The Never King: Chapter 27
The Never King (Vicious Lost Boys Book 1)
The pain sinks deep. It is worse than the constant, dull ache Iâve lived with nearly my entire life. Worse than the blades that etched fake magic into my skin.
This pain is all over. It feels like Tilly is touching my soul with claws and fire. Tearing through the very fabric of who I am and what I am.
I canât move, it hurts so bad. There is only the bright white light and the sharp ache.
I try to hold on as best I can.
I can do this, I try to tell myself.
I have endured.
But I canât.
I canât do it.
I want it to stop.
I want to seep away like a river, disappear over the horizon.
Just let go.
Peter Pan needs you.
The Lost Boys needs you.
The island needs you.
None of this is mine, but yet I feel I have a duty to save it.
Endure. Endure.
Just a little longer.
I canât be sure, but I think I start shaking beneath Tillyâs hands. I canât feel my legs and my hands are clawed around the arms of the chair.
Hold on.
Endure.
These brutal, vicious boys might have used me in the vilest way possible, but in that moment, I finally felt free.
I felt alive.
There is something about Peter Pan and the Lost Boys that feels like a liberation.
I can do this.
And itâs then, when some distant part of me gives in to it, when I decide to endure for them and not because of them, that something clicks into place.
And then the light cuts out and the pain ebbs away and I collapse into Vaneâs arms.
âNo more,â he says. His voice is a distant rumble over top of me. I have the distinct sensation of being lifted in the air, cradled against a solid chest.
âVane.â Panâs voice rings with authority.
âNo. Weâre not fucking doing this anymore.â Vane starts away.
âI wasnât done,â Tilly calls.
âIâm saying youâre done.â He keeps walking, his footsteps heavy on the hardwood floor.
âWhere are you taking her?â A beat, then, âVane, for Christâs sake.â
A door opens, then slams shut. A bolt clicks into place.
âVane!â
âDarling?â Vaneâs voice is hoarse above me. âYou still with me?â
My response is thick and muzzy. âI think so.â
He lays me down on a bed. The room is dark and warm and it smells like him, like dark, summer nights and crushed amber.
He starts to pull away but I take a fistful of his shirt. âDonât go.â
There is a second where it seems like heâll leave anyway. After all, I think he hates me, which doesnât explain why Iâm currently in his bed, why he would defy Peter Pan.
âMove over,â he finally tells me and though my body aches, I do as he says.
The bed sinks beneath his weight and then he takes me into his arms, nestles me against him.
My ear at his chest, I hear the steady thrum of his heart.
Iâve never felt as safe as I do in this moment and I donât know how to feel about that.
It makes me want to sob.
âWhy did you do that?â I ask, my voice catching.
âStop asking questions and just rest,â he says.
âWhy, Vane?â
His arm comes around me, his fingers sure at my waist. âBecause I felt like it, and because I could.â
âThatâs not an answer.â
He sighs. âWhere I come from, little girls like you are broken every day for no other reason than to watch them crack. And Iâm fucking sick of it.â
His breath is warm against my pounding skull.
âIâm stronger than you think,â I tell him.
âEven the mighty oak believes she is strong until a man comes along with an ax to chop her down.â
âIs that you then? Do you have an ax?â
âAll men are born with an ax in their hands, Darling. To take the measure of a man, you just have to pay attention to how he wields it.â
I sigh against him.
âNow rest.â His hand trails up to my temple and warmth spreads beneath his touch. Within seconds, Iâm out.