Home > Long Live The King Anthology(34)

Long Live The King Anthology(34)
Author: Vivian Wood

The bus shakes violently as it begins moving, knocking Avery off balance.

I drag her into the seat next to me.

“Thank you,” she says, sounding breathless.

All I have for her is a small smile. We make a pretty good team, though I’m not going to tell her that. I hope we never have to break out of a multi-million-dollar home again.

“We should go to the Den,” she says. “It’s on Fourth Street, once you go past the train tracks and—”

I squeeze her hand. These are my stomping grounds. “I know.”

The buildings get more narrow as we approach the historic district. The alleyways more winding, every building with three secret exits leftover from the prohibition.

On Fourth Street I pull the cord, making the bus stop.

We reach the Den to find the door open, the fortress completely dark. Empty. At least that’s how it looks from a few feet away. When we reach the short steps, we see him. Anders. The doctor. Spread out on the stairs like some kind of gruesome warning sign.

Avery kneels beside him, pressing her hands to his chest, coating her hands in blood. She takes off her sweater and pushes it against the wound.

He coughs. “Don’t.”

I can’t help but think pain is a good sign at a time like this. It means he’s alive and feeling. Then again that sounds like something Jonathan Scott would say.

“You’re losing blood,” Avery says, clearly panicking.

“Don’t,” he coughs again, his words mangled.

Panic descends on me like a heavy fog, keeping my feet in the same place, blurring my vision. It feels too much like being underwater, this fear. Too heavy to possibly fight.

Avery looks back at me, as if I might have the answers.

“He’s not here,” I say, because I know he won’t be upstairs.

“Gabriel?” she asks.

I shake my head. It’s Damon. It’s always been Damon.

Anders drags her close. “Don’t go to him. That’s what he wants.”

That is what Jonathan Scott wants, but then he orchestrated this violence. He’s the conductor, keeping all of us playing. We’re all just instruments to him. Even Gabriel, rare and beautiful.

Avery calls the police while I consider bolting. I want to find Damon, to protect him. At the same time I want to run far away from here, to hide in the trees somewhere, to live off the ruined land.

The truth is that I will go find Damon. It was always leading to this.

I only don’t want to take Avery with me. It’s too dangerous. And she’s too innocent.

Before I can make a decision, she turns to me. “He sent you to me, didn’t he?”

There are pieces of her story available to me—the virginity auction that Damon Scott ran that sold her to Gabriel Miller. Her enmity with him, her eventual trust.

And now her capture in his castle.

“I don’t know,” I whisper, not entirely sure what connection she has to Jonathan Scott.

Her gaze is fierce. “You’re going to take me to him.”

“No,” I say, shaking my head. She doesn’t belong in that mental hospital.

In the end I know she’ll come with me, the same way I came with her. We’re two sides to the same coin. We both love dangerous men. We both will lose ourselves trying to save them.

 

 

I stop by the diner to pick up a knife—a small weapon compared to the ones the men will have, but better than nothing. I also take the opportunity to talk to Jessica, who looks shocked to see me alive.

“What the hell did Damon do to you?” she demands.

I glance down to find blood on my hands, leftover from helping Anders get to a bed so he wouldn’t bleed out. “It’s not mine.”

Her eyebrows shoot up. “Then what did you do to him?”

All I can do is laugh, which I know makes me look crazy. “I need to ask you something. How do you know if you love someone?”

She laughs too, a little disbelieving, mostly relieved. “Jesus, you gave me a heart attack. The only person I’ve ever loved is Ky. And that’s… you know it’s not a feeling. Not for me. It’s just a state of being. Of turning to him, every second. Of wanting the best for him. Of wanting to give up everything for him.”

Impulsively I give her a kiss on the cheek. “Thank you.”

“Wait,” she says, already sensing my exit. “What are you doing with a knife?”

We don’t need to get into details, so I give her a small wave and return to the street. Avery waits for me, looking crazy nervous—which is a legit feeling, honestly. I know she’s older than me, but I have this strange protective feeling. It’s not the love that Jessica described, but it’s something like that.

“When we get there,” I tell her, “I’ll go in first. I know the layout, at least a little bit. And there’s always a chance it’s rigged to explode or something crazy like that.”

Her mouth drops open. “So you’re going to sacrifice yourself?”

“It only makes sense.”

“Are you kidding me? It makes zero sense. If anyone’s going first, it’s me.”

“I’m nobody,” I say softly, embarrassed I need to explain this. “The way that royalty would have someone taste their food, to make sure it wasn’t poisoned.”

Avery James wasn’t born in the west side. She doesn’t belong here. Her father was some famous businessman and politician, and even if he eventually lost everything, that doesn’t change her pedigree.

“I’m not royalty,” she says, sounding horrified. “And no one’s going to die for me.”

Maybe it’s only girls like me who can see the class system, ones who know they’ll never rise above it. “Maybe not royalty in the official sense. But in every way that counts. Girls like me, no one saves us in time.”

“Damon did,” she says, certain in this.

“He kept me from dying, but that’s not what I needed saving from. What Jonathan did to me…” It wasn’t about my body. It was my mind that he wanted. My mind he broke. Some twisted impulse to repeat what happens in that mental hospital. To make everyone else like him.

“God, Penny.”

“So you see what I’m saying. I’m already damaged.”

“Sometimes it’s harder to survive,” she says.

She does understand. For the first time I don’t feel alone. “Yes.”

“I won’t let you martyr yourself for me. We go together, okay?”

After a long pause I take her hand. Together. That’s how we’ll do this. Some small part of my soul eases at the knowledge. And I realize that even with Daddy, with Mama, I have always been alone. Only now with these people, this group of criminals and fallen heiresses, do I feel like I could have a true family. The possibility hangs in the air as thick as the mist hovering over the streets.

 

 

Chapter Twenty

 

 

The smell of pain fills the air. Jonathan Scott is strung up by his wrists, shirtless and clearly beaten. His skin singed and turned black. How long have they been torturing him? By the dead look in Damon’s eyes, it’s been an eternity.

“What are you doing here?” Gabriel says when he sees us.

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