Iwonder if she really loves me.
Iâll never forget the way she said it. It gutted me. She may grow to love me, but sheâll always hate me.
I canât blame her for that, but I want to hear the words apart from the hatred. So, I can pretend it comes without a caveat.
I want her to say it again, and this time to mean it. Those words shouldnât have fallen so recklessly as I pushed her to the edge of pleasure. Theyâre addictive and they did something to me I canât describe.
Sheâs drawing so slowly today. Lying in front of the fire in the den, sheâs only been working on one picture. One single piece of art for the last three hours. Iâm still not sure what it is, all I can make out is a field of flowers, but thereâs something beyond the black smudges of petals.
I donât have time to question her about it though. Other questions are too precious to be wasted by another moment of silence.
âWhat do you want more than anything in the world?â The fire crackles once my deep voice has broken the void of silence between us. The tension is still there, but it canât exist forever. I wonât let it.
Ariaâs hazel eyes lift, and she peeks at me through her dark lashes, not bothering to move from lying on her elbows. She glances back at the drawing and visibly swallows before shrugging slightly and looking back up at me as if she doesnât have to answer.
At this point, she doesnât. I donât care what she does or how she treats me with the door closed, so long as she doesnât run or hurt herself.
âI want my family to be untouchable,â I confess to her.
âThatâs quite an ambition,â she answers, crossing her ankles and still staring at the drawing pad in front of her. Sheâs still cold.
âIsnât that what you want, too?â I ask her. âThat would seem to be especially desirable given the current environment.â I canât keep the smug tone from my voice to cover up the pain from her reaction. If she would talk to me, sheâd see. She has to see that thereâs only one way for this to end. And once itâs over, it will all be better. Iâll make it better for her.
âI want everyone to fuck off and leave me alone,â she answers with a bite that tips the corner of my lips up into a half smile. I love the fight in her. Sheâll live, sheâll survive. A girl like her knows how to survive if nothing else.
âAnger is something I didnât expect. And someone like you shouldnât be left alone,â I tell her.
âI donât want to cry today. So, Iâll settle for anger.â Her answer comes with muted irritation. She throws down the stick of charcoal onto the paper and then meets my gaze to ask, âWhy shouldnât I be alone?â
âItâs one thing to say you want to be alone. Itâs another to truly be it. You pretend like you donât exist in the same world as I do. Locking yourself away and acting like thatâs what you want. But you belong here. You were born to this life. You need to accept that. And loneliness in this world leaves you vulnerable and thatâs a life neither of us can afford.â
âI was alone in the cell,â she says solemnly. I donât think she slept at all last night; I know I didnât. âI survived.â
A melancholy huff leaves me. âYou werenât alone. The first night you slept, Iâd drugged your dinner to make sure you would. So, I could tend to your wounds and the cuts on your wrists.â
âYou did?â Her eyes are filled with shock. âWhy?â
âYou were mine to take care of.â My shoulders stiffen, as does my gaze and she drops hers, falling back to the smudges of charcoal. âI knew you would live. And you would break quickly. Everything needed to happen quickly.â
âWhy?â she asks me, and I donât know how she canât know at this point.
âIâd intended to show how willing you were to be mine to everyone who was watching. So, there would be no question where you stood in the war.â
Her eyes close and she chews the inside of her cheek at my admission, trying to keep her emotions in check. I know the truth of the situation is raw for her. An open wound. But she needs to see it all. She has to accept everything for what it is.
âInstead, thereâs no question where I stand when it comes to you. I never liked Stephan. Once a traitor, always a traitor. But giving his death to you, allowing you to have vengeance? It spoke more words than I realized it would.â
Her face scrunches with the painful memory and then she hangs her head, avoiding my gaze and rubbing her cheek against her shoulder. She pushes the hair out of her face and when she speaks, she doesnât look up.
âBut youâre still going toâ¦â She doesnât bother finishing her question. I know she already knows. Sheâll come to accept it.
âYour father doesnât deserve what he has. Heâs not half the man Romano is. And Romano is a pathetic excuse for his title. Theyâll both die. Along with everyone who fights for them.â
âPlease. Not everyone. Iâll do anything.â Her words are spoken with conviction and she lifts her hazels up to meet my dark gaze. âYou want me to kneel at your feet? Iâll kneel.â
She still doesnât get it. And my heart aches for hers.
âWhat if I wanted you to stand at my side?â I ask her, my heart racing in my chest. Itâs a risk to give her more. Every time I do, she fails to cope with it. But I need her to know what I really want from her. What I desire more than anything.
âYou would tower over me,â she answers.
âThatâs not how it works, songbird. And itâs not what I want. Youâve only ever had broken wings, but I can show you what true freedom is.â
âYouâre still going to kill my family?â she asks me as if that answer is the end all, be all.
âIâm going to do a number of things youâre going to disapprove of. You need to accept that.â My answer is hard, leaving no room for any intolerance. âIâm not a good man.â
âIs this what it would be like to stand by your side? To have no control and to simply accept what you do?â Iâm surprised by her answer but eager to discuss terms.
âOn some matters, youâll never have control, and youâll have to accept what I choose. Whether or not you want to know about them is your decision.â I know part of her despair is because she knows everything, yet sheâs a casualty with little recourse.
âIâm sorry you know as much as you do,â I tell her and then almost take it back, thinking sheâll take it offensively and thatâs not what I intended.
She doesnât though. Instead, she cracks, showing me the side of her I love. The raw vulnerability.
âI donât want this life,â she whispers, slowly pushing the art away so she can rest her head against the rug. The light from the fire licks along her skin.
âWe donât get to choose,â I remind her. Iâve told myself so many times that I wish things were different, but you live the life youâre given.
âYouâre wrong,â she tells me as if she has another option.
âDo you love what I do to you? How I fuck that pretty little cunt and force you to scream out my name?â Iâm crude and harsh with my question.
She doesnât answer me, but she doesnât have to.
âThen no, you donât have a choice. I had a choice once. I chose wrong.â
âYouâll get tired of me,â she whispers, her eyes seemingly vacant but the depths of them harboring pain. âOne day I wonât be a shiny new toy. One day, youâll want someone to fight you and Iâll have none left in me.â Tears pool in her eyes. âOne day, the idea of shoving your dick inside of me wonât interest you in the least.â
She has no idea how wrong she is. Iâm only growing more obsessed with her. Breaking every rule to satisfy her.
Risking everything to heal the broken pieces of her she refuses to acknowledge.
Iâll never let her go because she isnât a toy. She isnât a challenge. She isnât the fuckdoll she thinks she is and secretly loves being.
âWill you let me go then?â
âNever.â
She turns to face the fire and I whisper to her, âYouâre so wrong, Aria. If you werenât so set on hating me, youâd see.â
âYou give me every reason to hate you,â she tells me. In the reflection from the mirror above the mantel, I see the fire dancing in her eyes.
Sheâll never know how much her words hurt me. Or maybe she does, and thatâs what she was after.
âWhy are you doing this to me? Why me?â she asks me in a single breath and I offer her a singular truth in return.
âYour father set a series of events in motion,â I reply, remembering the night his men took me from the street.
I remember how the pills spilled into the gutter even as they slammed their fists against my jaw and I fell to the cold cement. With her, I only see what lies ahead. But sheâs caught in the past. And thatâs what will destroy us.
âSo, itâs my fatherâs fault?â she asks me with a sadness in her eyes, as if Iâve robbed her of some fantasy.
âNo, itâs mine.â My confession confuses her for a moment, but before she can say anything else, I continue.
âI thought I loved you,â I tell her with a bitter hardness that forces the words to sound violent on my tongue. Her eyes widen as she turns back and stares at me. Her stance changes to one of prey, realizing itâs stumbled into its worst enemy. The shock in her eyes fuels me to push her farther. For her to realize the man I truly am.
âFor a long time after I left your home, when they kicked me back out onto the street after brutalizing me, I thought I loved whoever belonged to the sweet voice that stopped them from killing me.â Ariaâs expression changes to one of fear and knowing.
I tell her to break whatever thoughts she has of love. And whatever thoughts I have of it. Weakness crushes down on me as I tell her what I used to think. What I expected this to be when I stabbed the knife into her picture and told Romano to bring her to me.
âI knew I hated your father, and eventually I hated everything. I hated you for letting me live.â Aria is silent, waiting with bated breath to see what else Iâll say.
âIâm condemned to hell. Of everyone on this Earth, God knows I deserve to burn. And itâs because I was allowed to live. Itâs because of you.â
âIt has nothing to do with me. My fatherââ
âIt has everything to do with you,â I tell her, feeling the rage from the memory take over. âYouâre the one who banged on the door and pleaded with your father. I was so foolish. For a long time, I thought when you were crying out, âI need you,â that in some fucked up way, you were calling out for me.â
As I take another step closer to her, the wildness returns to Ariaâs eyes, the fear I know and love swirls within them. Her cunt is still feeling the pleasure I give her, while her heart beats with the knowing fear of me.
âI didnâtââ she starts to protest, and I stop her.
âYouâre the bird in the forest who lured the child out of safety until he fell into a black hole he could never get out of. And still, the bird sings so beautifully, taunting the child as he becomes a man of hardness and hate, stuck in a hell he didnât know was coming. Do you know what that man dreams of more than anything?â I ask her, remembering the moment my gratitude changed to hate for the very girl who sits in front of me.
She barely shakes her head, not taking her gaze from me.
âFirst to get out, for the longest time, just a way to get out. But when he realizes he canât, that thereâs no changing who he is and where heâs damned to, he searches for the songbird. Eager to capture it. Just to silence the song forever. Thatâs why I wanted you.â
I lean forward, pinning her with my gaze as I tell her, âAria, that was before I held you. No matter how much you choose to hate me, I swear Iâll never let you go. You mean so much more to me than I would dare to admit to anyone.â