Ruthless Empire: Part 1 – Chapter 5
Ruthless Empire: A Dark Enemies to Lovers Romance (Royal Elite Book 6)
Existence, or the lack thereof, is intriguing.
I remember the first time I picked up Nausea by Jean-Paul Sartre from one of Mumâs shelves. It was covered with dust, not having been touched in years.
I remember reading it in one day. I was twelve. I didnât understand much of it back then, but every time I reread it, I get these bursts of nothingness.
Other people would steer clear from that, but I keep coming back for more. I read about the existentialism theory and followed all of Sartreâs counterparts, and while Iâm not a believer in the theory â or in anything in general â I still find myself engrossed in Sartreâs main character in Nausea, Antoine Roquentin.
A lonely man suffering to come to terms with his existence while being horrified by it.
When Mum saw me reading the book, she said she pitied him because he didnât have anyone to understand him. Antoine is, in her mind, the worst-case scenario for writers who delve too deep.
Mum might be a novelist herself, but sheâs into what I call thought-provoking fiction. She writes books about the darkest parts of human nature, psychopaths, serial killers and cults. She writes books where villains are the main characters and she doesnât try to romanticise them. Thatâs what makes her plots heart-pounding.
No matter how much I love Mumâs talent and her literary genius, I think she missed the point in Nausea. Itâs not that Antoine didnât understand himself; itâs that maybe he understood too much, which became a burden.
I didnât tell her that, or she wouldâve given me that look. The one where her brow creases and she watches me closely as if looking for signs from her serial killersâ articles cheat sheet.
Then she wouldâve booked me an appointment with the therapist so I could talk it out.
Itâs been the same endless cycle since my father died. Over the years, Iâve learnt to keep my most unconventional opinions to myself. Whenever Mum says I sound a lot older than I am, itâs usually my prompt to cut back and mimic those surrounding me.
Especially Xander and Ronan; theyâre the most normal amongst the four of us â or as normal as they can get.
Iâve been having my suspicions about Ronan. His overall joyful personality sometimes seems to be the camouflage of something.
Heâs now grinning like an idiot as we gather in the Meet Up â the cottage Aidenâs late mother left him. We usually come here after games with other team members. Today, however, itâs only the four of us because Ronan said itâs a special occasion.
âLady and gents â and by the way, the lady is you, King.â He hops on the table, feigning to hold a microphone in hand. âWeâre gathered here today to celebrate the holy deflowering of Aiden King. He finally lost his virginity. Letâs hear it for him!â
Xander howls as he jumps on the table and grabs Ronan by the shoulder. Heâs one to talk, the hypocrite.
âShut the fuck up, Astor, and get down,â Aiden says from beside me. He appears bored as usual. His grey eyes are bland and about ready to commit murder to interrupt the vicious, dull cycle.
I know that feeling.
Unless thereâs chaos, itâs as if the world is permanently grey and thereâs no way to inject colour into it.
For me, it started after the kidnapping. Maybe I had some issues before, but that darkness â that first taste of chaos â sealed the deal for me.
Aiden is the same, although his case is deeper. Xander and I were taken for two days and werenât harmed. Aiden spent an entire week in chaos and came back with scars.
Is he special? Is that why Chaos kept him for longer?
Since then, heâs been making it his mission to instigate battles and wars. Or rather, itâs become our mission. Me, because Iâll take any chance to meet Chaos again, even if itâs brief. Him, because he loves the challenge. He isnât labelled Conquest for no reason.
They came up with these names for us at school because of football. Xander is War, which is understandable, considering heâs like a bull striker. Ronan is Death because he kills any attempt at attack from the midfield. Iâm Famine. According to them, silent but deadly.
Iâd say Iâm always hungry for more. More information, more books, more chaos.
âAdmit it, Aiden.â Ronan directs his imaginary mic at him. âItâs because of my recommendations.â
âFuck off.â Aiden doesnât miss a beat.
âYou donât have to say it out loud. I get it in the small space in my heart.â Ronan grins, running his fingers through his messy brown hair in a smug way. âI was the first to lose my virginity. Youâre the last. Guess who wins?â
A slight smirk crosses Aidenâs lips. âHow about Knight and Nash?â
âKnight was right after me.â Ronan squeezes Knightâs shoulder. âWas that night with that twin fun or what?â
âAre you sure, though?â Aiden glances at Xander, who flips him off with a dimpled smile.
âMais bien sûr,â Ronan dismisses Aiden. âCole was⦠Hey, wait a second. When was it?â
âMiss Goldman,â I say and focus back on my book.
They donât need to know the details. Besides, if they find out, Ronan will make a fucking show out of it. He makes it his job not only to start a rumour, but also to spread it until it reaches other schools.
Heâs shit with secrets.
âOoh, right.â Ronan grins, then pouts. âYouâre the winner in quality, but Iâm the winner in quantity. Aiden is last.â
The latter flips him off and he returns it as the door clicks open.
Only six people have access to the Meet Up. Four of them are here and the fifth is Levi, Aidenâs one-year-older cousin, but he disappeared with a girl, which leaves just one option.
My head lifts from the book as she comes inside, holding a grocery bag and juggling her backpack on one shoulder.
Chaos.
My entire body sharpens whenever sheâs in my vicinity. Itâs been getting more noticeable over the years. Every time sheâs there, I have this urge to get up, grab her, and take herâ¦somewhere.
Anywhere.
It doesnât help that every day, sheâs been growing from that kid Barbie doll to this girl with long, toned legs and an hourglass figure that keeps sharpening with time. Her tits are perky, high, and big, straining against her jacket whenever itâs closed â like now.
Her face has this symmetrical quality to it. Her eyes are huge and a clear blue, and when youâre close enough, you can see the grey flecks in them. Like a symphony of colours. The small freckles on her nose have been slowly disappearing over the years and sheâs been hiding the traces with makeup. Her lips are full and have a perfect teardrop at the top that I havenât been able to stop staring at since the day I sucked on it about a year ago.
No. Itâs not only her lips that I havenât been able to stop staring at.
Itâs her.
All of her.
And itâs not only because of that kiss or the almost-kiss before that.
It all started that night. It started with chaos and refused to end.
I still donât like Silver Queens. And not because she acts like a bitch to everyone at school, but because sheâs not actually a bitch. Sheâll go out of her way to snitch to the principal on anyone who bullies Kimberly, but she wonât talk to her. Sheâll even hurt her if she feels her ex-best friend, Kim, might get close to her.
She shuts Summer and Veronica up when they make the other students do shit for them while she sits at parties like sheâs a queen, accepting the peasantsâ offers at her feet.
The sorry fucks line up to ask her to dance, only for her to tell them sheâs not feeling like dancing, but they can sit with her.
Sheâs plastic. Sheâs becoming more and more a replica of her mother, and the worst thing is, I donât think she even realises it.
When her eyes meet mine, she pauses for a fraction of a second before she harrumphs and directs her attention at the others.
Since that day in our guest room, Silver has made it her mission to avoid me and never stay alone with me. Whenever we meet at my house by accident â because I make her think I wonât come back at that time and then show up anyway â she pretends I donât exist.
Like now.
Itâs a game we play. Pretending the other doesnât exist.
I still pull on her hair every chance I get. Sheâs lost that awed, surprised look over time, but itâs one of the rarest moments where sheâll stare up at me with wide eyes. They usually morph into glares way too soon, but that brief second is worth it.
Silver still tries to compete with me every chance she gets. She loses most of the time. In the beginning, I used to forfeit to see her eyes widening in a different type of way â with happiness â but lately, sheâs been pissing me off with all the fuckboys she sits with at parties, so I make sure to see her lose.
I make sure she falls at my feet.
She stands up every time, though, and swings back even more determined. Itâs one of her most admirable qualities. Itâs like she can climb a mountain, then destroy it if she puts her mind to it.
Iâm that mountain in her life right now. The one sheâll never be able to reach the top of. I wonât let her. Iâll keep her hanging on to me because I need the chaos she brings to the solid exterior. The way she digs her nails in and disrupts the boring cycle.
If I give in to her, if I allow her to have her way, everything will snap back to normal, and I donât like normal.
âI brought snacks Helen and I made.â She carries the bags to the kitchen area.
âAre there any crisps?â Ronan helps her and she nods.
Xander follows, rubbing his hands. âI get half the crisps.â
âNo!â Ronan brings out an imaginary sword. âFight me for it, peasant.â
Xander brings out his own imaginary sword and they start jumping like monkeys around Silver.
âYou mean, Mum made them and you just watched,â I say, feigning to read from my book. I canât concentrate on words when sheâs around. I always have this overflow of energy that starts in my chest and ends in my dick.
âFunny because you werenât there,â she shoots back.
âI donât have to be there to know you suck at cooking, Silver.â I donât use her nickname when anyone else is around. If I do, theyâll pick up on my abnormal attachment to her.
That means weakness.
And I already made a promise to myself that there would never be another moment where Iâm weak.
I did it once. Never again.
I donât lift my head, but I feel her glaring at me from across the room. I like to think her hatred is black hands, and theyâre punching me metaphorically when sheâs not within physical reach.
She still hits me whenever possible. Sometimes, itâs stomping on my foot or elbowing me in the side when no one is looking. Other times, itâs a straight out punch to the chest, but thatâs only when weâre alone. She thinks they hurt, but theyâre like a toddlerâs caress.
Silver has an outside image and an inside one. They never overlap and sheâs becoming an expert at juggling her two lives. One is Daddyâs little girl, her motherâs perfect daughter, and the top student, piano player, and classical music lover. The other is everything else. Like listening to rock music and eating Snickers bars in secret. The punches, too. Thatâs why I did everything to bring them out.
Iâm the only one who brings them out.
âYouâve been on the same page for ten minutes,â Aiden says from beside me, his voice low enough so that only I can hear him.
Silver is trying to pacify Ronan and Xanderâs fake fight. A pacifier â thatâs what she is deep down. However, sheâs been slowly but surely trying to get rid of that part.
I flip the page. âIâm engraving the words to memory.â
âLie. You have a photographic memory, so you engrave pages after a minute, or is it seconds?â He pauses. âMaybe youâre distracted.â
I lift my head from the book. Aiden is watching me with a sadistic smirk on his lips. Was I not careful enough? Did I somehow raise his suspicions?
âWhat are you talking about?â I play the nonchalance card Iâm so good at.
âSilver Queens, huh? I shouldâve seen it coming with the amount of time she spends with Helen.â
âShe only comes over for Mum.â
âSure, did I say anything?â He pretends to push his black hair from his forehead. âIn that case, is it okay if I fuck her?â
My hold tightens around the book, but I try to keep my expression the same. Itâs a tool Iâve found works in most situations. If you stay calm, itâll eventually go away.
If I tell Aiden no, heâll figure out my fixation and use it against me every chance he gets.
But I know something⦠Silver canât stand Aiden. She thinks weâre both wankers and doesnât miss a single chance to tell us that. She wouldnât touch him with a stick.
Besides, I have a way to make her hate him even more.
âSure, if youâre into bimbos.â I smile.
âYou and I both know sheâs a not a bimbo.â
âUh-huh.â
âYou think I wonât be able to do it.â His smirk widens. âI love it when you underestimate me, Nash. I really, really do.â
âBe my guest.â I focus on the other two. âHey, Ronan. Why donât you tell Silver what weâre celebrating?â
âOh, right.â Ronan pauses his fight with Xander and clears his throat. âAiden lost his virginity to his fatherâs secretary yesterday. Heâs finally a man.â
âI didnât need to know that.â She makes a disgusted face as she opens the container on the counter.
Bingo. I just made Aiden lose before he started to play. Thatâs how itâs done.
âYou fucked up, Nash,â Aiden murmurs to me. âNow, Iâm taking this to the next level.â
I canât resist the smug look that pulls at my lips. âBest of luck.â
âHey, Ronan,â Aiden speaks in a neutral tone. âWhy donât you tell her the order of how we all lost our virginities?â
âMais bien sûr.â Ronan points at himself. âIâm number one, of course â no need for applause â then Xan, and then Cole with the bombshell Miss Goldman, and the loser Aiden is last.â
Silver pauses opening a container, her fingers freezing on the handle.
Fuck.
The change in her demeanour is short, but itâs there. Her eyes are cast downwards, so I canât see the look in them. However, she purses her lips for the briefest second before she goes back to normal, and by normal, I mean the mask she wears every time she gets up in the morning.
Silver Queens is the most popular girl at school.
A piano prodigy.
The schoolâs queen B.
And fake.
Sheâs so fake, I can taste the bitterness of it on my tongue.
âYou guys are pigs,â she says with her haughty attitude, but thereâs a slight tremble in her voice at the end.
âYou insult me.â Ronan grabs her by the shoulder, speaking in a dramatic voice. âPigs donât have my package, love.â
âThank God for that.â She slips from underneath his hold. âIâm going home. Papaâs waiting.â
âAnd we can have all the crisps?â Xander asks.
She waves a dismissive hand at him as she strolls into our area to pick up her backpack.
Aiden stands, giving me a sideways smirk. âCan your driver drop me off?â
No, thanks. Sheâll say, no, thanks. Thatâs what she tells Aiden every fucking time.
âSure.â She grabs her backpack with stiff fingers.
âDrop me off, too.â I stand.
For some reason, I feel that if she walks out with him through that door, everything will be screwed up, and it wonât be the chaos I love so much.
Itâll be chaos I canât control, like when I was a kid, standing at the edge of the pool.
She snaps her head, finally looking at me. I wish she hadnât. Iâve never seen that look in her eyes â malice mixed with hurt and disappointment and something else I canât put my finger on.
Something so deep and raw, itâs almost like the time she pinned me to the bench and soaked my cheeks with her glitter tears because she couldnât hold them in.
Sheâs not crying now, though, and thatâs way fucking worse.
âYou can go to hell,â she tells me as Aiden steps to her side.
She leans in to whisper, âYou donât know what Iâm feeling right now, but Iâm going to make you regret it.â
I reach out a hand for her, but all it finds is air.
The moment the door closes behind her and Aiden, something inside me slams shut too.