Stuck With The Four Hotties

284



Last night, when I tried to ask about the Infinity Club, he started kissing my neck and I forgot my own name.

Today, he’s not going to be so lucky.

“You know, the boys and I were just discussing details for the tour this summer.” He lifts his phone up and wiggles it around. Ah, Saturday and the return of technology to the campus. It gets so quiet on weekends. That is, when people aren’t partying like crazy. “We sort of set it up, so that we go between here and Colorado. Keep it short, sweet, simple, and end with me sliding into your bed at Bornstead.”

I just look at him then, dressed in tight black jeans and boots, his shirt short-sleeved and covered in pins, and I try to imagine the type of life we could have together if I picked him. I’m so strait-laced, and he’s so … not. But I wonder sometimes if Tristan and I would be at each other’s throats after a time, we’re so damn similar.

Maybe Zayd could tour with his band, and I could teach seminars around the world or something … I’d spend all day working in a strict academic setting, and then he’d come back all sweaty and covered in ink and charged up from his performance and we’d-Property © NôvelDrama.Org.

“Marnye?” he asks, waving an inked hand in front of my face. “Whoa, beautiful, where did you go just now?”

I shake my head, and sweep my hands up to push some random loose tendrils of hair from my face.

“I want to know how Lizzie broke a bet, why she’s not like, dead or something, and why she said Tristan just did the same. I think I also deserve to know if people are trying to fucking kill me.”

“It’s … fuck, okay.” Zayd ruffles up his sea green hair with his fingers, and then glances out at the road like he’s waiting for someone. The bell towers above us ring, and birds scatter in the wind like leaves. “We tried, we really did. We … that’s all we did that week is try to fix things, so that Harper and the senior Infinity Club members would leave you alone. We failed at that, Marnye.” I remember Windsor’s face when he showed up at Dad’s house that day, all drawn and tired. “We tried. But we’re junior members, so …” He trails off and looks up at the sky, leaning back, the cluster of necklaces around his throat jangling. Absently, he reaches up with

his left hand and plays with them. I notice some are badges from past concerts. One has a lipstick stain on it that makes my eyes narrow to slits. “The deal is, nobody can touch you unless they’ve attended the academy with you. Period. No hired hitmen or special police forces-”

“Are you fucking kidding?! Hired hitmen?” Zayd turns his head slightly to the side to look at me, like he can’t figure out why I’m so surprised by that.

“Uh, yeah. Does that really surprise you? Most people have a price, and for the right amount, sure, they could get some crazy ex-Black Ops guy to shoot you. It’s not even that far-fetched.”

“Even I have a price, Marnye. The only person I know who doesn’t seem to … is you.”

I hear Tristan’s words echoing in my head like a warning and close my eyes.

“The Club takes real world shit, like economies or wars or political races, and turns it into something bite-sized and manageable. It’s like, aristocrats in a royal court playing at politics. The whole world runs on careful, behind- the-scenes maneuvering.” Zayd turns toward me and folds his legs on the edge of the fountain wall, putting his hands on his knees. “You’re the working class pawn, Marnye, risen up and fighting through the ranks. You’re taking out students whose families have been going to Burberry for generations.” Zayd gestures with his chin in the direction of the chapel building. “If their kids can’t take out one, lone scholarship kid, then what hope do they have for haggling with billionaires from China, or arranging trade deals with India.”

“So they’re going to kill me?” I ask, because it’s just too freaking surreal to believe.

“They haven’t made a move yet which scares me,” Zayd says, looking back out at the road. “But they will. Sometime before the end of the year, I know they will.” He turns to me again. “The deal is that they have until midnight of graduation day to kill you. That’s it. After that, we take the crown. If we win, the Infinity Club can never interfere with your life again, or the lives of those around you.”

“So you’d all be safe, too?” I ask, and Zayd smiles, almost sadly, his lip rings catching the glint of the sun.

“Whoever you pick, anyway. The lucky guy.” He spins one of his lip rings around with his tongue. “I don’t mean to sound like a total ass, but … please

pick me.”

“What?” My cheeks flush as Zayd looks me in the eyes, his green ones swimming with so much color, like jade stones flecked with lime and emerald. There’s so much variation in that single color, if I were a painter, I’d want to recreate his irises on a canvas. Yep, I’m doing it. Waxing poetic again.

“Or have you already decided?” he sneers slightly, and I can see that mean boy bully coming through in him. “It’s Tristan, isn’t it? Fuck, I knew as soon as I heard you guys banged in the library. Jesus.” Zayd curls his fingers in his hair, and I reach out to grab his hand, pulling it away.

“I haven’t decided. I … I know you guys are probably desperate for me to make up my mind, but give me until graduation day. If I’m not dead by midnight, then I’ll … make a choice.” It’s meant to be dark humor, but like Charlie’s attempt, it j

ust sort of falls flat.


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