Goddamn Aida for sticking her nose in where it doesnât belong.
Iâm used to my sisterâs complete disregard for other peopleâs boundaries, but this time she went too far. She knows that Simone is off-limits, in every conceivable way. I donât talk about her. I donât even think about her.
But thatâs not really true, is it?
I think about her every fucking day, one way or another.
After she left, I think I went mad for a while. I saw Simone everywhereâon street corners, in restaurants, in cars that passed. Every time Iâd turn my head, thinking it was really her, only to realize it was a stranger. Someone who didnât actually look like her at all.
And then the real mind-fuck started. Her face began appearing on the covers of magazines, in retail shops, and cosmetic aisles. Her new career seemed like a cruel joke designed to torment me. Once I fell asleep watching TV and I woke up to the sound of her laughâshe was on being interviewed by Stephen Colbert.
I couldnât get away from her. There was nowhere I could hide.
I hated Chicago. I hated my work. I even hated my family, though it wasnât their fault. I hated all the things that made Simone leave me. The things that made me unworthy.
I didnât want to be myself anymoreâthe man who loved her and wasnât loved in return.
So I joined the military.
I flew across the world to the godforsaken desert, just to find a place where I wouldnât have to see her face.
I still did, though. I saw her face in barracks, in sand dunes, in empty starry nights. It floated behind my closed eyelids at night when I tried to sleep.
I would have told you that I remembered every detail of it.
And yet, she took my breath away at the rally. I hadnât remembered even a quarter of how beautiful she can be.
She looked even more stunning tonight. She was wearing a simple white gown, one-shouldered with a tasteful slit up her left thigh. Every time she moved, I got a glimpse of that long leg, and her deep bronze skin against the glowing white.
Her waist felt tight and lean under my palm. But her figure was fuller than it used to be. Thatâs why they call her The Bodyâbecause thereâs never been a body like that in all of creation. Every other woman in the world is just a pale imitation of her. Like they were all made in her image, but with none of the same skill. Sheâs the Picasso and the rest are just postcards.
I know why. I know I failed her that night, leaving her alone and scared in the park. I know I terrified her when I showed up, crazed and dripping blood. And I know she was teetering on the edge of leaving me even before that, because I wasnât the man she planned to love, the one her family wanted for her.
So I guess the question I really want to know the answer to is, I thought she did. I looked into her eyes and I thought I saw my own feelings reflected back at me. I thought I could see inside of her, and I knew exactly what she felt.
Iâve never been so wrong.
Now sheâs back here, like an angel that only visits the earth once every decade. Iâm the fool who wants to fall down at her feet and beg her to take me back up to heaven with her.
A man like me doesnât deserve heaven.
I can see the musicians finishing up their set. The event organizer is messing with the microphones, probably about to bring Yafeu Solomon up on stage to speak.
I remember what he said about wanting to âthank me in public.â Iâve got zero interest in that. I donât want his thanks, or anybodyâs attention.
So I start heading toward the exit.
It was stupid to come here in the first place. I donât know why I let Riona rope me into it. What did I think was going to happen? That Simone would apologize? That sheâd beg me to take her back?
She didnât do it at the rally, so why would she do it here tonight?
I wouldnât want that anyway.
She didnât want me then, and she certainly doesnât now. Her status has risen like a rocket. Iâm the same gangster I was beforeâshined up a little, but still with bruised, battered knuckles if you look close enough.
Iâm almost at the door when Riona intercepts me.
âWhere are you going?â
âI donât want to hear Solomonâs speech.â
Riona brushes back a strand of bright red hair. She looks nice tonightâshe always looks nice. But Iâm not fooled by the dress or the heels. Sheâs a pit bull at her core. And I can see sheâs debating how hard to push me, after she already strong-armed me into coming here tonight.
âI saw you dancing with Simone,â she says.
âYeah.â
âWhat did she say?â
âNothing. We barely spoke.â
Riona sighs. âYou know sheâs only here for a couple of days . . .â
âGood,â I say roughly. âThen I probably wonât see her again.â
I push past Riona, leaving Heritage House.
After the heat and press of the dance floor, the cool night air is a relief. Riona picked me up on her way over, so she wonât care if I leave without her.
As I cross the parking lot, I see Mikolaj Wilk and Nessa Griffin pull up in Nessaâs Jeep. Mikoâs driving, and Nessa is leaning over to rest her head on his shoulder. Nessaâs laughing about something, and even Miko has a smile on his lean, pale face. His pale hair is ghostly in the dim interior of the car, and the tattoos rising up his neck look like a dark collar.
I raise my hand to wave at them, but they donât see me, too wrapped up in each other.
Fucking hell. I donât want to be jealous, but itâs hard not to feel bitter, when even the most unlikely couple can make it work, while Simone and I couldnât.
Mikolaj hated the Griffins with every fiber of his being. He kidnapped Nessa, their youngest child. He murdered Jack Du Pont, Callumâs bodyguard and best friend. Yet somehow, after all that, he and Nessa fell in love, were married, and even made peace with the Griffin family.
I guess thereâs something missing in me.
Some core component required for happiness.
Because the only time Iâve felt it were those few, short months with Simone. And she obviously didnât feel the same.
I take an Uber back to my house. The lights are mostly outâPapa goes to bed early now, and Neroâs probably out with his girlfriend Camille. Only Sebâs bedroom light is on. I can see it high up on the third floor, like a lighthouse above the dark sea of the lawn.
I jog up the front walk. The pavement is cracked. The yard is full of dead leaves. The old oak trees have grown up so tall and thick that the house is too shadyâperpetually dim, even in the daytime.
Itâs still a beautiful old mansion, but it wonât last forever.
Aidaâs son will probably never live here.
Maybe if Nero or Seb have a kid, there will be one more generation giving life to these old walls.
I donât see myself ever having children. Even though Iâm barely over thirty, I feel old. Like life already passed me by.
As I climb the steps to the front door, I see a package on the porch. Itâs small, about the size of a ring box, wrapped in brown paper.
In my world, you donât pick up unmarked packages. But this is too small to be a bomb. It could be full of anthrax, I suppose.
At this moment, I donât really care. I pick it up and strip off the wrapping.
I can hear something rattling around inside the box. It sounds small and hard. Too heavy to be a ring.
I open the lid.
Itâs a fifty-caliber bulletâhand-turned on a lathe. Bronze alloy. Smelling of oil and gunpowder.
I lift it out of the box, turning the cool, slippery cylinder between my fingers.
Thereâs a note nested in cotton. Small, square, and hand-written.
It says: