Page 31 of My Dark Prince

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Ollie vB:Haven’t I suffered enough today?

Zach Sun:Not nearly. Do you need us to bring anything?

Ollie vB:I NEED YOU TO NOT COME.

Zach Sun:See you shortly.

Chapter Fourteen

Oliver

Jinx. Harbinger. Curse.

I brought misfortune to everyone I cared about.

Then. Now. Nothing had changed.

The legs of the cheap plastic waiting room seat clattered beneath me each time my heel bounced over the linoleum floor. I rapped my fingers on my knees to the rhythm ofThe Sleeping Beauty.

I should’ve seen it for what it was: a warning. I’d managed to go fifteen years without hearing it. Yet, the memory of dancing to it with Briar had resurfaced a few days ago at a party after a Monegasque heiress tried to lure me into a quickie in the bathroom of a well-known palace. The waltz came on, ruining the entire moment.

The clock above the reception area glared back at me.

Two in the morning.

A sigh sailed past my lips, fanning the scrubs top I’d nabbed from a passing RN. Even though I still wore my pitifully drenched jeans – the same ones I’d rescued Briar in – I didn’t feel cold. Thanks to the influx of adrenaline, I didn’t feel anything at all. Only the familiar whir of anxiety, excitement, and desperation that attacked my gut whenever Briar and I occupied the same zip code.

The paramedics had let me accompany her in the ambulance, probably because I, myself, hadn’t looked too hot. By the time we arrived, Briar had lost consciousness. The doctorshad filed me into a separate treatment bay, checking my vitals and siccing two hostile nurses to fight me over ditching my shirt for something dry.

Since then, I’d occupied the corner of the waiting area on the seat nearest to Briar’s room. Here, they interrogated me, which went something like this:

Nurse: We can’t reach her emergency contacts.

Me: Her emergency contacts are two negligent flaming assholes.

Nurse: Nonetheless, we cannot reach them, but we’ll continue to try.

Me: Don’t bother. Her parents have been MIA since puberty. I’m practically her next of kin.

But was I? Better question: Should I be?

Two hours later, and I still sat in the same chair, waiting for an update.

Please don’t get into a vegetative coma. I fucking hate making big decisions. I can barely make up my mind about what I want for breakfast.

Tipping my head back, I banged it against the wall and shut my eyes. Hospitals depressed me. A potent mixture of bleach, antiseptic, and the indescribable scent of misery. A cocktail I’d grown quite familiar with over the years, sitting for hours outside operation rooms and intensive care units.

Through the pitter-patter of footsteps, phones ringing, and the staccato beeps of cardiac monitors, a door whined open.

“Mr. von Bismarck?”

I shot upright.

Doctor Cohen breezed past rows of seats, stopping just short of mine. For the most part, I took pride in not judging people by appearances, but if I had to choose a doctor to treat Briar, it’d be him. Bald. Wrinkled. Stern. For all I knew, he could be anywhere north of fifty-five and south of eight-three. Didn’t matter. So long as he wasn’t fresh out of residency and due for his first fuck up.

I used the armrests to push up to my feet, surprised by my own unsteadiness. “What’s up?”

“The nurses informed me you’re Ms. Auer’s next of kin.”