Declan removes my handcuffs before we get into bed. He removes the shirt he put on me, too, then gets undressed himself and pulls me down on top of him. He settles us under the covers and presses a kiss to my forehead, ordering me to go to sleep.
âHow can you sleep with me on top of you? Arenât I heavy?â
âAye. Camels weigh a bloody ton.â
âHa.â
âStop worrying about me, and do as I tell you.â
We lie there in the dark, my head on his chest, listening to each other breathing, until the whirlwind in my head makes me sigh. âI donât think Iâm tired.â
âIâm sure you have some kind of ridiculous breathing trick that will help.â
âI usually do a flow visualization when I have trouble falling asleep, but thereâs something Iâm freaking out about, so I know it wonât help.â
Declan had been rubbing his hand up and down my spine, but he stops. âWhat is it?â
âWe havenât had the STD talk. And we didnât use a condom last time.â
He says immediately, âIâm clean.â
âGood. Me, too.â
âI can get tested if you donât believe me.â
âNo, I trust you.â
That hangs there in the air like a party pinata stuffed with candy surrounded by a bunch of grinning five-year-old kids holding bats. I close my eyes, cursing myself.
Then Declan says quietly, âThank you.â
At least heâs not gloating.
After I blow out a hard breath, he changes the subject. âWhatâs a flow visualization?â
âItâs a relaxation practice. When Iâm stressed out, I picture myself sitting underneath a big oak tree beside a stream in the country. The weather is warm, and thereâs a gentle breeze. Iâm wearing some kind of super cool Lord of the Rings fairy queen costume, and my hair looks great.â
Declan snorts. I ignore him.
âWhatever worried thought comes to mind, I just mentally put the thought on a leaf in the stream and watch it flow away until it disappears around a bend. Money? It goes on a leaf and drifts away. My future? I put the words on a leaf. My boss at work? She goes on a leaf. In miniature. Itâs fun to watch her screaming and stamping her foot, two inches tall, then disappear. Sometimes I make a big fish come up and swallow her.â
After a thoughtful pause, Declan says, âWhat do you worry about your future?â
I answer without thinking. âThe usual stuff. Cancer. Bankruptcy. Dying alone.â
He sounds disturbed. âThatâs a heavy list for someone who isnât even thirty. You should be worried about what youâre going to do next weekend, not about dying alone.â
âEveryone dies alone. I just want to do it with dignity. But thereâs nothing dignified about being so sick you canât wipe your own ass or so weak you canât tell the nurse youâre in such agony you donât want to live another minute.â
Declan rolls me onto my back, props himself up on an elbow, and looks at me. Even in the dark room, I see the soft shine of his blue eyes.
âYouâre talking about your mother.â
âHow did you know that?â
When he doesnât answer, I say, âOh. Right. The background check you ran on me.â
âAye.â
âIt mustâve been pretty extensive.â
âAye.â
I study his face. In the shadows, he looks very serious, his expression intent. Hesitant, unsure if heâll tell me the truth, I say, âWas it through a detective agency, something like that?â
âNo. Through the NSA.â
âWhatâs that?â
âThe National Security Agency.â
When I only lie there looking at him with a frown, he elaborates.
âItâs the intelligence agency of the US Department of State.â
âWait. You mean the people who spy on us? Who record our phone calls and emails and stuff for the government?â
âAye, though Iâm sure theyâd tell you they donât do that.â
âI read an article about them not long ago. Theyâre like Big Brother!â
âNo, lass, theyâre much worse. They make Big Brother look like Ronald McDonald.â
âOh my god. And they have information about me?â
âThey have information about everyone. No, donât try to sit up. Stay right there.â
âYou want me to remain flat after I found out the government has been spying on me?â
âYouâre not special. They spy on everybody.â
I stare at him, horrified. âSo you know someone who works there who gave you all this information?â
âAye. I know your credit card balances, your medical history, your educational background, your driverâs record, that you have no criminal record but you did once talk yourself out of a DUI, everywhere youâve lived and traveled your entire life, what you buy from Instagram ads, how much money you have in your bank accounts, and, basically, everything else.â
He pauses for a beat. âIncluding that you had a negative STD test on your visit to your gynecologist last month.â
I clap a hand over my eyes. âWow, this honesty-and-trust thing is fucking awful.â
âWe havenât even really gotten started yet.â
âI feel sick.â
âI did warn you.â
âYou should probably stop talking now.â
He takes my wrist and pins my arm next to my side. âLetâs get back to your worries.â
âLetâs not and say we did.â
Blowing right past that, he says, âIâll give you money if you need it.â
I turn my head on the pillow and look at him. âExcuse me?â
âYou heard what I said.â
âI also heard you say you knew how much money I have in my bank accounts.â
âI do.â
âSo then you know Iâve been saving.â
In his pause, I sense that heâs trying to word something so as not to be insulting. He fails miserably.
âConsidering the amount in question, Iâd guess you were saving for a weekend cruise to Tijuana. On one of those cheap cruise lines. Where everyone ends up getting diarrhea from tainted drinking water.â
âThatâs not very nice.â
âI apologize.â
âNot everyone is rich.â
âNo. Especially not you.â
Insulted, I glare at him.
âDonât take it personally. Itâs not about your character. Iâm only saying you donât have much money, which Iâd be happy to rectify.â
âSay the word âmoneyâ to me again. I dare you.â
âI can see this is a point of pride for you. Letâs move on. What have you been saving for?â
âThe laser beam that will blow you into a million tiny gangster pieces.â
He tries very hard not to laugh as I lie there staring murder at him.
âSeriously. Tell me.â
âWhy? So you can mock me with your superior finances?â
âNo, so I can be amazed by how cool it is.â
I say grudgingly, âIt is cool.â
âI know it will be. So tell me.â
Sighing heavily, I turn my head and stare at the ceiling. After a short debate with myself, I relent.
âIâm going to open my own yoga studio. But for kids. Girls, to be exact. Itâll be called Fit for a Queen, and weâll hand out tiaras at the start of every class, and teach the kids how to feel empowered and proud of their bodies, instead of ashamed. There wonât be any scales. There wonât be any mirrors. There wonât be any asshole helicopter moms in the back of the room watching and wringing their hands over how fat little Abby and Eva are.
âBut there will be lots of hugs and encouragement. There will be lots of positive affirmations. There will be lots of tools they can learn to use to help themselves survive in a world that only values what they look like. Because there are way too many little girls whoâre being taught to smother their fire and stamp out their light so they can seem smaller to people who are scared of how big they really are. Or how big they could be, if only someone believed in them.â
In the wake of that passionate speech, total silence.
I refuse to break it first. I lie there with my heart pounding, waiting for him to say something, until, finally, he does.
âThatâs beautiful, Sloane. Thatâs bloody beautiful.â
The quiet wonder in his voice makes my chest tight. My throat gets tight, too. âThank you.â
He pulls me into his side, tucking me close. The arm he wraps around me feels possessive.
I whisper into his chest, âYou said youâd promise me anything I asked. Was that true?â
âAye.â
âI only have one thing.â
âWhich is?â
âPlease donât hurt Stavros. No matter how this turns out, leave him out of it. He doesnât deserve to get hurt because of me.â
His chest expands with his slow inhalation. His voice comes out rough. âYouâre very protective of him.â
âHeâs a friend.â
âHeâs an ex-lover.â
âHe needs someone to look out for him.â
âWeâre talking about a wealthy, grown man, not a child.â
âOh, please. Youâve met him. You know what I mean.â
After a pause, Declan says grudgingly, âAye.â
âSo do you promise?â
Though I canât see his face, I feel his confusion. âIf you care for him so much, why arenât you still with him? Heâs in love with you.â
âNo, heâs in love with my shoes.â
âI have no idea what that means.â
âIt means he loves what I give him, not me. He doesnât even know me. Heâll be head-over-heels for the next girl who meets his needs, trust me. My point is that I couldnât live with myself if he were to get hurt because of something I did. Or didnât do. Something related to us.â
When he doesnât answer me, I say, âPlease, Declan. It would mean a lot to me.â
âAre you this worried about all your exes?â
âNo. Are you jealous?â
âNot of him.â
It sounds like heâs hedging the truth. âOf what, then?â
After a long moment, he answers reluctantly. âHe didnât have to force you. You chose him.â
I can tell he didnât want to admit that, and it makes my heart ache that he did. I say gently, âYou didnât force me.â
âI kidnapped you. I took you against your will.â
âLetâs not get hung up on how this all started. Things could be worse. Itâs not like we met in prison.â
Heâs silent, thinking. When he doesnât talk for too long, I say, âSpit it out.â
âThe way your mind works continues to amaze me. Or maybe confuse is the right word. Iâve never known anyone so able to accept things as they are without a shred of denial.â
âI wasnât always this pragmatic. Life kicked my ass pretty good when I was a kid. Lucky for me, too, because it brought out the fighter in me. If I was never knocked down, Iâd never have discovered the strength it took to stand back up. And to keep getting up after every future kick, knowing that I could.â
He murmurs, âOut of suffering have emerged the strongest souls.â
âAnd the most massive characters are seared with scars.â
His heavy exhalation sounds depressed. âFuck.â
âWhatâs wrong?â
âYou know Khalil Gibran.â
âI love him. Have you read The Prophet?â
âItâs only my favorite book.â
âWhy does that make you depressed?â
His voice gains a rough edge. âBecause youâre a twenty-eight-year-old girl I fucking abducted, a girl whoâs best friends with the girlfriend of my worst enemy, a girl who frets over her ex-loverâalso my enemyâwho was born more than a decade before me in a different country than me and has lived an entirely different life than me, and who somehow fucking knows obscure ancient Stoic philosophers and obscure twentieth-century Lebanese poets, and who wants to cook healthy meals for her kidnappers and teach them stress-reduction techniques. You donât make sense.â
Into his angry silence, I say softly, âFor you, you mean.â
A growling sound is my only answer.
âIf it makes you feel any better, you donât make any sense for me, either. Youâre too old and too grouchy and way too bossy. Plus, youâre right. Kidnapping is a terrible way to start a relationship. Itâs completely fucked up. Weâre totally doomed, I get it. But you know what else?â
âNo. What?â
âI donât care about any of that, because the way you look at me makes me feel like I could fly.â
His entire body goes still. The breath he eventually releases is slow and ragged. âI thought you were scared of me. Of this.â
âI am. I hate that I am, too. I want to be that aloof, disinterested cat. But the reality is that Iâm not. And itâs awful. It could also maybe be amazing, I donât know. I also hope we donât have to keep talking about it, because thatâs pretty awful, too. But I donât want to have one of those situations where some stupid misunderstanding could be cleared up with a simple conversation, because I hate that shit. Itâs lame. Do you agree?â
âAye.â
âOkay. So hereâs the bottom line. We both think this is impossible but also awesome. We both think itâs fantastic and also sucks. We both have massive trust issues and friends who will hate this and really problematic personal histories that will most likely cause all kinds of issues going forward, but for right now, itâs on.â
âIt?â
âUs.â
âJust like that?â
âYeah. I just decided. That ivory tower-dark roads speech you made really resonated. But you still have to promise me about Stavros. Thatâs nonnegotiable.â
He grasps my jaw and tilts my head up so Iâm looking into his eyes. His beautiful, blue, shining eyes. His voice thick, he says, âI promise.â
âThank you.â
âBut I do have a question.â
âWhatâs that?â
âIf youâre not my captive, then what are you?â
I think about it for a moment. âI donât love labels, but if you need to call me something, you can just call me your queen.â
His kiss is rough and deep. He rolls on top of me, giving me his warmth and weight, and kisses me until I can hardly breathe anymore. He pulls away, panting, his stiff cock trapped between us.
âThis is gonna be complicated, baby. You ready for that?â
Baby. Oh, what that does to me. How it makes everything inside me glow. I grin up at him. âThe more complicated, the better. At least I know I wonât get bored.â
He growls, âYouâre damn right you wonât,â and crushes his mouth to mine.
Then he fucks me with so much passion and possession, there can be no mistaking that when he said I was his, he meant it. I fall asleep sweaty and sated in his arms.
When I wake in the morning, Iâm sore and starving. Declan is gone, but my period has arrived, staining the sheets beneath me red.
Oddly, the bloody stain is in the shape of a heart.
I hope that isnât a bad omen.