The List

“Yes, Mr. Fields,” John answered.

I took the back door into the alley, unbuttoning and rolling up my sleeves as I went. The air smelled like trash, but there was a faint freshness on the breeze coming over the buildings. Nearby, lower Manhattan traffic honked, and packs of partying twenty and thirtysomethings chattered. It all seemed so far away though. I was in another world, about to exact my revenge on a man who had no right to exist.

The whole security team knew about my habit. They supported it, you might say. They helped me find the guys who needed to be taught lessons. They were all too happy to do it too. Each member of Enigma’s staff received a handsome paycheck. Some of them took home more than twice the industry standard.

I waited in the alley, feeling the calmest I had since Riley rejected me. It may have been a shitty night, but I’d end it with a fine dose of justice. I was taking one wrong in the world and making it right.

The side exit opened, and the douche stumbled out the door. “But I didn’t do anything,” he protested.

John just slammed the door shut. Mr. Douche turned around, a sullen look on his face. He started walking toward the end of the alley but stopped when he saw me. His eyes lit up. “Hey. You’re the guy who got me the champagne, right?”

I didn’t answer.

He hooked his thumb over his shoulder. “Your dumbass security guard just threw me out! Can you believe it? What a fucking idiot! I need to get back in there, man. I just met this fine-ass girl...”

“You’re not going back in there.”

His face fell. “Huh? What are you talking about?”

I folded my arms across my chest. “How often do you go out and offend women? A few nights a week? Or do you make it a daily habit?”

“What are you talking about?”

“Turn out your pockets.”

“Why?”

“Let’s see what you’ve got in there. Or were you planning on using brute-force tonight and foregoing the date rape drug?”

He recoiled. “Fuck you.”

It was what I’d been waiting for. I knew the guy might not have drugs on him, but several men I’d fought before had. Knowing I was putting such losers in their place made the confrontations doubly satisfying.

He stepped to the side, about to go around me, but I blocked his path. He froze, his upper lip beginning a slow curl. “What? Are you going to fight me?” he demanded. “You’ll get your fancy shirt dirty. You sure you’re ready for that?”

In response, I laid him one across the jaw. He went down, his right shoulder slamming into the pavement. Fury pumped through me and combined with the fresh rawness in my knuckles. He was quick, getting up after just a second and coming right back at me. His agility and speed didn’t scare me though. They excited me. I loved it when they fought back, loved it when their anger and darkness showed on their faces.

I blocked his right hook and sent my fist into his gut. I’d found myself a formidable opponent, the kind who could keep me on my toes.

Even though the fight was a challenging one, each movement I made still felt rehearsed. I’d done this a million times before — not just behind the club, but in other places as well. My first fight had happened in the middle of the trailer park when I was ten years old. A kid called my dad a drunk. He was right, but that didn’t mean he should have said it. I made him pay with two of his teeth.

Since then, I’d made other men pay more for saying lesser things.

The douche punched me in the neck, taking me off guard. It had been a long time since I’d been hit, and the shock of it made me see stars. I sucked in a head clearing breath as I ducked and tripped him. His back met the ground, his legs flying into the air. I started to jump on top of him, to give it to him hard, but there was no need. I’d made my point. If I pushed any further, I might not be able to rein my anger in.

He sputtered and coughed. I stood a couple feet away and just watched him.

“Bastard,” he grunted. “You think you can just attack me and get away with it?”

“Who are you going to tell?” I countered. “You’re at my club, harassing my customers. That’s enough to make my security team not like you. And it’s their word against yours. I’d remember that before you think about going to the police.”

Realization dawned on his face. He was in my terrain. There was no upper hand to be gained. I was king of this whole land, and no one could take me down.

The guy climbed to his feet and backed away from me. There was a bit of blood trickling out of the corner of his mouth. He wiped it away and shook his head. “You’re fucking insane.”

If he only knew.

“Don’t come back here ever again. And forget about hitting on girls in clubs. They’re not interested in you. Trust me.”

He lifted his chin. “How are you going to stop me?”

“I have eyes in more places than this club.”

I didn’t have to expound on my contacts at many of Manhattan’s other upscale hangouts. The tone of my voice said everything. With wide eyes, he turned and scurried toward the street. Another rat running for cover.

I waited until I was sure he was gone, then I rapped on the side door. John met me with a bag of ice. Pressing it against my sore knuckles, I made my way back towards the innards of the club. This time I kept to the walls, not in the mood to talk to anyone.

The office was empty, Julian and Seth both gone. They knew about my part-time hobby, and like the staff, entertained it. I was a name in the real estate world, which meant that if a scandal were to get out about me, it would hurt my reputation. And one club owner’s reputation going down the drain would affect us all. Julian, Seth, Davis, and I didn’t always keep things clean, but we always remembered to act like we did.

I splashed my face with water in the office bathroom, wrapped a clean bandage around my bruised knuckles, and called my driver. He was in front of the club by the time I got there.

The drive to my penthouse seemed to take forever. The streets were starting to clear out, even most of the late-night owls and hardcore party kids calling it a night. I nodded to the doorman and took the elevator up to the top floor. The penthouse greeted me, cold and quiet. Just the way I liked it.

I didn’t spend much time at home, but when I did, it was welcome. My luxury apartment was a silent oasis in the middle of one of the craziest cities in the world. But now it felt different. Something wasn’t right.

Frantic energy still pulsed through me. The fight hadn’t calmed me one bit. Instead, I felt more amped up. I hovered by the living room’s bar but didn’t pour a drink. I already knew it wouldn’t do me any good. Instead, I took a long shower, hoping it would relax my tense muscles and put me to sleep.