H
e hadnโt meant it.
I knew he hadnโt meant it because at his core, Xavier wasnโt
cruel or malicious. Heโd been upset about the fire and lashed out. In hindsight, I shouldnโt have pushed him so hard about rebuilding the club after the fire. Itโd been the wrong time, but when I saw him sitting there, looking like a shell of himself, Iโd panicked and defaulted to what I did best
โsolving crises. I hadnโt known how to assuage his guilt, so Iโd tackled the concrete issue of his club instead.
Logically, I understood all that, but emotionally, I couldnโt dig out the barbs of his words. Theyโd embedded themselves in old wounds, tearing through scabs and sutures to pour salt into raw flesh.
Not all of us can go through life pretending they donโt feel, Sloane!
If anyone else had said what Xavier said, it wouldโve stung, but I wouldโve brushed it off in short order. After all, Iโd been accused of worse over the years.
But coming from him, the sentiment devastated me. He wasnโt entirely wrong, which wasย whyย it hurt so much. No one liked hearing the sting of truth from the person they cared about most, especially when it was delivered in anger.
Even a week later, even knowing he hadnโt meant it, it hurt so much I couldnโt breathe. That was what terrified me the mostโ the fact someone else had that much power over me.
โMore popcorn?โ Alessandra nudged the bowl into my lap.
I shook my head, watching our fourth holiday rom-com of the day without really seeing it. My review notebook lay empty in my lap; every time I tried to write something, I pictured Xavier playfully teasing me about it, and I lost my words.
โThis movie is boring.โ Isabella yawned. โMaybe we should switch genres. Watch a thriller instead.โ
โThatโs fine,โ I said without enthusiasm. I wasnโt in the mood to see fictional couples get their happily ever afters anyway. The concept of a happily ever after was a total scam.
My friends exchanged glances. It was the day after Christmas and a full week after the fire. The accident had made headlines, but everyone had been distracted by the holidays, and it hadnโt generated the same media storm it wouldโve had it happened any other week of the year.
Iโd told my friends what happened and declined Alessandraโs offer to spend Christmas with her and Dominic. The only thing worse than being alone on Christmas was being a third wheel.
Isabella and Kai had been in London, and Vivian, Dante, and Josie had gone to Boston to visit Vivianโs mother, so the last thing Iโd expected when my doorbell rang that afternoon was to see my three best friends crowded in the doorway, armed with enough popcorn and wine to fell an elephant.
Itโd been the only bright spot of my week.
While Isabella searched for a new movie, Vivian regarded me with quiet concern. โHave you talked to Xavier since Saturday?โ she asked gently.
The question scraped against exposed wounds, and I shook my head, refusing to meet her eyes.
โDo youย wantย to talk to him?โ
Again, I shook my head, this time with less conviction.
Xavier and I hadnโt talked or messaged since I walked away after the fire, not even to wish each other a merry Christmas. Part of me had been tempted to reach out first, make sure he was okay, and apologize for overstepping, but pride and self-preservation stopped me every time I picked up my phone.
Maybe our not talking was for the best. Obviously, I didnโt know how to comfort him properly, and my presence made things worse instead of better. โYou have to talk to him eventually.โ This time, Alessandra was the one
who spoke. โYour dating trial is expiring soon.โ Pain cleaved through me. โI know.โ
I wouldnโt win awards for my eloquence today, but I was afraid that if I uttered more than a handful of words at a time, it would destroy my already-tenuous grip on my emotions.
I hadnโt allowed myself to fullyย feelย the implications of what happened with Xavier and the silence thatโd followed, and if I had my way, I never would. Some things were better left repressed.
Isabella paused her search for the perfect thriller, and there was another exchange of glances around the room.
โWhat are you going to do when the trial ends?โ Isabella asked cautiously.
I set my jaw against the pressure swelling in my chest. โI donโt know.โ Except I did.
I just didnโt know if I had the strength to go through with it.
I could describe the week after the fire in one word: hell.
The paperwork? Hell. Visiting the hospital and seeing the workersโ burns up close? Hell. Speaking to the workersโ agonized families? Hell.
Not seeing or talking to Sloane while knowing how much Iโd hurt her the last time we spoke? Hell times a fucking thousand.
I shouldโve run after Sloane and apologized right after she left, but Iโd been worried Iโd make things worse. I hadnโt been in the right frame of mind to do anything except go home, pour myself a glass of whiskey, and pass the hell out.
The days after that had been filled with phone calls, meetings, paperwork, and a million other things I didnโt want to do. Iโd tried to contact Vuk but couldnโt get through, and Iโd spent Christmas at home, torn between calling Sloane and avoiding our inevitable confrontation like a coward.
The coward won out.
I wasnโt proud of it, but our trial dating period ended soon, and I didnโt need a genius-level IQ to know Iโd blown it.
As long as we didnโt talk, I could live in denial and pretend we were going through a minor hiccup, which was how I ended up at Valhallaโs bar the Sunday after Christmas, drowning my sorrows with Lagavulin.
I finished my drink and motioned the bartender for another one. He slid a fresh glass of whisky across the counter as someone settled on the stool next to mine.
โSave it,โ I said without turning my head.
โThis is quite sad.โ Kai ignored my preemptive dismissal, his tone mild. โHave you considered other methods of coping besides drinking by yourself atโโhe checked his watchโโthree in the afternoon?โ
โIโm not in the mood for your judgment, and Iโm not the only one sitting at the bar at three in the afternoon.โ I cast a pointed glance in his direction. โArenโt you supposed to be in London right now?โ
โWe flew back early at Isabellaโs insistence.โ A delicate pause. โApparently, one of her friends needs โmajor cheering up.โ Her words.โ
It was obvious who sheโd meant.
My gut twisted at the indirect mention of Sloane, and it took everything in me not to interrogate Kai.
Has Isabella talked to Sloane already? What did she say? How is she doing? How much does she hate me right now?
โHer friend isnโt the only one.โ Kai nodded his thanks when the bartender brought him a strawberry gin and tonic. He had a strange affinity for that particular cocktail. โIโm sorry about the fire. Truly.โ He sounded sincere, which made it worse.
The past week hadnโt done much to ease my guilt, and I felt like I didnโt deserve peopleโs sympathy.
โHave you talked to Alex yet?โ Kai asked.
I grimaced. โNot yet. Weโre meeting tomorrow.โ
I wasnโt looking forward to it. Alexโs assistant had scheduled the meeting, so I didnโt know his thoughts regarding the fire in his building, but I imagined they werenโt pleasant.
โI havenโt talked to Markovic since the fire either.โ I flashed back to the wild look in Vukโs eyes and the old burn scars around his neck. โHe disappeared when we got out of the vault. Do you thinkโฆ?โ
โThe Serb does what he does,โ Kai said. Most people referred to Vuk as the Serb, per his preference, but I couldnโt shake the habit of calling people by their, well, actual name. โNo one knows what goes through his head, but if he hasnโt dissolved your partnership yet, I assume everythingโs fine.โ
My shoulders tensed.
Kaiโs eyes sharpened behind his glasses. โIsย everything fine?โ โBesides the small matter of the fire? Sure.โ I tossed back my drink. โBecause Iโll dissolve the partnership myself after the New Year. The club isnโt happening.โ โWhy not?โ
Another headache set in behind my eyes. I was sick and tired of explaining the same thing over and over again.
I clipped out the same reasons Iโd given Sloane; like Sloane, Kai seemed unimpressed.
โPeople make mistakes,โ he said. โEntrepreneurs make even more. You canโt succeed in business without failing, Xavier.โ
โMaybe not, but I bet most mistakes involve a disrupted cash flow or media mishap, not a fire that couldโve killed people.โ
โCouldโve but didnโt.โ โBy some miracle.โ
โI donโt believe in miracles. Everything that happens, happens for a reason.โ Kai turned to face me fully. โThat list of names I gave you? Those are some of the sharpest people in business. They believed in you enough to invest their time, money, and resources into the club, and they wouldnโt have done that if they didnโt think you were capable of pulling it off. So stop using your martyr act as an excuse and figure out how to finish what you started.โ
The heated reprimand was so out of character for Kai, it stunned me into silence. We werenโt friends, exactly, and maybe that was why his words successfully cut through me. There was nothing quite so humbling or clarifying as getting lambasted by an acquaintance.
I opened my mouth, closed it, then opened it again, but nothing came out because he was right. Iย wasย acting like a martyr. Iโd taken the fire and made it all about me and my guilt, and Iโd used that as an excuse to walk away from the club.
Despite my success in getting the process started and the best of the best onboard, I was afraid Iโd still fail. The fire gave me an opportunity to walk away without admitting to that fear.
Iโd downed three glasses of whisky before Kai arrived, but the realization sobered me up quickly.
First Sloane, now this. I really was a coward.ย To think I accused Bentley of being that very thing when Iโm worse.
I swallowed the golf ball thatโd lodged itself in my throat and tried to think logically.
Kai mightโve been right, but it didnโt change the fact that pulling off a grand club opening by early May was nearly impossible from a logistical perspective. I could throw together something smaller, but whatever I did needed to pass muster with the inheritance committee.
Basically, I could try harder, but my chances of failure had increased exponentially.
I rubbed my temple, wishing not for the first time that Iโd been born into a simple, normal family with regular jobs and regular lives instead of thisย Succession-esque mess.
โIsabella put you up to this, didnโt she?โ Even in my current state, I was clearheaded enough to recognize that Kaiโs appearance in this particular place, on this particular day, wasnโt a coincidence. He didnโt respond, but the small twitch of his mouth said it all.
โHowโd you know Iโd be here today?โ I asked.
โEducated guess. This bar has seen its fair share of comfort drinking.โ He nodded at the glittering display of expensive bottles and crystal glasses. โI may have also asked security to alert me if and when you check in.โ
I snorted. โIโm flattered you went to the trouble.โ
โDonโt be. I didnโt do this for you,โ Kai said dryly. โI did this for my reputation and for Isa. I was the one who connected you with the people on my list, and itโll reflect poorly on me if the club doesnโt succeed. Plusโฆโ His gaze flicked to his phone. โIsa would never let me hear the end of it if I didnโt get you to pull your head out of the sand.โ
Sloane.
My hand flexed around my glass as another wave of regret crashed into me. Sheโd tried to help, and Iโd driven her away. Then I couldnโt be bothered to say a simpleย Iโm sorry, not even on Christmas, because Iโd been too wrapped up in my own mental bullshit.
God, I was an idiot.
I stood abruptly and grabbed my coat from the hook beneath the counter. โListen, this was a good talk, butโโ
โGo.โ Kai returned to his drink. โAnd if anyone other than Isa asks, this conversation never happened.โ
I didnโt need him to tell me twice.
I sprinted out of the club and into one of Valhallaโs chauffeured town cars. I gave the driver Sloaneโs address.
Itโd been eight days, two hours, and thirty-six minutes since we last spoke.
I only hoped I wasnโt too late.