Chapter 11
OLIVER
A Little Bird Told Us ...
hell hath no fury like a woman scorned!
Or a group of women scorned on behalf of our Shoreditch Pulse Tok bride, after a comical scene was reported at Brick Lane Market today.
A man (who looked suspiciously like the Pulse Tok cheating groom) was forced to abandon his takeout and run when an angry mob began to bombard him with fruit snatched from a nearby market stall.
Bystanders report the women had been celebrating a friend’s upcoming nuptials (bottomless brunch, maybe?) when they spotted him and reached for their weapons of choice. Some also struck up a chant of “dirty [expletive] french fry” while taunting him with their pinkie fingers.
Do we have our first sighting of our husband-not-to-be?
Did somebody catch it for posterity? Or us? Please say you did!
Come on, my lovely London flock—name that bride and groom!
Perhaps . . .
I put down my phone, conflicted. It’s only a matter of time before the gutter press are camped on Eve’s doorstep, given weddings are a matter of public record. Even the ones that don’t quite go through.
It still baffles me how Atherton managed to get her to the altar. Still, there’s nothing like a little outside persuasion. It can only help my cause, though it pains me to see that Atherton has put another woman through shit for his own means.
But Eve is made of altogether sterner stuff than Lucy.
Lucy. I put down my whisky glass, my thoughts turning as fiery as the liquid sliding down my throat. The man is a snake—a waste of flesh and air—and I have no fucking idea how women are continually taken in by him. Even if the messages he left on my phone do sound quite sincere. Not that I believe them for a minute. But it made my heart glad to hear him beg, because what he did to Lucy, involving her in his schemes, tearing us apart, makes me want to return the favor. It also makes my fingers itch with the desire to squeeze his windpipe, to make him feel some sense of the pain he caused.
As I pick up my phone, Lucy’s words echo in my head. But I love him.
I’m not sure if love turns people blind to reality or just temporarily stupid. Probably the latter.
Flicking to my voicemails, I recall the desperation in his tone.
“Please, Deubel. Let me speak to her. If you’ve touched her, I’ll—”
“I fucking love her!”
Had he professed to love Lucy with the same intensity? I put my phone away, disgusted with myself. With him. My own love for Lucy turned me blind for a while. I’ve since had my eyes opened. Very wide.
Reaching for my drink, I throw the rest of it back.
Now, Eve is an interesting proposition. A different kettle of fish. She’s strong, feisty, and lovely. She can be quite determined, with the right incentive, I know.
She will bend for me. I’ll make sure of it.
It will be such a delicious justice, turning Atherton’s plan back on himself.