Chapter 389: The Only One
Chapter 389: The Only One
The silence held for exactly four seconds.
Four seconds of held breath, locked joints, eyes wide in the particular paralysis of people who’d just witnessed something irreversible and weren’t yet sure they wanted to process it.
Then the dam broke.
“What the fuck—”
“Did he just—”
“Oh my God, did you hear what he said to her? The thing about—”
“—wanted to kill himself, he said that out loud, he actually—”
“—her face, did you see her face—”
The VIP general area detonated into the tightly controlled pandemonium only Paradise gossip could achieve. These were Legacy children and Downtown elite—they didn’t scream.
Amber reached Nastya first.
The Romano girl hadn’t moved from the couch. Her eyes were glassy and unfocused, both hands pressed flat to her own thighs as though sheer pressure could stop them trembling.
The warm, confident girl who’d looked at Phei five minutes earlier like she’d finally been seen had been replaced by someone who’d just watched that same boy almost become something that didn’t belong in the same reality as strobe lights and bottle service.
“Nastya.”
Amber’s hand landed on her shoulder—firm, grounding. “Hey. Look at me.”
Nastya lifted her gaze slowly.
“What happened to him?” The whisper cracked on the last word. “The cold. His eyes. That wasn’t—that wasn’t normal anger, Amber. That was something else.”
Amber didn’t answer. She had no answer to give.
Gianna appeared behind the couch like a storm front—shouldering through the college girls’ security perimeter without a word, because Gianna Romano didn’t request permission for anything, least of all when her big sister looked like she’d stared into an open grave.
“Nastya.” One word.
Nastya managed a nod. Shaken. Pale. But intact.
Gianna’s eyes swept the room—locked on the empty space where Phei had stood, on the frost still weeping off leather in slow, crystalline tears—then returned to Nastya. Her hand settled on her sister’s shoulder and didn’t move.
Yuki Tanaka stood near the bar, phone clutched in both hands like a diagnostic tool.
She wasn’t recording. She was analysing. Gaze flicking between the fractal frost patterns etched into the couch seams, the sudden condensation blooming on nearby glasses, the faint milky discolouration on the marble where ambient temperature had plunged past what physics considered polite.
“That’s not possible,” she murmured, more to the air than anyone.
Natasha Sinclair stood beside her—arms crossed, face diplomat-calm, mind already running parallel contingency tracks the way her mother ran war rooms.
“Whatever it is,” Natasha said under her breath, “it stays in this room. Agreed?”
Yuki met her eyes.
“Tash, I don’t even know what it is.”
“Exactly. So it stays here.”
Emily Hartwell was already three steps into damage control.
She’d materialised beside David Lockwood in the heartbeat between incident and aftermath, her hand closing over his phone with the polite but unbreakable grip of someone who would snap bones if diplomacy failed.
“Tell me you didn’t film that.”
David’s face—for once—held no smirk, no performative outrage, no gossip-king gleam.
“I didn’t film it.”
“David.”
“I didn’t.” He flipped the phone screen-up. Black. Dead. “Some things aren’t content, Em. Even I draw the line somewhere.”
She searched his expression for two long seconds. Believed him. Released his hand. Moved on.
Landon and Brian stood shoulder-to-shoulder near the VIP velvet rope.
They hadn’t spoken since the frost hit. Both still recalibrating—two boys who’d spent the afternoon trading passes with Phei, laughing at his trash talk, clinking bottles in celebration, and were now quietly rewriting every assumption they’d carried about the guy they’d called brother on the court.
“His eyes changed colour,” Brian said at last. Quiet. Factual. The tone of someone stating a fact they wished they could un-state.
Landon nodded once.
“Yeah.”
“Like… completely.”
“Yeah.”
A beat.
“We’re still his boys though, right?” Landon asked, voice low enough that only Brian could hear.
Brian turned to look at him. “Obviously. Don’t be stupid.”
Landon exhaled. “Cool. Just checking.”
And at the far edge of the booth they’d never vacated—Paige and Brielle Heavenchild watched the fallout with expressions they were trying—and failing—to keep neutral.
They were smiling.
Small, private smiles tucked behind champagne flutes raised to lips that barely touched the liquid. The smiles of two girls who’d been stonewalled from approaching Phei by Victoria and Nastya’s coordinated power play—the sneers, the security cordon, the casual deployment of rank and privilege.
And who’d just watched the architect of that blockade get publicly vivisected by the very boy she’d tried to claim.
“Begone, thot,” Paige murmured, biting the inside of her cheek to keep the grin from splitting her face.
Brielle took a long, deliberate sip.
“You’re just wearing a shorter skirt.”
They couldn’t help it. It was wrong and petty and they knew it and they smiled anyway, because watching Victoria Maxton—composed, cruel, untouchable Victoria—get humiliated in front of an entire VIP section by the boy she’d tortured for years was a flavour of justice that tasted better than anything the Crimson Eden Noire’s bar could serve.
And underneath the satisfaction—quiet, private, shared only between twins in the language that twins speak without words—was relief.
Relief that they hadn’t been the ones sitting next to him when that cold rolled in.
Relief that the anger in those eyes—eyes that had turned black, that had lost every trace of warmth and humanity—hadn’t been aimed at them.
Thank God, Paige thought, and meant it with her whole chest.
Thank God it wasn’t us.
Phei was gone.
Not in the building anymore. Or at least not in any part of it that the general population could access. His kryptonite—whoever she was, whatever soft-voiced miracle had pulled him back from the edge—had taken his hand and led him away, and Sierra and Maddie and Delilah had followed because what else could they do?
They couldn’t calm him. That much was clear to everyone who’d watched—two of his own women, his claimed harem, the girls who shared his bed and his body and his trust, had physically held him and begged him to stop and it hadn’t been enough.
Someone else had done what they couldn’t.
And that truth hung in the air like the last of the frost—melting, but not gone.
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