by Rose Queen
Table of Contents
Epilogue
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
The Prick Next Door
Rose Queen
The Prick Next Door
Copyright © 2017 by Rose Queen
All rights reserved.
Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without the prior written permission of the author of this book.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, brands, media, and incidents are either the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Epilogue
1
King of Pricks
"Get up, Prick," Dylan says, kicking my bare leg.
I rise off the mattress, taking my sweet time because it pisses him off.
The nauseating froth of retro disco—who the fuck chose that?—from the party downstairs bubbles through the cracks in the door. I can't remember who I invited, but it sounds like more people have shown up.
He both loves and hates when Mom goes out of town. Loves it because she's Mom, and we want her away from us as much as possible. But he hates the parties I throw, mostly because I abandon them halfway through. On the other hand, he doesn't complain about the surplus of breasts that turn out. It's an easy way to pacify him.
I detect a note of bitterness when he announces, "Your bitch is waiting downstairs."
Already? Bailey wasn't supposed to show up for another hour.
I grunt. "Tell him I need five—"
"I'm not your secretary, you shameless prick."
Godammit, Dylan.
Dylan sticks up his nose and crosses his arms, executing that righteous stance he always uses with me. "Especially not when it comes to you and that hooligan you call a friend."
It's pointless to remind him that I instigate most of our outings, not Bailey.
Dylan's furry brows draw together. "I don't suppose I've got a flaming chance of talking you out of whatever it is you're about to do."
I care what he thinks. I do. I just don't listen.
Dylan knows when to back off. He's not my warden. Shit, if I wanted one, I'd go back to juvie — though, I’m turning eighteen in a couple of days so maybe not juvie this time. Whatever. My brother knows I need to do my own thing. He knows I'll go crazy if I don't. Especially tonight.
"It's nothing bad," I drawl.
"We define bad differently, Cassius."
He's gone and used my name. He really doesn't want me to go.
I grind my teeth. "Trust me—"
Boogers practically rocket from his nose, he laughs so hard at this. "Trust you," Dylan echoes. "The day you do something legal is the day I'll trust you."
He lost me at legal. I roll my eyes, done with the conversation.
"Whatever," Dylan says. "Just get going. Bailey's lack of charm is stinking up the front yard by the second. Thanks for leaving me to deal with the party." He stomps off. So damn sensitive.
On my way out of the house, I weave through people who slap me on the back and slur things I don't hear. The house smells like an open liquor cabinet. Unable to stand the music, I detour over to the source of the horrible disco orgy and change the playlist. It doesn’t go down well with the room.
“Fuck off, if you don’t like it,” I tell them, walking out of the room.
"Don't go." Dylan's voice startles me as I'm grabbing my keys. He's staring at me intently. "I have a bad feeling."
Jesus. What channels has he been watching?
"Are you turning superstitious on me?" I joke.
"I'm serious, Cass. I'll kick your ass if I have to. I'll break your freaking leg."
I study him. "Not tonight, Dylan. Come on."
The fact that I'm reduced to pleading is annoying and a waste of time. I'll go with or without his permission. Let him try and kick my ass. He won't win.
We stare at each other, swapping the same memories of our father.
Not tonight.
Dylan nods. "Then let me go with you."
I chuckle, not taking him seriously, and head out.
Bailey is leaning against his vintage Mustang, blowing smoke rings into the air. His face cracks into a grin when he sees me, and he tosses the last bit of his cigarette. "About time, baby."
He takes my chin and leans forward, but I swing my mouth away from his. "Knock it off," I say.
Bailey has no gender preference. He knows I only go for girls, but that doesn't stop him from trying. Dylan can't understand why this doesn't make me uncomfortable. It just doesn't. It's that simple. I'm not going to over-analyze it.
"You smell like you fucked someone nice and slow," Bailey declares.
He drops into the passenger seat while I take the wheel. I start the engine. My brother dives into the backseat. I turn the engine back off and twist around. "What the fuck, Dylan?"
Bailey acts like Dylan isn't there. "Why is your puny brother soiling the back of my stallion?"
Dylan isn't puny. He's taller than me—most assholes are—but he's not as broad.
"I want to see what it is you're doing," Dylan says. "I want to see what makes this more worth it than the other crap you've gotten in trouble for."
He's referring to the fights and motorcycle races out on the bridge. I wish he would get over that stuff.
"I want to understand," he says.
"Ugh," Bailey groans, lighting a second cigarette. "God, your brother's a pussy."
"Hey," I warn him. "Don't."
They fight over me on a regular basis, but no one insults my brother and gets away with it. Bailey leans back, shaking his head.
Seriously, though, I've got to get Dylan out of the Mustang. I go for the jugular, hoping to spook him. "Mom will beat you if she finds out."
"You little shit. Since when does she need a reason? You think I can't handle myself because I'm not the one who gets incarcerated and then gets tattoos to celebrate the end of my probation?"
Bailey checks his watch while I debate Dylan's request. He might want to understand how I entertain myself, divert myself from the crap that goes on in our family, or he might want to get away from the house, too. This night doesn't affect just me.
"Buckle your seatbelt," I say.
"Wait," Dylan says, realizing something. "The party. Shouldn't we tell everyone to lea
ve first?"
I pluck Bailey's cigarette from his mouth, take a drag, and tilt my head back to blow smoke against the ceiling. I pretend to give Dylan's question serious thought. "No," I clip.
Because really, I could give a rat's ass if they ransack the place. I crank up the stereo, the spiky sound of a guitar gnarling through the car, backed up by the stomping pulse of a drum. I veer out of the driveway. My brother asks me to turn the music down, so I make it louder.
Things play out quickly. We park in a shadowed corner beneath the bridge, unload cans of spray paint and a ladder, and rush over to the wall that I'd chosen days ago. The breeze rustles my clothes. It's almost fall, and like a fool, I forgot to bring a sweater.
Dylan tosses his keys onto the pavement in frustration. "Graffiti? Are you kidding me? Can you get any more cliché?"
I tune out his bullshit and stare at the wall, a face forming in my mind. Without pulling my eyes away, I reach out for a can, which Bailey shakes and hands over.
"It's art," he defends on my behalf.
This is what neither of them gets. It isn't art. It's a way to get images out of my head before they torment me. For months now, I've been doing a series of faces around the city, faces I've seen and can't forget. Some of them I've only met in my dreams, frozen there until I let them go.
I've been inching my way up to doing my father's face. Haven't gotten there yet.
It would be nice not to have to use spray paint. It bores me and yes, it's cliché. Its strength is that it's fast. Until I get more confident transporting paint that I can use with a brush, I'll have to deal.
I ignore the hate going on between Bailey and Dylan. The hiss of the can hypnotizes me. I draw an oval head, a slender neck. I spiral into another dimension, one encompassed by a plump, dissatisfied mouth. A braid appears unbidden, so stiff and unyielding that it gets on my nerves.
Narrowed eyes that remind me of a hailstorm. Hard, judgmental, resilient. They pelt my chest.
The more details I render, the more confused I get, the more it dawns on me. I don't recognize this face. I've never seen her before.
And then the strangest, craziest part of all materializes. I walk backwards and scan the face with disgust. Not because she's disgusting, but because she's…
… a good girl.
My brother and Bailey go quiet. I don't blame them. This shit is not art. This is a television show having to do with prairies and little houses. And rainbow-colored unicorns and shit.
"Dude," Bailey observes. "That's a chick who's never had her brains screwed out."
He's right. This girl may have known good times but not wild ones. It would be fun to loosen her up.
"She's hot, but is your dick getting soft?" Bailey goes on. "This is a whole new low of kinky, Cassius. What's with that white cap thing on her head?"
I've fucked up the wall. On this night, of all nights. With my brother here.
I register the flashing red lights and squealing siren too late. Someone must have seen us painting and called the police. Fucking snitches. Bailey and Dylan panic, snatching the cans and ladder and jetting to the Mustang. Bailey has taken the wheel, so I barrel into the passenger seat. The squealing gets louder, nearly trampling over the howl of fear that Dylan belts out. He's gaping at the pavement under the bridge. My eyes follow his and zoom in on the keys he left behind.
Fuck. The three of us stare, willing them to disappear, aware that none of us will reach them in time without getting caught. My thoughts surge into overdrive. Dylan's fingerprints. Dylan detained without question because he's a Gunner, because he's related to me. Dylan confessing to protect me. Dylan getting his head ripped open by our bitch of a mother—if she feels like bailing him out.
I jump out of the car.
"Cassius, no!" Dylan pleads. "You can't. If you get caught again—"
I slap the dashboard. "Go."
"Cassius—"
"Fuck. Off," I growl and then haul ass. Maybe I can grab the keys and hide somewhere.
I hear the screech of the Mustang's tires; see the rear lights disappear around the corner. I swipe the keys off the ground and sprint across the street, reaching the curb at the same time someone knocks me to the ground and wrestles my arms behind my goddamn back.
The cold weight of handcuffs bite into my wrist. I'm lifted off the ground and spun around. Rotating red bulbs blind me momentarily. This, all of this, is because I'd been preoccupied with an artistic failure and the face of an unknown girl.
I blame that face.
That beautiful fucking face.
It’s gonna be the end of me. I just fucking know it.
"Well, well," a greasy voice says. "Cassius Gunner. The prodigal son strikes again."
Great. It figures this pig would be on duty. He thinks he's tough because of the uniform, but whenever he talks his beak flaps, and that's all I can concentrate on because it makes him look like Pac-Man.
The bastard hates me. I'm in deep shit for sure. Might as well fuck with him and hint at something he doesn't know.
"Cray." Lifting my head to the side, I level the officer with a cocky grin. "Tell your wife I miss her."
“You fucking prick!” he shouts, slamming against the side of his patrol car.
And I am.
I’m the King of Pricks.
2
The Good Girl
We chase the lightning bugs in the fields after dark. The tiny globes of yellow light blink, making my sister squeal as she skips around with a glass jar. We're in the heart of a firework. I feel silly for thinking nonsense like this, but I use the excuse that it's not a typical evening. Tonight, Elsie and I are getting along. She's dancing, running, twirling. I muster up the occasional laugh, which is the best I can do for amusement. It seems to be enough to please her.
Although the air is moist, I feel an oncoming chill as the night progresses, and I'm thinking it's time to beckon my sister back into our house. But if I do, she'll glare at me. I don't want to spoil the momentary truce between us.
My father spares me the chore by calling us to dinner. Inside, he has a fire roaring in the living room, a waste of wood too early in the season, but I suppose he can't help it. It's comforting.
Settling into the kitchen, I dutifully finish the cooking without having to be asked—unlike Elsie, who's lackadaisical by nature. Our father ruffles her hair and gently, but sternly, tells her to set the table. She does so with a grudge, a transgression we've been taught not to endorse. We're back to square one, I see.
She's just like our mother.
I wince. I sound eighty instead of eighteen. More importantly, the unpardonable thought insults my mother's memory. Even after so many years, certainly enough time forgive her waspish moods and intolerance of us. She was trampled by a nervous horse and died a few hours later. I was ten. Elsie was six.
Because of this, we're a tiny family by our religious standards — born to our sect of the Holy Cross of Catholic Unity. During her short life, our mother had two miscarriages. I once overheard my parents whispering in their room about how difficult conceiving had always been for them. I think this secretly relieved our mother. She was never fond of children.
Elsie eats way too fast for us to have an easy supper. I imagine her choking, though it does no good to nag. I'm a teenager, not a parent. That's exactly what she'd say anyway while stuffing more glazed carrots down her porcelain throat.
"Calm yourself, young lady." Our father places his hand on hers, his patience breaching that rock-hard place inside her that I've never been close to. I wouldn't have a prayer of finding even with a map, compass, and torch to light the way.
"We show gratitude by pacing our meal," he says.
We find a decent pattern at the dining table, forks grazing, hands reaching for glasses, a humble silence taking over.
That's when we hear the knock. The tentative rhythm causes us to lift our heads.
Elsie sits up straighter and sings, "Oooh, maybe it's David."
I s
hake my head at her, despite the anxiousness that surges through me at the mention of him. I tell myself this is normal. I should be anxious, excited, blushing. I'm marrying him when we both turn nineteen, after all. People know we're courting, but no one knows about the engagement other than our families. As is our custom.
Personally, I'm not unhappy about the agreement. David is my oldest friend. I like him because he's as strong-willed as I am. My father likes him because he's loyal. Elsie just likes his face. However, she thinks it's pitiful that I'm pledging myself to David for less than love.
Love is impractical. It's not always the answer, nor the safest choice. I've learned this by observation.
"David wouldn't show up when he knows we're eating," my father insists, giving me a look.
I adjust my Unity headdress and try not to rush to the door. Seeing David does make me happy, although I'm going to scold him for disrupting our meal.
My intentions are sidetracked when I look through the keyhole and see a stranger idling on our porch. Disappointed, I call over my father, who answers while I stand behind him.
The young man is probably around twenty. Parked in the walkway next to our truck, I notice an old-fashioned sports car, his mode of transportation. It's jarring to see the foreign vehicle waiting there. And inside, another figure is waiting in the driver's seat, but I can't see who it is aside from a trace of bronze hair.
The stranger rubs the back of his neck in confusion and checks the number on our house. He's not a Unity member, yet he's surprised that we are. Indeed, he seems especially surprised to see me. His expression is one of recognition, though that's impossible.
It takes him a second to pull his astonished gaze from my face and address my father. "Mr. Chaste?"
"That's me. Can I help you?"
"I'm Dylan Gunner. I think you know...knew...my father?"
I've never heard of a man by the name of Gunner. There's been no talk of him in our community. However, that doesn't stop shock and awe from slackening my father's features.
At the sound of a male voice, Elsie is at my side in two seconds flat. I have to fight her from craning her head over our father's shoulder and making a fool of herself.