Eyeing the door to Frankâs house as if I can summon Layla telepathically, I wait outside, counting seconds and smoking like a chimney. It takes ten minutes before she emerges with a bag hanging over her shoulder. She stops at the top of the concrete steps, half of her face covered with a scarf, the other half hidden under the hood of her jacket. I donât need to see tears to know theyâre there. The way she hugs herself paints the picture.
My instincts kick in before a single rational thought penetrates the growing madness. I shove my hand under my jacket, grabbing the gun. No thinking, no rationalizing. My body flips into battle mode, and my reaction is both natural and worrying simultaneously. I donât know what happened. Whether Frank had anything to do with her tears, Iâm ready to make a sieve out of him regardless.
Layla drops her hands, descending the steps. âIâm fine.â
âThen why were you crying?â
She hides in my arms, inhaling my scent. âWe had a fight. Can we go? Please, I donât want to stay here any longer.â
The plea in her voice stops me from asking another question. I grit my teeth, kiss her head, and give her the helmet. âPut it on. You ever rode a bike?â She shakes her head, watching me mount the Ducati. âHold on to me. Donât lean over to the sides.â
âWhere are all your cars?â
âThis is faster than any car in my garage.â
The engine springs to life, and its roar drowns out my racing thoughts. I look over my shoulder and grab Laylaâs thighs to slide her closer to me. She rests against my back, arms around my stomach, cold hands under my jacket.
I miss the adrenaline of speeding through the city at a hundred miles an hour on a bike. With Layla clinging to me like a child, I watch the speed, but Iâm eager to get home, so I double the limits a few times.
Layla jumps off when we park in the garage. I take my helmet off and watch her do the same. She turns to go upstairs, but my pulse speeds up faster than the Ducati ever could. Her scarf slides, revealing a crimson trickle of dry blood that marks a line from her mouth down her chin. Seeing the swollen, cut lip freezes my blood.
âItâs nothing,â she says, her eyes red from crying. âFrankâs impulsive, I said too much, andââ
âStop,â I seethe, reaching for my helmet. âStop making excuses for him.â
She tears the keys out of my hand, backing away. âDonât go there. It wonât change anything. Youâll just fight for no reason.â
â
?! Give me the fucking keys!â
Her back rests against the wall. Iâm right there, towering over her, the muscles on my back like stone, the need to break Frankâs neck so powerful it threatens to bring me to my knees.
Layla hides the hand that holds my keys behind her back. âPlease, let it go. Iâm fine, really. Itâs my fault⦠I angered him.â
I grip her shoulders. âHe hit you. I donât care what you said or did. He fucking you, Layla. Nothing justifies this.â
I canât believe the fucker.
He hit his own daughter.
He hit girl.
How can any man hurt a woman in the first place? Iâd fucking skin him alive if I saw him right now.
A single tear rolls down Laylaâs cheek, changing my attitude. I never could handle the sight⦠I pull her into my arms and kiss her temple. Itâs been years since I wanted to kill someone as much as I want to kill Frank, but it has to wait. Layla needs me to calm her down. She needs me to clean her up.
My hands still shake when I search the kitchen cabinets for a first-aid kit.
âI was scared to look in the mirror,â she admits, her cheeks pink. âThatâs why I didnât clean it up.â She cringes when I part her lips with my thumb to clean the cut.
The grimace on her pretty face pushes me to grab a gun and a shovel and bury the fucker, but killing Frank means hurting Layla, and thatâs the one thing I refuse to do. I remember when she saw blood on my fingers, and I donât want to think how scared she mustâve been when she tasted it in her mouth.
âI know, baby. Youâre not going back there again.â I throw the towel aside. âYou live here.â
âIsnât this quick? Weâve been dating forââ
âWhy? Why does it matter how long weâve been together? Weâre not standard, so donât expect us to follow some socially acceptable relationship timetable.â
She sits on top of me, her fingers weaving into my hair. âFrankieâs my father, Dante. I know you hate him, but I wonât cut him out of my life.â
My hands rest on her hips, and she cuddles into me, resting her head on my shoulder, pecking my neck. Everything I want is right here in my arms, but Iâm painfully aware that once the war ends, Layla might not want to be a part of my life anymore. If Frank doesnât bow out, if he insists on being the last one standing, Iâll have no choice but to kill him. Layla loves me, but the strength of her feelings is a mystery. Challenging times await us both.
âI donât want you anywhere near him alone. If you want to see him, Iâm coming with you.â
âYes, of course.â Irony coats her words. âBecause that wonât end in a blood bath.â She wriggles out of my arms. âDonât blow this out of proportion. Iâm fine, baby, but I do need a hot bath. Iâm freezing.â She leans over to kiss my forehead.
âTell me youâre okay, Star.â
âItâs not my first rodeo with Frank. Heâs never hit me before, but it didnât surprise me. Iâm immune.â
That calms me down a little bit. Until now, I wondered if he had hit her before or if she hid bruises under make-up. I wondered if she suffered many panic attacks at the sight of her own blood. Knowing this was the first time stops the tormenting line of questions but doesnât ease my rage.
âIâm fine. Really.â
I let her go and almost call Spades to cancel the meeting with the V brothers, but I canât. Thereâs too much to discuss, and the clock is ticking. Nikolaj might die any minute. I need to be prepared for any outcome or move on Frankâs part.
I get ready in one of the guest bathrooms, and forty minutes later, I enter the ensuite to inform my star that Lucaâs due in fifteen minutes to keep her safe.
She lays in the bubbly bath immersed up to her nose, cheeks pink. âYou look nice.â
âI have to leave.â I sit on the edge of the tub. âMy business partners from Detroit flew in this afternoon. They didnât announce it sooner.â
Layla smiles, so I stop talking. âYou donât have to explain. If you have to go, you have to go. The amount of time youâve been spending with me is quite impressive.â She slides underwater and resurfaces a few seconds later, wiping her face, then grabs a bottle of shampoo, glancing at me as if surprised to see I hadnât moved. âGo. Iâll be okay. Iâll go to bed early.â
I developed a compulsive need to quadruple-check if sheâll manage as if she has two left hands. She proved many times sheâs different from the women I dated in the past. Maybe because of her upbringing, or perhaps sheâs reasonable, and all my exes were spoiled brats. Either way, I bite my tongue before another leaves my lips, but thereâs one more thing to discuss.
âYouâre not staying here alone. Frankâs looking for a hitman, and I wonât risk some nutcase hurting you.â
âSo, you found me a bodyguard?â
âLuca will be here soon.â
âLuca?â She sits up, testing my concentration, when her beautiful boobs covered in soap bubbles come into view. âYouâve got so many people working for you! Why him?â
At least sheâs not trying to talk me out of the security-detail idea. âBecause I trust him. I know he gets on your nerves, but he wonât let anyone touch you. You can ignore him or argue with him if it helps you cope, but heâs watching over you tonight.â
She crosses her arms, pushing those perky boobs higher. âIâm trying,â she says, eyeing a large, round glass bowl filled with colorful bath bombs. I half expect her to smack my head with it. âIâm really trying to understand your reasoning. I mean, okay, youâre worried, I get it. Nikolajâs dying, and Frank feels threatened. I get it. He might do something stupid, so itâll be better if someone keeps an eye on me. I get that too. What I donât get is why you chose Luca. The one I hate.â She bites her lip, smiling. âOkay. I do get it. You really are crazy jealous.â
I open my mouth to object but think better of it. Explaining why I chose Luca requires informing her he was the one who killed the guy at the club, and I donât want to go there.
I peck her lips. âDonât wait up.â
She brings her hands up to hold my head in place and sinks into my lips, the kiss slow, full of lust. She sighs, grazing her nose along my cheek.
âDamn you, Star,â I whisper. âWait for me. Naked.â