âHe said heâs cooled off, but the fuckerâs already talking.â Jase updates me the second I step into the den. The adrenaline from tonight had subsided. The ringing in my blood had dulled.
Until I saw Aria still shaking.
One look at her delicate form trembling from the aftershocks changed everything. The normal rush of triumph was replaced instantly by something else. Something I donât care to look farther into right now.
I need a drink. A strong one, at that.
âWe knew we couldnât trust him,â I answer my brother as the ice clinks in the glass. I fill it with three fingers of whiskey and let it sit on the ice to chill. The amber liquid swirls as I consider every aspect of what we could face from Romano.
I know his friends. I know his enemies. And most owe far more to me than they do him.
âDo we need to send anyone a reminder?â I ask my brother as I lift my eyes to his and throw back the whiskey. If anyone wants to prove themselves to Romano, I need to shut down that train of thought before it turns into anything tangible. A small reminder of what weâre capable of could silence any ideas anyone has of turning on us. Itâs best not to entertain any delusions of grandeur they might have.
Jase shakes his head but doesnât return my gaze. Instead, he taps his finger against the back of the chair heâs standing behind before continuing. âHe messaged Talvery,â Jase tells me as the whiskey burns its way down to my gut.
I cock a brow at his statement. âIs that intel from our informant?â
âFrom one of them,â Jase answers with a confidence I respect.
âSo, he told Talvery that I allowed his daughter to kill her enemy. Thatâs interesting, isnât it?â I canât hide the amusement that plays along my lips.
âNot exactly. He only confirmed that we have Talveryâs daughter.â
A sneer of cynicism comes out as a grunt. âOf course, he did,â I say absently as I fill the glass once more.
âAnd then he left a message for us.â I donât breathe or move until Jase tells me, âHe says he understands and that he enjoyed the show.â
âFucking prick.â I let the words slip out before downing the alcohol in a single gulp. Heâs a coward. Pitting Talvery and me against one another while pretending to stay by my side. Revenge will be sweet when it comes time for that.
The whiskey is still burning down my chest as my brother asks, âAre we still with him? The guns have shipped. We have the upper hand. We can still pull back from our deal.â
âOr side with Talvery?â I ask him and Jase tenses. âWe could drop Romano and give the guns to Talvery.â
âWhy would we do that?â Jase asks with a glimmer of distrust in his voice as he walks closer to me and then settles against the side table, leaning against it and waiting for me to answer. The adrenaline returns full force as if knowing it would be a fatal mistake to put any trust in Talvery. His greed knows no bounds and to aid him could backfire immediately.
I watch the ice in the glass, seeing nothing but Aria. Hearing her pleas to spare her father.
The way she molded her body to mine in the shower was intoxicating. But sheâs still holding back. I would do anything to have her completely. This could be it.
But the risk is considerable.
Give it time, I hear a voice urge in the back of my head, but it canât be mine. Patience can go fuck itself.
âOf course⦠Aria.â My brother answers his own question given my silence and then runs a hand down the back of his head. It takes him a moment before he reaches for a glass and then takes the bottle of whiskey from my hand.
I let him. I already know sheâs making me think differently than I should. Making my actions unpredictable. She has a control over me thatâs undeniable and more and more apparent each day.
âYouâve never let anyone come between you and business before.â He downs the first shot, not waiting for a reply. Sucking the whiskey from his teeth, he asks, âWhy her?â
Silence descends upon us. Iâve never told anyone the complete truth. About how I wanted to die all those years ago. I was so close, and she stopped it.
Before tonight, I hadnât told them that Iâd hated her for it. I didnât tell anyone that Iâd prayed for it all to end. That at my greatest moment of weakness, Iâd given up.
Until she stopped it all.
Jase considers me for a moment. Heâs my second-in-command. My partner in all of this. And I never told him. I didnât want to speak the truth to life. âI need to know what she means to you at least.â
âEverything.â I donât hesitate to answer him, although my voice comes out lowly and full of possessiveness.
âAnd she wants you to side with Talvery. The man who tried to have us all murdered in our sleep? The man who set our house on fire?â
âShe doesnât know.â Iâm quick to defend her and even I feel the irritation of it. As if it seeps from the tone of Jaseâs voice straight to my head.
âShe doesnât know shit,â he responds with slight agitation, but one look at him and he looks away, staring at the liquid swirling in his glass.
âSheâs loyal.â
âShe doesnât owe him her loyalty.â He finally looks at me. Heâs not telling me anything I donât know already. âDoes she know about her mother?â he asks.
âItâs a rumor. We canât prove it.â Even as I answer him, I know Iâm merely playing devilâs advocate. Iâd do anything in my power to give her hope for the one thing she wants. Mercy toward her father.
âIâd planned to torture it out of Stephan,â I tell my brother, reminding myself. Iâd intended to give her truth tonight, along with the vengeance she so desperately needed. âI lost sight of that goal.â
Jase only huffs, although when I glance at him thereâs a shimmer of delight in his eyes and a smirk on his lips before he sips the expensive whiskey.
âSheâll never believe me.â As I give Jase yet another excuse, I feel a vise around my heart. Squeezing it tight. âShe would never side with me over her father.â The truth is damning.
âI donât mind telling her.â The ease with which he speaks catches me off guard. He must see it in my face though because he shrugs and adds, âIâll be gentle, but Iâll make her understand.â
âI donât want you getting between us.â The rise of anger is something I didnât expect. Clearing my throat, I return to the whiskey. One more and then I go back to my Aria.
âSheâs fucking with your head,â Jase says with a hard edge before adding, âIâve never seen you like this.â
âLike what?â I ask him, daring him with my tone to question me. Although, I already know the answer.
âIndecisive and emotional. We should have already annihilated them. Youâre taking your time and stockpiling more weapons and men than necessary.â
âI donât want her to hate me.â I expect to see shock in Jaseâs expression. Maybe even disgust. Sheâs a weakness I never intended, but one I refuse to give up.
Although heâs taken aback, he doesnât argue, and a tiredness sets in his dark eyes. The weight of everything Iâve been feeling is settling down on his shoulders now.
I propose to my brother, âWe have to choose. Talvery or Romano.â
âIâll die before siding with Talvery,â my brother confesses without a hint of emotion. Itâs merely a fact. And one I can support and respect, given everything Talvery has done. âIâd rather take them both out.â
Feeling the heat and buzz of the liquor slinking its way into my thoughts, I merely nod and then roll my tense shoulders. Iâm tired. Not just of tonight. But tired of fighting.
Thereâs no way to make it end though. The moment a man stops fighting in this business, is the moment heâs executed.
âWeâve pissed them both off, so itâs better to choose a side and make sure they donât put their past behind them to take us on together. Just because Romano slipped him intel doesnât mean anything more than heâs fueling the flames between them⦠but he knows what heâs doing. Heâs redirecting Talveryâs hate.â
Jaseâs head falls back as he downs the whiskey and sets the glass down heavily on the tabletop. He breathes out long and low as he nods his head in agreement.
âWe canât let that happen. But between the two, Romano is the best choice.â He stares at me, making sure I listen to his final words. âYou already know that. Siding with Talvery will be the end of us.â
Heâs not wrong. And dropping my gaze, I give in to what Iâd already decided. To what I knew had to happen. Romano canât be trusted, but he can be manipulated and used. Talvery would slit our throats the second he got a chance. Heâs already tried to wipe us out before and failed. And for that reason alone, allowing him any mercy would be a sign of weakness.
Instead of answering my brother, I give him a short nod and turn to leave him, to head back to Aria.
âHow is she?â he asks me, changing the subject before I can depart.
âHandling it well, all things considered.â The image of her trembling form in the shower reminds me that sheâs not well. âToday was hard on her. I should go back.â
âYou should,â he says beneath his breath, although he speaks so quietly Iâm not sure if the words were meant for me or for himself.
âIt had to be done,â I remind him, and he nods his head in agreement.
Feeling the conversation is over, I start to leave, but he calls out for me one more time.
âCarterâ¦â
Looking over my shoulder, I see the sincerity in my brotherâs expression when he tells me, âBe gentle with her.â
The moonlight filters through the slits in the curtain and washes over Ariaâs curves, hidden beneath the covers. Her hair is a messy halo, still damp on the pillow as she lies on her side.
My cock instantly hardens, remembering how I left her. Naked and wanting.
Sheâs a good girl, my little songbird, so I know sheâll be naked with the exception of my necklace around her throat. Sheâll be ready for me to take her.
The words from Jase still ring clear in my head. Be gentle with her.
Jase doesnât know her like I do, but he knows women far better than I ever have.
The images of me slamming into her and rubbing her clit until sheâs screaming my name push me to forget Jaseâs advice. To continue fucking Aria into obedience⦠until the moment I come closer to her.
Sheâs still trembling. Her hands clutch one another in front of her and her eyes are closed tightly. As if sheâs praying in the bed.
Her breathing is a mess of stutters.
Not all of us are made to be killers. I knew that when I gave her the knife and set Stephan up to be her victim.
âItâs the adrenaline,â I tell her quietly, cutting through the hushed night with my tense words. Her body jolts under the sheets and she stiffens, but her hands and shoulders still tremble.
I watch as she swallows and then her lips part. The look in her hazel-green eyes is a mix of utter sadness and fear.
âI canât stop,â she says, and her words are a whisper.
The need to make it all go away rides me hard as I quickly crawl into bed with her, pulling back the sheets and letting her fall into my arms. âPlease, help me,â she begs me.
âShh,â I hush her, petting her hair and pulling her closer to me. Her small body clutches at mine as if she canât get close enough. âI shouldnât have left you,â I whisper out loud and into her hair, feeling the wisps tickle my jaw.
She only responds by moving her hands to my chest and burying her head beneath my chin. Sheâs so frail in my embrace.
Which is anything but the Aria I know.
Maybe Iâve finally broken her. I already knew I was a monster, but the smile that begs to creep onto my lips at the thought is a validation of that fact. Iâm not worthy of a single breath, let alone the woman in my arms.
Sheâs not broken; a woman like Aria canât be broken. A voice whispers deep in the back of my mind, where it hides in the crevices. And the smile that begged to come out before forces its way to my face. I can only hide it by kissing her hair as I rub soothing strokes up and down her bare back.
âYouâre fine, songbird,â I tell her, and I know she can feel the hum of my deep words with her face pressed so firmly against my chest. âItâs only the adrenaline.â
She doesnât move from her spot, but her lashes tickle my chest as she opens her eyes and then blinks. Her breath is hot and her nails scratch lightly against my skin, but she doesnât ask the question on the tip of her tongue. How do I know?
Her hands continue to shake as she attempts to inch even closer to me. With her refusing to let go of me, I reach down and pull the covers tighter around her before telling her my story.
Not all people are made to be killers, but sometimes even the sweetest of creatures have to murder. I may not have ever been innocent, but there was a time when I wasnât the callous and brutal man I am today.
âThe first man I killed was a bartender named Dave,â I speak quietly without pausing my strokes along her back. Kissing her hair again, I stare at a sliver of light that flits across the bedroom floor. I only know Aria is listening because of the flutter of her lashes again. âI was sixteen,â I confess to her as Iâm taken back to that night.
âMy father didnât deal with my motherâs impending death all that well.â A huff of ludicrous laughter makes my shoulders shake and her body moves with mine. âHe was a coward, I know that now, but to face the deaths of the ones you love⦠well, I canât blame him for being a coward, but I can blame him for bringing me down with him.â
âWhat happened to your mother?â Aria asks gently, and her soft breathing is steady. Itâs only then that I see her shaking has turned into a slight tremble.
âShe had cancer. It took two years to kill her.â The memory makes my chest feel tight, but I continue with the story, the one that makes me angry, not the one that I donât have the strength to face. âMy father couldnât stand to see how she deteriorated. So, he drank himself into the man he was without her.â
My gaze drops to the comforter. âI swear he was a good man with her, but knowing he was going to lose her changed him.â My voice lowers, and I force aside the emotions that come with her memory. To vanish into the back of my mind where they belong.
âOne night, my father got himself into trouble and my mother was barely breathing.â The image of her on the hospital bed theyâd sent to our home for her hospice care causes my voice to crack, but I donât think Aria can hear it.
âHe hadnât been home in nearly twelve hours and I knew she wasnât going to make it much longer.â He knew too. He had to have known. We were only boys and even we knew she was going to die. âShe died while I was away looking for him.â
Ariaâs grip on me loosens, her nails trailing on my chest as her head lifts to look at me. I can feel her gaze on me, but I donât return it.
I can still hear the way the fall leaves crunched under my sneakers and feel the way the water from the earlier rainstorm seeped into a hole on the bottom of my sole as I trawled through the alleys looking for him.
âHe used to go to a few bars I knew.â I was young, but the bartenders knew me by name at that point. Aria doesnât stop looking at me, and I feel vulnerable and exposed under her eyes.
She makes me weak.
âI found him in the bathroom, beat up pretty bad. He said it was the bartender. I forget what excuse my father had, but then he cried and said he couldnât move. He cried and thatâs something he never did. He always drank away his pain. They beat him up and then cuffed him to the radiator, so they could come back and do it again. And again. All the while my mother waited for him.â
Aria sniffles against my chest and whispers an apology.
As the memories come back to me I tell her, âMy father was a poor excuse for a husband. And even a man. But what theyâd doneâ¦â
I canât explain to her how the anger spurred me on. In the moment that I thought I was going to lose both of them in one night, the anger is what kept me from breaking down.
Licking my lower lip and trying to play off the hoarseness in my voice as anything but emotion, I continue. âThe bartender knew my mother was dying. He knew we were on our own. He could have done a lot of things. He could have called the cops to remove my father. He could have locked the doors. But he wanted to humiliate him. He wanted to have a punching bag as payment for the debt my father owed him.â
I remember the way Dave looked at me that night when I left my father where he was and walked behind the bar to demand the key. He had a smile on his smarmy face. I knew he was a dick the moment I saw him, from his slicked back hair and the glint in his eyes. Iâd heard around town that he liked to get the young women who came to his bar drunk and take advantage of them. I didnât want to believe it though, not when I saw my father laughing with him other nights Iâd come to get my drunkard of a father back home.
âI went to get the key and Dave tried to punch me. He was piss drunk. I was only a kid.â
âYou never should have had toââ
âIn the streets where I grew up, it wasnât uncommon, Aria.â I cut her off before she can show me sympathy or even begin to suggest that I was too young for what I saw and what I was involved in. Iâm not the only one whoâs gone through this shit and I wonât be the last. Everyone leads different lives and there are no pretty promises or mercy for some of us.
âI grabbed the chair and I didnât stop hitting him with it. The other guys there never got up when Dave went after me, but they did come for me. Not at first. Not the first time I struck him with the metal legs. The ring of the metal bashing into his head was louder than the basketball game playing on the one TV in the corner of the bar.â Aria remains silent, and I continue.
âThey didnât even get up when he fell to the floor. I didnât stop cracking his head in with the chair. I couldnât.â A lot like Aria tonight. I hadnât made the connection until the thought hit me.
I remember how I didnât even think I was breathing. I didnât think it was real. I didnât want it to be.
âI didnât kill him that night,â I tell her and then kiss her hair. My grip on her shoulder tightens and I pull her back into my chest. âThe other assholes there dragged me away from him, but the minute I was free, they let me go. I got my father after leaving Dave on the floor bloodied up and moaning.â
I can see each of their faces now, full of fear and disbelief that a scrawny boy had nearly killed the man on the floor. My chest heaved but the adrenaline took over.
I killed him a week later after my mother had died and weâd buried her. He came to get money to cover the hospital bills for his broken nose. Money we didnât have, but he expected we would from the life insurance that didnât exist.
No one else was home and I wasnât supposed to be home either, but the guilt of leaving my mom that night kept me from going anywhere for days.
My mother died while I was gone, and I know if I had to put the blame somewhere, it should be on my father.
I know that Dave wasnât the reason that my mother died. But as he stood in the doorway of our home, telling me that the life insurance money from my motherâs death was going to him, I lost it. I already knew there was no life insurance. There was no money. There was no helping my father, a man who didnât want to be helped. There was no bringing my mother back.
I knew all of that. I also knew that the man in front of me didnât care.
He didnât care about any of that. And so, I let him into our home, grabbing the pistol my father kept by the door as I closed it. I walked Dave into the kitchen where my mother died on the hospital bed under the pretense of retrieving the check sitting on the counter. I shot him in the back. Just once, with shaking hands. But once was enough.
I didnât stop shaking, not even hours after Sebastian had helped me throw Daveâs body into the river. He was the only friend I had and the only person I could turn to. He was older than me, stronger than me and he was there for me when I had no one. He didnât stay for long though. He had his own demons to run from, and plenty of them.
I couldnât stop shaking. If it wasnât for my brothers, I donât think I could have continued living. In a way, it was our first act together that led to this empire. Nothing can bring you closer to someone than death can.
I remember how I didnât want to bury Dave like Sebastian suggested because I couldnât stand to see upturned dirt after watching my mother being lowered into the ground only days before. I threw up as Sebastian dug a hole. I couldnât take it. I couldnât deal with what Iâd done and what I was capable of.
And so, we tossed the body in the bed of the truck instead after covering the partially dug shallow grave, and Sebastian disposed of the body in the river. All while I uselessly rocked myself in the passenger seat of the truck, loathing myself and what Iâd done.
âWhen did you kill him?â Aria asks me, breaking up my thoughts and bringing me back to her. I blink away the memories and the heavy sadness in the pit of my chest.
It takes me a minute to realize I hadnât voiced the last bit of my story. She thinks I just lost it at the bar. She doesnât know that I did it days later and that I led him into the house knowing I wanted to see the man die.
âDoes it matter when he died?â I ask her, wanting to keep the truth from her and thinking that it makes it better if it was just heat of the moment. But nothing makes being a murderer better.
She doesnât answer me, she only lowers her cheek to my chest and I continue holding her, remembering how I shook that night after ditching Daveâs dead body into the river. âThe shaking will stop,â I whisper.
Time passes slowly, neither of us speaking until I finally feel the weight of the day and tell Aria to sleep.
âI donât want to sleep,â she tells me wearily and then forces herself to swallow. âIâm afraid Iâll see him. Heâll be there waiting for me.â
âShh,â I hush her again, cupping her chin in both of my hands and gently placing a kiss on her forehead. I notice then how calm her body is.
Itâs amazing what a distraction can do to a person. It can make you forget about everything.
âHeâs gone,â I remind her, although her prolonged fear worries me.
Killing him was supposed to set her free.
It will, the voice hisses and calms the worry creeping up on me. Nodding as if in agreement with the voice, I kiss her once more, pressing my lips to her smooth skin and then pull back, waiting for her to look at me.
âI told you. All you have to fear is me.â
Ariaâs hazel eyes are deep with emotion, swirling with an intensity that pulls me in and pins me down until her lips part and my gaze drifts to them.
The yearning to press my lips to hers nearly wins, but instead, I remember yet another aspect of tonight that Iâd planned and forgotten about.
âWait here,â I command her, and disappointment causes her gaze to lower, but she releases me for the first time since Iâd crawled into bed to be beside her.
As I walk to the dresser, I strip off my shirt and pants before grabbing the case with a syringe in it and a bottle of oil from the drawer. I havenât needed it for so long, but she needs it tonight. It will let her sleep if nothing else.
Standing next to the bed, I motion for her to come to me before telling her to turn around and get on all fours. Iâve come to expect a lot of things from Aria. Her sass and her mouth, her questions, and defiance.
But tonight, all she does is obey, and that stirs up something inside of me. Both the pure and the depraved desires. She doesnât even ask why.
My hand gentles on the curve of her ass then moves up to her waist and back down before I give her the shot, making her jump slightly before she steadies herself and then I can push down the plunger of the syringe.
âBirth control,â I tell her and then smirk at the thought as I add, âitâs better late than never.â
Aria only murmurs a response, placing both her hands flat on the sheets and her cheek follows as she turns her head.
âI have this for you too,â I tell her after setting the empty syringe down on the nightstand and pushing on her hip. âSit up,â I command her, and she obeys easily, wincing slightly as her ass presses against the comforter.
âIt should help you sleep,â I explain as I pull the liquid into the bulb syringe. The oil is clear, a pure drug that will hit her hard the first night. âHave you ever heard of Sweet Lullabies?â I ask her, and she tilts her head with a crease in her forehead indicating her confusion.
âLullabies? I know a few-â
âNo, the drug.â
I donât expect her to. Weâve only just started selling the adapted version thatâs marketable. She shakes her head, proving me right although the confusion in her expression stays in place.
I lift the syringe to her lips and she obediently opens her mouth, tilting her head back slightly for me. I admire how the moonlight reflects off her slender neck and plays with the shadows down her body as the liquid hits her tongue.
âSuck it down.â The command I give her makes my dick stir, but sheâll be out soon. Within minutes, I would bet.
âWhat is it?â she asks me, and I debate on telling her how it came to be and how itâs responsible for so many of the reasons I am who I am, but she yawns, cutting me off before I begin.
âJust lie down,â I tell her gently, and pull back the covers for her to nestle in beside me. Iâve had her in my bed a number of nights now, but sheâs never readily slept this close to me.
With the rustling of the sheets silenced, I let my hand rest on her hip and rub soothing circles there. I breathe in the scent of her hair and leave a small kiss there as I listen to her steady breathing and know that sleep has taken her before I could even begin to admit what this drug really is.