They Will Fall: Chapter 26
They Will Fall: A Dark College Romance (Wicked Boys of BCU Book 3)
SCREAMS COMING from Stanleyâs wife can be heard from where Iâm standing above ground. Sheâs talked, cried, and punched him a few times, and now sheâs shouting at the top of her lungs.
Iâm waiting rather impatiently for Mr. Cross, Rileyâs dad, to decree my new assignment. This is a special oneâa personal oneâand Iâm thankful itâs being handed to me and not just some other member whose punishment will be a life of misery. Stanley Crane doesnât deserve a life, period, but itâs only with Maddox and his momâs approval that I will fulfill my oath and punish Stanley to the fullest extent.
With the gun in my back pocket, I walk toward Mr. Cross as he, too, closes the space between us. âIs it finalized? Do I get the assignment?â The anticipation is eating away at me. Thereâs a chance The President of my chapter will handle this a different way, even if Mr. Cross voices his reasoning on why the assignment should be given to me.
The second he says, âRaise your right hand,â I release all the air Iâve been holding in my lungs.
I do as Iâm told, lifting my right hand in the air with my fingers pressed tightly together. Iâve taken this oath three times, so I know the drill, and I begin without him telling me what to say. âI, Lev Pemberley, solemnly swear to keep the secrets, oaths, and promises of The Society. To protect our antiquity and to abide by all rules. I understand that failure to do so will result in my abolishment, never to enter The Blue Bloodsâ society again.â
âThank you, Mr. Pemberley. I trust you wonât let us down.â Mr. Cross hands me a notebook with my name engraved on the front. Without hesitation, I flip to the first page to read my assignment.
Punish Stanley Crane. Report any pertinent information found during your investigation to The Elders.
I close the notebook and bite back a smile. âThank you, Mr. Cross.â
Mr. Cross steps closer, slaps a hand to my shoulder, and whispers, âOff the recordâ¦make that son of a bitch pay.â
âWill do, sir.â
My eyes land on Maddox, whoâs sitting on a log with his elbows pressed to his knees and his face in his hands. I walk toward him slowly and the sound of me approaching has him lifting his head. âYou got it?â he asks, pain and betrayal lacing his voice. I know itâs not aimed at me, but it still hurts to see him like this.
I pat the notebook in my palm. âYeah.â Taking a seat beside him, I allow the silence to engulf us while waiting for him to speak first. Maddox is the gentle one. Ridge and I talk with our fists or we yell. Maddox, on the other hand, needs patience.
He grabs the notebook from me and opens it up to read the passage in the front. âIf youâre seeking my permission, youâve got it.â
âYouâre sure? Because I can handle this in a different way. There are other options.â I donât like those other options. Any option where Stanley leaves this place breathing makes my body actually want to vibrate with anger. But Maddox is my boy. I have to make sure this wonât break him.
He hands the notebook back to me. âThe man on that floor is already dead to me. I feel nothing toward him. Go do what you have to do. And if you donât, Iâll do it for you.â My fingers graze over the gold letters of my name, biding time as I wait for him to recant what he said. To tell me not to do it. But he doesnât. âWell. What are you waiting for?â
âOnce itâs done, thereâs no going back.â
âThen you better hurry your ass up.â He shoves me forward and I see the resolve in his eyes.
I smile widely, finally having the reassurance I need. âAll right. Guess Iâll see you in a bit.â
âIâll be here.â
The climb down the ladder is indescribable. Everything is falling into place and happening at exactly the right time. Had this all happened last year, or even a month ago, I wouldnât have the emotional capacity to even understand why I was doing what I was doing. Now, my mind is clearer than ever and Iâm feeling an array of emotions surface.
Heartbreak for my family who left too soon. Sadness that I lost so much time with them because of a ridiculous man and his vendetta. Relief that I can finally pay back the fucker who took them from me. I feel it all, aside from a few emotions that one might have in a situation like mineâremorse, empathy, and regret.
Standing on the middle of the ladder, I see Mrs. Crane knelt beside her husbandâwhoâs on his back. Sheâs gritting out profanities and shouting about how she hopes he goes straight to hell when he leaves this earth. I leap down from where Iâm at and my boots hit the ground with a thud.
Mrs. Craneâs eyes lift. âPlease tell me itâs time.â
Iâm a bit surprised sheâs so adamant on her husband meeting his maker. Not that he will where heâs going.
âWhenever youâre ready,â I tell her. âIfâ¦you are ready?â Itâs a question more than a statement because I need to be certain she wants this, too. Iâm not a good man, but my empathetic bone has fused back together for the people I care about. Since Maddox is one of those people and this is one of the few family members he will have left after this, I need to be sure this isnât going to break something between the two of them.
She stands up, sweeps her hair off her shoulder, and says, âAs far as Iâm concerned, youâre late. He doesnât deserve to breathe our air for another minute.â
Itâs true that The Society members are ruthless, but Iâm beginning to realize just how ruthless we all are. Secrets, lies, murder. None of us are innocent. Not even the woman in front of me who, on any other day, I would describe as warm and gentle.
Mrs. Crane walks toward me with tearstained cheeks and bloodied knuckles. She stops at my side, placing a gentle hand on my shoulder. âMake him hurt.â Then she disappears up the ladder.
I watch Mr. Crane for a second, waiting to see if he begs for his life. His cold eyes are dead set on me. Every couple seconds he blinks, making it known heâs still alive.
I take a step toward him, then another, still watching. Still waiting. He finally opens his mouth to speak. âWell. What the hell are you waiting for?â
I shrug my shoulders, one hand gripping the gun in my pocket. âJust trying to decide if I wanna make this quick, or torture you a bit first.â
He turns his head and hacks up some blood, then spits it straight out in front of him. âOr maybe youâre just too much of a coward.â
I pull the gun out, my hand trembling as I raise it in the air.
âGo ahead,â he taunts me. âPull the trigger.â
With a jerky finger set on the trigger, I count down in my head.
Ten.
Nine.
Eight.
Seven.
Six.
A raspy laugh climbs up his throat. He coughs and spits again. âSeems I forgot the most cowardly Pemberley member of all when I took the others out. Always knew I shouldâve tracked you down and put a bullet between your eyes.â The venom in his tone is enlightening. It settles any question in my mind I could have had about my decision here. He means every single word. They arenât out of desperation to die; they are out of a sickness within him.
With the cold steel gun in my trembling hand, my arm stretches outward, pointing directly at his heart. Iâve killed before, but never with such a personal connection. âToo bad you missed your chance.â My tone is stoicâempty of any emotion.
One.
I watch as the bullet fades into his chest, a pool of blood spilling out onto his shirt. His eyes go wide before settling into a blank stare. âHowâs that for a coward?â I ask his corpse.
Itâs finally over.