Something is wrong.
This feeling has been a constant over the last couple of days. It could be because Jonathan didnât spank me hard enough and has disappeared from my side when I wake up in the morning. Heâs usually there the entire night, sometimes holding me through the aftermath of my nightmares, and other times staring at me as if heâs making sure of something. What, I donât know.
Needless to say, after that night at Aidenâs house, Iâve been sleeping in Jonathanâs bed. My room was cleaned up and appears as good as new. However, each time I end up there, even to grab my things, Jonathan grabs me by my hand and leads me back to his room.
Not that Iâve wanted to spend any nights alone after those voices I dreamt about.
He still spanks me as âpunishmentâ, but we both know itâs so much more than that.
Itâs our connection.
Itâs something that fills his eyes with possessiveness and mine with raw lust.
Sometimes, I wake up with his face buried between my legs. Other times, he fucks me into the mattress with his hand around my throat. He then sleeps with his cock deep inside me just so he can pick up where he left off in the middle of the night.
He exhausts me, but at the same time, he completes me in the strangest way possible.
Thereâs no getting enough of Jonathan. The harder he takes it out on me, the more I meet him head-on. If heâs a hurricane, Iâm the wind that gets off on the damage he causes.
But itâs not always damage, and thatâs what throws me for a loop. After he marks my arse with his handprint and wrenches one orgasm after the other out of me, Jonathan doesnât stand up and leave like when I first came into his life.
He doesnât look at me as if Iâm an annoyance or something heâs bent on breaking. Thereâs acceptance in his steel eyes now, the sort that both frightens and intrigues me. Being on the receiving end of Jonathanâs attention is like living in a high-alert mode twenty-four-seven.
Then he does things that make me pause.
Every day, he either makes us shower together, or he runs me a bath and takes special care with washing my hair. Itâs become so much of a habit that I get infuriated when I have to do it myself.
He also gets frustratingly protective whenever I hurt myself in any way.
Over time, heâs eventually stopped being a blank board in front of his children. Jonathan will always be Jonathan; however, he sometimes follows my lead and doesnât purposefully act like a bastard.
I might be addicted to his harshness, but his tenderness strikes a completely different chord inside me. A part of me is slowly leaving my body and creeping to his side, and although Iâm aware of it, thereâs no way I can stop it.
Heâs a steep cliff, and I keep rolling down, enjoying every bump and hit.
However, today, thereâs something wrong.
When he gave me an undecipherable look this morning, I brushed it off. Jonathan does a lot of watching and observing, and not all of his expressions can be explained.
After all, he didnât give me that look again, the âYouâre crazyâ one. Weâre past that phase, right? Thereâs no way heâll bring that back up.
And yet, that doesnât alleviate the tension sinking to the bottom of my stomach. I caught myself touching my watch more than often today, and I barely pushed through the meetings.
I leave work early, opting to go home. Not that Jonathan will be there at this time.
My feet come to a halt in front of my car. Did I just call Jonathanâs house home? Since when did I start considering it as such?
I shake my head, not wanting to think about it. Just when Iâm about to open the door, a dark shadow passes in my peripheral vision.
My hand freezes as I search my surroundings.
H&Hâs car park isnât that big, but itâs still underground and silent. The only sound is the buzzing from one of the defective neon lights.
This time, I donât stand there and wait for the hit.
I beep my car and reach out to open the door. When a hand comes from behind me, I startle, hitting blindly.
Itâs like Iâm pushed back to that day eleven years ago. Soon, thereâll be the crunch of the blade against my bones, then blood â lots of blood â followed by pain.
Uncontrollable pain.
Iâll be buried alive in a grave. Iâll be just like those women, where no one will hear my screams.
âNo!â I shriek, then shove my hand in my bag and retrieve the pepper spray I started keeping on me since my most recent attack.
I whirl around and point it at the shadow. I donât care if heâs a member of a victimâs family. I shouldnât be the subject of his wrath.
My voice is strong and comes from the bottom of my gut. âIf you want to attack anyone, go stab the fucker Maxim!â
âWhoa.â
My hold falters on the pepper spray as I come face-to-face with none other than Ethan Steel.
My harsh breathing slows down and I glance behind him as if expecting to find the shadow. Sure enough, thereâs what resembles a shadow, but itâs only Agnus.
âSorry.â I drop the bottle back into my bag. âI thought it was someone else.â
âItâs fine.â He smiles, and itâs kind of welcoming. Kind of, because thereâs something else behind it that I canât pinpoint.
âIs there something I can help you with, Ethan?â
âYes, and I canât exactly visit you at Jonathanâs place or heâll chase me away with a shotgun.â He motions at his car. âDo you have a moment?â
I hesitate for a beat. Itâs not only due to Jonathanâs warnings about staying away from Ethan â and the entire male population, per his words. I also want to go home tonight. It feels crucial that I be there.
Seeming to sense my hesitation, Ethan says, âItâs about Jonathan.â
That gets my attention. No matter how much Jonathan says he hates Ethan, he was once his best friend. One way or another, he knew him better than anyone else.
I follow to Ethanâs car and Agnus joins in the front seat beside the driver. Heâs like Harris in a way, but without the latterâs weird antics and snobbish sense of humour. Heâs kind of grown on me. Even Margotâs and Tomâs silence has grown on me, too.
Everything that I was wary of about Jonathanâs entourage has eventually snuck its way into my life. Before I knew it, they became an inseparable part.
The car rolls down the streets. The bright city lights and the endless traffic are visible through the tinted window. No idea why all of it gives me a horrific premonition.
âWhat did you want to talk about?â I ask Ethan.
He leans an elbow on the armrest between us and pins me down like a lab researcher would do to his guinea pig. âWhy donât you tell me, Aurora? Whatâs your secret?â
My heart pounds at that word. Secret. Whenever someone says it, I feel like my past will come running in and ruin any type of stability Iâve been building for years. Not that Ethan would know anything about it.
Right?
Adopting my nonchalant tone, I say, âMy secret concerning what?â
âConcerning how Jonathan treats you. Heâs never shown his true feelings about anyone â at least not until he crushes them. Hell, he didnât even act this way towards his father and brother when they were alive.â
âWas heâ¦close to them?â
âYes, especially James.â
My chest falls at what Jonathan mustâve felt when he lost his only brother. I know he died of an accident that also took away Astridâs mother, but thatâs not all. He was an addict prior to that. I could almost imagine Jonathan wanting to help him and not finding the right way to, because he sucks at offering emotional support.
âAt first, I thought you were holding something over his head.â Ethan taps his fingers on the armrest. âBut we both know Jonathan is the type who holds things over peopleâs heads, not the other way around.â
âYou can say that again.â
âSo what is it? The Alicia angle?â
âI donât know. You can ask him yourself if youâre so curious.â
âThat would get my head on a platter, and I kind of need it. My head, I mean.â
I clear my throat. âMay I ask you something?â
âOf course.â
âElsa mentioned that Jonathan and you fell apart because he blames you for Aliciaâs death. Is that the case?â
âNot entirely. That was the final straw.â He sighs, and his gaze seems to be trapped someplace in the past. âIt all started with our loathsome rivalry and games. We used to play a lot of them when we were younger. Jonathan refused to lose and I was the same. When we graduated from university and each of us took reign of part of the family business, we rivalled each other in profit margin and stock value. Then it extended to other things. Gambling. Property. Women.â
âWomen?â
âYes. We shared women. Occasionally at the same time.â
âOh.â My lips fall open. I kind of find it hard to imagine Jonathan and Ethan doing threesomes.
âIs there a problem?â
âNo, itâs just that Jonathan is possessive.â
âOf you, and of his wife, perhaps, but he wasnât in the past. He didnât care enough about anyone to be possessive.â
âSo you, like, had threesomesâ¦right?â I whisper, not sure if Agnus and the driver should be privy to this conversation.
âWe had. Donât get me wrong, we didnât touch each other, but we got off on the same things. Not to mention, we were somehow always attracted to the same type of women.â
âLooks-wise?â
âNo.â A mischievous smirk tilts his lips. âPersonality-wise. Both of us could sense their demons, their mental scars, and I guess we were attracted to the broken sides of them.â
âIs that why he married Alicia? Aside from the revenge, I mean.â
âYou know about that.â
âHe told me.â
He nods. âItâs part of the reason, yes.â
âAnd you married Elsaâs mother.â
âCorrect. Both women wereâ¦how to put it? Beautifully broken. At least, Abby was. Alicia slowly disintegrated from Jonathan.â
âWhat?â
âShe pulled away from him after Aidenâs birth. He became her world and Jonathan was second.â
âThatâs not what Aiden said. He mentioned it was Jonathan who pulled away.â
âAiden was just a kid. He had no idea what was going on between his parents.â
âAnd you do?â
âDespite our rivalry, Jonathan and I remained friends. We talked.â
âDid you continue to share?â
He laughs, the sound light and amused. âOur wives? Absolutely not.â
Phew. Then whatever Layla heard about Ethanâs wife having an affair with Jonathan mustâve been a stupid rumour all along.
âSo what happened? What caused you both to be at each otherâs throats?â
âThey both fucked up,â Agnus says from the front seat, making his presence known.
Ethan releases a breath that seems exasperated, but he nods. âWe did. For net profit rivalry reasons, Jonathan arranged for someone to burn down my main coal factory in Birmingham. Due to a miscalculation, the factory caught fire while people were inside and many passed away.â
âThe Great Birmingham Fire,â I gasp. It was all over the news back then. I canât believe Jonathan was behind that.
âSo you kidnapped Aiden as retaliation?â I ask.
âCorrect. Though, due to another miscalculation, he was tortured for more than a week by my unwell wife and almost died. Alicia figured he was with us, and drove to find him, and thatâs how she had her accident.â
âThatâs why Jonathan blames you.â It all makes sense now. His aggression towards Ethan is fuelled by the past, and although the man in front of me indulges him, thereâs something else to it.
Heâs not as closed off as Jonathan, and he doesnât hold grudges as long either. The reason heâs been a thorn in Jonathanâs side is probably because it brings back memories from when they were rivals or frenemies or whatever their relationship was.
âYou want to be friends with him again.â I donât voice it as a question, because Iâm almost sure thatâs the case.
âFriends?â He chuckles. âAre we talking about the same Jonathan?â
âHeâs not a stone and you know it.â
âBut heâs perfect at emulating one.â
âThatâs because you keep provoking him.â
âThe only way he reacts.â
âYeah, youâre right.â I smile. âBut I donât think heâs that immune to emotions. He might not feel them like everyone else, but theyâre there, and Iâm sure he also remembers your friendship.â
âI wouldnât bet on it.â
âI would, and you know what? Iâm going to help.â
He raises a brow. âAnd how are you going to do that?â
The car comes to a stop at a gas station for a refill. My grin falters as I stare out the window at the very familiar face on the TV screen inside the store.
Ethan is talking, but Iâm not listening. Like a moth drawn to a deadly flame, I open the door with shaky fingers and step out.
My ears buzz, and the closer I am to the store, the more everything else is erased from my surroundings. Itâs like thereâs no one and nothing. No smells, no sights.
Just nothing.
Iâm floating on air, unable to feel my legs. By the time I reach the counter, where the cashier and a few customers are focused on the news, I think I may fall.
I donât.
My feet keep me planted in place as the buzz in my ears gives way to the male news anchorâs voice.
âTurmoil broke out in the juridical system today when Judge Huntington approved the parole hearing of Maxim Griffin.â The image flashes from the anchor to an archived footage of when the police first arrested Dad. He was on his way home after that call he made to me when the police grabbed him. As they led him to the car, a conceited smirk tugged at his lips. âThe most notorious serial killer in the UKâs recent history has murdered seven identified women and ten others remain suspected. The ages of his victims ranged from nineteen to thirty and all carried the same physical description.
âGriffin is labelled as the Duct Tape Killer because he abducted his victims and suffocated them using silver duct tape for long periods of time that ranged from several hours to a day before he buried them behind his cabin. His daughter, sixteen years old at the time, was the one who reported seeing her father dragging a corpse out of their hunting cabin. The trial was messy and had a lot of public attention, both inside and outside of Great Britain.â The screen flashes again to show Dad during his recent interview. âA few weeks ago, Griffin conducted an interview for the first time and accused his daughter of being an accomplice. He claims the only reason the police caught him was due to being betrayed by his partner in crime.
âThe Crown Prosecution Service announced that it will re-open an investigation in regards of Clarissa Griffin, who also happens to be the only alleged witness of Maxim Griffinâs crimes. The serial killerâs daughter should be twenty-seven now. In an exclusive statement, her fatherâs solicitor, Stephan Wayne, says that she has adopted a new identity and currently lives in London. Itâs notable to mention that Clarissa disappeared right after the sentencing of her father and escaped the Witness Protection Program.â A headshot of me from eleven years ago appears on the screen. Even though itâs old, if anyone looks at it hard enough, theyâll recognise me. âThe question remains. A victim or an assailant?â
My legs shake, unable to carry me as the screen switches to a statement made by the solicitor, Stephan.
I try to focus, but the world is closing in on me and all I can hear is the beeping in my ears and the sinking of my heart.
The cashierâs attention shifts to me, and I jerk back. God. Theyâll recognise me. The nightmare will start all over again.
âMay I help you, Miss?â The cashier watches me closely.
I lower my head as Dadâs voice filters from the TV. âIn the time I spent in confinement, I started believing in justice, its rules, and how it should be applied. I love my daughter, but she needs to pay for what sheâs done. Justice, Clarissa. I taught you that.â
If someone stabs you once, stab them back ten times.
Thatâs what he taught me. Those were the exact words my father said to six-year-old me when I came crying about a girl who stole my pens at school. He kept repeating them until they became my mantra.
The cashier is still staring at me, but before he can recognise me, I spin around and run out of the small store. Theyâll know who I am now, and everything will start again.
The name-calling, the trials, the poor police treatment, the accusatory looks.
Everything.
A hand grabs me by the arm and I yelp, coming to a screeching halt.
Ethan.
His brows scrunch. âAre you okay?â
No. Absolutely not.
He holds my phone that I left in the car, on which there are five missed calls.
âJonathan has been calling nonstop.â His gaze drifts behind me. âAlso, why is everyone staring at you?â
No, noâ¦
Agnus barges outside and kind of pushes me towards the car.
âWhatâs going on?â Ethan asks, but he follows anyway.
âShe needs to get out of the public eye.â Agnusâs features remain steady. âNow.â
Ethan and I are both inside when the car revs its engine in the street. Then Elsaâs father asks, âAre you going to elaborate, Agnus?â
âSheâs part of a public trial.â
Again. Iâm part of a public trial again.
I barely survived the first one. I canât go through that nightmare all over again.