It becomes clear I made a massive mistake ordering Reyna to accompany me on the ring-buying excursion the moment we walk into the Cartier store in Manhattan and the store manager greets us with a big smile, open arms, and an enthusiastic, âCongratulations on your engagement!â
Reyna stares at the manager as if sheâs planning his murder.
She says icily, âHow kind. Thank you. Now please show me the biggest diamond you have for sale.â
âDo you have any preference for shape?â
âWhichever oneâs the most expensive.â
The manager almost wets himself in excitement. âRight this way!â
I follow behind them as they walk to a lighted glass display case near the back of the store. Weâre the only customers, as Declan called and arranged a private showing for us.
I didnât tell him I was bringing Reyna instead of Lili, because I didnât want to get a lecture. Now Iâm thinking I couldâve used a good lecture to talk me out of such a dumb idea.
I have no doubt that by the time we leave, Iâll be flat broke.
The manager, who still hasnât introduced himself, hops behind the case and makes spokesmodel hands at the rows of glittering rings nestled in white velvet below.
I hear words like flawless and exquisite, but Iâm too distracted to pay attention to anything else.
Reyna has leaned over the counter. Her posture and the way the fabric of her dress clings emphasizes the perfect rounded swell of her arse. Inspecting the goods in the case below, she lifts a hand to her jaw and slips a pinky between her lips, biting the tip of it in concentration.
Good God, that mouth. How I want to fuck that luscious mouth.
I have to force myself to look away so the front of my trousers wonât get tented.
âThe pink ones are gorgeous. Lili would love those.â
âYou have excellent taste,â the manager says, sounding awed. âPink diamonds are among the rarest of all gems.â
âProbably the priciest, too,â I mutter.
âThey sell for between one to five million per carat, depending on clarity and cut.â
When I send him a sour glance, he smiles like a used car salesman. âBut who can put a price on true love?â
âMe,â I say flatly. âAnd it isnât five million bloody quid.â
The manager glances at Reyna, whoâs giving me a look that could melt solid steel.
âBut ,â she purrs, slinky as a panther. âArenât I worth it?â
I narrow my eyes at her.
She smiles.
Sensing a power play between us and an opportunity to profit from it, the manager says to Reyna, âIf youâre looking for something unusual, try this.â
He opens the back of the case with a key from the chain on his wrist, removes a clear acrylic stand, and sets it on the glass counter. On the stand sits a ring composed of a simple rose gold band with an enormous blood-red stone set in the middle. It glitters and flashes under the light like itâs alive.
âIs that a ruby?â says Reyna, frowning at it.
The manager replies in a hushed voice. âItâs a red diamond. One of only a few ever mined. It contains zero impurities and is absolutely flawless.â
Itâs also the exact color of Reynaâs lush lips.
I stare at it, mesmerized by the vivid hue.
âTry it on,â the manager urges, pulling the ring off its stand.
âOh, no, I couldnât,â Reyna starts to protest. But the manager has seized her hand and is already sliding the ring onto her left ring finger.
She yanks her hand away, but itâs too late.
The ring sparkles on her finger like a big, brilliant drop of blood.
She holds her hand out as far away from her body as it will reach and gapes at it with wide, unblinking eyes. Sheâs pale, and her hand is trembling.
Iâm not sure, but I think sheâs about to vomit.
Very gently, I grasp her wrist and slide the ring off her finger. The tattoo on her skin appears somehow darker, the slanting script seeming to crawl like hissing snakes.
I blink, and the illusion is gone.
Reyna murmurs something in Italian, then exhales a shaky breath.
âIt is, isnât it?â says the manager, beaming.
I hand the ring back to him. âYou know Italian?â
He nods. âMy mother was born in Rome. I never lived there, but we were brought up as kids speaking it at home. I took some college courses as well.â
Reyna pulls her arm from my grip. âPlease excuse me. I need to use the restroom.â
âYes, of course. Just through that archway. Second door on your left.â
Nodding distractedly, she hurries away without looking back.
As the manager is putting the ring back into the case, I say in a low voice, âDid you happen to see the tattoo on my fiancéeâs ring finger?â
âYes, Mr. Quinn, I did.â
âWhat does it say?â
When he looks at me quizzically, I smile at him. âSheâs too shy to tell me herself.â
He chuckles. âWell, I suppose that makes sense. It is a little awkward.â
âHow so?â
âAnyone with the words ânever againâ tattooed where a wedding ring would sit probably has some strong feelings about matrimony. You mustâve been very persuasive.â
Never again.
It hits me like a kick in the gut: a powerful urge to unalive her already-dead husband.
With a new sense of urgency, I ask, âWhat did she say to you about the ring?â
His smile is smug. âThat itâs the most beautiful thing sheâs ever seen in her life.â
He whips out a business card from his suit pocket and writes something on the back. Then he slides it across the glass case toward me.
I pick it up, read the price of the red diamond, and almost laugh out loud.
Twenty million dollars.
Flipping over the card to read his name, I say, âTell me, Lorenzo, if you were an eighteen-year-old girl, which of the pink ones would you like?â
He frowns in confusion. âEighteen?â
âItâs a long story.â
On the drive back to the house, Reyna is silent.
She has an expression on her face that Iâve never seen before. Itâs a mix of longing and loneliness, pain and sadness.
A kind of sadness that makes her look lost.
âYou want to talk about it, viper?â
She glances at me, then turns away, shaking her head. âTalking never helps anything.â
âI know a few therapists whoâd disagree with you.â
âYou say that like you actually know therapists.â
âI do.â
I feel her attention sharpen, but she doesnât look at me. âPersonal friends of yours, orâ¦?â
I shrug. âI went to counseling for a few years. Tried a few different ones.â
Now she does look at me, swinging her head around to stare at me in shock. â
â
I grumble, âDonât make it sound so bloody implausible.â
âNot implausible, impossible.â
âWhy?â
âBecause youâre you!â
âWhatever the fuck that means.â
âDid these therapists know what you do for a living?â
âNo. I never talked about my work.â
âWhat did you talk about?â
After a moment to gather my thoughts, I say, âThe meaning of life. The futility of revenge. How forgiveness isnât for the other person, itâs for you. How to go on when you donât have a reason for living.â
Her silence is profound. I donât risk looking at her.
I can feel her looking at me, though, and thatâs enough.
Dragging a hand through my hair, I exhale heavily. âWhen I was a young man, there was a time when all I did was think about dying. I wished for it, every day. Iâd put myself in all these crazy situations, tempting fate.â My chuckle is dark. âI was suicidal.â
âWhy is that funny?â
âBecause I could easily kill another man, but I never found the guts to kill myself.â
She says softly, âOh, Quinn. Not killing yourself wasnât an act of cowardice. It was an act of courage. It takes so much more bravery to keep living when youâre in pain than it does to give up.â
When I look over at her and our eyes meet, it feels like I plugged myself into a socket. Electricity, snapping hot, courses through my veins. Even the air feels charged with a current. My hair is probably standing on end.
She murmurs, âAnd for what itâs worth, Iâm glad youâre alive.â
I can tell she immediately regrets that, because she closes her eyes, shakes her head, and turns away.
We donât speak for the rest of the ride. As soon as I pull up into the circular driveway and stop, she jumps out of the car and hurries into the house. I sit there with the engine running, fighting the need to run after her.
Then I text Declan that I need something to keep me distracted for the next week.
Preferably something violent.