Phei couldnât stop laughing.
Not the polite chuckle people fake at parties. Not even the sharp bark of someone whoâs just heard a good joke.
This was deep, ugly, chest-rattling laughterâthe kind that starts in the diaphragm and keeps coming like itâs trying to claw its way out of your ribcage. Wave after merciless wave until his abs burned, his eyes streamed, and he had to brace both hands on the edge of the desk he was perched on just to stop himself sliding off and hitting the floor in a heap.
"Oh my
gods
," he wheezed, wiping at his face with the heel of his hand. "This isâthis is actually happening. You actuallyâ" Another convulsion of laughter choked him off. "You actually brought
muscles
."
Derek stood framed in the doorway of the empty classroom like a man whoâd walked into his own funeral and found the coffin already occupied.
Flanking him were three boys who looked like theyâd been custom-ordered from Central Casting under the listing
"Disposable High-School Enforcers â Intimidation Package, Extra Testosterone."
Big. Broad; builds that came from years of varsity tackling drills, creatine binges, and the unshakable teenage delusion that sheer
mass
equals
invincibility.
The one on the leftâwhite kid, neck like a fire hydrantâactually cracked his knuckles.
Cracked his fucking knuckles
. Like this was 1987 and heâd just stepped off the set of a
Steven Seagal straight-to-VHS.
Phei laughed so hard he nearly aspirated his own spit.
"Stop fucking
laughing
," Derek snarled, voice low and dangerous.
"I
canât
â" Phei pressed the flat of his palm to his sternum, trying to force air back into lungs that refused to cooperate. "I literally
cannot
. Do you have any conceptâ
any
conceptâhow clockwork-predictable you are? I literally set a timer when I sat down here. Thought, â
Derek will show up in forty-five seconds with at minimum two
meatheads
in tow.â
And you arrive in
forty-three
. With
three
."
He dragged in a shaky breath, grinning like a man whoâd just won the lottery and the prize was watching someone elseâs life detonate. "You
over-delivered,
mate. Iâm genuinely touched."
Derekâs jaw flexed so hard the tendons stood out like steel cables under skin.
He stepped fully into the room. His three shadows fanned out behind him in a practiced semicircle. The door kicked shut with a heavy
thud
that echoed like a gavel.
"You think this is funny?"
"I think this is
comedy gold
." Phei stayed exactly where he wasâperched on the teacherâs desk, legs swinging lazily, ankles crossed, posture so relaxed it bordered on disrespectful.
Four large, hostile bodies closing the distance like wolves around a lamb that had forgotten how to bleat. "I think youâre about to launch into the classic extortion script:
âYou know things you shouldnât know, hand them over or we hurt you.â
Then your designated grabberâ"
He pointed lazily at Fire-Hydrant Neck "âis going to try to put hands on me. And then things are going to become
very
,
very
educational for everyone involved. And Iâm going to savour every millisecond."
"You cocky little shitâ"
"Ah-ah."
Phei raised one finger, still smiling. "We havenât
reached
the
credible-threat
portion of the programme yet. First you have to monologue. Set the stakes. Establish motive. Then you
threaten.
Basic
dramatic structure,
Derek. Donât
skip
steps."
Derekâs fists clenched until the knuckles bleached white.
It was almost too easy. Almost unfair.
Phei had run the probabilities before the first whisper about Derekâs
clandestine
meeting with
Renee Harlow
hit the grapevine. The second David started dropping breadcrumbs outside
that
particular classroom door.
Two paths forward.
Path A: Derek goes straight to Brett and Anderson. Falls on his knees. Swears the audio is deepfake,
AI-generated,
edited, anything. Begs for trust. That path requires emotional intelligence, composure under fire, an unshakable bond that survives hearing your best friend agree to sell your soul to save his own.
Derek possesses none of those things.
And he knewâ
knew
âthat Brett and Andersonâs first response to betrayal would not be dialogue. It would be
knuckles.
Then questions. Maybe. If any
teeth
remained.
Worse?
Brett and Anderson were already sprinting through the east wing like bloodhounds with a fresh scent. They would reach Danton. They would reach Zack, Kyle. They would reach the rest of the Seven.
And then Derek would not be dealing with a journalist. He would be dealing with an institution whose idea of problem-solving involved private airstrips and beating the crap out if their traitorous bestie before he even talks.
So, Path B: leverage.
Renee had told him to fuck the devil himself if he had to. Derekâpanicked, cornered, thinking with adrenal glands instead of
cortex
âhad done exactly what cornered animals do.
Heâd gone looking for the...
devil.
And who at Ashford Elite knew more about the Seven than anyone breathing? Who had appeared from the
charity-case
gutter and, in less than a month, amassed a private arsenal of secrets that should have been entombed under concrete and NDAs?
Who had seduced two of the most untouchable girls in the school, accumulated power like interest on a blood debt, and moved through their world like heâd been reading the script while everyone else was still learning lines?
Phei!
Phei had selected this classroom forty minutes earlier. Positioned himself last two minutes in the precise corridor Derek would have to cross if he wanted to avoid the hunting parties currently tearing the east wing apart looking for him.
Timing. Positioning.
The twin pillars of any successful ambush.
"Fine," Derek bit out, voice tight as a garrotte. "You want context? Hereâs your fucking context. You have dirt on Brett and Anderson. I donât know how you got it. I donât know what sick game youâre playing. But you have it. And youâre going to hand it over."
"Am I, though?"
"You are."
Derek took another step forward. His enforcers mirrored him. The circle shrank. "Because right now a journalist has my life in a hydraulic press, and the only way I walk out of that press with my spine intact is if I feed her something
bigger
. Something that makes whatever she has on me look like playground gossip. Problem is, I know everything but no evidence to back it. But you do."
"And you believe I can supply that."
"I
know
you can." Derekâs eyes were fever-bright, pupils blown with desperation and the kind of fear that turns rational people into cornered predators. "Everyone fucking knows. Youâve been hoarding secrets since the day you crawled out of whatever gutter they found you in. Donât even try to deny it. Iâve seen how you watch. How you listen. You know things about usâthings that should be impossible. Youâve
threatened
us with them."
"Maybe Iâm simply observant."
"Maybe youâre a dead man walking if you donât start talking.
Right. Fucking. Now."
There it was. The threat. Right on schedule.
Phei tilted his head. The smile fadedâslowly, deliberatelyâuntil only something colder, quieter, more surgical remained. The laughter was gone. Completely. As if it had never existed.
Phei smiled again. Smaller. Sharper. The smile of someone who has already calculated the exact number of seconds until blood hits tile.
"Let me make sure I have this
crystal
clear."
His voice was calm, almost conversational. "You want me to hand over information capable of ending Brett Castellano and Anderson. Two of the most
untouchable legacies
in this school. Sons of families that could have me disappeared so thoroughly my dental records would be classified. Sons of families whose private security details carry
suppressors
and black budgets and zero qualms about making problems vanish over international waters."
"Thatâs exactly what I want.
Yes."
"And your opening moveâ"
Phei gestured lazily at the three slabs of meat behind Derek "âis to
threaten
me with
violence.
With
this
."
"Itâs not a threat." Derek jerked his chin toward his enforcers. "Itâs a promise."
"Interesting."
Phei stopped smiling.