I wait until I hear the door shut to pry my eyelids open.
Vinny and Sy.
Going on a date, if I heard that conversation right.
Iâm pretty sure the closest thing Syâs ever had to a date was busting a nut in his pants at a Fourth of July party a few years back. First and last time he ever made out with a girl at a function. Well⦠until Vinny.
I wallow in the ensuing self pity for a bit, not bothering to get out of bed. Iâve done nothing but sleep all day, so Iâm caught in the web between being wide awake and too exhausted to move. My muscles feel like theyâve been beaten with a meat tenderizer made of needles and regret. My throat feels like fire, stomach burning, but the urge to retch up the acid has thankfully passed. My shoulder is stiff and still swollen, and a big part of that ânot movingâ thing is a deep desire to not feel the heavy, aching twinge of it.
All of that could be tolerated, though.
The problem is that there are no colors.
Red or green would guide me. Black or white would offer some relief. Blue would make me feel better. Purple might make my muscles move, drive me into action. Orange would make me fucking miserable, but at least thereâd be something. Instead, itâs all justâ¦
Gray.
I put my palm over my eyes as if I could call them back with a prayer.
. But I already know it wonât work. I can feel it inside, the empty pit where they used to be. Iâd probably cry if I had any yellow to spare.
Iâve hit a lot of rock bottoms, but this time I must have rolled my sorry ass into a trench.
âGet up.â
I let my hand fall away, squinting to see Nickâs figure in my doorway. Getâ¦
? âWorst idea you ever had,â I say, voice rough as gravel. âAnd thatâs saying a lot.â
Nicky doesnât look any more mad at me than he already was, entering the room and walking to my dresser. âClean yourself up and put on something loose and comfortable. We leave in an hour.â
Every inch of my guts recoils at the thought of walking. âLeave for where?â
âThe gym.â Nick throws me a pair of boxers and a t-shirt, not meeting my eyes. âPaulyâs going to take a look at that shoulder. Make sure everythingâs kosher.â
My gaze falls to my hand, and I curl my fingers. âItâs fine.â
The dresser drawer slams, making me flinch painfully. âGoddamn it, Remy.â Nick braces his hands on the dresser, not even turning to look at me. The line of his shoulders is as tense as his words. âIâm not going to stand here and order you around like a fucking toddler. Either you get out of bed and handle your shit, or you lay there and rot. Iâm not going to be your new Sy.â Straightening, he strides to the door, flicking a hand dismissively. âMeet me downstairs at eight if you find your balls.â
Taking a stealing breath, I go through the motions of sitting up, my head throbbing like a wound for a good second. Usually when Nickâs pissed at me like this, he either avoids me like the ice prince heâs so good at being, or he just straight up punches me in the face. Since no punch of his could hurt more than whatâs already going down inside my head, all thatâs left is avoidance, and thatâs not an option, either.
Groaning, I push myself to my feet, fist pressed into my gut. I give it a few seconds to make sure nothing is about to come up before gingerly making my way out of the room. Flipping the bathroom light on is roughly the equivalent of stabbing hot pokers into my eyeballs, so it takes me some time to adjust.
When I do, I wince.
The man staring back at me in the mirror is just as gray as my mind.
My hair is gnarled and dull, cheeks gaunt, eyes rimmed with red. Unbidden, Syâs voice rises in my head.
. I turn on the faucet, duck my head, and take large, greedy gulps of water from the stream, trying not to hear the way it sounds, rushing and wet. Just like the river.
I jolt out of the memory, slamming off the tap, which is when I see them. The orange bottles are lined up in a nice little row. One, two, three.
See no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil.
Itâs been a week since I took my medsâfor â
â, maybe more. I look at them, their presence as unavoidable as a heartbeat, and then look back up at my reflection. The first real memory I recall having at Saint Maryâs was being convinced that Iâd died. I didnât know why at the time. Back then, the memory of jumping into the river was still a red riddle inside my memories. But I knew something happened. Something enormous. Something unsurvivable.
Something horrifically yellow.
The feeling never really went away. That much I do remember. Itâs always been there in the back of my mind, this possibility that everything happening around me isnâtâ¦
. Just synapses firing off inside my brain on the moment of impact. An infinite loop of days meant to provide me with the physical chemicals that made dying a bearable thing.
Itâs not something I tell Sy about, because it isnât all the time. Sometimes, like right now, everything feels real. The smoothness of the pedestal sink. The buzz of the overhead light. The drip of the showerhead. The scent of Nickâs body wash. The dampness of the mat beneath my bare feet.
I havenât had that feeling in days.
Not since I jumped with Vinny.
Reaching out, I begin opening the bottles, ignoring the orangeness of them, and dump one of each pill into my palm. They go down harshly, scraping at the back of my raw throat, but something inside me strengthens with resolve afterward.
I keep my shower quick, washing my hair one-handed. After, I consider shaving the five days of growth from my face, but doing that one-handed just seems fucking stupid, so I brush my teeth instead. Canât be having all those pills on an empty, upset stomach, so after getting dressed, I stop by the kitchen for a bagel and one of Syâs protein shakes.
By the time I step into my boots, the thought of my bed is feeling pretty tempting. My shoulder hurts like a bitch, but thereâs nothing anyone can do about it anyway. Whatâs the point? Sleep is healing. I could do that for two more hours. Or, like, thirty.
comes Syâs voice.
.
Oh.
Right.
Even knowing thatâs probably true, it still tears something within me to pass my bedroom. To reach for my coat, wallet, and keys. To make all the motions of stepping through the door. To leave the hope of crawling into a hole behind.
Nick is waiting in the party room.
I pause at the bottom step, only halfway into my jacket because I refuse to consider how much itâd suck to thread my arm through its sleeve.
He looks me up and down with blank, assessing eyes, and then nods. âGood.â
If I had the energy, Iâd be glaring back. âStellar.â
The walk down the stairs is excruciating. Every step makes the protein shake slosh around in my belly, and even if it didnât, my legs consider mutiny halfway through. Nick stays quiet ahead of me, but keeps my slow pace, glancing over his shoulder at me, each flight.
âIâm going as fast as I can!â I finally snap, but even that takes too much energy, so I end up slumping on one of the steps.
Nick turns, lifting an eyebrow. âYou could have taken the elevator.â
âFuck you.â
âFuck me yourself,â he says, watching as I sprawl out. His eyes are annoyingly alert, scanning the stairwell before he lowers himself to one of the steps below me. âWe can rest for a second.â
Bitterly, I mutter, âGo ahead.â He twists, giving me a questioning look, and I huff. âTell me how this is all my fault, and Iâm a pussy-ass bitch who should have pledged to the Princes, yadda fucking yadda.â
Nick rolls his eyes, turning his gaze forward, forearms resting on his knees. âWell, itâs no fun if you do it yourself.â I cradle my shoulder, hissing at the tug, wishing for a bottle of whisky and the sweet, sweet release of oblivion. Nickâs quiet, pensive voice breaks the silence. âWhen I looked at the tracker and saw her in the river, I knew you were with her, and Iââ I canât see his face, but I can hear the distress in his tone. âI canât lose you, Remy. If Iâm a dick to you, itâs only because I love you. And because I know you can be better.â Turning just enough to show me the cut of his jaw, he adds, âAnd also because I canât punch you in the face when you already look so pathetic.â
Snorting, I just shake my head. âTake your shot, Nicky. Fair is fair.â
He twists to meet my gaze, and I know heâs remembering that day in the Pit at the Hideaway. I wanted so badly to beat his ass for handing Vinny over to the snakes. And he let meâwould have let me do a hell of a lot worse.
Nick gives me a wry, knowing smirk. âLike I said, itâs no fun if you do it yourself.â
I kind of wish heâd beat my ass, too. One of the best things about Nick is how willing he is to call me on my shit. âI want to ask you something,â I start, throat already tightening. âAnd I need you to be up-fucking-front with me, okay? No bullshit.â
Hearing the seriousness in my tone, Nick turns, giving me his full attention. âShoot.â
âDo you thinkâ¦â I can barely say it. Admit it. âDo you think I could have killed Tate?â
Nickâs eyebrows crash together. âWhat?â
âI was there with her and Leticia. I donât know what frame of mind I was in, or what I saw, or whether or not I was cycling, orâ¦â I look at Nick, searching his expression for some kind of confirmation. âShe was running around with a Lucia behind our backs. What if I thought she sold us out?â
âRemyââ Nick tries.
âIt was one of your guns. I had access, Nicky, and donât fucking tell me Iâd neverââ My words choke off. âBecause look what I did to Vinny. If Iâm capable of thatââ
âYou did not,â Nickâs gaze is rock solid, voice sharp with vehemence, âfucking kill Tate.â
My heart pounds, and this time when my stomach rolls, itâs not from the withdrawals. âAre you sure?â
Without hesitation he says, âYes.â
âHow can you be sure?â Even though itâs a question, it emerges with all the desperation of a plea.
âBecause if you did, your father would have known,â Nick says, holding my stare. âAnd he would have used that shit to lock you up for the rest of your life.â
I blink. Heâs right. The conversation with my father up on that cliff made one thing certain. Heâd take any chance he could to lock me away forever. To keep me under his thumb and away from the DKS. Nothing could have turned Nick, Sy, and West End away from me faster and more effectively than the knowledge Iâd killed Tate.
The nausea dissipates, relief whipping through me at the new certainty. The resolve from before returns in full force, and I promise him, âIâm going to make it better. With you. With Sy and Vinny. With DKS. I donât know how yet, but I do know one thing.â
âI know.â
âHow?â I ask.
âA man whoâs cheated death twice doesnât just give up.â
âHe ,â I add, feeling it in my chest. God, itâs the first real feeling Iâve had in days not engulfed in regret and cravings.
Nick stands, brushes himself off, and then offers me his hand. âThen let me help.â
Pauly meets us at the gym, sizing up my shoulder in the training room off the main room.
âAn x-ray would make me feel better,â he says, raising my elbow and ignoring my grimace, âbut I think it looks pretty good. Range of motion is all there. You should start some light exercises tomorrow. Nothing too strenuous, but you need to loosen up this joint, son.â
Nickâs expression is skeptical, but Iâm confident in Paulyâs skills. He joined DKS before he failed out of med school. âSomething came upâ is what he always says whenever someone asks why he didnât graduate. Verity told me once that he was kicked out during his residency for stealing drugs from the pharmacy at his hospital. That tracks, to be honest. I see it in the shake of his hands and the mottled scars on his upper forearms. But heâs the closest thing the gym has to a medic, although heâs actually just a trainer, and even then, only part-time when his real job allows it.
His real job.
As a line cook.
Itâs no wonder the Duchess is always meant to be pre-med.
âNo shit.â I hiss when he drops my arm, rounding the chair to get another look at my back.
âThese bruises worry me more,â he says, giving the large black and blue patch a poke. âThe fuck did you do, jump off a building?â
I glance at Nick, whose eyes darken. âSomething like that.â
Pauly makes a thoughtful noise. âWell, youâre going to need something for the pain if you plan to rehab that shoulder. Weâve still got some codeine in the back.â
Fuck.
That sounds like heaven wrapped in pussy.
I deflate. âNo, wait.â Knowing Iâm going to end up regretting this, I meet his gaze. âDonât bother, man. Iâm coming off a bender. Trying to clean myself up. You know how it is.â
Pauly, whoâs probably done and quit more drugs than Iâll ever see, spits a low curse. âYouâre going through withdrawal, too? Donât tell me. Viper Scratch?â
Nickâs standing off to the side, arms crossed. Heâs the one to say, âI think the worst has passed. He stopped ralphing around noon.â
âSo youâve got a shoulder that needs rehabbed as you detox from some of the worst dope around.â Pauly shakes his head. âKeep on burning that candle at both ends, Maddox, and all youâre going to find is ash.â
I struggle back into my shirt. âYou donât know the fucking half of it.â
He leaves us with a couple of exercises but mostly wants me to rest it and allow it to heal for the next few days. âPushing it will only cause more pain and more pain will drag you back to the scratch, baby.â
âCome on,â Nick says, âyou can spot me on the weights.â
I know what heâs doing. Heâs keeping me busy.
me until Iâm ready to go to class or pick up a paintbrush again. My hands have been shaking so bad I wonât dare get near the tattoo gun. Jesus. I value my artâmy âtoo much to risk it.
Nick racks the weights then lays back on the bench, beneath the bar.
âYou know if this falls on you thereâs not much I can do with this fucked shoulder, right?â I tell him, eyeing the amount of weight he added to each end.
âThis?â He nods to the weight. âTotal cakewalk,â then grips the bar. His muscles tense, but he pops it off the rack and brings it down to this chest. I roll my eyes, knowing Nicky canât stop pushing himself. Sy has that too. That determination and grit.
The Maddox genes didnât pass that down.
A door slams across the room and I glance up. âShit,â I mutter.
âWhaââ Nick starts, but it ends in a grunt. Sweat blooms in the center of his gray T-shirt.
âItâs Haley,â I say, feeling the tickle of anxiety on my spine. Iâm not a big fan of confrontation. Or accepting responsibility. Or cleaning up my messes.
More Maddox genes.
My signature move here is to just dip. Get the fuck out. Avoid whatever hellfire is going to come my way from engaging with Haley any further.
Iâm about to notify Nick of my super mature plan, that Iâll meet him in the car, when he says, âRem. A little help?â
His arms wobble the massive amount of weight threatening to crash down on his chest. âJesus. I told you!â
I grab the bar with the hand on my good arm and the two of us struggle to get it back on the rack. âSee?â Nick says, wiping his face. âCakewalk.â
I shake my head but then I see her crossing the gym. âDammit. Now sheâs coming over here.â
âDude, you dug this hole. Fix it. Own up to your bullshit.â He tosses his towel over his shoulder. âIâll be over there on the treadmill.â
âWhatever,â I say, âHaley loves me. Iâm sure sheâs fine.â I run my hand over my face and when I look at her again, I see sheâs got her shoulders back, pushing her chin and tits out. A coy grin toys with her lips. I try to pull out her colors, get a feel of her vibe, but theyâre lost to me right now, like so many other things.
âHey, babe,â she says, eyes skating over me. âYou okay? I tried to find you after the fight and you were just gone.â
Gone is the right word. Out of my goddamn mind, climbing cliffs, confronting demons and jumping for my life. Declaring my love. She has no fucking idea what Iâve been through since the locker room.
âLook, Haleyâ¦â I start, aware of the steady sound of Nickâs feet pounding on the treadmill.
âNo,â she says, voice hard.
âNo, uh, what?â
Her hip juts out and her hand lands on the curve. âYou are not about to âlookâ me.â
ââLookâ you?â
âNo good conversation starts with âlook,â I know that. Iâve been on the receiving end enough times in my life.â Her tone is sharp. Bitter. âSo let me jump to it.
Remy, you and I are good together. We rock some serious orgasms. Youâre hot. Iâm hot. You obviously want me because you keep coming back.â Her eyes narrow when I open my mouth to cut her off. âAnd donât give me that Duchess shit. You got busted. Who cares? Youâre a Duke. You can fuck or get blown by anyone you want, and itâs obvious you want me.â
Across the workout area, the thud of Nickâs foot missing a step, bounces over to us. I shoot him a hard stare and the cocksucker has the nerve to laugh. Heâs loving the fact this is not going my way.
âLââ
She glares at me.
I swallow. âHaley, what happened the other night wasnât just a mistake, it was a capital F fuck up. I was high on scratch, high on the win, and completely convinced that everyone in my life was out to get me.â I soften my expression. âI shouldnât have used you like that. It was shitty. Especially since I know how you feel about me.â
âHow I feel about you?â she snaps. âYou have no fucking idea how I feel.â
I mean, I think I do, but my radar could be a little off.
âOkay, well,â I rub the back of my neck, âI apologize. You can take it or leave it. I didnât mean to lead you on or whatever.â God, I hate this. My stomach hurts. My shoulder hurts. I search over her head. Maybe Pauly still has that codeine in the back.
âHey,â she says, drawing my attention back down. âI know what this is about.â
âYou do?â Worry adds to the mix. Does she know my father is the Baron King? What the hell did I say while she was sucking my cock? Anything is possible.
She steps closer, planting her hand on my chest. âThis is about that interloper, Lavinia, isnât it?â
I frown. âWell, yeah.â
âYouâve changed since she showed up. We used to have so much fun. Youâd strip me down and draw on me. Weâd fuck and get high. Stay up all night, riding across town on your bike.â She jabs her finger into my chest. âBut you couldnât resist that fresh piece of pussy. Royal pussy. Count pussy. God, in the end youâre just another fucking typical man, you know that?â She pushes up on her toes. âWanting what you canât have. Youâre such a dumbass, Remy, letting her get under your skinâprobably letting her sleep in your bed.
her. Sheâs using you.â Her eyes flick to Nick who has slowed down and is listening carefully. âSheâs using all of you, and Iâm here, as one of your loyal cutsluts to give it to you straight.â Her eyes glimmer with hate. âSheâs going to ruin you, of you, before this is over.â
Her nail digs into my sternum, and I snatch it off at the wrist. âStep back, Haley, before you say something you regret.â
She snorts. âOr what? Youâll push me to my knees and make me suck you off? Donât forget, baby, I do that for free. Does she?â
Her other hand reaches for my waist, but I knock that away too. Before I can react, Nick is by my side, jerking his chin at her. âYouâre embarrassing yourself, H.â
âSee?â she says, âThatâs where you donât get it. Iâm not embarrassing myself. Iâm loyal. To all of you, but youâre the ones willing to toss it away.â Her shoulders square and she finally steps back. âBut I know how it is; youâll be back. Crawling to me after some win or some loss or whatever it is that spins you out, and unlike your little Duchess, Iâll be here.â
She turns, hair flouncing behind her.
I open my mouth and start to follow, to tell her to get the fuck out of here but Nick says, âLet her go.â
âSeriously? After what she said about Vinny?â
He shakes his head. âSheâs hurt, but sheâll get over it. Verity and the others will calm her down. Sheâs not worth it.â
He says that, but Haleyâs right. I know her pretty well, and something tells me sheâs not going to let this goâlet goâso easily.
We stop at the diner on Sixteenth on the way home, grabbing hamburgers and fries. The sugar and grease help get the food down, even if the harsh fluorescent lights make my eyes hurt.
âWhat do you think theyâre doing on their date?â I ask, sucking on a chocolate milkshake.
Nick pops a fry in his mouth, checking the window beside us every now and then. Weâre in West End, but only just, and I can see it makes him twitchy being this close to North Side. He hums, talking with his mouth full. âI know what theyâre doing.â
Having sex. Heâs right. Thatâs going to take a minute.
Thereâs a long moment where I pick at the remnants of my burger, wishing I could look up and see something other than gray. Knowing it sounds sulky and stupid, I mutter, âI could take her on a date.â
.
Nick narrows his eyes at me, stabbing his shake with his straw. âYeah, you could.â
I push the rest of my food to the side and confess, âI told her I loved her.â
âYeah?â Nick looks at me over his glass as he sips, eyes intrigued. âWhat did she say?â
âMostly, uhh⦠incomprehensible shrieking?â I shrug but Nickâs expression forces me to add, âWell, we jumped right after I said it.â
Putting his glass down, he gives me a blank, mystified look. âYou told Lavinia you loved her right before you threw yourselves off a fucking cliff?â He shakes his head, shoulders bouncing with a laugh. âIt really is always life or death with you, isnât it?â
My back straightens. âItâs not like I planned it!â
He sighs, tossing the fry heâs about to eat into the trash pile. âI told her I loved her, too. A few times, actually.â
I fight a wayward shiver, watching as he dusts the salt from his hands. âWhat did she say to you?â
âThe first time?â Nick slings his arm over the back of the booth, sucking his teeth. âShe laughed in my face, called me crazy, and then tried to kick me in the balls.â
I wince in solidarity. âYeah, you win.â
Nick grabs his milkshake and holds it in the air. âTo the fucking victor, brother.â
My eyes follow his gaze through the window, to the corner across the street. Itâs lit up with a single flickering light, a couple guys in dark hoodies tucked close, talking. I already know who they are. I knew Cash Mallis was standing there the second we rolled up. Maybe the resentment should burn that Nick brought me here of all places to grab a quick bite, as if neither of us know the boundary between west and north, but instead I just feel hollow.
âYou can beat it, you know.â When I look up, Nick is watching me carefully. Closely. âViper Scratch made its rounds in South Side before it came here. I once saw Daniel Payneâs best girl, Augustine, so strung out that Mrs. Crane had to tie her up just to stop her from clawing out her own eyes. She looked fucking possessed.â
I shift my eyes back to the corner. Mallis is leaning into a car window, a little hatchback having stopped to make a purchase. âItâs where it gets its name. Scratch.â I can still feel the phantom tug of needing to dig my nails into my arm. âWhatever itâs cut with, it makes you itchy as hell.â
I see Nick nodding in my periphery. âYou just did it a couple times, though. Enough to get the bug, but not enough to really get its fangs into you.â Leaning forward, he lowers his voice. âItâs the next time thatâll get you, though. Youâll start lying to yourself. Youâll think,â he shrugs, quick and casual, âwhatever, you kicked it once. No big deal. It wasnât so bad. You can just do it once or twice. Three times, since itâs available. Four, because you had a bad day. Five, just on account of wanting to.â Thereâs a pause where we both watch Cash salute the driver of the hatchback, slinking back to his post. âAnd you wonât come back, Remy.â When I swing my eyes to his, Nickâs mouth is pressed into a tight, grim line. âNot if you do it again. One more time is all itâll take.â
I drop my eyes, wishing he was wrong but knowing heâs not. Iâm no Augustine. No oneâs going to tie my ass down and get me clean, because if that fraction of the pull I felt a few days ago grew big enough, no one could stop me.
Lifting my hips, I take out my wallet, pulling out a wrinkled twenty. âLetâs go home,â I decide, dropping it beside my plate.