Lords of Wrath: Chapter 25
Lords of Wrath (Dark College Bully Romance) : Royals of Forsyth University
I step out from the shower and dry off. Itâs been a long dayâa whole-ass week, really. The carnival ended an hour ago, the guys and I doing our share of the cleanup after leaving Story in the funhouse. I still have the sight of her on her knees, bound and covered in spunk, my initial carved into her chest, burned into my brain like the brand Iâd threatened her with.
The lying whore had it coming for what she did to me and the others. I knew bringing her in here was a risk, but I thought she was too weak to make a move. Turns out, Story has a backbone. Sheâd be an excellent asset to the Lords, but to what end? So she can betray us? Sell our secrets and souls to the highest bidder?
Jesus Christ.
I taught her to use a gun.
So why is it when I flop down onto my bed, inhaling the vestiges of her scent on my pillow, I donât feel anything but defeated?
I lie on my back, well aware of the hollow cavern in my chest, and try to draw the memories of what she did to me from my brain like a syringe. The marks on my wrists are a physical reminder and everything else is a hazy blur, but if I struggle through the fog, I can make out these little snatches of memory. The caress of her hair against my face. The weight of her body on my hips. A sound she made, breathy and keening. Her words in my ear, low and vexed.
âDonât you like it, big brother?â
My cock swells at the memory of her words, at the sensation of her pussy sinking down onto me. But itâs not enough. The sex wasnât the problem. It was the loss of controlâjust like she said. And the fucked-up thing is, looking back, I can see exactly what she was doing and how she was such a deft hand at playing us.
In another universe, I might have found it in me to feel proud. She fucked Rath over so good. Got into Tristianâs head so deeply. Brought me to my knees so efficiently. I should be enraged, but while the fury is still thereâthe impulse to strike and wound and damageâthereâs also something lurking beneath it.
When I was a kid, Ms. Crane used to say that every life is a patchwork quilt assembled from our hurts and joys, and it always stuck with meâa square on my very own blanket of bullshit. I used to think of it like that, as if every person had their squares, all fused together to form the fabric of who theyâd become, and no two could ever look alike. I know mine is ugly and tattered and frayed, not fit for covering anything except my own fucked up insides.
How much of Storyâs was constructed on account of us for her to have played us so expertly?
And why does the answer to that make my fucking heart sing?
I pause then, hearing someone coming up the stairs. Tristianâs in the basement handling LDZ business, and I can hear Rath right above me, listening to something fast and depressing through his speakers, so I know itâs not them. Ms. Crane went to bed long ago.
Storyâs footsteps are light but obvious, crossing the distance to our doors. She doesnât even pause in front of mine, the sound of her bedroom door closing ringing with a grim finality. Briefly, I wonder what she looks like. Has our come dried in her hair? Are her cheeks still stained with blood and tears? Would it make me satisfied to see it?
Now that my immediate aggression has been spent, unloaded on her like a stack of dynamite, I feel depleted and weary. Keeping Story is a full-time job thatâs making my muscles ache.
Iâm in the middle of deciding whether I want to rub one out when I hear a crash from across the hall. I pull on a pair of boxers as I cross the room, striding over the distance between our doors and giving her knob a try.
Itâs locked.
My jaw goes rigid because itâs barely an inconvenience, but itâs getting old. Everything is a fight. Even when things started to get easy, it was just a trick. I see that now. That day in the truck when she climbed into my lap and we fucked, fast and hard and so desperate that sometimes I can still feel the imprint of her fingernails in my shoulders. It was fake. It had to be, because it was too easy.
Now Iâm stomping across the hall and digging that key from my desk drawer, and the weariness is still there, but some of that aggression is creeping back in, salivating at the prospect of having another go at her. It comes out when I jam the key into the lock and thrust it open, revealing a dark, empty room. Thereâs a slant of light slashing across the bed from the bathroom, door cracked a few scant inches, and I donât think twice about storming into it.
I freeze at what I find inside, all that tight hostility zapped away in the span of a single blink.
The mirror is shattered, glass scattered everywhere, and among the debris is Story, naked and pale.
Holding a shard of glass to her wrist.
My bones turn to ice, and for a long time, I canât move. I try to speak, but my jaw wonât unclench, tongue fused to the roof of my mouth. The come is still dried in her hair, and her chestâ¦
Itâs gruesome and inflamed, our initials difficult to make out beneath the swollen, scabbing skin around it. The tracks of tears are gone, but in their place are empty eyes and a dead expression, as if she left her body back in that funhouse and now itâs just walking around without a driver. Her gaze is fixed to her wrist, so slender and flawless, and I have no idea what sheâs seeing, but it canât be the same image Iâm taking in, because she looks soâ¦
Relieved.
My voice emerges in a ragged whisper. âPut it down.â
I donât think she even hears me, because she doesnât blink. Doesnât flinch. Doesnât move at all, except to shift a delicate finger over the jagged shard of glass. It looks wrong there, pressed to the vibrant blue of her veins, and my chest goes tight in a way Iâm not expecting. It isnât until I realize sheâs already cutting into the skin that my body begins to move.
I take three steps into the bathroom, barely noticing the sting of the glass beneath my feet and wrench her wrists apart. âDrop it!â I snap, nicking my fingertips as I angrily pry it away. She makes a small, wounded sound, forehead furling in confusion. Sheâs a wraith, contained inside nothing but what her hand is doing. Her forehead furls in confusion, gaze climbing my hand to meet my eyes. I can practically see her snapping to awareness, surfacing from whatever hypnosis sheâd been under.
âWhat?â
I hurl the shard of glass into the sink and grab her by her arms, giving her a jarring shake. âDonât you fucking dare,â I growl, watching the moisture build in her eyes. âYou donât get to take whatâs mine!â
âWhy do you care?â she asks, chest hitching. âHavenât you hurt me enough? Isnât it enough?â Her palms come up to shove at me ineffectually. âIsnât it fucking enough?!â
The sob that wracks her body is a shocking thing, full of shuddering agony. And it should make me feel something other than relief, but fucking Christ. Agony is something.
Agony isnât dead.
I donât know what compels me to drag her into my chest. The truth is that Iâm always on a knifeâs edge with this girl. I either want to fuck her or kill her. Kiss her or kick her. Caress her cheek or yank her hair. Itâs never made any sense to me, but itâs never had to. Until a few days ago, Iâd always leaned to the easier side of the blade. Hurt, strike, yank, wound. Since she drugged me, Iâve found myself wondering if she feels it, tooâhow addictively intimate it can be to hurt someone. Maybe hugs and kisses are nice. Fuck if I know. But I know the look in her eyes when I say something meanâwhen I yank her hair and grab her too rough and call her a whoreâand I donât care what other people think. Thatâs a certain kind of closeness.
God fucking knows, itâs a lot less confusing than this.
She cries into my shoulder, her little body heaving with sobs. She doesnât touch me back, but she doesnât pull away, either. Her skin is colder than mine, tits pressed up against my bare chest, and when I run a hand down her back, I donât know what the hell Iâm doing.
Only a couple hours ago, I was pushing a blade into her skin.
I was bitterly shooting my nut into her mouth.
I was helping Rath fuck her ruthlessly with the handle of that knife.
I was seeing her puckered asshole taking it and feeling so hard and excited about it that I almost forgot to hate her for what she did to us.
Now, Iâm saying, âShh,â and, âCalm down,â and, âThatâs not happening. I wonât let you.â
Itâs not often I find myself on this side of those feelings, but I think about hurting her some more, and I justâ¦somehow know.
I know it wonât bring me any pleasure.
I press her closer, my hand curled protectively against her head as she cries, and some of that chest-clenching pressure eases, melting away at the feel of her in my arms.
I canât say that Iâm sorry, because Iâm not sure I am. She fucked us over. She tied me up and used me. She took away my rituals, knowing how much I needed them. She made me think I had herâthat she belonged to me, willingly, wholly. These werenât betrayals that could go unpunished. Surely she had to know that. This woman broke the one thing I canât look past. The one thing that makes us Lords. Trust.
But deep down, beneath the tattered squares that define my fabric, is the knowledge that sheâs probably right about one thing.
We struck first.
Wrapping my arms around her waist, I lift her just enough to spare her feet as I walk her to the shower, sliding the glass door open and lowering her to the clean tiles. She goes easily when I peel our skin apart, because even after all these years, Story doesnât cling.
I wonder who made that square in her quilt.
I wonder if it was me.
Gently, I command, âTurn the shower on,â prying one of her hands from her face. âGet it warm, the way you like it.â She obeys perfunctorily, her little shoulders jolting with a restrained sob. I watch her test the spray, adjusting the knobs automatically, hands shaking each time she reaches out to feel the water. âIs that good?â At her shaky nod, I order, âGet under the water, clean yourself up. Wash your hair.â
The longer I watch, the more I want to say the words. They wouldnât be welcomeâthey shouldnât be welcomeâbut I feel them in the pit of my chest, hard like a boulder, and seeing her tears mingle with the water makes them so goddamn difficult to ignore.
Iâm sorry.
It had to be done.
Iâm sorry.
She doesnât flinch when I run the cotton over the cuts on her chest, even though I know the antiseptic hurts like a bitch. Iâll be finding that out myself here in a few minutes, since my feet are cut all to hell. Iâll probably spend all night getting the glass out.
For now, Iâve got her on the bed. Her gaze is fixed dispassionately over my shoulder as I pick up her wrist, running the cotton over the cut she made. It isnât very deepâwonât need stitches. Rathâs initial had been cut deeper than this, but for some reason, Iâm more careful with this one. Itâs fucking stupid, sitting here cleaning up the mess I made myself. The mess I refuse to even apologize for. It doesnât make sense.
And yet, I reach for the ointment Iâd found in the first aid kit and get to slathering all the cuts with it. The contrast of the letters tattooed on my knucklesâKILLâwith the gentle way Iâm dabbing the pads of my fingers onto her wounds, angry and vivid-red, is almost laughable. I donât patch wounds; I make them. Thatâs made obvious by how sloppy the bandages look when I clumsily press them to her skin.
Rubbing my nose, I inspect my handiwork, her full tits perky and perfect on either side of the initials. Iâd be lying if I said my dick isnât hard, and it isnât just because of the way her robe is opened, teasing the sight of her tits. Itâs the letter between them, the âKâ thatâs scabbing and still swollen. Sheâs going to wear that for the rest of her life. The thought makes my blood run lava-hot, something in my chest unwinding at the knowledge Iâll always be a part of her.
Iâm not completely senseless. I know itâs abominable.
âRemember that one Easter?â I ask, sweeping the fold of her robe back to reveal her pebbled nipple. âIt was right after you moved in. Dinner was fucking terrible. My dad was riding my ass about being nicer to your mom, and youââ Fuck, she was wearing this dress that killed me. It was a pale pink I could see right through when she stood in front of the dying sun. My balls were aching all day. She was different thenâawkward, but with a carefree naivete about her. She was sweet and cute, and I still thought she was mine. âWe spent hours that night in my room, playing games. You got so frustrated that I actually let you beat me.â
She sat between my legs as I taught her the controls, and I thought about claiming her then. Thereâs no way she couldnât feel how hard I was. Sheâd send me these smirking little grins every time I let her win, and the more I think about it, the more I suspect that night was the happiest Iâve ever been.
In the end, I chickened out, too young and dumb and fucked up to risk ruining that square in my quilt.
But I saw her later, when she was sleeping in her bed. It was the first night I really watched herâthe first night I allowed myself to stand over her and stoke myself to the sight of her soft body and wet mouth.
âStory,â I say, touching her chin. âLook at me.â
She obeys, just like she had in the shower, and I understand now, like I understood then. Sheâs turned off, shut down, reduced to following orders because sheâs been taught that not doing so means suffering of one sort or another. Sheâs nothing like that girl anymore. Sheâs all rough edges, that light in her eyes so dimmed that I canât even see it anymore, but sheâs still enough. The sight of my thumb pressing into her bottom lip still makes my spine feel electrified.
And I could have her.
All Iâd need to do is tell her to lie back and open up for me, and sheâd part her thighs. Sheâd lay there impassively as I pushed into her, still flush with the memory of that knife. Sheâd fix her eyes to the ceiling as I fucked her, trying to cling onto whatever scraps of that girl are left so I can weave them into my quilt and imagine it bringing me warmth.
I draw her robe closed, sighing. âLetâs get some sleep.â
Iâm drag-ass all day, tired and annoyed at every little thing. Two hours cleaning up glass, another hour picking it out of my feet, and five more hours spent laying stiffly at Storyâs side hasnât made me inclined to take Neil Takacâs bullshit.
âYou donât have to pay,â I tell him, not bothering to keep my voice professional. âYou entered into this agreement, no one forced you.â
Every first Sunday of the month, my dad has us go around collecting the dues. Itâs tedious, and more often than not, someone has to cause a ruckus about it, as if itâs some big surprise. Itâs a waste of our skills and talents. Either one of the Nicks could easily be doing this bullshit. As always, I suspect itâs my fatherâs way of punishing me for getting all these tattoos.
âYou want to look big and bad, son?â heâd say, giving me a nod. âThen thatâs what youâre useful for.â
Rath is just as crabby as me. âIf you want to give up Mr. Payneâs protection, itâs no skin off our noses.â
Tristian is the only one who plasters on a smile and level with the guy. âMr. Takac, you didnât pay last month. Iâm sure a fine businessman such as yourself can understand how that puts us in an awkward position. If we let it slide for you, then weâll have to let it slide for someone else, and then someone else. You donât give your services away on credit, do you? Why should we?â
Neil glares around his body shop, swiping an oily rag over his sweaty neck. âItâs a bad quarter, fellas. I just donât have the money today. If you need to pull the protection, then I understand.â
But he doesnât like it. A body shop in South Side? This place is practically screaming âsteal somethingâ, which is pretty ironic given the three jacked cars heâs got sitting on the back of the property.
My dad doesnât generally like us to blackmail people unless itâs warranted, so I donât bother. Instead, I ask, âYou insured, Neil?â
Eyes narrowing, he answers, âYes.â
Nodding, I wonder, âFor two hundred? Because you got some nice cars in here.â
Tristian offers, âIâm thinking heâd need more like three.â
âWell, youâre the car guy.â I shrug, gesturing to Tristian. âYou insured for three?â
We leave ten minutes later, the bag in my pocket a couple grand heavier, and walk shoulder to shoulder toward the avenue. The thick clouds in the sky decide to finally break, moistening the air with a fine, misting rain. Shoulders curled against the chill of it, I finally bring up whatâs been on my mind.
âWe need to talk about Story.â
Tristian huffs. âIâm fucking sick of talking about Story. Sheâs hot, sheâs cold. She wants to be ours, she stabs us in the backs.â Scowling into the distance, he shakes his head. âShe canât be trusted.â
âI know,â I say, my feet still aching as I trudge along the damp sidewalk. âWhich is why we need to let her go.â Iâm three paces away when I realize theyâve both stopped. I turn to look at them, setting my jaw. âSheâs a liability,â I say, hoping to reason with them. âAnd right now, liabilities are dangerous.â
âEven more reason to keep her close,â Tristian says, eyes flashing in challenge.
I knew this would happen. Tristian can talk all he wants about being sick of her shit, but at the end of the day, sheâs his little plaything. And heâs not like me and Rath. Random one-offs will get him by, but just barely. He needs someone he can really sink his claws into.
âWeâre not keeping her. That much is certain.â I jerk my head, waiting for them to follow. âLike you said, she can never be trusted.â
Tristian scoffs. âWell, how exactly do you plan on doing that without making us look like a bunch of weak pussies?â
Thereâs little precedent for this. Sure, there have been other Ladies who didnât fulfill their mission. Back in â63, the Lady slept with a Baron, immediately violating the contract. She was stripped of her duties and her Lords-purchased belongings and forced to walk to the Baronâs mansion in nothing but her bra and panties. She was theirs to deal with after that.
Then there was Jacqueline Wilkins, Lady for the class of â81. She developed a coke habit so massive that she started stealing valuables from the house. The Lords at the time set her and her dealersâthe Countsâup with friendly police. She got three years for the drugs, and then later, a nice little charge for an assault while she was inside, adding a cool decade onto her sentence.
âThe problem,â I say, scoping out each alley we pass, âis that regardless of what we do with her, itâll go public and the Kings will ask questions. Especially ours.â
Rath toys with the ring on his lip, scanning the street. âYeah, thatâs not a conversation I want to have with Daniel.â
Tristian grabs my arm, pulling me to a stop. âSo letâs not. We can push harder, crack down.â
I throw my arms out. âWith what resources, Tristian? We donât have the time to chain her to us!â I can see he doesnât careâfucker calls me stubbornâso I finally release a hard breath, shoving my hand through my hair. âSheâs going to kill herself.â
Rath kicks a foot out, looking bored. âDonât be dramatic. Sheâs justââ
âI walked in on her last night with a blade to her wrist,â I snap, satisfied to at least his head jerk back in surprise. âThis wasnât acting,â I say before either of them can try. âI looked into her eyes, and you know what I saw? Nothing.â
Rath watches me with a skeptical expression. âWhat happened? When was this?â
I look around, not wanting to have this discussion on the avenue, of all places. âAfter she got home. She was in her bathroom. She fucking shattered her mirror, and then tried to use one of the shards toââ I press my lips together, not liking the way it feels to remember it. Looking at Tristian, I will him to understand. âWe canât push her any harder, and if Iâm being honest, I donât want to. It shouldnât have to be this goddamn difficult. I donât care about my dad, or about fucking LDZ or the Royals or the other Kings. What good is having a Ladyâhaving herâif sheâd rather be dead?â I ignore the stunned looks on their faces, averting my gaze. âI had to have Ms. Crane keep an eye on her today. I think weâve taken this thing as far as itâll go. Weâre all fucking miserable. Whatâs the point?â Irritated, I jerk a hard shrug. âWhatâs the fucking point?â
Thereâs a long moment where the world moves on around us. Cars creep by, music blaring, and people pass like weâre invisible. The avenue isnât like anywhere else Iâve ever known. No matter what, it just keeps on chugging, the biggest cog in the South Side machine, keeping everything running in a perfect cycle.
Tristian is the first to speak, voice thoughtful. âMaybe being upfront with Daniel is the best thing to do. Maybe heâll have an idea about how to fix this.â
âItâs not a bad idea,â Rath says, crossing his arms as the rain begins falling harder. âPlus, if he thinks weâve been hiding it from him? Itâll only make shit worse, Killer.â
âYou know whatâll happen if we take this to my father,â I say, voice low and full of dread. âYouâre right. Heâll have plenty of ideas, and the first one will be taking her from us, and keeping her forâ¦â I think of her sitting on his lap, his hand snaked around her waist and resting on her belly. I think of her words last night in the funhouse, and the thing is, I canât trust them. She could be lying about her never wanting it. But thereâs a chance she isnât, and if itâs true?
Then Iâm the one who deserves that knife.
Shaking my head, I insist, âFuck that. Iâm not letting that happen.â
We start walking again, and I can tell theyâre as lost in thought as I am, struggling for a solution to a problem that only we can really be blamed for. Itâs not like the other houses donât sometimes lose a girl. Shit, for three years running, the Princess has cycled out in her fourth month. The Countess sometimes gets busted. The Duchess has a tendency to justâ¦fucking disappear. Of all the houses, LDZ probably has the second-best track record with these things.
Kind of hard to beat the Barons.
We arrive at the last location just as the sun begins fading. Itâs a warehouse thatâs more often than not illegally operating as a nightclub. As always, we dip into the alley to knock for access to the back door. It reeks of piss, booze, and stale cigarettes, and my feet are killing me, raw like ground meat from the glass last night.
âShit,â Rath mutters, patting his pockets. âLeft my piece at the house.â
Tristian and I both roll our eyes. He fucking would. Itâs not the end of the world. My gun is tucked into my waistband, and I can tell that Tristianâs got his.
âWeâll just do this and dip,â I say, not feeling great about how much money Iâm carrying. Aside from old Neil, the avenueâs been looking flush, businesses happy to fork over their dues in whatever form they please. There must be some serious tax crunching happening, because almost everyone preferred paying with paper. Iâm basically a walking target.
I bang at the door again, annoyed and quickly losing my patience, when headlights swing into the alley, bearing down on us from the other end. Tristian looks casual as he tucks a hand beneath his shirt, resting it on his gun. But Rath and I share a look and I know heâs feeling what I feel.
Unease prickles at the back of my neck.
I bang at the door again, reaching for my own gun. Weâre so focused on the headlights that we donât even noticeâdonât even hearâwhoâs approaching us from the other mouth of the alley.
Not until Tristian grunts.