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At this, his reaction is so unexpected that I can’t breathe for a second.

Not to mention, so violent.

Those knuckles that were already jutting out almost tear through his moon-kissed skin.Healmost tears the wheel off with his grip. And when he looks at me again, I flinch at the ferocity in his wolf eyes.

“Isavedyou,” he grits out.

I’m not sure what it is that I said that made him so angry, that made his cheekbones even more pronounced, but I somehow manage to respond. “I always thought it was you. I always thought that you were the one who reported me, who pressed charges. I guess it was my mistake. I just assumed it would be you. But it wasn’t. You didn’t press any charges against me. You —”

“Get out.”

I don’t.

I won’t.

I have to know. I have to knowhow.

How did he save me? What did he do?

“Con told me,” I continue, hugging my backpack to my chest, pressing my back against the door, watching his angry frame. “Again, he didn’t want to. He let me believe that it was you who did everything, but he told me the truth. That it wasn’t you. In fact, you came to him with the deal. You made those charges go away. Reed, I need —”

“Get the fuck out of my car, Fae.”

I shake my head. “And it was your d-dad, wasn’t it? He pressed those charges against me. And I know you don’t like to talk about him. But Reed, what did you do? You must’ve done something, right? To make him back off. To get me off the hook. What did you do, Reed?”

Maybe the why doesn’t matter. Maybe his conscience did wake up, as Con said. Maybe he saved me to amuse himself, to do his good deed of the year.

Like he did two years ago. When he let me go, unscathed, from his clutches.

When he left me a virgin.

But I want to knowhow.

I want to know what he had to do.

Because it’s his father.

The man he hates.

The man I’ve never even met but who wanted to see me punished for what I’d done to his son’s car. Not that I blame him. I take full responsibility for my actions.

But I know, Iknow, there’s more to the whole story and I need to know what.

“What did you do, Reed? What did you have to do to save me from your father?” I ask when he doesn’t break the seething silence.

And it’s as if that word —save— is some kind of a trigger for him, making ripples cut through the air again. His hands on the wheel vibrate. His entire frame vibrates.

His eyes were already dark, already angry, but now they become bottomless pits.

They become the eyes of a demon. The villain that he is.

Someone so heartless and cold that I almost breathe out in wintry vapors. And when he turns toward me completely, it takes all of my courage, all of my bravery, to stay put.

Not to shrink back. Not to run away.

That’s when he grabs me.

Or rather, my backpack.