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Authors: J.R. Gray

BOOK: Ever So Madly
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Chapter Three

 

Madden

“Finish and we’ll go dance.” It may have sounded too eager, but I’d never been good at concealing my feelings. I wore my heart on my sleeve.

Obliging me, she brought the plastic cup to her lips and pressed her eyes closed as she took another swallow of the intoxicating liquid. When she closed her eyes, her light brown lashes lay against her cheek. She wore a touch of face paint and a hint of glitter on her lids, above a thin professionally applied black liner around her almond-shaped eyes. Her red lips shimmered when they caught the light, and I hoped I’d put the blush on her cheeks. She had long blonde hair tied up in a twist at the back of her neck, and her blue eyes were lively from the ruckus she and her companion had made at their entrance, which had drawn my attention immediately.

“You might have to buy me another drink to get me out there.” She wrinkled her nose at the idea.

I had long since learned looks rarely held me to a person. At first glance, I’d expected to find her as shallow as every other pretty face on this planet. She was everything, but I had been here less than a week, and Trenton had already put a bad taste in my mouth. It was fake and cold. I missed the empathy even if it came with the heat and labor of the mines.

Strangely, she hadn’t fawned all over me like other girls here had. Her poise never faltered as she threw my jibes back. Her wit was more intoxicating than the drink, and I doubt she knew it. When she opened her eyes again, I could see her pupils reacting slower, as the drink took hold.

“It would be—” But I was cut off by the striking boy she had come in with.

“J, what are you drinking?” He grabbed the glass from her delicate fingers and downed the contents, shooting a hard look in my direction. “Didn’t I warn you?”

“If you hadn’t left me to fend for myself, maybe I’d know what I was drinking.” She reached for my arm, linking hers through it to pull me along as he dragged her off the dance floor.

I knew she was only dancing with me to irritate her companion, but I willingly followed her to where the bodies writhed in the center of the large warehouse. She wasn’t intoxicated. Even with low tolerance, the drink shouldn’t have given her more than a warm tingly feeling. I had chosen it for a reason. I could feel the young man’s eyes on me, and I looked up to find him back with his friends on the edge of the mass of people, staring me down. Their appearances were similar, and I guessed he was her brother, not a suitor. She started to sway to the music, and everything else in the room faded. I was drawn into her, moving in to her personal space to mimic her movements. Song after song we stayed like this, not quite touching but rhythmically reacting to one another on a purely biological level.

We were both sweaty by the time the music slowed. I leaned in to offer her another drink, but she cut me off, sliding her fingers around the back of my neck, drawing me in to close the last bit of space remaining between us. We fell in sync, and I rested my chin against her temple, feeling as if all the blood in my body had drained from my head, pooling below my belt. If she noticed, she didn’t care. Forward as it was, I slid my arms around the small of her back, solidifying the connection so we could absorb the feel of one another.

She pulled back, and I tightened my grasp on her, not wanting to let her go just yet—or ever. She kept me close, tilting her head up to look into my eyes. Hers were deep swirls of blue, a raging storm of crashing hues. Before I could stop myself, I leaned down and brushed my lips over hers. I froze when they didn’t immediately mold to mine. Lingering there, I was relieved when she parted them and ran her tongue over the seam of mine. I opened my mouth to allow her entrance. My heart picked up speed, and the tips of my fingers tingled as I wrapped my hand around the back of her neck. She gripped me by the ear, moaning softly and rubbing up against me, deepening the kiss. The taste of her frayed my nerves, leaving me desperate like an Ore junkie.

She was yanked out of my grasp. My eyes snapped open, and I growled, seeing the boy.

“What the hell?” he asked.

She looked between us and then focused in on the boy. “Jacob?” The words were calmer than I felt.

I knew it was stupid and forward of me to feel this way over someone I’d just met, but she had been the first girl I’d ever felt a connection with. I didn’t want to let it go.

“Keep your fucking hands off, Scab.” He shot me a look. “We’ve got to get going, Jocelynn.”

That got me hot in the ears, and I knew I could take the skinny prick. I took a step toward him, but her eyes met mine, and she frowned.

“Why do we have to go?” she asked. “You are never home this early.”

“I got a call asking where you were,” Jacob replied, keeping his eyes on me.

I could tell he was lying. His eyes darted around seeming to keep track of the Red Stars in the room. I watched him. He had gone from cool and collected to jittery. Something had to have happened. It was the only explanation. She sensed it, too, because she nodded without further questioning, something which seemed to go against her personality.

Her whole face fell, and she turned to me. “I have to go.” She didn’t wait for a reply, letting Jacob lead her away.

I reached a hand out for her, but I didn’t follow. I knew I wasn’t near her league. The mirage was a punishment sent by the universe for my past transgressions. The room moved around me, but I stood still, watching how meaningless this all was.

My chest ached, and I craved the idea of her. Intelligent and unobstructed by class, she wasn’t worried about saying the wrong thing. On a planet with four million people, a million of them in this city, could I have any hope of finding her again?

 

Chapter Four

 

Jocelynn

“I feel like a pincushion,” I groaned in frustration.

A sharp pin stabbed my side. I grunted, certain the tailor stuck me on purpose.

“But you look so lovely.” Jacob leaned against the doorframe, sinking his teeth into an abba fruit and letting the juice run down his neck, not bothering to wipe it.

I held up my middle finger and smiled sardonically.

“One of these days you’re going to have to learn how to be a lady. Half the known universe depends on it.” He licked at his lips.

“Sometimes I wish you were born first.”

“And I thank all the great powers of the universe I wasn’t, so I’m free to fuck off,” he shot back.

We both knew with his “defective” attributes, as the Baron saw them, it was better for him not to be required in the spotlight.

“Clean yourself up. You have juice running to your collar.” I pursed my lips. “Just because you are second doesn’t mean you won’t be subjected to as much prodding as I am.” I growled and shot another look at the little man fixing my clothes who’d stuck me again. I tried to be nice to every last person who worked for us, but because of all the tight clothes the tailor was on my last nerve. He didn’t so much like my unladylike behavior.

The tailor muttered apologetically and shrugged, but I saw his smirk.

“Be happy you didn’t smell my breath before the fruit.” He took a step closer to me, grinning wickedly, as he wiped his fingers on a bolt of expensive fabric behind the tailor’s back.

I laughed in spite of myself. “Gross, I didn’t need to know about your early morning activities.” We both knew I was curious.

“Don’t be jealous. I saw how you looked at that scab last night.” He played it off as he smoothed his fingers over the day of stubble around his mouth, wicking away what was left of the juice, but there was a hint of something there.

“Says the boy who undoubtedly sucked a slave’s cock this morning?”

There was a moment of thick tension, and the tailor looked between us. I didn’t back down.

He pushed his tongue into the side of his cheek, grinning coyly. “I’ve never agreed with the separation of classes as such.”

I rolled my eyes. “Then why did you take issue with the scab?”

I knew he had as many friends and lovers among the slaves and scabs as he did inside our own sect.

“Because he wanted to fuck my sister.”

“I’ve never thought of you as the possessive type,” I said.

The tailor finished with me and nodded, helping me out of the uncomfortable heap of fabric before gesturing for Jacob to take my place on the pedestal.

“Don’t use that fabric.” He waved at the one he had smeared juice on and glanced at my dress. “The Barron wishes for us to complement each other while he stands alone in the house red.”

The tailor barked at him in common, so fast I had a hard time following.

“Yes, yes, I know he originally wanted me in the red, but we are to be presented at the aging ceremony, and he wants us to look striking together.” He winked at me. “The white and purple like my sister’s gown will look better with my alabaster skin tone, don’t you agree?”

The only reason I wasn’t wearing it was because the Baron had forbidden it until I was named as his successor.

The tailor said something about having said so in the first place and went about his work.

“You are so bad,” I said when the man stepped away.

“But at least I won’t be washed out in red.” He shrugged coyly. “We have the worst house colors for our complexion.”

I tried to resist the smile spreading over my lips.

“See, you know how the Baron looks on the vids!” He bounced his brows. “Looks like a Scilian fruit.” He held his arms out in front of his stomach and puffed out his cheeks.

I repressed a laugh. “Hurry up. We have orientation to get to.” I ducked out of the room to pull on a large cotton shirt with sleeves that passed below the tips of my fingers and a pair of wool pants that tapered down my legs, hugging them to my ankles.

When I walked back in the room, Jacob was back in his clothes and waiting.

“Damn, boys get off easy.”

He offered his arm, and I took it. We didn’t have far to go as the palace was placed across the great square from the Imperial Institute. I pulled my jacket tighter around me and left my shirt hanging around the tips of my fingers. I would have caught hell for going dressed this way to an official event, but the last thing I wanted was to stand out in a place I’d been attending for years. I already had to be a public face for the House of Akillie. There were some places I tried to hide in plain sight.

The sun shone through the thin layer of clouds that lingered high up in the atmosphere, causing the bright red glow of the sun to turn the skin an amber hue in the full light. The star above Trenton was dying. Black cracks spidered over the surface, and it cooled by the year, but the home world was such a pride to the Akillie house they refused to abandon it. My boots clicked over the large gray stones that made up the square. They were mined from Becca, one of the hot planets, at the rim of known space and brought in as a sign of wealth. It was one of the planets in Akillie rule and possibly where Mad had come from. I wondered if I would see him again.

He had to be here to work the Worlds’ Fair. It was unlikely I would cross his path again. But I wanted to.

He felt so familiar, while at the same time exciting and exotic. Behind my closed eyes, I could see the way he looked at me before he touched our lips together. My lips burned in memory. I licked over them, inhaling, almost thinking I could bring back his scent. Instead I inhaled the clean ocean air I breathed in and out every day.

“Come on, we are going to be late.” Jacob dragged me up the large stone stairs, out of my fantasy.

We took seats toward the back, with some of our friends. My brother liked to sit here so we could make an easy escape when the time came, or leave early if he got bored. I tended to zone out during these things so it never bothered me. It was more a formality I attend than anything. My whole existence was tailored to this life. If I didn’t know it at this point, I wouldn’t.

I stirred, feeling eyes on me, and I scanned the coliseum-shaped room to see if someone had turned in their seat to stare at me. It wasn’t until my eyes reached the edge of the aisle we sat in that I saw him.

 

Chapter Five

 

Madden

My mind hadn’t left her in two nights. I ran through our conversation over and over in my head. Why hadn’t I asked for her scan? Why hadn’t I gone with her? I tried not to live in past actions, but I found it impossible not to run through every scenario that would have left me with a way to contact her. I had myself so turned around and distracted, I almost missed my first lecture. The morning bells rang, and I had minutes to get in and take a seat. I slipped into a row near the back to avoid unwanted attention. Already out of place with these people, the last thing I wanted was to be anything but background noise.

I scanned the row to see what I’d gotten myself into. There wasn’t a single face like mine. Deep down I’d known it would be the case, but it was harder in person. Like a moth to the flame, my eyes fell on her. Not four seats down, she sat with Jacob. She looked up at the same moment.

“J…” I didn’t know what to say to her. I’d run through a million things from that night, but not one plan of attack for this occurrence.

She looked down at herself for a moment like she was nervous, but she replaced the mask over her emotions and looked me in the eyes. I moved closer.

“You’re a jumper. Interesting.” She stood and took a step toward me like I was a game that became much more intriguing.

Her brother laid a hand on her shoulder. They exchanged something in a look.

“You worry too much. Let’s go sit with him.” She turned to me. “If that’s okay, Mad?”

I was stunned, but I did my best to keep my guard up as well. “Please do.”

They followed me back to my seat, and we blended into the crowd as the spaces around us filled in.

“More than a scab, I see,” Jacob said. “And here I thought you were only here for the fair.”

“Some people are more than they seem,” I commented looking at J, holding my hand out to her. “I’m Madden, and since we’ll be seeing more of each other, it might be better to be on a first name basis.”

She placed her hand in mine, but she had changed. As if dictated by protocol, she slipped into an almost regal figure. She must have been the daughter of some dignitary or adviser to the House of Akillie. The breeding seemed so ingrained it had to be instilled with generations of snobbery.

“J. Let’s stick with J.”

I hadn’t noticed it before, but her voice was articulate. It spoke of her birthright. She wasn’t a jumper. She wasn’t here because she had earned her place like I had. She was here because her place was garnered at conception, but it hadn’t changed her. She treated me like anyone else from the moment I met her, while her brother seemed to hold some air of pretension. It was a puzzle I turned over in my mind. I wanted to figure her out as much as she did me.

I brought her hand to my lips and kissed it. Her cheeks pinked a little, and I had to wonder if the reaction was also training.

“You forget I already know what to call you, but if you prefer J.” I half shrugged, wondering what the big deal was.

“Today I want to be just J. It’s easier.”

My mind spun. Jacob rolled his eyes. J’s lip curled up, and she scowled at him.

“What does your name matter?” I released her hand, drawing her attention back to me.

She scooted to the edge of her seat, bringing her face closer to mine. I was suddenly hot, remembering how she tasted. “Because we are no more than equals sitting here, and I don’t want to change your perception of me.”

Usually the class division stuck, even at university. But then Jacob had seemed to know all the “scabs” as he had put it the other night, and was more than friendly with a few I knew resided in my building. It struck me his bias wasn’t against me, or my kind, but against anyone talking to her. It was the only fitting explanation.

“I knew you were of noble birth the moment you spoke. You play the part well, but you have tells.” It was a white lie, but I’d figured her out. I turned into her a little, inhaling her scent, stifling the moan threatening to leave my lips.

“Can you be sure it’s not the other way around? I could be of low birth with years of training.” She cocked her head to the side.

I leaned even closer, taking a chance in the packed room and trailed my fingers down her spine. “I don’t think anything less than a century of pure bloodlines and rigorous poise could have produced a more perfect act. It’s impossible.” I met her gaze.

“Then why didn’t you dismiss me when you saw through my mask?”

Because I’m wearing one myself.

“Because I’ve seen what’s hiding inside, and it’s not the usual elitist crap. You fascinate me.” I dropped my voice to a whisper. “You’re not like them.” I nodded at the rest of the room.

She turned into me, her lips nearly touching my ear. “How do you know?”

“Because I’ve worn a mask my whole life, so I can see right through yours.”

Her soft cheek touched mine. As she pulled back, my stubble caught on her skin, causing a slight burn between us. There was so much in a glance, and then it was gone. She smiled and nodded. It was all the conformation I needed.

My gaze barely strayed from her for the next hour. She would look over, and I wouldn’t look away. We held a silent conversation with our eyes, and I wanted to get lost with her. She couldn’t possibly feel what I was. But it was hard to imagine something so intense being one sided.

She trailed her fingers up my thigh, and I dropped my eyes from her face for the first time, shocked at how close her hand was to my groin.

“What are you doing?” I hissed under my breath.

She used her left hand to scribble out a message on the screen her scan bracelet projected onto her arm. It was barely legible. I have to combat your staring somehow.

I swiped my hand over her arm to erase the screen then wrote with a finger, So, you decide to arouse me?

She grinned coyly, turning her arm to tease with her fingers again. I narrowed my eyes and growled. She retracted her hand and skimmed over the image of my words, touching them, before she erased them.

She wrote, Something tells me you’re not used to someone who can match you at your game.

She was right. I’d experienced two types of women: those who dropped their clothes instantly and those searching for husbands. Those kinds were all about the hook. Neither had held my interest. A beautiful body was nice to look at, and I had given in to many, men and women, but I’d learned none of them held my attention, so I stopped trying.

I grabbed her hand as it moved to my hip, pulling it to my lips so I could kiss her palm. Strands of blonde hair fell in her face as she smiled, and I used my other hand to tuck them behind her ear.

Pulling her hand down from my lips, I used the screen on her arm again. Spend the day with me?

She looked from the words to me and back. I could hear Jacob sigh from the other side of her. I wanted to snarl at him to stay out of it.

I placed my hand over the screen holding her arm. My skin prickled. We weren’t two people meeting for the first time. Whatever she was, our souls were the same. I had known her before, and I couldn’t let it go.

She dropped her blue eyes to my hand and tapped it. I moved it and she wrote...

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