Lords of Wrath: Chapter 29
Lords of Wrath (Dark College Bully Romance) : Royals of Forsyth University
The sun has overtaken the horizon by the time I get to the looming office building overlooking South Side. Itâs early enough that the city has barely come to life, but the air is buzzing with the promise of a new day, the damp chill receding with the fresh rays of sun. From the front steps of Payne Holdings, Inc., itâs easy to imagine last night never happened. I never killed a man in a dark, wet alley. I never ran from the police as my stepbrother bled out into the back of my car. I never opened myself up for them, showed my Lords just what kind of Lady theyâve been living with these last weeks. Itâs almost as if I could go back to their brownstone and find them all at the dining room table, doling out orders for the day.
Instead, Iâm here.
With a deep breath, I reach out for the handle and give it a pull. Itâs not locked. I stride through the doors, past the empty security desk and chairs, and mash the button on the elevator. The last time I was here with Dimitri, and I well remember him pressing the button for the top floor. Thatâs what I do now, and itâs surprising.
Iâm not nervous in the least.
When the elevator dings, I step out into his immaculate lobby. The receptionist I met before, Vivenne, isnât in the lobby. I walk past her tidy desk on the way to my stepfatherâs office, catching a scent of her perfume. Itâs an oily, lingering scent that makes my nose itch. I wonder if my mother smells it on him when he gets home. On his suit. On his skin.
Does she turn a blind eye to it the way she did with me?
Danielâs door is cracked, and I pause outside, hearing his voice carry as he speaks on the phone.
âI know itâs a mess. Dead bodies tend to leave one. I pay you to handle situations like this.â His voice is strained with irritation, and from the ebb and flow of it, it sounds like heâs pacing. âChief, itâs not my job to tell you how to deal with something like this. If you happen to âloseâ the bullet and any other evidence, Iâm sure everyone will understand. Just,â his voice tightens, âfix it.â
I push the door open just as he rests the phone on the receiver. His shoulders tense and his eyes dart up, but whatever annoyance he had with the chief slips away into that signature Payne indifference.
âStory,â he says, my name falling from his mouth like something thatâs disappointed him. âThings are a little hectic right now. Maybe you can come backââ
I cut him off, saying the words that Iâve been holding in for so long. âI know who you are.â
It isnât until heâs seated in the chair behind the desk that he raises an eyebrow, shrewdly asks, âWho exactly am I?â
Heâs going to make me say it. Once he doesâonce itâs out in the open, veil liftedâthe game is over. I doubt heâd want that. Personally, Iâm done playing games.
âYouâre Ted.â
Propping an elbow on the arm of the chair, he slowly swivels side-to-side, pinning me under his fierce gaze. âAnd youâre my Sweet Cherry.â My skin crawls hearing the name come from his mouth and itâs only half due to the casual confirmation of all my fears and doubts. Itâs been years since anyone but the guys called me that.
God.
All this time, my own stepfather was stalking me.
âWell,â he adds, rubbing two fingers over his mouth, âyou were. Now youâre justâ¦â His eyes sweep over me dismissively, lip curling in distaste. âUsed up trash. Just like every other woman. Canât say I didnât warn you.â
He sounds bored and repulsed, and the bile I taste in the back of my throat is the only thing that stops me from responding.
Leaning back in his seat, he asks, âWhat are you doing here?â He raises a hand. âNo, let me guess. Youâre here to ask for more money. Or maybe for my help transferring away from Forsyth. Perhaps youâre looking to get away from my son and his friends, which wouldnât surprise me.â His mouth curves into a mean smile. âI didnât think youâd last long with them. Good boys, but a bit on the rough side. No finesse, I think youâll agree.â
Unable to hear him speak of them, I clench my teeth. âI want you to leave them alone.â
âLeave them alone,â he listlessly repeats.
âObviously,â I say in a steely voice, âyou sent Ugly Nick after them last night. He shot Killianâalmost killed him.â The bile creeps up again, but itâs a different sort. The memory of the gun in my hand, the scent of sulphur, Nickâs limp body on the ground, the wound to his cheekâ¦it all makes me want to heave. âAnd I know you did that becauseâ¦because I provoked you, butââ
âWhat is this about Killian?â He jolts from his chair, face gone ashen. âWhat do you mean heâs been shot?â
âLike you donât already know what Ugly Nick did!â I snap.
âClearly, I do not!â he shouts back, swiping his smart phone from the desk and thumbing through it. âWhy would Nick shoot Killian?â He seems to ask this more to his phone than to me, and thereâs a flash where I feel like Iâve gone mental.
âBecause you sent him,â I answer, voice dripping with disdain.
His eyes snap up to mine, sparking. âThatâs ridiculous. You think I want to kill my own son?â
âIââ But I find I canât answer, because I donât know. Maybe Daniel is just a brilliant actor, but the frantic way heâs listening for Killian to answer his phone doesnât look fake.
âWhere is he?â he asks, trying to call Killianâs phone again. âHow serious is it?â
Iâm thrown off balance by his reaction, stammering out, âHeâs alive. Itâsâ¦serious, but probably not fatal if they can get him to someone soon.â
âWhere is he?â Daniel asks, not looking happy about needing to repeat himself.
I shake my head, laughing darkly. âIâm not telling you where they are. You really expect me to believe you had nothing to do with this when you emailed me the location?â
âWhat location?â he asks, slamming his phone down. âThe only time Iâve emailed you in the last two years was right after you sent me that disgusting picture.â
I thrust an accusing finger at him. âAnd I remember what it said! âI take my restitutions in fleshâ.â
An eerie quiet settles over the room, the only sound being the squeak of Danielâs leather shoes as he slowly circles the desk and stands before me. Thereâs something dark brewing under Danielâs skin, something Iâve never witnessed before. A chill runs up my spine as I realize that Iâm not in the presence of my stepfather. Iâm standing before The King.
âI didnât send Ugly Nick to hurt my son. When I told you Iâm taking my restitution in flesh, I didnât mean from him.â He tilts his head, those menacing eyes cutting into me. âDo you realize how valuable those boys are to me? To my enterprise? To my legacy? Killian and I may have our differences, but heâs my most prized assetâmy heir. And you.â He scoffs, sneering, âYou had so much value before you spread those twiggy little legs for my son. Do you have any idea the kind of offers I had for you? The opportunities!â
I flinch back at his roar, almost stumbling over. âOffers?â
âOh, yes.â He bears down on me, driving me back into the wall. âYouâd be surprised what you could get for a sweet little sixteen-year-old virginâprovided you can get her parents out of the picture and keep herâ¦intact.â
I stare at him in horror. âYou wanted to sell me?â
He tilts his hand back and forth. âI like to think of it as more of an exchange of assets.â He snorts, looking so much like his son that it jars me. âKillian thought I got you for him, you know. I love my son, but he does tend to exaggerate his importance. When you returned, I actually believed I had a second chance. Youâre older, but a twenty-year-old virgin is still a bit novel. Not that it matters anymore.â Flicking at the worn hoodie Iâm wearing, he chews out, âYouâre worthless to me now. A waste of four years providing for you, educating you, hunting you down over states and counties to keep tabs on you.â He shakes his head, giving a barbed laugh. âYou should have stayed in Colorado and saved everyone the trouble.â
âThen why?â I gape at him, utterly lost. âWhy did you kill Jack? Why would you send all those letters threatening me, and Ugly Nickââ
He gives me a long, narrow-eyed look. âI donât know who Jack is, but I didnât kill anyoneânot on account of you, and certainly not my own legitimate flesh and blood. If thatâs your measure of your own importance, then it would seem my son has rubbed off on you.â Holding my stare, he sleazily adds, âIn more ways than one.â
âI-I donât understand,â I rush out. âYouâre Ted.â
His eyes flash in exasperation. âTed was a fake name I used for all of three months to ensure my investment wasnât letting dirty old men between her thighs. Ted doesnât exist! His account is long gone.â He saunters over to the window, irritably musing, âBefore your crude email a few weeks ago, I didnât even realize the address was still active.â
My mind spins. If he didnât send Ugly Nick, then who did? Who sent me those texts? Once again, I feel off kilter, like there are pieces to the puzzle Iâm missing. When I look at Daniel again, this doesnât seem to be one of his worries.
âSo,â he begins, demeanor shifting to business as usual. âWhich of my wayward sons killed Nick? Was it Rath? Youâd think someone with that much precision on a piano would have less of a twitchy trigger finger, but youâd be wrong.â
Iâm stunned that he can talk about it so cavalierlyâas if a life hasnât been taken. As if weâre not under attack by some mysterious entity he claims to know nothing about.
âIt was me.â The confession pours out of me lifelessly, quiet and unbidden.
âYou.â His face remains blank, gaze trained on the streets below. âAnd where am I to send Ray? Killian needs seen to, I assume.â
âI-I canât say.â Even if Daniel is telling the truth about not being behind the attack, I get the sense Tristian wouldnât forgive it. âHeâs going to be in contact soon. Today.â
âThen weâll have to settle this among ourselves for now,â he says, crossing his arms and turning to me. His eyes, the ones that match his sonâs, flicker with resolve. âIâve got a dead body in the morgue with our figurative fingerprints all over it, bribes to pay, destruction of evidence, and the loss of a seasoned South Side foot soldier. This is, naturally, on top of boarding school, Forsyth tuition, and the considerable depreciation of the investment they were meant to be recouped with.â He shakes his head, looking me up and down. âThere are many people in my employ, and even more in my debt. But do you want to know whatâs interesting? No one has cost me nearly as much money as you have.â
What I say next makes my stomach turn, but I canât think of any other way. âMaybe Tristian canââ
âI already told you.â His shoulders go as tight as his voice. âI take my compensation in flesh.â
Deflated and full of dread, I ask, âWhat does that mean?â
âYouâve been to The Velvet Hideaway.â Itâs not a question. âWeâre a modern facility, providing more upscale services than what youâd find out on the avenue.â He steps forward and runs his finger down my cheek. In a flash, Iâm fourteen again and heâs got me in his lap. âI already know youâre comfortable in front of a camera, and since youâre fucking Tristian, I assume you have some experience performing in front of a group.â He turns on his heel, pacing back to the desk. âIâve decided youâll perform for me. I think Iâll charge five-hundred for the live audience and two-fifty for virtual.â
I try to follow what heâs asking me to do. Maybe itâs the strain from the last forty-eight hours, or the lack of sleep, or just everything, but I canât. Perform? In person? Virtual? âWhat are you talking about?â
âItâs time for you to make good on your debts.â He raises his chin, eyes piercing. âYou canât possibly earn enough to truly compensate for what youâve lost me, but Iâll settle for the tuitions and whatever it takes to make this Nick situation disappear.â His mouth purses into something thoughtfully derisive. âI canât bill you as a virgin, but thatâs okay. Weâll put you in something slutty and young. A schoolgirl skirt, perhaps. Knee-highs and pigtails. Set you up with my best guy and really play up that dewy ingenue thing youâve got going on.â He grips my chin, forcing me to look at him. âDonât worry. The man I have in mind is a professional. Heâll make it hurt like itâs your first time.â
âYouâre asking me to have sex with someone,â I realize, feeling like I might be sick, âin front of other people?!â
âDonât consider it a request,â he answers, eyes hard and cold. âConsider it extortion. Because if you donât, then I just might fail to pay off the people investigating Ugly Nickâs grisly murder.â
My mouth works around a series of aborted replies, brain swimming with disgust. âIt was self-defense.â
He scoffs. âSure, you can take your chances with that. Someone with a history of lying, whoring, running away, and increasingly erratic behavior will appear very reputable.â
I lurch out of his hold, banging into the wall behind me. âIâll tell my mom.â
âAlright.â He just shrugs, slinking back over to prop himself against his desk. âBut I think we both know what sheâd say if she were here. Sheâd tell you this is just what women need to do sometimes. Sheâd say itâs importantâfor the family â plus, itâs only one time. Are you really going to tell your sweet mother, whoâs found herself on her back to support you more times than either of us can count, that you refuse to repay that favor because youâre above it?â When my face twists in outrage, he lifts a hand. âBefore you decide, you should know that Iâll stop at nothing to protect my son. Killian will be fine. And Tristian? Heâs a Mercer, and therefore, untouchable. But Rath, wellâ¦heâs got debts of his own, you see.â He tsks, head shaking. âTroubled boy with a long rap sheet. It might be difficult to keep him out of this if I find myselfâ¦unnecessarily aggrieved.â
I find myself lost in a suspended moment of acknowledging how utterly stupid I am. Walking in here and telling him Iâm the one who killed Ugly Nick. Telling Daniel to leave them alone was giving him a peek at my handâat the things I care about.
If there was any doubt about him being a Lord, itâs gone.
The wall is solid and cool as I slide down it, knees too weary to hold me upright. There was a time when the thought of doing something like this was unspeakable. Deplorable. The height of impossibility.
Throat clicking with a swallow, I ask, âOne time?â
âYes.â
âAnd youâll leave us alone?â I ask, voice trembling. âAfter this, youâll let me go. You wonât follow me, or let Dimitri get busted. Andâ¦â My chest hitches with a sharp breath. âYou canât tell them.â I canât bear to have them think this is what I am. That maybe this is what Iâve always been. That everything I said before was a lie.
His reply is perfectly congenial. âOf course.â
If I had any left, I think thereâd be tears in my eyes. As it is, I just raise my gaze to his and give my dull, lifeless answer.
âTell me when.â