I couldnât stop thinking of my fist crashing into that fool. The whole dinner, Iâd been fantasizing about slamming him into the wall and using him as a punching bag. Mario couldnât be with Noahâthat was that. I didnât want anyone to be with her, actually, and I didnât care to think about why. I couldnât take my eyes off her the whole meal. The way she laughedâso different from meâhow easy she was to talk to, that way she unconsciously rubbed that part of her neck where she was tattooed, all of that drove me crazy the whole night.
After seeing her leave with Mario, I had gotten up and taken Anna home, and I now found myself on the way to a bar. I couldnât stick around Annaâs place; it was unbearable. Iâd been spending too much time with her these past few weeks. If I didnât want things getting serious, Iâd need to find another girl to hang out with. I headed for a club Iâd been to a lot in recent years, in a rough part of town where many less than respectable people hung out. The door guys knew me, so I didnât have to wait in line. Inside, the music was deafening, and the blinking lights gave a strange, even eerie glow to the sweaty bodies dancing there. Who knew what they were all high on.
I walked over to the bar and ordered a whiskey while glancing around at the crowd. Since the year Iâd lived with Lion in that neighborhood far from my father, his money, and everything the Leister name represented, Iâd found my place among these people. They respected me, they accepted me, and they were the perfect escape route from everything I hated about the life I was now being forced to live. Iâd run away as soon as Iâd turned eighteen. Since Mom had left, my relationship with Dad had dwindled away to nothing, and I didnât think anyone would care if I just up and disappeared and tried to go it alone. But Dad had wound up sending his security chief, Steve, to find me. It had been ironic, seeing a tall guy in a suit showing up at the house Iâd been living in then, and even more so when heâd realized that if he wanted to make me go back, heâd need an army.
Steve had worked for my father since I was a kid, and he knew me well enough to recognize there was no way he could force me to go home against my will. But then the thing with my sister had happened, and Iâd needed my fatherâs help.
The day after Steve showed up, all my credit cards had been canceled, and my checking account had been blocked. Iâd had to get a job at Lionâs dadâs garage to make a living. But I had never felt freer or more myself.
Life in that neighborhood had been tough. Iâd gotten the shit kicked out of me as soon as Iâd shown up there, and Iâd realized that I would never make it, being a millionaireâs son, unless I turned into one of them. I had started training every day without fail: no one was going to put their hands on me again without knowing Iâd hit back. Lion had shown me how to defend myself, how to throw a punch, and how to take one. My first real fight had come two months after Iâd started training. Iâd left Ronnie laid out on the ground covered in blood, and that had gotten me the respect of all present. The races and the gambling had come a while later, and Ronnie and I had made a truce, but that meant people started choosing sides. There were Lion and our guys and I and then Ronnie and his dealers and delinquents. He knew it worked out better for him to be cordial with us, especially after my father got us out of jail when weâd been charged with disturbing the peace.
Everything had changed when Iâd come to need my fatherâs help. I couldnât have ignored the fact that I had a sister and wanted to meet her. Dad had said heâd help with the trial and get me visitation rights if Iâd move home, go to college, and stay with him for at least three years. Iâd had to agree and go back to Leister mansion, and once there, I had realized my father wasnât indifferent to me. Our relationship had improved, but my life had basically stayed the same. I lived with him now, but I spent most of my time with Lion, getting drunk, getting high, and getting into trouble. As long as I slept at home and went to school, Dad didnât get mixed up in my life, and I stayed out of his business, tooâ¦and things had continued that way until now.
Fights and races were an everyday thing for me, and Ronnieâs and Lionâs gangs were getting into more and more confrontations. Things were worse now than before, but Iâd always seen the hidden resentment in Ronnieâs eyes. We needed that truce: we lived in the same town, and we ran with the same people. But our friendly rivalry had turned into a feud between two gangs, and it was getting dangerous, as last time had shown. Me smashing his face at the last race had been an affront, and there was going to be backlash, I just didnât know when. Noah beating him was the greatest humiliation imaginable, and I knew Iâd end up having to deal with it. The problem was, Ronnie wasnât just a street fighter anymore. This was getting ugly. I knew after he shot at us how dangerous he could be, and I couldnât stop thinking heâd come for Noah at some point in the near future.
Damn her. Whyâd she have to do that? Damn her for fucking up everything for me. I needed to stop thinking about her, get back to my life, have fun the way I always did, enjoy myself the way I always hadâ¦
A blond stuffed into a skimpy halter top and black-leather pants sidled up to me at the bar.
âHey, Nick,â she said, and when I saw the dragon tattoo on her collarbone, I realized Iâd hooked up with her before. Her name started with an S: Sophie, Sunny, Susan, something like that.
I nodded to her. I wasnât in the mood to talk, but I in the mood for other things. She was already close to me; it didnât take much to turn that proximity into a kiss.
I grabbed her waist and pulled her into me. Her breath smelled like vodka and something sweet. She was exactly what I needed to relieve the tension from the past few days. I grabbed her hand and dragged her to one of the VIP tables, where we could escape from the lights.
But when I saw how Susanâs hair shone in different colors as she passed under the neon, I thought of Noah. Cursing, I pushed her against the wall harder than I needed to, but she sighed with pleasure, so I felt free to keep going. Her body pressed against mine in all the right places, but her lips were too greedy, that wasnât what I wanted. I leaned in and kissed her on the neck. She smelled like liquor and smoke. I pulled aside her hair and looked at the dragon tattooâ¦but the tattoo I wanted to kiss was another, and that wasnât the neck that drove me wild as soon as I looked at it.
I grabbed her face. There wasnât a single freckle on it. Her blue eyes werenât honey-colored, her lashes werenât long.
I pulled away.
âWhat is it?â Susan asked, her hands moving down to my crotch and stroking me. I grabbed her wrist and jerked it away.
âSorry. Gotta go,â I said and turned my back. I didnât even bother listening to her complain. I needed to leave.
I walked around a corner toward an alley, trying to ignore the intimation that I was screwing up. Bad. I was so angry, so self-absorbed, that I didnât even realize who was at the end of the street until familiar voices made me look up. Right away, I was on edge.
Ronnie and three of his drug dealer friends were leaning on a car, a Ferrariâ¦
Ferrari. I stopped, clenching my firsts, struggling to restrain a fury that was crying to get out.
âLook who we have here!â Ronnie shouted, stepping away from the hood and toward me. âDaddyâs little rich boy.â He laughed, and his goons laughed along. I recognized all three of them: two tattooed guys who were high as a kite and Cruz, Ronnieâs right-hand man.
âYou here to beg for your car back?â Ronnie asked. Iâd have happily knocked that smile right off of his face.
âYou mean the car you cheated your way into getting?â I asked. âWhatever. Maybe with a real car, youâll actually learn how to drive. I mean, you donât want to lose to a seventeen-year-old girl again, do you?â
It was deeply pleasing to see how the remark affected him. He wasnât smiling now. No, the veins were swelling in his neck.
âYouâll regret that,â he threatened me, trying to act calm. âGet him!â he shouted.
I had known that was going to happen. I knew it as soon as I saw them, and I was ready. I punched the first guy who came over and grinned when I felt his nose break. Someone grabbed me from behind, and I fired back with an elbow, striking something hard, probably someoneâs mouth. Cruz came over to help the two others, but before he got there, Iâd already hit goon number one again in the face. Now it was my turn to suffer. Someone punched me in the right eye, hard enough to knock me aside, but still, I managed to kick whoever was trying to grab my arms. I held out awhile longer, but three against one was too much even for me, especially with Cruz in the picture. He was every bit as tough as Lion. One-on-one, I might have taken him, but with the other guys restraining me, there wasnât much I could do.
Cruz started pounding me in the ribs, and I tried not to scream as I thought how much Iâd like to kill him with my bare hands. Ronnie came over. The look on his face told me this wasnât going to be the end of it.
âTell your little sister I havenât forgotten what happened on the track,â he said. Noahâs innocent face appeared in my mind. Ronnie grabbed me by my hair and pulled my face close. He stank like cheap beer and weed. âAnd tell her when I see her, Iâm going to make her pay, and Iâm not just talking about cash or a car.â I saw red all over. I was trembling with violence. I was going to kill that motherfucker.
âIâm gonna bust her wide open, Nick,â he said. If I could have moved, Iâd have headbutted him and knocked his nose bone up into his brain. âAnd when I do, Iâm gonna wreck that pussy so bad you wonât even want to go near it.â
âIâll kill you,â I said. Three words, one promise.
He laughed and punched me in the stomach. Every ounce of air in me came out, and I had to bend over to cough and spit up blood.
âDonât come around here no more or Iâll be the one to kill you. Donât think I wonât,â he said, turning around. The guys holding me let go after one final punch in the face.
Those sons of bitches.
I stumbled off to my car. I barely made it home. Everyone was asleep; it was after one in the morning. Strangely, there was no light coming from Noahâs room. No way she was still out. I opened the door. Her bed was made.
I cursed, walked into my room, and pulled off my clothes, trying to grit my teeth through the pain. I was in bad shape; it had been a long timeâfour years to be exactâsince Iâd received a beating like that. It had been dumb of me to wander down that alley by myself. Iâd made it easy for the bastard.
I got into the shower and let the water wash away the blood and sweat. Theyâd mostly stuck to my stomach and ribs, so I could cover up my bruises with a T-shirt. The black eye and busted lip were a different story. Iâd need to come up with a good explanation for Dad or avoid him until the swelling went down. I had some practice. I didnât get hit in the face often, but when we had our fights and money was on the line, sometimes there was nothing I could do about it.
I couldnât stop thinking about how Ronnie had threatened Noah. He must have wanted to strangle her after that public humiliation at the races. The mere thought of that scumbag touching her made me so mad I could hardly keep from punching the mirror in front of me.
I dried off and threw on some sweatpants. I stayed shirtless, since some of my wounds were still bleeding. I rinsed out my mouth and made sure I hadnât cracked any teeth, but I was good. My lip had even stopped bleeding, but it was red and purple, just like my eye. And both would be that way for some time.
I grabbed my phone and walked out into the hallway, thinking Iâd try to find out where the hell Noah was and get some ice for my wounds.
Five minutes later, as I was walking out of the kitchen with my phone to my ear, I heard the key turning in the front door, and the main reason for my bad mood appeared.
Her phone was buzzing. It stopped when I hung up. She looked up at me. Her eyes were surprised and then horrified.
âWhere the hell have you been?â I asked.