So I sit, a prisoner in a sundress, a glass of untouched water sweating onto the pristine white linen. Until two familiar figures cut through the sea of pastel polos.
“I clocked you from the server station looking like you were about to face a firing squad,” Ruby says, sliding into a chair without an invitation. “Figured you needed backup. We’re on break.”
Candace follows, taking the other seat with a quiet nod. She looks at my untouched water, then at the tense line of my shoulders. “Definitely need backup.”
“I swear to God,” Ruby huffs, aggressively stirring her own iced tea, “if one more person asks me if our water is ‘locally sourced,’ I’m going to lose my mind. It’s from a tap. Do you want a Pellegrino or not?”
“Just tell them it is,” Candace says dryly. “They won’t know the difference.”
A real laugh bubbles up and escapes before I can stop it. “Careful, Candace. Lying to the one percent is a slippery slope. First, it’s about the water, next you’re telling them their pastel shorts are a good look.”
Ruby snorts. “Too late for that. Mr. Henderson’s salmon-colored atrocities are already a lost cause.”
As Candace reaches for a sugar packet, the sleeve of her crisp white uniform slides up, revealing the faint, ghost-yellow of old bruises on her wrist. My breath catches. They’re faded, but I recognize the pattern of fingers. A ghost of violence she carries with her. My skin prickles in a silent, shared understanding. She glances up, catches my eye, and her expression doesn’t change, but I see a flicker of the same recognition in her gaze. She knows I’m a survivor, too.
“Okay, this emergency intervention is cute, but we need a real summit,” Ruby declares, breaking the moment. “I’m talking about hijacking my dad’s boat, a case of tequila that requires signing a waiver, and we don’t come back until we’ve forgotten our own names.”
“I am so in,” Candace says, a genuine smile finally breaking through.
“Me too,” I say, and the words are so full of feeling they almost choke me.
I look at these two women—one a storm, the other a whirlwind—and they chose to sit with me. A warmth spreads through my chest, a feeling so foreign I almost don’t recognize it. For years, my circle was a tight, broken triangle: Frankie, and the ghosts of two boys. I’d forgotten what it felt like to let someone new in. To build something new.
“Well, hello.”
The voice is a silken threat at my shoulder, the cloying, familiar scent of his cologne a sudden, suffocating cloud in the warm afternoon air. The relaxed, happy atmosphere shatters. A cold dread snakes down my spine, and my entire body goes rigid. Not here. Not now.
He places a hand on my shoulder. It’s not a friendly gesture; it’s a claim, a brand. His fingers press down with a calculated pressure just shy of painful, a reminder. You are mine. Two chairs scrape. Ruby’s glare is a blade; Candace’s stillness is a held trigger.
“Darling,” he says smoothly, his eyes flicking dismissively over Candace and Ruby as if they are part of the scenery. “Are you finished with your little chat?”
Every instinct, every lesson my father ever beat into me, screams to stay quiet, to smile, to be the porcelain doll. Don’t make a scene. Don’t embarrass him. But it surges through me—a hot defiance, a spark I refuse to let him extinguish. The weight of my new friends is at my side, a silent, supportive wall.
“We were,” I say. My voice is sharper than I intend; it’s a cold, clear sound in the quiet air. “But you’ve just given us something new and fascinating to talk about.”
His hand tightens, the pressure becoming a clear threat. “Don’t be rude. Your father and I have an understanding. It would be a shame for you to disrespect that.” Trent tries to pull me to my feet, his grip insistent.
Planting my feet, I pull back until the fabric of my dress strains. The words scrape free, low and tight, costing me every ounce of courage I have. “Get your hand off me.” I don’t stand, but I don’t flinch either. I make him move first.
Out of the corner of my eye, I see Candace shift in her seat. It’s a subtle movement, but I recognize it for what it is—her shoulders squaring, her weight repositioning. She’s a coiled spring, ready to launch. Her weight shifts to the ball of her back foot. Trained, not lucky. She could take him, I realize with a jolt. She could drop him before he even saw it coming.
Trent’s smile becomes a tight, angry line. He releases my arm only to lean in close, his body caging me against the table, his voice dropping to a venomous whisper meant only for me. “You are making a big mistake, Darla. You should learn your place.” He glances around the pristine terrace, his lip curling in disgust. “People who end up in the wrong place at the wrong time get what’s coming to them.”
The world stops.
As the pristine terrace dissolves into a blur of green and white, the sound of his voice fades. The polite clink of silverware vanishes. I can’t escape the high-pitched, metallic ringing in my ears after seven years, and it’s all I hear. I can only feel the memory of gravel digging into my knees. All I can smell is the coppery, metallic tang of blood. The color drains from my face, my blood running cold as the memory of Declan’s last, rattling breath rips through me like a physical blow.
I’m so lost in the horror, I don’t even notice him at first.
But Trent does. His gaze lifts over my shoulder, something shifting in his expression, the smug confidence faltering. I follow his line of sight.
And there he is.
East.
He’s standing at the entrance to the terrace, a dark, dangerous anomaly in his leather cut and worn jeans. He’s not looking at me. His eyes are a flat, cold gray, locked on Trent’s face, on the way he’s looming over me.
Then his gaze lifts and finds mine. He sees the sheer, unadulterated terror in my eyes.