by Lana Grayson
The heat seared through my shirt, and a lick of flame singed the sleeve. A biting pain surged over my leg. I shouldered the door and sprinted outside, lowering Sarah to the grass as my own lungs seared.
She beat at my arms. Hot embers burned, nearly engulfing my shirt. I forced the inhaler into her hands.
“Reed—” She panted in a choked rasp.
“Stay here!” I yelled. “Listen to me this time. Don’t fucking move. I’ll find him.”
Her hand cradled her belly. I gently rubbed the little swell, still too little and new. Bumper didn’t kick. The thought shattered my courage. I relied on pure adrenaline to move.
“This doesn’t end with us separated, Sarah. I love you.”
The asthma took her words. She touched me instead, brushing a hand over my cheek.
Her hand was burned. A fierce red streak over her fingers.
I’d never forgive myself.
I’d never forgive him.
I took my jacket and burst inside the estate, the material wrapped over my head as I pushed through the flames once more. Heading upstairs bordered on suicide, but I couldn’t leave my youngest brother to die.
Not when Max was already dead.
The thought slayed me—a chill in the suffocating heat.
I crawled the stairs, slinking low to the stone and breathing shallow gasps of the charring wood, grit, and dust.
We presented the estate as pristine at all times, in all ways. Never a speck of dirt. No children’s toys beyond our bedrooms, no rough-housing on the furniture, no running to scuff the floors. The estate was kept immaculate.
And now, the filth rotting it from the inside was exposed to the world.
The Bennett Estate harbored a vile core, a crumbling, blackened heart that feasted on the misery and pain of others. Greed was praised as ambition, and success disguised through sadism. The tenants of family and power corrupted our dignity into the pretense of honor.
I had none.
But I’d regain it. Find it. Keep it.
Teach my daughter the true meaning of honesty, integrity, and family.
The north wing of the house had yet to be consumed, but the smoke smeared everything in foul, polluted grime. I choked as I ran, blinking through stinging, watery eyes.
“Reed!”
Nothing. He wouldn’t hear me. The walls groaned and shuddered, popping with boiling heat and creaking through an old foundation. Even the stone heated to the touch.
I couldn’t save this estate.
I sprinted through the hall, aiming for a far staircase leading up and up, further into the swirling, frenzied mass of fire. Everything crumbled and stained, peeled and crushed.
It was supposed to be mine.
It was meant to be mine.
The estate and wealth, the prestige and pride.
I was Nicholas Bennett, and this was intended to be my legacy and my empire. It blackened to ash and collapsed upon the weight of the ideal and the dishonesty of the dream. Corruption fanned the flames.
But my future?
It was safe.
My life, my future, my everything was spared from the fires.
Sarah and the baby waited outside. They were the only riches, the only empire, the only future I needed.
I kicked the door to the roof. The air wept with toxic moisture, thick and heavy with the consuming stench of fuel. Reed retreated from the wreckage, crashing over charred metal. He screamed, begging for our brother to answer.
Max didn’t respond.
He wouldn’t.
My stomach heaved. I ran for my brother, pulling Reed from the unrecognizable carnage. He fought me, punching, kicking, flailing from my grasp to rush at the fires again. His hands burned on smoldering metal. He swore through the pain, tossing flaming debris aside.
The roof cracked, a warning fate delivered only because the devil had swept back to hell.
“Reed, we have to go!”
He swiped at me, like losing one brother would justify attacking his remaining family.
“Reed!”
“Max!” His voice grated, raw and muffled with agony. “Max!”
“Come on!” I pulled his arms, hauling him away. Reed fought me, refusing to leave the wreckage, screaming for a man who no longer existed. “Reed! The roof is going to collapse!”
“Max!”
Inconsolable.
Desperate.
I forced him to run, tripping his legs backwards, denying him the chance to throw his life away too.
“For Christ’s sake!” I shouted. “We have to get out of here. Sarah’s in trouble!”
Reed shuddered. Her name ran through us both, a fire catching and igniting our own fierce possessiveness. We rushed to the stairs, tumbling over them two at a time, crashing against the walls only to push off and sprint through halls that never heard pounded footsteps or shouting.
But they heard pain.
Too much pain.
And now the estate screamed too.
Fallen debris and crashed chunks of the ceiling blocked the grand staircase. The side stairs coiled with smoke too thick to see, to breathe.
Reed grabbed my arm and forced me down the south wing, his hall. He kicked open the door to his room, pitched off his jacket and rushed to the balcony.
I hardly recognized him, dusted with soot, burned with fire, beaten by his own mourning. He stepped onto the edge of the balcony and looked down.
“Feeling lucky?”
Not particularly, not as our childhood home and prison collapsed around us. I searched beneath us. The pool waited below.
Two stories below.
“Always wanted to try this,” Reed said. “Dad forbade it.”
“Dad’s dead.”
Now he smiled.
And leapt.
Christ.
He didn’t give me warning. The splash crashed over the entirety of the pool. I waited for my idiot brother to either surface or bleed out. He kicked off the side and shouted.
“Water’s fine!”
Fuck, he’d lost his goddamned mind.
I ripped the jacket off and poised over the edge. The balcony didn’t extend over the pool.
I didn’t have a choice.
I pushed from the railing and dove, smacking the water at full force, crushed by the impact. My vision flared white.
Burned and drowned.
Two deaths escaped.
I kicked from the bottom and burst through the surface. Reed grabbed my arm and hauled me onto the concrete. The salt-water seared my eyes, my lungs, the wounds.
“Sarah.”
I grunted, pushing myself up. We raced to the front of the house, but Sarah wasn’t where I left her. Of course. I shouted, and she answered, weakly, hiding behind the car. One hand wrapped over her belly, the other on the inhaler.
I wasn’t taking chances. She needed to go to a hospital.
“Max?” she wept, knowing the answer. “Where’s Max?”
I shook my head. Reed dove to her side, his own tears mixing with hers.
She crumpled. “But I didn’t…I hadn’t forgiven him…I didn’t say—”
I enveloped her in a hug. She sobbed against my shoulders, beating at me, weakening with each blow.
“It’s okay,” I whispered. I kissed her, again and again, rocking her in my arms. “It’s done. It’s over. You’re safe.”
Safe.
The orange flicker of fire destroyed and betrayed, weakened and collapsed. Just as Sarah promised, the very foundation of the Bennett Empire began to fall.
And I would help it. I’d break every stone, burn every wall, and crush every last memory.
Then I would restore our family in the image of what was most important.
Safety, trust, love.
Sarah and I would build it together.
Brick by brick.
Yeah, I really shouldn’t have been here, but someone had to come. Not sure why I volunteered.
We didn’t even mark the grave. What was there to say?
>
You’re gone.
The dirt was still fresh and smelled odd. But then again, all I smelled was soot and ash and dirt. And now salt. That was a relief. The beach wasn’t the beach without the ocean spray.
I hadn’t been to the shore in so long. I wasn’t permitted to loiter at the ocean. Names to uphold and parties to plan. Now I had a chance to go.
And I always did want to leave it all behind. Drop the name and expectations and get the hell out of that insanity before I earned yet another injury. I knew I was cute, but I was running out of canvas to keep clear of the scars.
So I thought about going until I realized I didn’t have anything to run from now.
I sat beside the grave, but he wasn’t in there. They couldn’t find…most of him. That type of fire was too difficult to escape.
I wasn’t sure he even tried.
You’re gone.
My cell rang. I didn’t want to answer it so close to the grave. I walked away and resolved never to look back.
Sarah’s number blinked across the display.
“Hey,” I said. “What’d the doctor say?”
“Everything’s looking good.”
“And Bumper?”
“Kicking my lungs.”
“Well, they don’t work anyway.”
“No, but they’re generally nice to not have bruised.” She hesitated, confirming what we figured. “The doctor warned I might have to go on bedrest in another few weeks because of the asthma.”
I groaned. “That’s not the good kind of bedrest. You’re not allowed to do anything fun then.”
“Certainly not your idea of fun.”
“That’s every man’s idea of fun.”
The wind whipped against the phone. I inhaled, but whatever charred the estate also settled in my veins, my skin, my hair. Two weeks had passed, and I still found smudges of ash over my house. It’d be spooky if I hadn’t already lived through my worst fears.
“Where are you?” Sarah asked.
Yeah, right. She wouldn’t understand, and I didn’t want her to worry about that night. Too many things went wrong.
Actually, not a whole hell of a lot went right over the past year.
I was changing that. Better late than never.
“I’m outside,” I said. Technically, it wasn’t a lie. I’d never lie to her. “You?”
“Home.” Her voice warmed. “Well, at Nick’s. Are you coming over?”
I cleared my throat. “Actually. I…uh, I have a date.”
Shock. The baby would probably crash out of her right then.
“You have a date?”
“Yeah.”
“With a girl?”
If she didn’t know my preferences by now, I couldn’t help her. “Yeah.”
“Is she…” Sarah laughed. “Is she normal?”
Were any of us? “She’s just someone I know. Thought maybe it’d be good to get out. Head to the ocean. Surf.”
“Sure. Yeah. That’s…” Sarah smiled, and I could hear it over the phone. She was doing that more lately. I liked it. “That’s really good. I’m so glad you can finally…”
And now the weeping. So much for the smile, but she blamed the pregnancy.
It wasn’t. She felt the same thing I did.
Relief.
“I’ll stop by tomorrow,” I promised.
“I want all the details.”
Yeah, she was getting them whether she wanted them or not. For the past year my only relationship consisted of trying to fuck and breed my step-sister. How the hell was I supposed to be normal now?
Most girls wanted flowers and roses. Sarah just wanted to stop bruising and get mounted by me and my brother at the same time.
No matter how much money I had in my pocket that shit wasn’t the eccentric life of a billionaire. It was pure fucking crazy. And who the hell knew how much damage it did to any of us.
Sarah bounced back, if only because she was more spring that human, forced to the ground to pop up again. And Nick? Christ. What the hell did he care? He got everything. Company. Woman. Baby. Future.
I couldn’t even think about Max.
Which left me and my baggage, each piece categorized with a neat little tag. Father issues, Guilt, Grief, Oddly specific sexual fetishes that weren’t resolved or explored.
Yeah, we were in good shape.
But at least I finally had the chance to try. I wanted out, and this was it. My own life, my own future, my own everything.
God help the girl who got saddled with me.
But that’s what the dimple was for. So far, it got me into enough trouble. Maybe it was time it got me out of some.
Or maybe it was time I found someone to share the trouble with me.
It was the most harrowing, sweaty, utterly disturbing experience of my life.
Then the nurse passed the squirmy bundle of pink to me.
And I figured it hadn’t been so bad.
Nicholas didn’t last. I never saw him cry before, but he nuzzled against me, breath just as labored as mine. They probably should have given him the oxygen. I didn’t need it.
I hadn’t breathed since Bumper looked up at me.
“Oh, she’s the most beautiful baby girl,” the nurse said. “She looks just like Daddy. Look at those big, golden eyes.”
I clutched her, but I was lost. Overwhelmed.
Nicholas held us, both of us.
Me and his daughter.
And we both wept in joy.
The party was scheduled for tomorrow. After finals. Because, for some reason, I thought it’d be fun to chase the baby, take an eight AM final, graduate, and then have a giant formal party to celebrate my degree.
But if anyone could handle it, it was me.
Still, my books were piled on the patio table, cast out around me. I stared at the results of my titration lab. They were the right figures, of course, but smudged with smashed bananas. I’d pass it off as me initialing the work and hopefully my professor—a woman with a young child herself—wouldn’t take too many points off my current A.
It really wouldn’t matter. I still had Atwood Industries to run and the future GMO division of the Bennett Corporation to oversee, but I wanted this degree. Not because it was what my family planned for me, and not because I had to finish anything I started, but because it was for me.
It was mine.
And I wasn’t letting anything keep me from what was mine anymore.
So I pushed the sippy-cup toward the high-chair and let the chubby little hand squeeze my fingers as I studied.
“Hannah,” I smiled at the squealing toddler. “Can you say titration?”
“Ie-ie-ah-banana.”
Nicholas snorted over his laptop. “Sounds like she’s going into business with me.”
“Yeah, right. That was an –ethyl group. She’s talking compounds and esters.”
The sippy-cup smashed to the table. Nicholas scooped it up before it spilled over my books.
“Thank you, Daddy.” I murmured.
“Did you graduate yet?”
I bit my pencil. “Not yet. Give me twenty-four hours.”
“You sure you can’t take off early?”
I didn’t trust the devious glow in his golden eyes—warm and promising and absolutely not the distraction I needed while studying for my last test ever.
At least, until I went for my doctorate.
“The plane’s ready,” he teased. “Beautiful spot on the beach. Just you, me, Bumper.”
“You know we can’t go until after tomorrow. Hard to host a graduation party if I’m not here.”
“Hard to have a honeymoon if you don’t want to go.”
“Oh, I want to go.”
“Do you?”
“Depends,” I smirked. “What are you planning?”
“You’ll see.”
Nicholas curled a finger. I leaned in close, stealing a heated, perfect kiss.
Hannah squealed in shrill delight. I knew that excited sound. I mur
mured against his lips.
“Uncle Reed’s here.” I pulled from Nicholas. Reluctantly. “Honeymoon can wait.”
Reed jogged onto the patio, making a beeline for the baby. Hannah loved the game, and she raised her arms for a hug. Spoiled little thing. All she ever got were hugs. And kisses. And trust funds. Mostly hugs.
“You really shouldn’t cage her like this.” Reed slathered her with kisses.
“It’s a high-chair.” I laughed.
“This little girl wants to run.”
“Run and jump and fall off all the steps and rush into the corn…”
And they were down, rolling in the grass. Reed tossed Hannah into the air, way too high.
Yeah, we weren’t studying now.
“Place looks good.” Reed mimicked Bumper, squealing just as shrill as she expressed her profound enjoyment at rough-housing with her uncle. “Almost done?”
Nicholas glanced over our new home. “It is.”
It wasn’t the garish Bennett Estate, nor was it the gaudy farmhouse turned mansion. But it was ours. A blended, perfect union of both rural cornfields and hectic business. Nicholas surrendered and agreed to raise Hannah on the farm. It wasn’t much of a fight. He didn’t care where we were or where we lived.
So long as we were together. A family.
And we were.
For the most part. As much as the old wounds healed.
Reed stood, gathering my baby-turned-toddler-before-I-was-ready into his arms. He passed her to me. His voice lowered.
“Are you expecting anyone else?”
I turned.
The dark figure limping his way to the patio hesitated. The party planners and decorators buzzed in his path, and he wasn’t completely stable on the prosthetic leg yet. He clutched an oversized teddy bear dressed in overalls with a little straw hat.
Just like one he gave me once, but this present wasn’t for me.
My heart stilled. I held Hannah close. Nicholas stood.
“Max?”
Max didn’t look at me, but he approached his brothers after a long moment. He appeared…so different. Pale, but still a mountain of muscle and ink and frightening intensity.
“Holy shit, dude,” Reed said. “What are you doing here?”
My words shuddered, lost in a pain I hadn’t felt for a year and a half.
“I invited him.” I stared at my step-brother. “I didn’t think you’d come.”