed the door by the time I manage to process the enormity of that decision. Nick has been a chain around my neck since the first night we met, an obstacle between me and freedom. Standing here alone, I realize that somewhere deep down, Iâve been waiting around for him to give it back to me.
But maybe Nickâs been waiting, too.
A Queen would take it back herself.