I STRODEÂ along the hallway and lifted my gaze to the towering guy waiting outside the door of AP class.
âTook your time.â Gio gave me a wink. âDidnât think you were coming for a while there.â
I looked away as heat rushed to my cheeks. âSorry, got held up.â
âOh, yeah?â he followed me in, taking the seat behind me. âAnything interesting?â
âOkay, settle down everyone,â the teacher called out, and motioned for the voices to settle.
For once, I didnât hear them. I didnât notice anything. Not the laughter or the chatter, or the way that heavy feeling grew on the back of my neck under Gioâs stare. I was still back in that car, with excitement and shame moving through me. I couldnât believe Iâd just done thatâ¦
âHey.â
I snapped back to reality and turned my head.
âYou okay?â Gio scowled, his gaze serious. âYou seem k-kinda out of it.â
I forced a smile and nodded. âSure.â
But that was a lieâ¦just like my entire life, it seemed. I tried to focus on the class, but I was still back there, my body quaking as I came under Nickâs stare. I hadnât wanted to do that. I shouldnât have done that.
the good girl everyone saw. I lifted my gaze to the class, felt the weight of Gioâs stare, and tugged my hair down to cover my face. In the wake of desire, fear pushed in.
I needed to stop it, whatever this was with Creedâs sons. My pulse sped at the thought. It was My mind was heavy, weighed down by the desperate need to figure this out.
Gio met my stare, giving me a confused smile before I turned away. My mom had divorced my dad without me even knowingâ¦and now was marrying a man I barely knew, a man whose sons wanted nothing more than to torment and play with me. I needed to get out, needed to stop this before whatever this game they were playing was got further out of hand.
The bell rang before I knew it. Chairs scraped against the floor as the other students rushed out. I followed, my heart thunderingâ¦until the crash.
Thatâs why I was so conflicted. I wanted them and I liked what they did to meâ¦a little too much.
âYou want to walk to History?â Gio asked, his tone low and careful.
I pulled my thoughts away from them and glanced at him. âSure.â
âYouâre not pissed at me or anything, are y-you?â
I met his gaze as we walked out of the classroom and along the hall, following the herd. âNo, of course not. Sorry, myâ¦my mom told me she was divorcing my dad last night.â
One brow lifted in surprise. âWhoa, thatâs heavy.â
I nodded. âYeah.â
âNo wonder youâre distracted. I thought it was me for a moment, thought those Banks assholes had said something about us standing together yesterday.â
âNo.â My mind was trapped by the . âThey donât even know.â
âOh?â He flinched and glanced my way. âI just figuredââ
âFigured what?â
âThat youâd do whatever those assholes told you.â
Nickâs demands rose in my head.
âNo,â I answered. âNot everything.â
âGood. âCause I was hoping youâd still want to go to Hannaâs party this weekend.â
I stepped around a group of others and thought about it. Itâd be a way to break away from this hold they had over me. A way to make some friends. I glanced toward Gio. Maybe even more than friends.
Gio caught me looking, and a spark brightened in his gaze as he motioned to the class-room up ahead. âWhat?â
âNothing,â I muttered.
âYou checking me out, Ryth?â
I flinched. âNo.â
His green eyes grew wider. âYeah, you w-were. Itâs o-okay.â
His stutter grew worse when he was embarrassed. Maybe I checking him out, maybe I was a little desperate, desperate to get away from Creed and his sons. I stepped into the classroom, only this time Gio sat beside me.
I barely heard the chatter in the class, capturing just enough of the teacherâs lecture to take notes on the laptop Creed had bought me. I guess I had to expect that nowâ¦him being my stepfather and all.
âSo I want a three-thousand word paper on my desk by Monday on this.â The teacherâs words wrenched me from my thoughts. I jerked my gaze to the gray-haired professor wannabe with his glasses perched on the end of his nose.
âWhat?â I muttered.
âWhat?â Gio snapped, then the entire class groaned.
âDonât the teacher snapped. âYou all knew this was coming. I gave an entire lecture on this last week.â
âBut I wasnât here last week.â I searched the faces of my other classmates.
But it didnât matter, they didnât hear me. No one did under the muttered swearing and pissed-off groans.
âI donât careâ¦â The teacher shook his head. âThree thousand words on legislative social reform of the nineteen twenties,â he called out as the bell rang and we all rose and shoved our chairs back.
Twenty goddamn percent? The classroom seemed to blur under the weight of my panic.
âMs. Castlemaine.â
I froze at the sound of my name, halfway to the door, and turned. Heads turned toward me and I caught a glimpse of snarls from a few of the girls, and in an instant, that mark on my cheek started to burn.
âYes?â
âI expect you to be able to catch up,â Davidson, or whatever his name was, said. âI wonât be giving any special favors, even under the circumstances.â
âYeah, that she lives with the fucking Banks. Stuck-up bitch,â someone called out.
I jerked my gaze around the room, scanning those who were looking at me. But they just staredâ¦until Gio stepped in. âEnough. Come on.â He motioned me forward.
âWhat the hell was that?â I glanced his way, unable to comprehend what had just happened. âWhat were they saying?â
âNothing.â He didnât meet my gaze, just ushered me out of the room.
Something was happening though. There was a shiftâ¦a dark, hateful shift happening all around me. I hadnât noticed it before, maybe I wasnât looking. But I felt it now, felt the anger and their stares. I glanced over my shoulder as they glared. The moment I stepped through the door and into the hallway, I was hit from behind.
âGet out of the fucking way, you traitorous cunt.â
The impact slammed me off balance. I stumbled sideways and glanced toward them. But they were gone, striding through the crowded hallway filled with students.
âJesus.â Gio grabbed my arm, pulling me toward him. âYou okay?â
âFine,â I answered. âWhat the hell was that about?â
âNothing. Come on.â He tried to pull me forward again, until I jerked from his hold.
âYou keep saying nothing, but thereâs clearly Whatâs going on here, Gio?â
A tortured look rose in his eyes before he pulled me gently, guiding me through the students toward our next class. The moment we were inside the classroom, he stepped in front of me. âLook, some of the students here are friends with the Rossis.â
The Rossis?
The blood drained from my face.
Dadâ¦
It was about dad betraying them. I slowly shook my head. âBut thatâs got nothing to do with me.â
âDoesnât matter,â he muttered, and glanced over his shoulder. âNot to them. Which is why you need to stay with me, okay?â
I glanced around his body. âAll of them hate me?â
âNot all.â He met my gaze.
I knew then, knew why he was so insistent for me to sit with him in class and at lunch. But what I didnât understand was why himâ¦
âOkay, letâs settle down,â the female teacher called out.
She glanced my way as I turned, my fingers pressed against the throbbing ache in my forehead, one that was starting to grow. I sat there, catching glances my way from the other students and feeling like the entire world was against meâ¦
Until finally, the last bell rang.
âCome on.â Gio rose from his seat beside me. âLetâs get you out of here.â
But once Iâd seen their hate the first time, it was all I could see. Not everyone looked at me, but there were enough. I grabbed my laptop, lingered long enough to stay out of the rush, then made my way to the front of the school.
I glanced up, finding that dark, midnight beast waiting for me at the curb.
Nickâs warning filled my head.
âIâll walk with you for a bit,â Gio offered.
I just shook my head, scattering that pounding roar throughout my head. âNo, thanks, I got it.â
I left Gio behind and strode toward the waiting Mustang, feeling that throb in my head grow barbs. Nick was watching the other cars when I yanked open the door and climbed in.
He wasnât chatty this afternoon, not demanding and snarly. Thank Christ for that. He shoved the car into gear before I had a chance to grab the seatbelt. And before I knew it, I was thrown hard against the door as we turned. Agony roared through my head as I slammed into the door, then clawed for the seatbelt and snapped it closed around me.
I waited for the snarlâ¦
Waited for demands and the degradation.
I waited for But he was silent all the way back home. The moment he pulled into the driveway and killed the engine, he turned to me. âRythâ¦â
âJust leave it,â I muttered, and shoved the door open. I couldnât deal with this, not any of this. Not dad, or momâ¦or my new predatory stepbrothers and now the kids at Duke who hated me. Nothing ever changed for me.
. I clenched my fists, fighting the overwhelming urge to lash out or run, and I gripped the laptop to my chest and strode toward the house.
Nick barked.
But I didnât, just shoved through the front door and made for the stairs.
I barely registered that the rest of the house was silent as I hit the top of the stairs.
Nick roared, yanking me around to face him. âWhat the fuck is your problem?â
A bedroom door opened beyond meâ¦the thud of heavy steps followed as Tobias stepped out. âWhat the fuck is going on, Nick?â
A chill rose along my spine as Tobiasâ glared at Nick. âBrother. You and I need to talk.â