โEventually the World Breaksโ
Everyone
The pain in his voice has my heart thudding slow and hard in my chest.
Sure, thereโs a part of me that canโt imagine what world heโs talking about, considering Iโm currently living in the middle of a fantasy novelโone complete with fantastical creatures and secrets galore. But thereโs a larger part of me that just wants him to know that whatever world heโs talking about, and whatever happened to him in that world, Iโm on his side.
I take my time running my palms over his chest and pressing kisses along the powerful column of his throat. He smells like oranges again, and deep water, and I sink into the scent of him, into the glorious taste and feel and sound of him.
His hands go to my hips, and he groans low in his throat as he arches against me. It feels amazingโhe feels amazing. Iโve never been this intimate with a guy before, have never wanted to be, but with Jaxon, I want it all. I want to feel everything, experience everything. Maybe not now, when weโre on borrowed time, but soon.
But I also want to know whatโs hurting him. Not so I can take it awayโI know way better than thatโbut so I can
share it with him. So I can understand. Which is why I roll off him just as things are getting really interesting.
He rolls with me, of course, so that now weโre stretched on our sides, facing each other. His arm is around my waist, his hand resting on my hip, and thereโs a part of me that wants nothing more than to sink back into him. To just let whateverโs going to happen happen.
But Jaxon deserves better than that. And so do I.
Which is why I reach up and cup his unscarred cheek, then lean forward until our mouths are so close that weโre breathing the same air. โBelieve me, I understand better than most if you donโt want to talk about what happened to you,โ I whisper. โBut I need you to know that if you ever want to share what happened with me, Iโm more than happy to listen.โ
My words arenโt sexy and they definitely arenโt slick, but they are sincere and they are heartfelt. Jaxon must sense it, too, because instead of dismissing me out of turn, as I half expected him to, he stares at me through eyes that show more than I ever imagined.
Then he kisses meโlong, slow, deepโbefore rolling away and sitting up, with his elbows on his knees and his head in his hands. I sit up, too, and because I canโt leave him alone in thisโฆwhatever this turns out to be, I wrap myself around him from behind as I press soft, quick kisses to his shoulders and the back of his neck.
And then I say, โTell me,โ because I think he needs to hear me say that almost as much as he needs to tell me the story burning inside him.
Iโm not sure how I expect the story to come outโwhether
in fits and starts or one smooth retellingโbut I do know that I never could have anticipated what he says when he finally begins to speak.
โI killed Hudson.โ
Shock rips through me. โHudson? Yourโโ โBrother. Yeah.โ He wipes a hand over his face.
A million emotions go through me at those four wordsโ shock that isnโt really shock, horror, sorrow, concern, pity,ย pain. The list goes on and on. But the one that stands head and shoulders above the others is disbelief. Dangerous as he is, I donโt believe Jaxon would ever deliberately harm someone he cares about. Everyone else might be open season, but not those he considers under his protection. If Iโve learned nothing else in the week Iโve been here, Iโve learned that.
Which means something really horrible must have happened. What must it be like to live with the kind of power he wields?
What must it be like to live with the knowledge that one careless moment, one slip of control, and he can lose everything?
โWhat happened?โ I ask eventually, when minutes pass and he doesnโt say anything else.
โIt doesnโt matter.โ
โI think it does. I canโt imagine you hurting your brother on purpose.โ
He turns on me then, eyes showing that yawning, empty blackness Iโm coming to hate so much. โThen your imagination isnโt good enough.โ
Fear skitters through me at the darkness in his voice.
โJaxon.โ I lay a gentle hand on his arm.
โI didnโt set out to kill him, Grace. But do you really think intentions matter when someoneโs dead? Itโs not like you can just bring them back because you didnโt want to do it.โ
โI know that better than most.โ Iโm still haunted by the fight my parents and I had right before they died.
โDo you?โ Jaxon demands. โDo you know what it feels like to be able to wave a hand and do this?โ Seconds later, everything in the room, except for the bed weโre sitting on, is floating in the air around us. โOr this?โ Everything comes crashing to the ground. The guitar crumbles. One of the glass picture frames shatters into a million pieces.
I take a minute, let the shock cycle through before I try to say anything that makes sense.
โMaybe youโre right,โ I eventually answer. โMaybe I donโt know what any of that feels like. But I know your brother wouldnโt want you beating yourself up over whatever happened to him. He wouldnโt want you torturing yourself.โ
Jaxonโs answering laugh is filled with actual humor. โItโs pretty obvious you donโt know Hudson. Or my parents. Or Lia.โ
โLia blames you for Hudsonโs death?โ I ask, surprised.
โLia blames everyone and everything for Hudsonโs death. If she had the kind of power I do, her rage would burn down the world.โ This time when he laughs, thereโs only regret in the sound.
โWhat about your parents? Surely they donโt hold you responsible for something you had no control over?โ
โWho said I had no control? I had a choice. And I made it. I killed him, Grace. On purpose. And I would do it again.โ
My stomach churns at his admissionโand the coldness in his voice as he makes it. But Iโve learned enough about Jaxon to know that he will always cast himself in the most awful light. That he will always choose to see himself as the villain, even if heโs the victim.
Especiallyย if heโs the victim.
Pointing that out to him right now wonโt do any good, though, so I wait for him to say more. And there is more. If there wasnโt, he wouldnโt be so concerned with losing control and hurting me.
โHudson was the firstborn,โ he eventually continues. โThe prince who would be king. The perfect son who only grew more perfect after death.โ
Thereโs no bitterness in the words, just a matter-of- factness that makes it way too easy to read between the lines. Still, I canโt resist asking, โAnd you are?โ
โVery definitely not.โ He laughs. โWhich is fine. More than fine. Being king has never exactly been an aspiration of mine.โ
โKing?โ I ask, because when he first said it, I thought it was a metaphor. His brother the prince. But now that he said it again, in reference to himself being king, I canโt not ask.
โYes, king.โ He lifts a brow. โDidnโt Macy tell you?โ
โNo.โย King of what?ย I want to ask, but now doesnโt exactly seem like the time.
โOh, well, here I am.โ He does a mock little bow. โThe next vampireย liegeย at your service.โ
โOoookay.โ I donโt know what else to say to that revelation. Except, โIt was supposed to be Hudson? But now
that heโs deadโฆโ
โExactly.โ He makes aย you guessed itย clicking sound with the corner of his mouth. โIโm the replacement. The new heir apparent.โ
And future king. My mind boggles at the mere idea. What does a vampire king do, anyway? And is that why everyone treats Jaxon with such deference? Because heโs royalty? But what does vampire royalty have to do with dragons? Or witches?
โI am, of course, also the murderer of the former heir apparent,โ Jaxon continues, โwhich in another species might cause some problems. But in the vampire world, youโre only as strong as what you can defendโฆand what you can take. So all I had to do to become the most fearsome and revered vampire in the world was to kill my big brother.โ
He gives a little shrug that is supposed to show how amusing he finds the whole thing, how much he doesnโt care.
I donโt buy it for a second.
โBut thatโs not why you killed him,โ I add, because I think he needs to hear me say it.
โI thought we already covered that motive doesnโt matter? Perception becomes truth eventually, even when itโs wrong.โ Thereโs a wealth of pain in those four words, even though the tone Jaxon uses is completely devoid of emotion. โEspeciallyย when itโs wrong. History is, after all, written by the winner.โ
I rest my head on his shoulder in a small gesture of comfort. โBut youโre the winner.โ
โAm I?โ
I donโt have an answer for that, so I donโt even try. Instead, I ask for the truth. His truth. โWhy did you kill Hudson?โ
โBecause he needed to be killed. And Iโm the only one who could.โ
The words hang in the air as I try to absorb them, to figure out what he means. โSo Hudson was as powerful as you, then.โ
โNo one is as powerful as me.โ He isnโt bragging. In fact, he sounds almost ashamed of the fact.
โWhy is that exactly?โ I ask.
He shrugs. โGenetics. Each generation of born vampires tends to be more powerful than the generation that came before them. There are exceptions, of course, but for the most part, thatโs how itโs always been. Itโs why there are so few of usโnatureโs way of keeping the balance, I figure. And since my parents come from the strongest two families and wield incredible power themselves, itโs no surprise that when they mated, their offspringโฆโ
โCan literally make the earth shake.โ
He gives a half smile, the first Iโve seen from him since this conversation began. โSomething like that, yeah.โ
โSo am I right in guessing that Hudson was not exactly responsible with his power?โ
โA lot of young vampires arenโt.โ
โThatโs not an answer.โ I raise a brow, wait for him to look at me. It takes longer than it should. โAnd you strike me as very responsible.โ
He arches his own brows, takes a deliberate look around the disaster he made of the room when he was kissing me.
โYou know what I mean.โ
โI know what you think you mean. Hudsonโฆโ He sighs. โHudsonโs plans were always audacious. Always looking to give vampires more power, more money, more control, which isnโt bad in and of itself.โ
Iโm tempted to disagree. After all, if you plan on garnering more power, money, and control, it has to come from somewhere. And history has shown that taking any of those three things tends to be less than humane for the people itโs being taken from.
But thatโs a discussion for another time, not now, when Jaxon is finally opening up.
โBut somewhere along the line, he got lost in those plans,โ Jaxon continues. โHe got so concerned with what he could achieve and how he could achieve it that he never stopped to question if he should.
โI tried to pull him back, tried to talk reason to him, but with Lia and my mother whispering all kinds ofย Chosen Oneย bullshit in his ear, it became impossible to reach him. Impossible to make him understand that his own brand of manifest destiny was notโฆacceptable, especially when those plans includedโฆโ His voice drifts off for a minute, and a look at his eyes tells me that mentally, Jaxonโs not here in this room anymore. Heโs far away in another time and place. โThings between vampires and shifters have always been
tense,โ he finally continues, a defensive note in his voice that Iโve never heard before. โWeโve never really gotten along with the wolves or the dragons; they donโt trust us and we sure as hell donโt trust them. So when Hudson worked up a plan toโโhe curls the fingers of his free hand
and makes air quotesโโโput the shifters in their place,โ a lot of people thought he was onto something.โ
โBut not you.โ
โGoing after the shifters looked and smelled an awful lot like prejudice to me. And then it began to look a lot like genocide. Especially when he started adding other supernatural creaturesโand even made vampiresโto his list. Things got ugly.โ
โHow ugly?โ I ask, though Iโm not sure I actually want to know the answer. Not when Jaxon looks more grim than Iโve ever seen him. And not when heโs throwing around words like โgenocide.โ
โUgly.โ He refuses to elaborate. โEspecially with our history.โ
Again the blanks in my knowledge base make it impossible to understand what history heโs referring to. Instead of asking, I make a mental note to check the library or ask Macy.
โI tried to reason with Hudson, tried to talk him down. I even went to the king and queen to see if they could do something with him.โ
I note how he calls his parents the king and queen instead of Mom and Dad, and for a second, I flash back to the first day I met him. To the chess table and the vampire queen and the things he said about what I thought at the time was just a chess piece.
It all makes so much more sense now. โTheyย couldnโt.โ
โThey wouldnโt,โ he corrects. โSo I tried to talk to him again. So did Byron and Mekhi and a few of the others who
would have graduated with him. He didnโt listen. And one day he started a fight that was set to rip the whole world apart, had it been allowed to continue.โ
โThatโs when you stepped in.โ
โI thought I could fix things. I thought I could talk him down. It didnโt work out like that.
He closes his eyes, and it makes him seem so far away. Until he opens them again, and I realize he is even more distant than I imagined.
โDo you know what itโs like to realize the brother you grew up revering is a total and complete sociopath?โ he asks in a voice made more terrible by the reasonableness of it. โCan you imagine what it feels like to know that maybe if you hadnโt been so blind, so caught up in your hero worship and seen him for what he was sooner, a lot of people would still be alive?
โI had to kill him, Grace. There was no other choice. Truth be told, I donโt even regret doing it.โ He says the last in a whisper, like heโs ashamed to even admit it.
โI donโt believe that,โ I tell him. Guilt radiates off him, makes me hurt for him in a way Iโve never hurt for anyone before.
โI believe it was necessary. I believe you did what you had to do. But I donโt believe for one second that you donโt regret killing him.โ Heโs spent too much time torturing himself for that to be true.
He doesnโt answer right away, and I canโt help wondering if I said the wrong thing. Canโt help wondering if I just made everything worse.
โI regret that he had to be killed,โ he finally says after a
long silence passes between us. โI regret that my parents created him and molded him into the monster that he was. But I donโt regret that heโs gone now. If he wasnโt dead, no one in the entire world would be safe.โ
My stomach plummets at his words. Instinctively, I want to deny them, but Iโve seen Jaxonโs power. Iโve seen what he can do when he controls it and what it can do on its own when he canโt. If Hudsonโs power was anything closeโ without Jaxonโs morality to keep it in checkโI canโt imagine what might happen.
โDid you have the same power, orโโ
โHudson could persuade anyone to do anything.โ The words are as flat as his tone. As his eyes. โI donโt mean he could con people; I mean that he had the power to make people do whatever he wanted them to do. He could make them torture another person, could make them kill anyone he wanted to. He could start wars and launch bombs.โ
A chill runs up my spine at his words, has the hair on the back of my neck standing straight up. Even before he looks straight at me and continues. โHe could make you kill yourself, Grace. Or Macy. Or your uncle. Or me. He could make you do anything he wanted, and he did. Over and over and over again.
โNo one could stop him. No one could resist him. And he knew it. So he took whatever he wanted and planned for more. And when he decided he was going to murder the shifters, just wipe them out of existence, I knew he wouldnโt stop there. The dragons would go, too. The witches. The made vampires. The humans.
โHe would destroy them allโ just because he could.โ
He looks away, I think because he doesnโt want me to see his face. But I donโt need to look in his eyes to know how much this hurts him, not when I can hear it in his voice and feel it in the tension of his body against mine. โThere were a lot of people who supported him, Grace. And a lot of people willing to stand in front of him to protect him and the vision he had for our species. I killed a lot of them to get to him. And then I killed him.โ
This time, when he closes his eyes and then opens them, the distance is gone. And in its place is the same resolve it must have cost for him to not only take on Hudson but also to beat him. โSo, no, I donโt regret that I killed him. I regret that I didnโt do it sooner.โ
When he finally turns back around to look at me, I can see the pain, the devastation behind the emptiness in his eyes. It makes me ache for him in a way Iโve never ached for anyone, not even my parents. โOh, Jaxon.โ I put my arms around him again, try to hold him, but his body is stiff and unyielding against my own.
โHis death destroyed my parents, and it broke Lia into so many pieces, I donโt think sheโll ever recover. Before all this happened, she was my best friend. Now she can barely stand to look at me. Flintโs brother died fighting Hudsonโs army in the same fight, and Flintโs never been the same, either. We used to be friends, if you can believe it.โ
He takes a deep, shuddering breath and lets himself sink into me. I hold him as tightly as I can, for as long as heโll let me. Which isnโt long at all. He pulls away well before Iโm ready to let him go.
โNothing has been the same since Hudson did what he
did. The different species have been at war three times in the last five hundred years. This was almost number four. And though we stopped it before it got too far, the distrust for vampires that goes back centuries is right up front again. โAdd in the fact that a lot of people got an up-close-and- personal look at my power and no oneโs happy. And can you blame them? How do they know I wonโt turn like my brother
did?โ
โYou wonโt.โ The certainty is a fire deep inside me.
โProbably not,โ he agrees, though itโs hard to miss his qualification. โBut this is why I warned you away from Flint, and itโs why I had to do what I did in the study lounge. Theyโve been gunning for you since you got here. I donโt know why it started, if itโs because youโre human or if thereโs something I havenโt figured out yet. But Iโm sure that itโs continuedโand gotten worseโbecause youโre mine.โ
The torment is back, worse than before. โItโs why I tried to stay away from you,โ he adds, โbut we both know how well that worked.โ
โThatโs it, isnโt it?โ I whisper as so much of what heโs said and done since I first got here finally begins to make sense. โThis is why you act the way you do.โ
โI donโt know what youโre talking about.โ His face closes up, but thereโs a warinessโand a yearningโin his eyes that says Iโm on the right track.
โYou know exactly what Iโm talking about.โ I rest a hand on his cheek, ignoring the way he flinches when I touch his scar. โYou act the way you do because you believe itโs the only way you can keep the peace.โ
โItย isย the only way to keep the peace.โ The words are torn from him. โWeโre balanced on a razor-thin tightrope, and every day, every minute, is a balancing act. One wrong step in either direction, and the world burns. Not just ours but yours as well, Grace. I canโt let that happen.โ
Of course he canโt.
Other people could walk away, could say it wasnโt their responsibility. Could tell themselves that there was nothing they could do.
But thatโs not how Jaxon operates. Those arenโt the rules he lives by. No, Jaxon takes it all on his shoulders. Not just the mess Hudson created and left him with but everything that happened before itโand everything thatโs happened since.
โSo what does that mean for you?โ I ask softly, not wanting to spook him any more than I already have. โThat you have to give up everything good in your life just to keep things together for everyone else?โ
โIโm not giving up anything. This is just who I am.โ His hands clench into fists, and he tries to turn away.
But I wonโt let him. Not now, not when Iโm finally understanding all the ways heโs managed to torture himself
โfor Hudsonโs death and for this new role he doesnโt want but canโt turn away from.
“That’s bullshit,” I tell him softly. “You wear indifference like a mask and wield coldness like a weaponโnot because you feel nothing, but because you feel too much. You’ve worked so hard to make everyone believe you’re a monster that you’ve begun to believe it yourself.
“But you’re not a monster, Jaxon. Not even close.”
This time, he doesn’t just turn awayโhe jerks away, like he’s been shocked. “You don’t know what you’re talking about,” he growls.
“You think if people are scared enough, if they hate you enough, they won’t dare to step out of line. They won’t dare to start another war because you’ll finish that one, tooโand them right along with it.”
The pain and loneliness of his existence hit me like an avalanche. What must it feel like to be so alone? What must it feel like toโ?
“Don’t look at me like that,” he orders, his voice as tight and thin as a high wire.
“Like what?” I whisper.
“Like I’m a victim. Or a hero. I’m neither of those things.”
He’s both of those thingsโand so much more. But I know he won’t believe me if I try to tell him that. Just like I know he won’t take any more comfort from me right now, not when I’ve just laid him open for both of us to see.
So I do the only thing I can do.
I tangle my hands in his hair, pull his mouth down to mine, and give him the only thing he’ll accept from me.