Christian and I arrived in Kauai past dinnertime the next night.
Instead of venturing to the hotelâs restaurant, which would take too much effort, we ordered room service and settled in the villaâs living room.
True to form, Christian had taken one look at the room Delamonte booked for me and upgraded us to the last remaining villa.
I snuck a peek at him as we ate in companionable silence.
He lounged against his side of the couch, looking infuriatingly sexy with his rumpled shirt and tousled hair. Neither of us looked our best after traveling all day, but his dishevelment only made him hotter, not less.
âLike what you see?â he drawled.
âYes.â I made a point of looking around the gorgeous villa. It boasted stunning views of the Pacific, and the living room opened onto a furnished lanai, which in turn led directly to our private beach. âThis place is stunning.â
That wasnât what he was asking, but there was no need to inflate his ego. He knew I knew he was hot, so what was the point of saying it?
Christianâs knowing laugh warmed my stomach like decadent hot chocolate.
There was a certain magic in seeing him outside the confines of D.C. Like at Danteâs dinner, heâd slipped into a more relaxed version of himself.
No suit, easy laughter.
âI like this version of you.â I held my mug close to my mouth. âYouâre moreâ¦â I searched for the right word. âApproachable.â
A smile played at the corners of his mouth. âAm I?â
âLetâs put it this way. D.C. Christian looks like he would murder you if you cut him off in traffic. Hawaii Christian looks like he would give you a ride if he saw your car broken down on the side of the road.â
The rich sound of his amusement filled the corners of the room once more. âWeâve been in Hawaii for less than two hours.â
âExactly. Imagine what three days in paradise would do to you.â I took a thoughtful sip of tea. âDancing in a Hawaiian-print shirt? Joining me for sunrise yoga?
The possibilities are endless.â
âStella.â He leaned forward, his face serious. âThe day I wear a Hawaiian-print shirt is the day cows fucking fly.â
âYou never know at the rate technology is progressing. It could happen,â I said, undeterred. âYou know what your problem is?â
âPray do tell. Iâm on the edge of my seat.â
I ignored his unhelpful sarcasm. âYou take yourself too seriously, and you work too much. You should take more vacations, or at least connect with nature every once in a while. Itâs good for the soul.â
âItâs too late for my soul, Stella.â
Despite his light tone, I sensed he wasnât joking.
My smile faded. âSpoken like a true pessimist.â
âRealist.â
âCynic.â
âSkeptic.â Christianâs lips tugged up at my frown. âShall we continue playing thesaurus or move on to a more interesting topic?â
âWeâll move on, but only because I want to spare you the indignity of losing,â I said regally.
âThatâs very kind of you.â
I didnât appreciate the knowing laughter threaded through his voice, but I let it slide. He was paying for this beautiful villa, after all, and heâd saved me from spending ten hours in a cramped airline seat, watching old movies and trying to prevent my legs from falling asleep.
There were few things more uncomfortable than being a tall person in economy.
I sank deeper into the couch and deliberated on a good topic before I said, âTell me something about you I donât already know.â
Iâd forgiven Christian for shutting me out after Danteâs dinner, but I hadnât given up trying to pry more personal tidbits out of him. I didnât care if they were as simple as his favorite superhero growing up; I just wanted Knowing things about Christian wouldnât do much to protect my heart, but we were stuck together for the foreseeable future and I wanted to make the best of it.
Part of me expected him to evade the request per usual, but to my surprise, he answered readily. âI donât like dessert.â
A horrified gasp rose in my throat. â
dessert?â
âAll dessert,â he confirmed.
â
?â
âI donât have a sweet tooth.â
âThere are non-sweet desserts.â
âYes, and I donât like them.â He took a calm bite of his food while I stared at him in disbelief.
âI take back what I said. Your soul is definitely suspect. Itâs not normal for someone not to like dessert.â I searched for a plausible explanation. âMaybe you havenât met the right dessert yet.â
Who could hate baklava, cheesecake, and ice cream? The devil, that was who.
âPerhaps Iâll meet it at the same time I meet my soulmate,â Christian deadpanned.
âYou joke, but it could happen. And when it does, Iâllâ¦â I faltered.
Threats werenât my forte.
âYes?â He sounded like he was holding back another laugh.
âIâll never let you hear the end of it.â
âLooking forward to it.â Christian took pity on me after my lame response and switched subjects. âTime to reciprocate, Butterfly. Tell me something I donât know about you.â
âCanât you look up everything you want to know on one of your fancy computers?â I was only half joking.
âIâd rather hear it from you.â
For some reason, that sent a flutter through my chest.
Iâd planned on sharing something silly and lighthearted, like how I watched YouTube tarot readings when I felt down because the readers always put such a positive spin on things or how I color-coded my closet for fun because the result was so aesthetically pleasing.
Instead, I said, âSometimes, I fantasize about finding out I was adopted.â
Shame curdled in my gut. Iâd never, ever shared that sentiment with anyone, and hearing it aloud made my skin prickle with guilt.
I didnât come from a bad family. They were judgmental and had high expectations, but they werenât physically abusive. Theyâd paid for my college education in full, and I grew up in a nice house with nice clothes and nice vacations. Compared to a majority of people, I lived an incredibly privileged life.
But our lives were our own. There would always be people who were better and worse off than us. That didnât make our feelings any less valid. We could acknowledge how good we had it in some respects while criticizing other parts.
To his credit, Christian didnât condemn me for being an ungrateful brat. He didnât say anything at all.
Instead, he waited for me to finish with no judgment in his eyes.
âI would freak out if that actually happened, but itâs the fantasy of having another family out there thatâs moreâ¦like a family, I guess. Less competition, more emotional support.â I traced the rim of my mug with my finger. âSometimes, I wonder if my sister and I would be closer if my parents hadnât pitted us against each other so much. They didnât spend a lot of time with us because they were so busy with work, and the time they spend with us was focused on whichever child they could brag about the most. The one who had the best grades, the most impressive extracurriculars and college acceptancesâ¦Natalia and I were so busy trying to outshine each other growing up that we never connected with each other.â
A sad smile touched my lips. âNow sheâs a vice president at the World Bank and Iâm unemployed, soâ¦â I shrugged, trying not to picture dozens more family dinners where I sat in shame while my parents gushed over my sister.
That was, if I was even invited to future dinners. After my fight with them, I wasnât so sure.
âI never fit in with my family even when I was employed, anyway. Theyâre the practical ones. Iâm the one who spent my childhood staring out the window daydreaming about fashion and travel instead of stacking my resume with college-boosting activities. When I was fifteen, I created a manifestation board for Parsons, my dream college, and covered it with photos of the campus and a mock acceptance letter I typed up.â
My smile turned wistful at the memory of my optimistic teenage self. âIt worked. I received an actual acceptance letter my senior year, but I had to turn them down because my parents refused to pay for such an âimpractical degree.â So I ended up at Thayer.â
I didnât regret it. If I hadnât attended Thayer, I wouldâve never met Ava, Bridget, and Jules.
Still, sometimes I wondered what wouldâve happened had I attended Parsons. Would I have skipped the chapter of my life? Maybe. Would I already be a designer with multiple fashion shows under my belt? Less certain but probably.
âTake this from someone whoâs seen plenty of competitors come and go over the years,â Christian said, pulling me out of my thoughts. âYou canât measure your success based on someone elseâs progress. And Iâve met your family. Trust me, itâs better that you donât fit in.â
I let out a small laugh. âPerhaps.â
It felt good to get all that off my chest, and it helped that Christian and I werenât as close as I was to my girlfriends. It made me less self-conscious about the things I was sharing.
Sleep tugged at the edges of my consciousness, but I didnât want to go to bed when Christian and I were finally having a real conversation.
The shoot didnât start until late morning tomorrow anyway.
âWhat about your family?â I took another sip of tea. âWhat are they like?â
Christian never talked about his parents, and I hadnât spotted a single photo of them in his house.
âDead.â
The tea went down the wrong pipe. I spluttered out a series of coughs while Christian finished his dinner like he hadnât dropped a bombshell with the casualness of someone mentioning their family was out of town for the weekend.
âIâm so sorry,â I said once I recovered. I blinked away the tears from my coughing fit. âIâ¦I didnât know.â
It was an inane thing to say because of I hadnât known, or I wouldnât have asked, but I couldnât think of a better response.
Iâd assumed Christianâs parents lived in another city and/or he had a bad relationship with them. I never would have guessed he was an orphan.
âIt happened when I was thirteen, so donât feel too bad for me. It was a long time ago.â Despite his casual tone, his tight jaw and rigid shoulders told me he wasnât as unaffected as he pretended to be.
A deep ache blossomed in my chest. Thirteen was too young to lose oneâs parents.
age was too young.
I might be upset and frustrated with my family, but if I lost any of them, I would be devastated.
âThey were your parents. Thereâs no time limit to grieving the loss of family,â I said gently. I hesitated, then asked, âWho did you live with after theyâ¦â
âMy aunt raised me until she died when I was in college.â Christian answered my unfinished question. âIâve been on my own since.â
The ache spread until every part of me tingled with the need to comfort him.
He wouldnât respond well to a hug, but words could be just as, if not more, powerful.
âDonât pity me, Stella,â he said, tone dry. âI prefer being alone.â
âMaybe, but thereâs a difference between being alone and being .â The former was the absence of physical company; the latter was the absence of emotional and interpersonal support.
I liked being alone too, but only in the first sense of the word.
âItâs okay to feel sad,â I added softly. âI promise I wonât tell anyone.â
I didnât ask how his parents died. I could tell we were already stretching the limits of his willingness to share, and I didnât want to destroy the fragile intimacy of the moment.
Christian stared at me with an imperceptible expression.
âIâll keep that in mind,â he finally said, his voice a shade rougher than usual.
I expected him to end the conversation there, but to my surprise, he continued without me prompting him.
âMy father was the reason I got into computers. He was a software engineer, and my mother was a school administrator. In many ways, they were the quintessential middle-class American family. We lived in a nice suburban house. I played Little League, and every Friday night, we ordered pizza and played board games.â
I held my breath, so entranced by the rare glimpse into his childhood I was afraid to breathe in case it broke the spell.
âThe only thing that didnât fit into this picture,â Christian said, âwas their relationship. My parents loved each other. Madly. Deeply. More than anyone else on the planet.â
Of all the things Iâd expected him to say, that didnât even rank in the top thousand, but I swallowed my questions and let him continue.
âI grew up hearing the crazy tales of their courtship. How my father wrote my mother a letter every day while he was studying abroad and trekked two miles to the post office in the mornings because he didnât trust the university mailing system. How she ran away from home when her parents threatened to cut her off if she didnât break up with him because theyâd wanted her to marry the son of a wealthy local businessman instead. She eventually made up with my grandparents, but instead of throwing a big wedding, my parents eloped and moved to a little town in Northern California. They had me less than a year later.â
The haze of memories darkened Christianâs eyes. âThey settled into what outsiders might consider an ordinary life, but they never lost that fire for each other even after I was born.â
Most people dreamed of the kind of love his parents had, but he spoke about it like itâd been a curse, not a blessing.
âYet you donât believe in love,â I said.
How was that possible? Most peopleâs cynicism toward love came from seeing it stripped down to the barest skeleton of what it once was. Ugly divorces, broken promises, tearful fights. But it sounded like his parents had been a shining example of what it be.
âNo.â The caustic cut of Christianâs smile across his face raised goosebumps on my arms. âBecause what my parents had wasnât love. It was ego and destruction disguised as affection. A drug they kept chasing because it gave them a high they couldnât get anywhere else. It clouded their judgment to the detriment of themselves and everyone around them, and it gave them cover to do all these irrational things because no one questioned them if it was for â
He leaned back, his face hard. âIt wasnât just my parents. Look at the world around us. People kill, steal, and lie in the name of this abstract emotion weâre told is supposed to be our ultimate goal. Love conquers all. Love heals all. Etcetera, etcetera.â The curl of his lip told me how much respect he had for such platitudes. âAlex gave up a multibillion-dollar company. Bridget almost lost a country. And Rhys gave up his privacy, which mattered more to him than any amount of cash. Itâs completely illogical.â
âAlex got his company back,â I pointed out. âBridget made it work, and Rhys didnât give up his privacy. Sometimes, sacrifices are necessary for happiness.â
âWhy?â
I blinked, so startled by the bluntness of his question that it took me a minute to respond.
âBecause itâs the way the world works,â I finally said. âWe canât have everything we want without making some compromises. If humans were robots, Iâd agree with your assessment, but weâre not. We have feelings, and if it werenât for love, the human race wouldnât survive. Procreation, protection, motivation. It all hinges on that one emotion.â
It was the least romantic and therefore the most effective answer I couldâve given.
âPerhaps.â Christianâs shrug expressed the depth of his skepticism more than words could. âBut thereâs a second issue, which is that people use so often itâs lost all meaning. They love their dogs, cars, happy hours, and their friendâs new haircut. They say love is this grand, wonderful thing when itâs the opposite. Itâs useless at best and dangerous at worst.â
âThere are different types of love. The way I love fashion is different from the way I love my friends.â
âVarying degrees of the same disease.â Dark amusement filled his face when I winced at the word . âIs this where youâll try to change my mind? Convince me that love does, in fact, make the world go around?â
âNo,â I said truthfully. âYouâve already made up your mind. Nothing I say will change it. The only way youâll change your mind is through experience, not words.â
Surprise coasted through his eyes before it submerged beneath something heavier, more slumberous.
âAnd do you think that will happen?â His low drawl condensed the air between us. âThat Iâll fall in love and eat my words?â
I shrugged, the casual movement at odds with the rapid beats of my heart. âMaybe. Iâm not a fortune teller.â
Secretly, I hoped he would. Not because I had delusions of being the one who could quote-unquote change him, but because everyone deserved to experience true love at least once in their lifetime.
âOne of the clauses in our contract,â Christian said, watching me with those all-knowing eyes, âis that I donât fall in love with you.â
My mouth dried. âYes.â
âWhy did you put in that condition, Stella?â
âBecause I donât want you to fall in love with me.â
He didnât smile at my quick quip. A long silence passed before he spoke again.
âYou and I, we arenât so different,â he said softly.
A spark ignited and burned up all the oxygen between us. The sound of my pulse faded into a distant whoosh.
But his gaze held my voice captive, and before I could free it, his phone rang and shredded the moment to pieces.
Christianâs eyes lingered on me for a fraction of a second longer before he took the call. He walked out to the lanai, where the distant roar of the waves drowned out his end of the conversation.
The weight on my chest eased, leaving me light-headed and dizzy. I felt like Iâd been submerged beneath the ocean for the past hour and only just came up for air.
It was always hard to breathe around Christian.
I thought the trip would be a simple one. Arrive, do the shoots, leave.
But, as I was quickly realizing, nothing that involved Christian Harper was ever simple.
âSomeone hacked into the Mirageâs security system,â Kage said, sounding grim. âOur cyber team confirmed it was the result of a device similar to Scylla.â
I bit back a colorful curse.
The last thing I wanted was to discuss work this late at night in fucking Hawaii. Granted, it was even later for him, but Kage worked all hours and his update was a mindfuck.
Iâd developed Scylla two years ago. Named after the legendary Greek monster who devoured men off ships that sailed too close, the device didnât require a download or a USB port to hack into a system. It only needed to be within a few feet of the target for the owner to remote control into the device and fuck shit up as they saw fit.
No one knew Scylla existed except for the people at Harper Security and Jules, whom Iâd lent the device to last year. She didnât know what it was when she used it, and even if she did, she didnât have the schematics for it, which meant one thing.
The traitor was still at Harper, and they were somehow connected to Stellaâs stalker.
Cold fury rippled through me.
Iâd run a second round of checks on everyone I employed after the Mirage surveillance hack with a special focus on those closest to me, including Brock and Kage. They came back clean.
Iâd let go of a few mildly suspicious employees, but they hadnât been high-level enough to know about Scylla.
Plus, unless Stellaâs stalker was a developer himself, it shouldâve been damn near impossible for them to replicate Scyllaâs schematicsâ¦unless they got their hands on the blueprint hidden in my office.
My mind spun with a thousand possibilities, but when I spoke, my voice was calm. Rock solid.
âPull all the security footage from the area around the building. I want video from every single corner and storefront that has a camera within a five-block radius of the Mirage. Unless the hacker can fucking teleport, he had to have gone somewhere after the break-in. Find him.â
I hung up after Kageâs grunt of affirmation.
The footage wasnât my top priority. My top priority was finding out who in my company was trying to sabotage me, but until I returned to D.C., gathering and screening the footage would give my men something to do while I hunted down the traitor.
Between the Scylla news and the stalled progress on Stellaâs stalker, May was shaping up to be a shitty fucking month.
Aggravation mounted in my chest while I calculated my next move.
If I were here for any reason other than Stella, I would fly back to D.C. first thing in the morning, but I couldnât leave her alone when there was a psycho on the loose targeting her.
Iâd lied when Iâd told her there was no news. Iâd intercepted three more notes from him in her mailbox. They contained basic threats, nothing new, and they were still untraceableâfor now.
The chances of him following her here were slim, but they werenât zero.
At least, that was what I told myself.
I returned to the living room and locked the sliding glass door behind me.
It was already midnight. I was wide awake thanks to the adrenaline from Kageâs news, but Stella had passed out on the couch during my call.
I gently pried her empty mug from her hand and set it on the table before I picked her up and carried her to the bedroom. She was in such deep slumber she didnât even stir.
Moonlight cut a silvery swathe through the darkness as I laid her on the bed.
I tucked the comforter tighter around her, the gentleness of the action a sharp contrast to the roar in my blood. It seemed almost obscene to touch Stella while visions of blood and dismemberment crowded my brain, but I couldnât shut off the part of me that thirsted for vengeance.
The cold shower I took dampened my anger but didnât erase it completely. And, because I needed an outlet for my frustration that didnât involve physical release, the first thing I did when I emerged from the bathroom was open my laptop.
I skipped past the open window with an unfinished crosswordâI preferred physical puzzles, but I made do with digital versions when necessaryâand opened the file I kept specifically for times like these.
I skimmed the list of names before settling on the president of a major multinational bank. Heâd never been and would never be a Harper Security client. Contrary to popular belief, I did have fucking standards for the people I associated with, and this guy was a nasty piece of work. Embezzlement, tax fraud, three sexual harassment lawsuits from his former assistants that were settled out of court, and a penchant for slapping around both his wife and the women he cheated on her with. And that was just the tip of the iceberg.
âYouâre about to have a very bad day when you wake up,â I told the photo of his red, beady-eyed face.
It took me less than five minutes to hack into his bank accounts and reroute the funds to various charities via anonymous donations and a network of proxy servers. It was almost embarrassing how easy it was. The manâs password was his first carâs model and his birthday, for fuckâs sake.
I left a chunk of money for his wife along with the name of a good divorce lawyer before I forwarded some information to the IRS that the U.S. government would find highly interesting. As the cherry on top, I put his info up for sale on the dark web, sent several humiliating photos from his last visit with his mistress to all two hundred thousand of the bankâs employees and, because the asshole once tried to steal a parking spot from me, I hacked into his car, killed the GPS, and wiped out all the vehicleâs data.
By the time I finished, I felt calm enough to slide into bed next to Stella.
Contrary to what she said earlier about nature, nothing cleansed the soul like a good cyber rampage.
I stilled when Stella let out a mumble and draped her leg over mine. She mustâve liked the warmth because a few seconds later, she wrapped her arm around my waist and snuggled into my chest.
Even though she was already asleep, she released a small yawn that melted into a contented sigh and thenâ¦silence.
I stared down at her, waiting for her to wake up or at least shift again.
She didnât.
Judging from the steady rise and fall of her chest, sheâd drifted back into sleep and had no intention of untangling herself from me anytime soon.
I hated cuddling after sex and cuddling sex even more, but instead of pushing Stella away, I brushed a lock of hair out of her face and examined her in the moonlight peeking through the curtains.
The silvery glow caressed her skin in a way that made her look ethereal. An angel sleeping in the arms of a monster.
Few people trusted me enough to close their eyes when I was in the room, and here she was, cuddling against me like I was a damn teddy bear. Completely unaware of the violence brewing only inches away.
My hand drifted from her hair and onto the elegant curve of her cheekbone. I traced it down to her chin, keeping my touch featherlight so as not to wake her. I wanted to etch every detail of her into my mind until I could close my eyes and picture her as vividly as if she were standing in front of me.
Perhaps then I would understand the hold this woman had on me. How could someone so innocent and pure-hearted have branded herself so deep into my psyche I felt the agonizing burn of it this long after we met?
My touch lingered against Stellaâs face before I dropped it.
Invisible traces of the blood coating my hands streaked her cheeks. They were the same hands that fit easily around the metal of a gun and ended lives with the mere press of a button. A liarâs hands at best, a killerâs hands at worst.
I shouldnât be touching her and tainting her with my crimes, both past and future. She deserved to shine without darkness threatening to consume her, and if I were a better man, I would let her go.
But I wasnât.
My flickering conscience recoiled at the unseen smears of red against her skin while a twisted, possessive part of me thrilled at the sight.
But if there was one thing both sides agreed on, it was that she was mine.
And now that she was in my life, there was no letting her go.