Dukes of Madness: Chapter 1
Dukes of Madness: Royals of Forsyth U (Royals of Forsyth University Book 5)
It takes me an hour to get back to the tower. I take one left for every two rights, meandering down side streets and grimy alleyways in a slow crawl back to West End. It doesnât look like Iâm being followed, but this whole getaway driver thing is more Nickâs thing than mine. The whole time, my phone buzzes away like an angry wasp in the center console, stopping only to begin its insistent whirring once again. By the time I get halfway down the Avenue, itâs become background static that I can almost ignore.
I shake my head, muttering, âJesus Christ, Remy.â Heâs such a picker. Once something gets in his head, he just⦠fucking picks at it, over and over, until it drives him and the rest of us up the wall.
Every now and then, I turn to glance at the sad heap currently curled in the back. Sheâs so still that if it werenât for the jerky rise and fall of her ribs, sheâd look like a corpse. I guess I always knew Lionel Lucia was a sick bastard. The Counts have always had sadistic tendencies. What house in this town doesnât?
Still, the children of Kings have always been protected. Privileged. Sacred. Itâs why the Princes kick them out like machines. Nothing has ever been as precious to Forsyth as its own blood. Itâs why Nick could waltz right in and get a straight shot to the belfry.
Tainted goods or not, Lavinia Lucia is Royalty.
Wrong. Thatâs how it felt in Laviniaâs bedroom, standing over that chest, a wave of realization crashing into me. Before I even opened it, I knew Iâd find her inside. I didnât grow up in the Royalty, but Iâve been touched by it enough that the sight of North Sideâs heir, stuffed into the confines of an old cedar chest by her own goddamn family, struck me as so wrongâso fucking profaneâthat my stomach still squirms uncomfortably at the thought.
Davis Bruinâs decision to abdicate his position, and my mother and father going with him, suddenly makes more sense. The Kings arenât just powerful. Theyâre monsters.
I wait until weâre a little closer, the tower looming just to my left, to pick up my phone and finally answer. âWhat?â
âItâs been three fucking hours!â Remy explodes. I can practically hear him pacing over the speaker. âIâve had one foot out the door and my finger on this trigger all night.â
âWould you chill the fuck out?â I snap, checking my rearview. âWeâll be there in five.â
âWe?â Remyâs tight, stunned voice comes through the speaker. âYou found her? You got her?â
It wasnât technically the plan. I was just going to scope it out first, try to figure out where Lionel had shunted her off to before calling in for Remy. I could tell him it just seemed easier, in the moment, to get her from Lionelâs mansion than to wait until sheâd been secured in the Countsâ own territory. But itâd be a lie. The truth is, no part of me could have closed her back up in that chest. It would have been the more strategic move. Lionel was only out for a few minutes. I didnât have any lookouts.
But the second she flung herself into my arms, I knew I couldnât do it.
âIâve got her.â But even as I say the words, I shoot her a dubious look. Iâm not sure what Remyâs expecting to see when we get up there, but this isnât the Duchess I drove away from several nights ago. âI need you to get some supplies. Remember that weekend after you pledged?â
Remy responds in a confused tone, âWhen I got shitfaced?â
Shitfaced is a really nice way of putting it. He was so dehydrated that I had to pilfer the gym for something medical grade. âThe bags are in with the other things. Just have it ready.â
Thereâs a short pause before he asks, âShe needs IV fluids? Why?â
âIâm pulling up now,â I tell him. âFlip the breaker on the elevator, would you?â I hang up before he can respond. Remyâs not the best guy in a crisis, but Iâve found that giving him clearly defined tasks makes him focused and less prone to catastrophizing. I pull up to the curb and jump out, wrenching open the back door, but all that greets me is Laviniaâs motionless figure, curled into the same fetal position I found her in back at her fatherâs house.
I take a deep breath and scrub my fingers through my hair, thinking. Sheâs pale and gaunt-looking, shivering, bruised all over. Sheâs injured, but itâs hard to say how badly. I form a mental list of priorities. Dehydration is first. This means I need to get her up that tower before anything else.
I lean in, ducking my head to observe her face. âCan you walk?â When she doesnât answer, I reach out to touch her hip, giving her a gentle shake. âLavinia. Hey! You have to get out now.â I watch as her eyelids flutter, two dazed eyes appearing beneath wet lashes. âCome on, up, up.â
She doesnât protest as I coax her into a sitting position. I can only barely stop my nose from wrinkling. If I had to guess from smell alone, Lavinia was in the box the entire four days, and the thought comes to me again. The wrongness. What the fuck?
âWhat time is it?â Her voice is a quiet, painful-sounding croak as she stares out the open door, eyes glazed.
âAlmost midnight,â I answer, giving her arm a soft tug. âWe need to get inside. Someone could be watching.â I have no idea how long it will be before someone notices sheâs gone. An hour? A week? Jesus. I shoot a glance down the alley, half expecting to see headlights. This wasnât as clean as I wanted it to be. The initial plan had phases and contingencies, fail safes and back-ups.
This one just has a disoriented girl in my back seat, staring unseeingly into the night.
I snap my fingers in front of her face. âLavinia!â
This spurs her into a stiff, mechanical sort of motion, her legs awkwardly scooting her battered body toward the open door. I stand back as she emerges on unsteady feet, a hand gripping the door. I know her knees are going to give out before she even takes the first step. I shoot forward, catching her around the middle, and she lets out a soft, pained sound that makes me wince.
âLike this,â I say, slinging her arm around my neck. I hold every pound of her frail, trembling weight sheâll allow me to, and Iâm struck by something foreign and upsetting. I donât quite understand it, but itâs what compels me to pull her close, ducking my head to say, âThatâs good. Youâve got it. Just step here.â Then, quieter, âGood girl.â I donât stop to question the impulse, and despite the seemingly patronizing tone, she doesnât so much as shoot me a glare for it.
Thatâs how I know it must be bad.
I get us through the doors, but donât allow myself to feel any relief. I may have made it back in one piece, but eventually, her father is going to notice her missing. âThis way,â I tell her, guiding her toward the elevator.
She lifts her head, blue hair brushing the too-sharp points of her cheekbones, and then freezes.
Any color that might have returned to her face on the drive here vanishes instantly when she sees the elevator. Something cold and dark slams over her expression, and suddenly, Iâm looking at the same crushed, desperate girl that had clung to me in her bedroom.
She lurches backward so fast that I almost donât catch her when she stumbles. âNo,â she groans, long and miserable. âI said Iâd be good. You said I was good.â Iâm expecting the tears this time, but itâs still such an alien thing to see her face crumble into a body-wracking sob. It doesnât seem right. For all that Iâve thought Lavinia weak in body, sheâs never been weak in spirit. It isnât until now I realize how much Iâd come to appreciate that about her. It was such a non-Royal trait.
A West End trait.
A Duchess trait.
Iâm so caught up in the loss of it that it takes a long moment for me to understand why itâs happening.
âShit. Look at me.â I grab her face in my hands, forcing her to look at me with those big, terror-filled eyes. âYou canât walk up all those stairs. Theyâre too narrow for me to carry you, or I would. This is just to get us to the top. Itâs not like your father. Itâs notâ¦â
Itâs not like Nick, I want to say.
But thatâd be admitting I knew about those times my brother had chucked her into the elevator for safekeeping. Whatever fragile trust sheâs put in me since opening that chest will probably disappear if I tell her that. Itâs not like I had anything to do with it. Most of the time sheâs spent under this belfry, sheâs been more Nickâs Duchess than mine. But sheâs not thinking rationally, and thatâs made all the more clear when another of those deep, agonizing, body-shaking sobs escapes her throat.
âDonât make me. Please, donât make me.â She stares up at me with exhausted eyes. âI canât.â
âYou can. Itâs only a couple of minutes.â Without thinking, I thumb away a tear, that dull upsetting feeling turning my stomach once again. âIâll be in there with you.â
She pulls in a wet, shuddering gasp, eyes so wide and bloodshot that she looks downright unhinged. âIâll die. Iâd rather die.â
âHey!â I snap, something hot flaring in my chest as I pull her to her full height. âYou see that door you just came in? When a Duke loses a fight, he spends the night somewhere else, because losers arenât allowed to walk through it. To the victor go the spoils, Lavinia. A Duchess is no fucking quitter. Pull yourself together!â
âMake me sleep again,â she pleads, breaths coming quicker. She winds a fist into my shirt, voice rushed and insistent. âDo the thing⦠make me pass out.â
I growl in frustration. âYour body is already stressed. Cutting off oxygen to your brain was risky enough the first time. Youâre going to have to woman the fuck up.â
Her face crumbles into a wretched sob, but she just as quickly sucks it back in. Itâs fascinating to see, like her whole being flinches to hold back the force of it. God, do I know that feeling. I experience it every day, forcing my impulses down beneath the churn of my mental ocean. The terror is still in her eyes, but thereâs also a hardness that covers it. It isnât real. Itâs a flimsy performance thatâs given away by the hitch of her shoulders. But itâs enough.
I jab the button to open the doors before that determination can fall away, reaching out one-handed to yank the gate open. Inside, a dim bulb illuminates the space, flickering anemically. I give it a brief, wary glance, because itâs almost too small a space for my comfort, and Iâm not the one who just got out of a cedar chest.
Sheâs going to fucking lose it.
âClose your eyes,â I order, pulling her against my chest and thrusting us inside.
I try to make quick work of itâclosing the gate, slamming my hand over the buttonâbut sheâs hyperventilating before the elevator even lurches into motion. Her body trembles like a leaf against mine, and my arms wind around her shoulders instinctively.
âIt wonât be long,â I promise, although I donât know why.
It must be because sheâs so small, so afraid, soâ¦vulnerable. That must be why I feel the urge to wrap her up and hold her against me. That must be why I feel this sense of responsibility, like I want to protect her all of a sudden. That upsetting feeling in my stomach churns and flips, and I canât put a name to it, but itâs some strange mixture of anger and tenderness, and fuck me.
Maybe this is what Nick feels.
No wonder heâs such a fucking headcase.
Laviniaâs hands ball into fists around two palmfuls of my shirt, so tightly that I can feel them shaking against my ribs. Iâd know that tremble anywhere. Itâs the vibration of restraint, pushed to the very edges of someoneâs capability.
Sheâs gasping, âI canât, I canât, I canât,â and every inch of her feels impossibly tense, as if sheâs been made of stone.
In an effort to keep her focused, I ask, âWhen did they put you in there?â
Her forehead digs into my sternum as her back jerks with rapid breaths. âImmediately,â she says, confirming my fears.
âThe whole time?â
A jerky nod.
Fuck.
Thereâs another suspicion niggling at the back of my mind, and as the elevator chugs upward, I allow myself to voice it. âThat wasnât the first time, was it?â Her forehead rolls against my chest, and I duck my head, watching her strained face. âHow often? Come on, tell me.â
The point is to get her to speakâto think. But her answer is so instant that she obviously didnât have to put any thought into it at all.
âAll the time,â she wheezes, flinching when the elevator shakes. âWhen Iâm bad, he⦠sometimes once a month. Sometimes every week. Sometimes every day.â Her breath speeds, and I realize sheâs thinking about it, being trapped in that tiny box, unable to move or break free.
Itâs almost a relief when she goes limp, her body giving out under the stress of it. I still spit a curse as I gather her up against me, that upsetting feeling returning to the pit of my stomach. Suddenly, I regret not choking her out downstairs. If she was just going to pass out anyway, it would have saved her the stress.
I keep my fingers against her jugular as the elevator climbs. Her pulse is strong, but too fast. Her head lolls to the side, still etched with tension even in unconsciousness, and her skin is clammy, cool to the touch. So much of this couldâve been solved with some intel and a solid plan, and Iâm mentally berating all three of us when the elevator finally grinds to a stop.
Remy is waiting so closely that his tattooed fingers are wrenching the gate open before the door even stops sliding. The second he lays eyes on us, he freezes, a divot digging into his brow.
âWhat happened?â he breathes, shoving the gate the rest of the way open. âWhat the fuck happened to her?â
I bend down to sweep a wrist beneath her knees, hoisting her into my arms as I burst through.
âRun a bath,â I say, brushing past him. âMake it really warm, but not too hot.â
âSy,â he says, eyes tracking her limp form. âTell me what happened! She looks fucking dead!â
Thereâs a thread of enraged panic in his voice that brings me up short, and I turn to him. âListen to me, Remy,â I wait until his wild eyes meet mine to say, âSheâs in shock. Sheâs dehydrated. We need to warm her up and get that IV in her. Got it?â
Heâs gone before I even finish, dashing into the bathroom. A second later, I hear the gurgling of the bath getting started, so I lay her down on the nearest couch and get to work on her clothes. I work her boots off first, jostling her body as I yank them forcefully free. Iâm just tossing the second one aside when Remy returns. The silver locks of his hair are standing in that special level of chaos that tells me heâs been pulling on it for the last four hours, but when he shoves it out of his eyes and kneels down on the floor beside her to rip open the packaging on the IV needle, I know his head is where I need it.
âDo you know how to do that?â
His green eyes rise slowly to mine. âDo I know how to use a needle?â
âFair point,â I mutter, moving to the head of the couch to slide her shirt up her body, over her head, down her listless arms. âLetâs get her bra off before you put that in.â
It feels less strange than it should to undress her, Remy pulling her pants and underwear down her thighs as I struggle with the bra. Iâve got both hands crammed beneath her back, feeling for the clasp, when Remy hovers over her to touch the tattoo beside her hip. I watch his lips move as he counts the points of the star, but heâs not looking at it.
Heâs looking at her. âVinny,â he whispers, brushing her hair aside as he frowns at her slack face. âHey, wake up. Why isnât she waking up?â
Instead of admitting that I donât know, I finally get the bra freeâfucking annoying, overly complicated, bullshit contraptionsâand fling it across the room. âDo the IV now.â
Remy is on top of it, settling on the floor beside her to open an alcohol soaked wipe. I watch as he takes her hand in his, his inked skin turning to reveal the bruises covering her knuckles, but he doesnât fixate on them like I know damn well he wants to. He rubs the wipe over the vein on the back of her hand, and then gently pinches the needle to position it. This is the thing about Remy. He has the steadiest hands Iâve ever seen, and when he ducks his head, eyebrows furrowed in concentration, itâs with the same laser focus he uses to prick art into someone elseâs skin.
Iâm so fascinated by the sight of him easing the needle beneath her skin that I donât even realize thereâs someone standing behind me.
âWhat the fuck?â
A quick glance over my shoulder reveals Nickâs slack face. Itâs probably the most heâs said since that night we returned from the cliff. He must have heard the ruckus, because lately, he barely shows his face outside of his bedroom. Heâs completely stopped going to classes. He wonât answer Momâs calls. He only made a perfunctory appearance at Remyâs fight on Friday, leaving immediately after to do god knows what. Not that he missed much. The celebration was weirdly solemn and short-lived, and some pledge we call Ballsack straight up asked me where the Duchess was.
Remy doesnât flinch at the sound of Nickâs voice. âGet out,â he murmurs, pressing down on the plug. I have a piece of tape torn from the roll ready for him and he takes it smoothly, never looking away from the needle as he carefully fixes it to her skin.
The fact Nick is shirtless, clad only in a loose pair of sweatpants, tells me he was probably already in bed. Heâs standing ramrod straight in his doorway, dark eyes glued to the naked girl currently occupying his couch. His lips form around words that never emerge. Not until he settles on, âWhat the hell is she doing here?â
I turn away, teeth gnashing against the impulse to shove and hit and hurt. âI went and got her. And good fucking thing, too, because sheâd probably be dead otherwise, you fucking idiot.â
Remy makes quick work of uncoiling the tubing, and he still has that laser focus, but I can see the storm brewing in his eyes. âWhat happened?â Remy asks. âWhat did they do to her?â
They. It takes everything in me not to spin around, to ask Nick what the fuck he was thinking, to tell him that heâs the one that did this to her, but I just press my fingers to her jugular again, searching for her pulse. âSheâs been locked inside a wooden chest for four days.â
Remyâs movements stutter and he looks up at me, brows crushed together. âWhat? Why?â
At this, I can only let out a humorless chuckle. âShe said her dad used to do it a lotâas punishment. If I had to guess?â I turn to glare at my brother. âCollecting his daughter from the guy whoâs been taunting him for months made Lionel a little aggressive.â
Nickâs normally a little difficult for me to read. Iâm not sure when he got so good at hiding his reactions and painting over them with something else, but I know it was sometime around high school coming and going. And the real rub of it? His time in South Side just made him better at it. He left an angry, stone-faced teenager and came back this blank, stoic soldier. Itâs part of why I might believe himâthat he went to South Side to investigate Tateâs deathâbut I still canât trust him. How could I ever trust something that hides from me?
But heâs not hiding now.
I watch the force of the realization crash into him like a sledgehammer, and for the first time in years, I think I might finally see my brother. I see the breath punch from his lungs and the color bleed from his face. I see the jolt of self-loathing in his eyes, accompanied by something dark enough to be grief, and I want to say, yes. Yes, thereâs no coming back from this. This isnât some playground squabble. This is something big enough that even the way heâs been moping around this tower for the past four days doesnât touch the gravity of it.
I donât have the chance to say anything, though.
Not before Remy slams into him.
I didnât even see him hurtle past me, and from the way Nickâs eyes are staring right through Lavinia, neither does he. Nick flies back, slamming into the wall. That dark, mournful look never even leaves his features.
âWhat gave you the right?â Remy snaps, bearing down on him with another shove. âYou think because youâre a Bruin you own everything in this fucking tower?â
The third shove, which sends Nickâs head banging into the wall, snaps him out of whatever daze that seeing Lavinia had put him in. He jerks forward, shoving Remy back, to snarl, âHow the fuck was I supposed to know what heâd do to her?â
Remyâs eyes narrow into slits, his toned muscles strained and flexing as he steps up to Nick. âYou didnât care. You never care. You do whatever you want and damn the consequences.â
The mask falls over Nickâs face, carving it into stone. âThatâs rich coming from you. Exactly how much of that junk have you put up your nose this week?â
Iâm off the couch before Remyâs punch lands, but not quick enough to stop it. âHey!â I bark, making a futile grab for his shirt. Nickâs responding punch has Remy stumbling to the side, but he rebounds with a hook at Nickâs jaw. The sound isnât good, nor is the way Nick crashes into the end table, falling into a tense heap as the lamp flickers and goes dark.
The energy of it is an odd mirror of Remyâs fight on Friday, which had been void of his usual flash and showmanship. The fight had been difficult to watch, Remy going hard but a touch too determined. Out of the three of us, Remyâs always been the best at taking a loss. The fight isnât about winning to him. Itâs about the art of it, showing the crowd something beautifully profane. Remy usually has fun in the ringâa demented sort of fun, but fun nonetheless. But thereâd been no performance to his relentless jabs and unforgiving hooks, and even after, when he was sitting sweaty and bloody in the locker room, perfectly victorious, he didnât even look happy about it.
He just stared up at me, the cut on his nose bleeding sluggishly, and asked, âDonât you ever get sick of losing people?â
And thatâs exactly how Remyâs looked these past few days. Sick. Ill in the way that makes him too quiet and eerily still. Itâs the reason I went to North Side tonight, because Remy was right.
I am sick of losing people.
Nickâs up in an instant, barreling toward Remy with murderous eyes, and I get this split second awareness that they might actually fucking kill each other. Remyâs got that mindless glint of casual destruction in his eyes, and Nickâ¦
Nick is looking at him like Remy might as well be Lionel.
When it comes to anger, my brother copes in one of two ways: Beat the shit out of the person responsible, or just whoever is closest. Itâs why I have such a hard time believing him about Tate being murdered. True or not, he needs someone to blame. Someone to hit.
Iâll be damned if thatâs going to be either of us.
I leap between them, meeting Nick just in time to plant my palms on his chest and send him careening back. Nick lands hard on his ass, eyes flashing in rage as he staggers upright. Before he has a chance, I say, âRemyâs right. You need to leave.â
Nick pushes to his feet. Heâs over by Lavinia now, towering over her, and he shoots her a glance before swinging his glare back on us. âFuck that,â he says, as if heâs someone who has the right to look worried about her. âThe only reason sheâs here is because of me. Both of you would have thrown her back to the wolves if I hadnâtââ
âBut only one of us actually did,â Remy counters.
Iâm guessing from the twitch of his muscles that Nick has an opinion on that, but he never voices it.
Because Lavinia begins to stir.
She makes a soft, pained sound, and Nickâs gaze whips to her, face going slack again. I can see the exact instant he realizes heâs not ready to face herâto look her in the eye and accept the hurt and hatred that would meet him.
He grabs his shoes and keys, and then as my brother is wont to do, he runs away.
The door closes behind him with a decisive thud.