Robin Wasserman
Wrath
The fourth book in the Seven Deadly Sins series, 2006
for Michelle Nagler and Bethany Buck, extraordinary editors who have given me an extraordinary opportunity
… let grief convert to anger; blunt not the heart, enrage it.
– William Shakespeare, Macbeth
And all I really want is some patience A way to calm the angry voice And all I really want is deliverance.
– Alanis Morissette, “All I Really Want”
Preface
Two weeks earlier…
Chapter 1
Harper burrowed deeper beneath the covers. How was she supposed to sleep with all that banging?
“Come on, Grace, open up.”
Damn her parents. Which part of “I don’t want to see anyone” did they not understand?
“We’re bored,” Kaia complained through the door.
“Come out and play with us!” Kane added, in that little-boy voice most girls found irresistible.
Harper Grace wasn’t most girls.
“Go away,” she shouted, her voice muffled by the pillow pressed over her head. “Please!”
With that, the door opened-and the covers flew off the bed.
“Time’s up, Grace,” Kane said, flinging away the comforter. “No more feeling sorry for yourself.”
“Screw you. I could have been naked under here!” Harper said indignantly, suddenly realizing that the ratty sweatpants and faded gray Lakers T-shirt was an even more embarrassing ensemble.
“Why else do you think I did it?” Kane asked, chuckling.
How could he laugh?
The three of them had worked so hard to split up Beth and Adam and, for an all too brief moment, they’d finally gotten everything they’d wanted. Kane got Beth. Harper got Adam. And Kaia… got to stir up some trouble, which seemed to be all she needed. But now? Everything had come to light, and gone to shit. They were alone. How could Kane laugh, when Harper could barely stand?
“What are
Harper sighed. Even the prospect of trading insults with her former rival didn’t deliver the jolt of energy it should have-not now that Kaia was one of only two friends that Harper had left. Some friends.
Not quite the Three Musketeers.
“We’re here to cheer you up,” Kane said. “So cheer.”
“Like it’s that easy,” Harper grumbled. Though, obviously, it had been for him.
“We even brought reinforcements,” he added, pulling a bottle of Absolut from his pocket with a magician-like flourish.
“What, is that your answer to everything?” Harper asked harshly. “If you hadn’t been so drunk last week, and opened your big mouth-”
“Children, children,” Kaia cut in, placing a perfectly manicured hand on Kane’s broad shoulder. “I thought we agreed we were going to move past all that unpleasantness, kiss and make up. Her voice was soft and light, with a razor’s edge-that was Kaia. Beautiful and dangerous.
As if Harper was scared of her.
“I don’t care what we agreed,” she shot back. “If Kane hadn’t opened his big, stupid mouth… if Beth and Adam hadn’t overheard his stupid bragging…” She couldn’t finish.
“And if I hadn’t opened
“Hey!” Kane protested. But he was smiling-the infamous Kane smirk, which not even heartbreak could wipe off his face.
“Thanks for the pick-me-up, guys,” Harper said, “but I’m not interested.You’re dismissed.”