BEFORE
The room is silent except for the electric piano drifting around us, the floor tilting and spinning like a merry-go-round. It almost feels like we’re swept up in it, unable to escape, moving around and around with the music as it mounts louder in our ears.
I think I might be sick.
“Well?” Lucy asks, and I feel myself blink. I look over at Levi, at his stunned expression, then back at Lucy. Her eyes haven’t left his for even a second.
“Fuck,” Lucas mutters. “Way to kill the buzz, Luce.”
“I’m being serious,” she says, leaning back, the tension in the room lifting slightly like that simple shift in posture somehow altered the very air. I look around and notice how everyone else seems to mimic what she does exactly: the placement of her hands, the tip of her head, all of us subconsciously miming her movements. “If you could kill someone and know for a fact you wouldn’t get caught, would you do it?”
Levi lifts his hand to the back of his neck, massaging it gently. His cheeks are flushed and he won’t look at me, he can’t look at me, because he knows what I’m thinking. What we’re both thinking.
“I don’t know,” he says at last. “I’m a lover, not a fighter.”
And there’s that word again—love—or at least a derivative of it. I don’t know if Levi actually loved Eliza, and to be honest, I don’t care. I loved her, too, but that didn’t stop me from hurting her; from making her feel guilty about the things she wanted. The life she craved. In fact, I think I hurt her because I loved her—that’s what people do, after all. Destroy the very thing they desire the most.
“Bullshit,” Lucy spits. “That’s bullshit.”
“Would you?” Levi shoots back, suddenly angry, and I can’t help but flinch at his abrupt change in tone, the way Lucy so easily burrowed beneath his skin.
“Of course I would,” she says, satisfied with his reaction. “We all would.”
We turn to look at her, tired eyes trying to focus, and I wait for her to smile, let out a laugh. Instead, she simply crosses her legs before picking up the pin and twisting it in her hands.
“The only thing that makes bad things bad are the consequences, right? Think about it. The fact that we’re all here right now means we’re all a little morally loose.”
She grins as she says it and everyone is quiet, looking around, suddenly feeling so exposed. I can’t help but flush as I take in the empty bottles we pulled from the bar; the liquor we drank that isn’t ours. The way we’re all sitting here in this place we don’t belong, acting like we do. She’s right, I realize. If there’s one thing Lucy’s taught me since the moment we met, it’s that once you bend one rule without consequence, it feels a lot easier to break the others.
“If we could indulge in life’s dirty deeds without the repercussions, we’d be animals,” she continues. “We are animals. All of us.”
“I disagree,” James chimes in, and I turn to look at him, though I’m barely listening. Not really, not anymore. I’m still thinking about Lucy, entranced by her confidence. Mesmerized by the way she asserts herself with no apology before inevitably bringing everyone around to her side. “That’s not the way it works.”
“It’s not?” she asks.
“No, it’s not,” he says. “Morally, most people would draw the line before killing someone.”
“Moral is subjective.”
“Moral is straightforward,” he argues. “It’s right versus wrong—”
“Nothing in life is straightforward.”
“Okay,” Nicole juts in, an uncomfortable twinge in her voice. Her eyes keep darting over to Levi, his long, tanned legs knocking into hers. “We get it. You’ve made your point.”
“No.” Lucy shakes her head. “I haven’t. And my point isn’t about morality, anyway. My point is that if you claim you’re above killing someone, it’s only because you haven’t found a reason to do it yet.”
She looks at me and winks, a shot of adrenaline spiking through my chest.
“We break rules when we decide the cost of getting caught doesn’t outweigh the reward of doing it, right?” she asks. “You can say the same for everything. Once you find the right person, the right reason … the scales start to tip.”
We’re all quiet, considering it in our drunken stupor. The idea of it like some distant dream.