Dukes of Ruin: Chapter 14
Dukes of Ruin (Dark College Bully Romance): Royals of Forsyth University Book 4
I disappear up the stairs while sheâs in the bathroom, doing whatever it is girls do in there.
Or whatever my mind seems to think girls do in there.
I donât turn on the light to the tiny stairwell as I climb to the room below the belfry. I already know where every step is, can feel the handle to the door at the top, without having to see it. Itâs not because Iâve been here so long, either. This is only the third time Iâve ever been up here.
Iâll say this, it sure smells real. Like old metal, dust, and damp. Iâve always been good at that, though. The details. Itâs why people want my ink on them. They want the small things, the shit no one else would notice or care about, but Iâm happy to spend hours agonizing over. The precise way a shadow falls below an eye. The hatched lines that fill it. The texture, the shade, the perfect curves of a circle.
The density of stars.
Black glass. Blonde hair. Red lights. Blood on the trees.
I think I do pretty well.
Itâs the problem with not having made anything Iâm happy with in so long. Sometimes my brain just decides to pour all of its effort into something elaborate.
Like, for instance, filing duty.
Itâs pointless to do work here. I know it, feel it, acknowledge it, and yet I still sit down on the stool and flip the switch, bringing the drill press to life. I used to know this guy at Saint Maryâs who kept swearing we were all machines. Maybe not in the most literal sense, but there is some truth to doing things automatically, a muscle that flexes itself without being told to, like a heartbeat. Thereâs work to be done, so my hands start moving. Weâre all mechanical up to a point. I believe that shit down to my marrow. Bag of flesh made up of cogs, cables, and rods, not too unlike that dead clock downstairs.
Filing duty isnât new to me. I did it all summer for Saul, so I picked up the little nuances. The way the drill falls when I lower it into the metal. The sound of the shavings being kicked up. The noise of the mechanics, the texture of the steel. If only Sy could appreciate how exact it all is, maybe this version of him wouldnât keep looking at me the way he does.
Like Iâm broken.
I know Iâm working perfectly when I finish the first one. The five fine holes Iâve drilled into the surface of the metal are smooth, but not too smooth. Rough, but not too rough. Fucking nailed it.
And when my phone rings, I feel my mouth quirk in a triumphant, bitter smirk, because itâs my dadâs name flashing across the screen. Of course, heâd call me when I was feeling the smallest bit of pride. My mind is fucking amazing.
Because three days ago, I fell into a dream.
And I never woke up.
âYeah?â is how I answer, eyes narrowing suspiciously. Sy had threatened to call him before. Am I turning on myself already? That happens sometimes. Canât help it.
âYou arenât in class.â The tone of disappointment is so realâso goddamn perfectâthat I nearly laugh. Iâve definitely got that one down. âI was going to leave a voicemail.â
Looking around the room, I decide to let this play out. I have places to be. âIâve got work this morning. Class at eleven.â
âOh.â He sounds just south of surprised, as expected. âSo I take it you havenât ruined your future quite yet. Otherwise, are you well?â
I tap my fingers against the table, wondering which value of âwellâ heâs asking about. I guess thatâs up to me. âI havenât read a single syllabus.â Tapping my fingers faster, I add, âIâve been late twice, Iâm in the middle of securing some studio time, and I fucked my Duchessâ brains out with a marker over the weekend.â
Thereâs a stretch of silence on the other end of the line, and then my fatherâs exasperated, âI think youâre supposed to use your cock for that.â
âOh, thatâs what itâs for?â Kicking a foot up on the table, I shrug. âWouldnât know. Some complete jackass put me into a middle school with abstinence-only education. Shittiest parenting imaginable.â
âThis is your senior year.â His voice takes on that serious, authoritative tone that always makes my teeth ache. âYou wanted an art degree, and despite knowing the best thing it can get you is something to wipe your ass with, Iâve paid hand over fist to make sure you get it. Howâs that for shitty parenting?â
âGets a little shittier each time you throw it in my face.â I rub my chin. âEver wonder why you canât call me without throwing a few jabs in?â
âProbably the same reason you add another tattoo to yourself every time youâre throwing a fit.â He sighs, all long-suffering. Hard work, being my dad. âI meant, are you well? Any side effects? Are you sleeping? You havenât answered a single one of my texts, and Doctor Weatherby says you havenât scheduled a session in weeks. You know the arrangement. I need to be kept informed aboutââ
âIâm doing fine,â I insist, cutting him off. Doctor Weatherby is the last person I want to see. For years, Iâve had it drilled in my head.
Donât think about the stars, Remy.
Turn away from the stars, Remy.
Stay in the light, Remy.
Iâm not allowed to look, but that night of the party, I did it. I glanced downâit wasnât like I meant toâand the stars were there, and now Iâm caught in a web of them, waiting for the red lights and the blood and the black glass, and goddamn it. I need to see them. Iâm tired of being told I canât. They said my name and made me look, and now, if I could just get back to them, I could find out why.
Itâs the snake.
Vinny.
She makes the stars burble up like a bad chemistry experiment.
Smoothly, I lie, âIâve been sleeping like a baby. The kind who has loving parents, even. Modern medicine is amazing, really.â
Thereâs no sigh this time. For all that, heâs a gigantic shithead. My dad has always been lazy enough to believe me when I say everything is all good. Less work for him. âWell, since youâre so fucking splendid, then I guess I can inform you that itâs time to be realistic and plan for grad school.â
âAh, itâs been a few months since weâve had this talk, hasnât it?â Fuck, I am so good. âSo where you wanna do this?â
Sounding confused, he asks, âDo âthisâ?â
Nodding, I elaborate, âYeah, you know. Where do you want to lecture me about the âsorry course my life is takingâ? Because I know you like to keep it hush-hush that Iâm the family fuck-up, and since I canât see you coming to campus, we have a few options.â Before he can answer, I offer, âIâve always liked the country club. Itâs not my scene, obviously. But they let us sit in that roomâthe one with the Rubens painting? Itâs the one with all the thick asses. Anyway, I think Iâm pretty close to determining that itâs fake as hell, so if we could go there, thatâd be cool.â
I can practically hear him rubbing the bridge of his nose. Itâs one of the reasons Iâm so drawn to Sy. He does this thing where he rubs his thumb with his forefinger. A fidget. It reminds me of my dad, just without all of the festering resentment. âDo you really think that attitude is going to get you anywhere in life?â
I get this sudden flash of Nick this morning, yanking Laviniaâs head back. Stars. Thatâs what I see when I look at her now. Blonde tendrils of hair. The sound of her scream. The flashing panic in her gray eyes. Red lights. And angerâso much fucking angerâburning hot enough that it could flatten this whole goddamn city to rubble and ashâ¦
âDo you really think this attitude is helping you any?â
The words are almost identical. That canât be a good sign.
I run my fingers through my hair, pushing it back, blinking as I try to reorient myself. âCan we do this later? Iâm not really feeling great.â
My dadâs voice drops an angry octave. âDonât brush me off. Either youâre doing alright, or youâre not. You donât get to play both sides whenever itâs convenient for you. You know our agreement. Make an appointment with Weatherby, or elseââ
I rub my temple. âSet up a time with the club and Iâll be there.â
âRemington!â
I hang up, letting my phone fall to the workbench as I clutch my head. Starsâso many goddamn stars. Blonde hair. Red lights. Panic. Anger. Wind. The memory is beginning to hurt again, a sharp, hot throb behind my eyes. Itâs all smudged, like a charcoal sketch thatâs been handled too many times, the edges indistinct.
Iâve tried to get back to it. I donât know how or why, but I know itâs what I need to do. It just feels so far away. Even when Lavinia is right in front of me, itâs not quite right. Not yellow enough. Not red enough. I thought if I just stayed here, itâd come back to me. I thought if I played along, let my brain work out the kinks in this whole thing, that Iâd get to go back to where it all started.
Itâs not working.
I power down the drill press, going through the motions of closing up shop as my temples throb painfully. The longer I wait, the worse it gets here. My dad will come. Sy will turn away. Nick will leave. Lavinia will fade, just like the stars.
If they arenât going to come to me, then Iâll just have to go to them.