“Three!”
 
 And I place my hand on the sticky bar, my legs broken apart at first, but when I find my balance, I put them together. Straight, like a board. I glance over, and notice Nikolai in the same position.
 
 Don’t fall.
 
 There’s nothing that says I can’t beat him. The cheers from the crowd jumble together, but I hear my name, from multiple, indistinguishable voices.
 
 “Thora! Thora!”
 
 What?
 
 My eyes flicker to Nik again. And even upside-down, his curved lips are unmistakable. Very rarely does anyone root against the God of Russia. And he’s happy. Really happy that they are.
 
 “Thora! Thora!”
 
 I shut my eyes, concentrating, smiling, unable to stop my pulse from speeding. My muscles ache, pull and stretch, but I ignore the pain. Mentally sound, I stay at peace, motionless and still.
 
 Thirty minutes pass and my eyes snap open at the gasps and “Ohhhhhs!”
 
 I turn my head.
 
 Nikolai dropped.
 
 No way.
 
 He sits on the bar, his forehead beaded with sweat. Looking shocked, he shakes his head over and over. I bet he’d already picked out a place to pierce me. When he sees me as I sit next to him, he lets out a short, humored laugh. “You’re beaming!” The crowds are so noisy that I barely distinguish the words.
 
 “I can’t believe you lost!”
 
 “You won!” he rephrases.
 
 I won. My heart somersaults. Which means… “Tattoo or piercing?!”
 
 He runs a hand through his hair, still in disbelief. Nikolai is not the kind of man who’d lose on purpose, even for his girlfriend. This is a true win, one that everyonein the club sees. It’s insane. The whole night.
 
 “Tattoo,” he says.
 
 My smile fades. I have no idea how to ink a tattoo on someone. I could permanently mark him with a messy blob.
 
 He leans into me. “I’ll guide you.” And then he motions for the tattoo gun from someone, and he asks them for another thing—his words lost behind me.
 
 I scan his body, and it takes me a quick second to figure out what I want to draw. Where I want to draw it.At least you’re sober.
 
 Yeah—I’m not sure my sloppy self would tattoo something pretty.
 
 Nikolai passes me…a magic marker. “Draw it first.”
 
 I nod, relaxing at this idea. Without hesitation, I straddle him. On the bar. Whistling—everyone is whistling. Including Camila, who even winks at me and I read her lips:get ‘em, Thora.
 
 Timo is tossing dollar bills at us, and John is muttering things—that I can only assume are variations ofthis is so stupid and crazy and is that tattoo gun sterile?
 
 Nikolai turns my chin, so that I focus on him, his eyes descending into mine. “What’s it going to be?”
 
 I open my mouth to tell him my plan.
 
 “Show me,” he says.
 
 “You don’t want to know first?” I question.