Dukes of Ruin: Chapter 15
Dukes of Ruin (Dark College Bully Romance): Royals of Forsyth University Book 4
The staircase to the belfry is behind an undersized doorway in the loft. Iâd noticed it earlier but wrote it off as little more than a hiding spot for spiders, so I left it shut. I seriously consider following my gut when I finally heave the heavy metal from the frame, flipping the light switch just inside.
Cramped.
Thatâs what the staircase is. Narrow, enclosed with high stone walls. The main tower staircase is roomy compared to this. Practically cavernous. Just the thought of walking up those steps, knowing the walls are so close to my shoulders, makes sweat prick up on the back of my neck, stomach lurching with panic. I gulp as I stare into the dimly lit space, peering up the stairs to the door at the top. Five seconds if I sprint. Ten if I donât. And I donât even know what Iâll find once I reach it. Maybe itâs a closet, and Iâm just trapping myself into the worst space imaginable.
Fingers flexing into fists, I square my shoulders.
And then I sprint.
Two steps at a time, swatting webs out of my way as I go, I dart up the staircase to the tall, industrial-looking door ahead, as if itâs the only thing that exists.
When I finally reach it, wrenching it open with constricted lungs and a hammering pulse, Iâm not expecting what I find.
Itâs⦠bright.
Brightly lit.
I stumble through, closing the door behind me as I gasp for air, letting the panic bleed out of me in waves. Itâs not a closet, but instead, a large, busy space full of the clockâs inner workings. I peer openly into the musty space, instantly seeing that all the brass rods and cogs are dusty from disuse, probably jammed in a million different ways. Iâd skimmed the manual, but seeing the sheer enormity of the guts up close is a whole different perspective.
I take the book from where Iâve had it tucked beneath my arm, intending to flip through the pages in an attempt to figure out what parts do what. Or what part stopped working? But I pause before my finger can dip between the pages.
Something is off.
The floor isnât clean, which is why I can see the well-worn path leading toward the center of the room. I follow it without thinking, my mind full of the fact that this doesnât feel like an abandoned chamber of an ancient clock tower. I canât explain why, but it simply has this⦠energy. An odd buzz in the air, like someoneâs been here more recently than fifty years ago. Maybe even more recently than last month.
It isnât until I cross to the other side of the tower, ducking around cables and clock stuff, that I see the crates, open and visible to anyone who can manage to gain access to the highest room in Forsyth.
Guns.
Entire cases of them.
I stand there stunned for a long moment, even though I shouldnât be surprised. Everyone knows the Dukes run the gun trade in this town. I just wasnât expecting them to beâ¦here. So close to campus. So fucking obvious. The Counts would never.
I crouch down to inspect a pistol, shiny and new-looking, and feel a zing of jubilation. I could take them all down with one of these babies. I test the weight in my hand, running my finger over the barrel, and feel an odd, raised spot to the metal, like itâs swollen and rough.
Looking up, I catch sight of a drill press in the corner. Some other complicated machinery sits beside itâthe source of the buzzing Iâve been feelingâand suddenly, Iâm reminded of Syâs words earlier.
âYouâre on filing duty this morningâ¦â
Not filing papers, I suddenly realize.
Remyâs filing the fucking serial numbers off.
Gooseflesh springs up over my skin as I whip around, looking for signs of his platinum hair and gaunt cheeks. I donât see anything, though. And thatâs another problem. There must be a hundred guns hereâmaybe moreâbut not a single box of ammunition.
Irritated, I put the pistol back in its place.
Thump.
My eyes spring to the ceiling, muscles tense. Everyone knows thereâs one last level to the tower. The belfry. A quick scan around the space doesnât reveal a door or staircase, but there is a ladder. Itâs in the southeast corner, illuminated by a weak bulb.
I climb it, fully appreciating how stupid it is to do so. The main living area of the tower is restricted for anyone but Dukes, but the belfry is basically considered Fort Knox. From the way people talk, the Dukes basically treat it as sacred. I donât think Iâve even known anyone thatâs been up here, unless you count Saulâand who does? At best, Iâm admitting to poking my nose into places I donât belong. Itâd just be showing them that Iâve seen the guns, that I know too much now to be let free.
This could get me days in the elevator.
I spend about five minutes gnawing a thumbnail before deciding I have to see it.
At the top, I push up a heavy hatch, arms straining under the weight. Iâm met with a gust of wind, blustery and warm as I rise out into the late morning air. The enormous iron bell that hangs overhead casts me in shadow, and I crawl on my hands and knees to get out from under it. I donât realize how tight my chest is until Iâm up here, inhaling air like a man dying of thirst would swallow water. I circle around the big bell and rush to one of the arched openings to suck it in. The air, the view, the openness of it all. As my muscles unwind, I take in the landscape below. Itâs spectacular, looking out over the city, each of the four corners of Forsyth visible from such an extreme vantage.
I went to bible school when I was smallerâfor, like, a dozen heartbeats. My father thought itâd be a good luck for usâLeticia and me. It wasnât long before both of us were thrown out for having a âproblem with authority.â I got punished. Leticia didnât. In any case, I spent enough time there to realize Iâm not religious.
But if there is a heaven, itâd be just like this; no walls, open space as far as the eye can see.
Iâm soaking it in, staring out over Forsyth with jubilant awe, when I hear, âI knew youâd come.â Jumping, I spin, startled at the voice behind me.
Itâs Remy, just as I expected. Heâs strolling up from the other side of the bell, leaning to casually rest against the support to the west-facing archway. Heâs wearing a baseball cap, but itâs backward, haphazard locks of his hair twitching in the wind. Even if he doesnât look as imposing as he had before, thereâs still that empty wildness swirling in his eyes. His skin is paler in the sunlight, and although heâs looking right at me, the dark orbs of his pupils make it seem like heâs a million miles away.
This isnât Remy at all.
Itâs Maniac.
âYou have class in twenty minutes,â I say, fidgeting nervously. Itâs a passable ruse, the pretense that Iâve come up here to remind him, but if the lack of reaction on his face says anything, he isnât buying it. âNick never said I couldnât come up here.â I press my back to the stone wall. âI just wanted some air.â
His eyes fall to my fingers, which are twining around the drawstring of Nickâs hooded sweatshirt. âYouâre not supposed to be wearing that.â
I glance down at itâdark gray, bearing the tongue-in-cheek âFUâ insignia that always sells well around hereâand shrug. âHe basically forced it over my head yesterday. Itâs not like I stole it orââ
âNo.â Something crosses over his face, tight and frustrated. âI mean, this isnât how it went. Not exactly. Youâre notâ¦â His head tilts, eyes narrowing. âWhy arenât you blonde?â
I pause, face screwing up. âBecause I dyed my hair?â
The frustration smoothes out, leaving him with a bland expression. âIt doesnât matter. I think I found out how to go back.â
âGo back?â Now Iâm the one who looks frustrated. âYouâre not making any sense. Use your words!â
He lifts his arm and I finally see the flash of crimson. Itâs running down his forearm to his wrist, over his palm, dripping from his lithe fingers. He watches the sluggish stream of blood, looking disinterested. âThis obviously didnât workânot completely.â
âShitâ¦â I start forward, though I donât know why at first. I just know that Remy is standing in front of me with a huge gash on his arm, and for some reason, I need to fix it.
Nick is going to think I did this.
Thatâs whatâs going through my mind as I lurch forward, snatching his wrist from the air. âLift your arm, you fucking moron!â I raise it over his chest, hoping to stem the bleeding, but itâs heavy and limp and heâs looking at me with those fucking eyes.
âIâm just re-tracing the steps.â His fingers are suddenly grazing my jaw. âI saw you falling into the stars. I donât remember what they said, but I heard you scream. You had⦠all this bloodâ¦â
Itâs then that I realize heâs smearing it across my cheek. I drop his wrist and lurch back, frantically wiping it away. âWhat is wrong with you?!â But then a flash of light draws my attention to his other hand. A gleam of silver. A knife. I come to a slow, gradual realization, edging further away from him. âYou did that to yourself.â
His eyes move from my cheek to the knife, and he lifts it, inspecting the blade. âIt was supposed to wake me up.â Shrugging, he raises the blade and calmly slashes another cut into his skin. âItâs not like Iâm an expert on my own psyche. I usually pay people to take care of it. Itâs justâ¦â The frustration comes back, carving a divot between two angry brows. âItâs really confusing in here sometimes.â
I take a deep breath, teeth clenched. âRemy, youâre off your meds. I saw you spit them out. Thatâs why you take them, right? Itâs why Sy gives them to you? Because youâre crââ His eyes spark in a way that makes my mouth slam shut. Gently, so as to not provoke the armed lunatic, I finish, âBecause youâre sick. Youâre just not yourself. You donât know what youâre doing.â
âOh, I know exactly what Iâm doing.â He lifts a bloody finger, tapping his temple. âGot it all figured out. Iâve just been stuck in here too long. Itâs adapting, tricking me into thinking itâs real. But itâs not.â
I throw my hands up, exasperated. âStuck in where?!â
âThe dream!â he snaps, face transforming into a furious pinch. âYou did this. Drawing on you, sleeping with youâ¦it made me dream. This is all your fault. You fell into the stars and left me up here! Where the fuck did you expect me to go?!â
I pull my hair back from my cheeks and breathe. Because this? This is actual insanity. Iâm standing in front of a madman. âRemy,â I try, keeping my voice even and calm, âyouâre not yourself.â
âThen why,â he demands, shooting forward, âwhy do I keep remembering the stars and the blood?â
I jump back, startled. âI donât know what youâre talking about!â Only, I realize, maybe I do. Blonde hair, blood, the night sky? Grasping at straws, I ask, âAre you talking about what happened the night you broke into the brothel?â
His pale lips mash into a tight purse. âThis is the problem. No one ever listens to me. Theyâll look, but they wonât hear. Everyone wants to see my brain. Everyone wants to look at the paintings and the drawings and the fucking tattoos! But no one wants to hear it.â Looking away, he starts pacing a small circuit in front of the bell, muttering in an agitated voice, âHow do I even know?! How do I know the brothel actually exists? Maybe I created you just for this, because Iâm telling myself to wake up.â He freezes, whipping his wild green eyes to me. âFuck, of course. It explains everything. That shitty tattoo on your leg? I couldnât finish it because I ran out of ideas. Theyâre not stars. Theyâre not, like, infinite, you know?â
Feeling at a loss, my attempt to be firm falls as limp as his arm had before. âRemy, this isnât a dream. Youâre awake, youâreâyouâre right here.â
He lets out a laugh that sounds relieved, tipping his face up toward the sun. âThatâs why youâre here, isnât it? Maybe Iâve been dreaming about this for months. Fuck, maybe Iâve been dreaming it for years. You showed me the stars because you know I need to wake up, and maybe when I doâ¦â His head jerks back, like heâs just been physically hit, eyes unblinking as they fix to mine. His face goes dark with such a terrible sincerity that it makes my stomach plummet. âMaybe when I wake up, Tate will be alive.â
My blood turns to ice. âWhoâ¦whoâs Tate?â
His jaw works around a soundless reply as he stares at me, hard and wide-eyed, like Iâve just horrified and awed him all at the same time. âMaybe I never left. Maybe thatâs why it hurts.â Fingers pressing into his temple, he let out a slow exhale. âBut we can make it stop. Canât we? You should know what the stars said.â When all I do is shake my head, completely lost, he leans over the edge and gestures for me to look. âSee? Down there. Donât you see?â I slowly move next to him and peer over. Thereâs nothing down below but a terrifying drop and hard pavement, which is made all the more obvious when a gust of wind catches the brim of his hat, sending it over. Watching its fluttering descent, I draw back, stiffening when his hand lands on my back, pressing down. âYou know how this ends, donât you?â
My heart pounds, feet scuffing the stone as I struggle backward. âRemy, letâs go back downstairââ
âI have to wake up now.â He moves abruptly, arms and legs fluidly pulling him up onto the ledge. He rests a hand on the arch, looking so casual about it. So calm. âIf I wake up, then maybe we can be together again.â He looks at me, green eyes piercing, and the thing is, heâs crazy. He really fucking is. But he looks at me and all I see in his face is a bottomless despair. âThe four of us. Like it should be.â
âThe four of us?â I ask, waving a finger in a round gesture thatâs meant to encompass the Dukes and me. Itâs only then that I notice Iâm trembling. âI think we can probably do that downstairs, away from theâyou knowâhorrifying drop to our gruesome deaths?â
His laugh is a jagged, broken sound. âYou? No, not you. Youâll be gone, back to your snake hole in my brain. But Tate will be here.â
He sways, legs and arms loose. Too loose. Without thinking, I lunge forward to grab his hand. âRemy, look at me. This isnât a dream. Youâre having some kind of episode. You donât know what youâreââ
âI know. I have to wake up now.â His green eyes drop to the ground below the tower, pale lashes brushing the tired hollows beneath his eyes. I can hear it from all the way up here. Traffic. Distant sirens. The static of voices and wind and life.
And I know that he means to jump.
People think Iâm a murderer. Theyâre wrong, but itâs not something I can shake off with a few impassioned refusals. Itâs going to take time, proof, preferably a whole-ass body of evidence. If Remy takes some batshit swan dive from this tower, Iâm through here. I have his blood on my face, my hands. No one will believe Iâm innocent. And I might not understand it, but Remy is beloved. To DKS. To Nick. Jesus, to Sy.
This isnât just a few days in the elevator.
This is my dead body being shoved in there for transport.
Eleven days.
âRemy, look at me,â I order, keeping my voice firm. This is some fucking nonsense, which means thereâs only one way to deal with it. Better nonsense. I wait until his distracted eyes pass over mine to say, âYouâre right. The stars talked to me. I know everything.â
His attention snaps to me, as sharp as the blade in his hand. âThey did?â
Nodding, I carefully take the knife from his loose grip, tucking it into my hoodie pocket. âThey said youâd come up here. They told me to tell you the truth. Donât you want to hear it first?â
His eyes move from me to the street below, a seed of skepticism on the wrinkle of his brow. âI already know the truth.â
I shake my head. âFine, Iâll keep it to myself.â Itâs a risky bluff, but I turn to walk away, pulse hammering in my head as I brace for the sound of his jump. Iâve seen someone die before. Once. But I was too young to remember it. In the recess of my mind, I wonder if it felt like this. Was I scared? Did I try to stop it?
Did I fail?
Instantly, I hear the soles of his designer shoes meeting the stone. âWait! The stars.â Turning, I raise an eyebrow at his impatient expression. âWhere are they? Why canât I see them?â
Because itâs daytime, you fucking lunatic?
I keep my sarcasm to myself for once, knowing what I need to do. âYou need to go lie down. Have another dream. You liked that before, didnât you?â At least thatâs how it seemed the other day when Nick was congratulating him about it, as if such a feat were impressive and new.
Thereâs another strong gust of wind that blows his hair into his eyes, platinum locks brushing his cheekbones. He turns to toss a glance over his shoulder at the ledge, fingers twitching. âGo to sleep so Iâll wake up?â He actually has the nerve to sound incredulous, like this is the craziest thing heâs heard all day.
âNot exactly. Come on.â I reach out for his bloody hand, watching his eyes flick to the movement. I keep my movements slow, placating, coaxing him away from the edge. âIâll show you the stars. Iâll tell you everything.â All I want to do is get him away from this belfryâaway from the ledge and air and deadly drop. I want it so badly that I donât even think twice about offering, âYou can draw on me again. You can fix my snake, make me how you want.â
His first step is reluctant, but the second is solid and sure, allowing me to pull him toward the bell. He follows without protest or question, ducking down to the hatch when we reach it, and I try to ignore the twist in my gut when he pauses there, glancing up at me like I hold all the answers to the universe.
âI think I did a pretty good job with you,â he says, face cast in the shadow of the bell. Then heâs down the ladder, giving me a moment of reprieve to brace my palms against my knees, chest shuddering in relief.
âYeah,â I say, unsure if he can hear me, âyou did a really good job.â