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Sun’s up.

Time to go.

“Unless you want to put your hands down my pants, you’re not going to find it,” I tell her.

“Already looked there when I thought you were dead.”

I freeze, momentarily believing her.

She smirks and settles on the floor, reaching between the mattress and the box spring of this ancient bed again.

I scoot closer to the edge to squish her hand. “What’s your price?”

Sleep has made everything clear.

I don’t know what she’s doing these days, but I know she doesn’t have money. Her family cut her off after one too many public scenes, and she’s living—actually, I don’t know where.

Most of what I know about her situation came from my best friend, since she was disinherited after Margot and I broke up. Not long after, but after. I wasn’t part of the family discussions on that one.

I know she has a real job somewhere outside the city where she’s relatively anonymous and she’s living like—dammit.

She’s living like I want to.

Like a normal person.

While I have the resources to live like she used to.

Never thought I’d see the day when I’d be jealous of Daphne Merriweather-Brown, but here we are.

“Price for what?” she asks.

“For your silence.”

She snorts again and pushes her arm deeper under the mattress like I weigh nothing, which is annoying. “Nothing about me is for sale.”

“You don’t want a pony? I thought all girls wanted a pony.”

She flips me off.

Probably deserve that.

I know full well my ex-fiancée’s sister has no interest in owning a pony. She’d rather set them free.

I heard about it enough times at various Merriweather-Brown family dinners while I was dating Margot.

“A donation to your favorite charity that rescues dogs from dog-fighting rings,” I try again.

I don’t care how late it might be in the morning, it’s still too early for that kind of side-eye.

“No, thank you,” she says primly.

Primly.

Daphne.

The girl who once told me to eat a bag of dicks in front of her grandparents because I’d suggested—kindly, I might add—that she suffer through not getting herself arrested for a few months so that she didn’t have to listen to her family berate her about it.

“Everyone has a price. What’s yours?”