Cole shrugs. “If he’s smart, he’s laying low. And besides, he killed four girls, one more than usual. He should be satiated.”
I don’t like Erin being grouped in as one of the four, like she’s just another grape on the stem shoveled into Shaw’s mouth. Erin had talent—she made watercolors so beautiful you could weep. She was funny and blunt. She loved to tease me and Frank, but never to the point of actually hurting our feelings.
She loved her life, and Shaw had no fucking right to take it from her.
I’m sure all those other girls were just as unique, just as wonderful, if only I’d had the chance to know them.
“I want that cop to catch him,” I say. “I want him to rot in a cell for a hundred years.”
Cole doesn’t bother to reply. We both know his opinion on the subject.
We’re pulling up to the gallery. The line stretches all the way down the street. People crane toward the windows, several girls trying to take pictures through the glass.
“Why is it so busy?” I ask Cole. It was supposed to be a cocktail party, nothing out of the ordinary.
Cole marches right up to the doors. He’s probably never waited in a line in his life.
Betsy Voss waves us inside. She’s bouncing with excitement, her body as buoyant as her bouffant of lacquered hair.
“Come in, come in!” she trills. “You’ve got to see this, Cole. You’re going to love it!”
Venom – Little Simz
Spotify → geni.us/no-devil-spotify
Apple Music → geni.us/no-devil-apple
The reason for her excitement, and everyone else’s, immediately becomes apparent.
The entire gallery space is filled top to bottom, wall to wall, with a brilliant technicolor spiderweb. The thick strands are woven up and down, all around, with large enough gaps between that the guests can walk through, clambering in and under the installation. You’re forced to interact with it, to grip and touch the thick ropes. The puffy, loose-woven wool manages to look sticky and dripping, but also soft and enticing. The eye-searing shades of magenta, lemon, and teal are so vivid and wet that the strands might have been spray-painted via some sort of pressure-cannon.
The aggressive color envelops you, making your eyes burn and your head spin. You’re trapped inside a rainbow prism that seems to go on and on forever, disorienting and intoxicating.
Cole stares around at the installation, not touching anything.
We both know the architect of this piece. The signature colors give it away. But it’s nothing I could have imagined from him.
“Guess he’s not laying low,” I murmur to Cole.
Cole is unusually silent. I think I know the reason why.
Cole’s disdain for Shaw has been apparent to me since before I ever met either of them. He’s never spoken of Shaw’s work with any level of respect.
But for the first time, Shaw has created something truly impressive. Something even Cole can’t deny.
It’s slapping us right in the face.
Marcus York comes bustling up to Cole, his frizzy orange hair puffing out on both sides like a clown wig, an impression not helped by York’s short legs and too-tight waistcoat stretched across his large belly.
“Oh ho, Cole, someone’s putting you on notice!”
“What?” Cole snaps irritably.
“This is Shaw’s bid for the sculpture in Corona Heights Park! If chosen, he’ll do a larger version of this. And I haven’t even received your design yet. The deadline is this week …”
“I know the deadline,” Cole hisses.
“Well, better hurry,” York says, his eyes glinting wickedly. “You’ll have to come up with something good to beat this …”
York hurries away again, probably spurred by the murderous look on Cole’s face.
My own feelings of repulsion are so strong that I find it hard to speak. I feel exactly as Shaw intended: enveloped in this web, trapped by it, screamed at from all sides.
Cole says, “He would never have had the confidence to do something like this before.”
“What do you mean?” I ask, turning to look at Cole’s black stare.
“Everything Shaw has ever made is commercial.” Cole gestures around at the brilliant, dripping ropes. “You can’t sell this. It’s an experience.”
I nod slowly. “He’s leveling up.”
As if summoned by those words, Alastor Shaw himself materializes, striding toward us.
He navigates the web with confidence, easily maneuvering his bulk through the fluorescent strands.
Shaw glows with health and happiness. His golden hair, rich tan, and shining white teeth beam at us. His shoulders seem a mile wide as he stretches his arms open, greeting us in his booming voice.
“Mara! Cole! So glad to see you!”
He’s so loud that a dozen people turn to observe our meeting. Camera flashes wink at us. Everyone loves a tête-à-tête between their two favorite rivals.
We’re frozen in place. Trapped in his web. Watching the spider approach, grinning at us both.
“Cole.” Shaw slaps Cole on both shoulders, with such a loud sound that it feels like a detonation between us. “My oldest friend. Look at you. You know the thing I love about you? You’re unchanging. Your principles unwavering. That must be what Mara loves about you, too.”
While I still don’t know everything about the dynamic between these two, I understand the barb all too well.
Shaw abducted me as a provocation. To try to tempt Cole into breaking his own rules.
And it worked. God, how it worked. Better than Shaw ever could have dreamed.
Cole is breaking every rule for me, and me for him.
We’ve ensnared each other, more deeply than Shaw could ever have dreamed.
Cole is changing. And Shaw is mocking Cole’s pretensions of discipline and stability. I see how his words dig under Cole’s skin.
Still, Cole stands silent—it’s too true to refute.
Now Shaw turns toward me. It’s my turn for a blast of his smug sarcasm.
“Mara,” he says, his face twisted up in an expression of mock sorrow. “I heard about your friend. Erin, wasn’t it? You know she and I had a fling once. She was quite the wildcat.” He winks at me. “You know what I mean.”
His pretend pout has turned into a lascivious grin.