bird nipped at my flesh. I look like I’ve survived a war, with all the marks marring my skin. “My mom will have my ass for this. Family portraits are tomorrow afternoon.”
With a snort, he swipes up my sling from where I threw it on the ground. “Fitting, then, for your macabre family.”
Much as I know my mother will be upset, I can’t help but chuckle at the visual of standing alongside her, coated in blood, while my father looks on behind me, pissed off and stern, as always. “The locals would surely have a field day with that one.”
“Speaking of which, I thought, surely, you’d be a more gracious host and gift an old friend some pussy while I’m stuck here.”
Jude and I met at the boarding school my father shipped me off to, up until I managed to get myself expelled for setting the headmaster’s couch on fire. Now I’m forced to slog through boring lessons with a tutor every day, with only the occasional visit from my friend when school is out of session.
“One of the local girls?” I say. “You’d end up with crabs.”
A bellow of Jude’s laughter echoes through the forest, while we trek back to the castle grounds. “Still, a little T and A would’ve been a nice touch.”
“Touch to what?”
Shoving his hands into his shirt pocket, he pulls out two perfectly rolled joints.
“How’d you manage that here at the Chateau de Prison.”
“You really should pay more attention to your help. The gardener hooked me up for a modest fee.”
Swiping one of them up from his palm, I drag it across my nose, inhaling the scent of crisp herb and wood. “We’ll meet down in the cave tonight, after my mother takes her Valium.”
“And the girls?” he asks, tucking both joints back into his pocket.
“Forget the girls, man. There’s nothing in this town that would interest you.”
They’re a strange breed in Tempest Cove. The kind who smile and flirt, while spreading their gossip behind your back. I once made out with a local girl, nothing more than kissing and some fumbling of hands, and by the end of the week, half the town was talking about my dick.
I hadn’t even bothered to whip it out.
That’s how they operate here, though. For whatever dirt they can spill, they’ll dig as deep as they have to.
The forest breaks up for the open lawn of Blackthorne, and we stride past Easton, the gardener, who flashes a smirk that makes a whole lot more sense than it would’ve ten minutes ago.
“I think you’re wrong, my friend.” Slowing his steps, Jude grabs hold of my shoulder. “I think there’s definitely something interesting.”
I follow the path of his gaze, toward where a woman gathers up her suitcase in the circular drive in front of the manor.
Jude strides ahead of me. “Please, allow me to help you.”
As the woman turns around, my heart screeches to a halt inside my chest.
Her eyes are a deep gray beneath long black lashes, in a narrow face framed by long, lazy curls that tumble over slender shoulders, which widen with the edges of large breasts stretching her tight sweater. When she smiles back at Jude, one of her teeth in front is twisted just enough to lift her plump lip into a crooked sort of smile. A painfully beautiful woman who must be at least ten years older than me, judging by the maturity in her features.
“Merci,” she says, her lips pursing when she slides her gaze to mine. “My name is Solange. I’m here to clean.” A thick French accent only adds to the sultry nature of the woman.
“Jude.” My forward friend prods a hand in front of her, but her eyes remain locked on mine as she rests her palm in his. Jude leans forward to kiss the back of her hand. “It’s a pleasure to meet you, Solange.”
“The pleasure is mine,” she says, smiling as she slips her hand out of his. “You must be Lucian.”
My name rolling off her tongue sends a shiver down my spine. “You know my name?”
Her gray eyes dip from mine and back. “You’re hurt,” she says, rather than answer the question.
“I’m sorry?”
“You’re bleeding.”
A quick glance at my arms reminds me of the ass-kicking I suffered at the beak of a bird. “I’m fine.”
“Lucian! I’ve been calling you for the last hour.”
At the unwelcomed clamor of my mother’s voice, I cringe, trying to ignore her, where she stands at the front of the castle, hands crossed in