âThe best and most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen or even touchedâthey must be felt with the heart.â
âHelen Keller THE PAST HELD A SIMPLISTICÂ charm in my heart, but that didnât mean I couldnât see the beauty in my complicated present. Urban development stretched to the sky, its pollution blocking the stars, but beneath it the magic of humanity lived on. There was good in the world, and I couldnât understand how the blonde newscaster only focused on the unpleasant.
The alleyway was still, the kitchen staff having already dispersed. Tire noise, honking, and sirens were steady in the background, but even louder than that was the soft, harmonic lilt of a saxophone.
My heels clicked on the asphalt as I took a few steps toward the music. A certain reality settled on me: I didnât have a spellbinding love story to bring to this world. The honest truth was, I only forced myself to enjoy tragic endings because I knew mine wouldnât be far apart.
Warmth brushed my bare back, the whisper of a thrill trailing behind. I turned around to find Nicolas standing so close I had to tilt my head to meet his gaze. He took the cigarette from my fingers, put it between my lips, and then, with the metallic of a Zippo lighter with an ace of spades on the side, the mesmerizing glow of a flame flickered between us.
âThis is the last cigarette youâre smoking, so enjoy it.â
I smiled, and as he lit the cigarette, I puffed slowly so I didnât cough and come off as a rookie once again.
âSomething funny?â
A soft laugh escaped me. âYeah. You.â
With a pensive stare, he pulled the cigarette from my lips, brought it to his own, and inhaled.
I tilted my head, regarding him. âSo, can I call you my now?â I didnât know why Iâd said it, but it had just slipped through my lips as easily as air. Nicotine ran through my veins and lightened my tongue.
He looked at me, blowing out a breath of smoke above my head. We were standing so close his sleeve touched my arm. So close his presence obliterated mine. And there was nothing that felt familial about it.
He handed me the cigarette. âNo.â It was a hard , not one you debated with.
âWhy not? You will be.â
His jaw ticked. âIâll be your , not your brother.â
âSame thing, really. You already have the controlling brotherly act down.â
His expression told me he wasnât amused and he wasnât going to participate in this conversation.
âYou can call me your . Maybe a sibling is what you need to realize the world doesnât revolve around you.â
He let out a breath of amusement, but it sounded like he wanted to choke me. âSmoke your cigarette and shut up.â
I turned around to hide the ridiculous warmth that rushed to my cheeks and walked a few steps from him. The soft clicks of my heels in tune with the saxophoneâs lilt was hypnotic. The nicotine must have been mixing with the alcohol in my system. Or maybe I was just drunk on his presence.
Spinning around, I leveled my gaze on him. âYou donât have to babysit me, you know. I donât usually get assaulted twice in one weekend.â
He leaned against the back door, his gaze sparking with sarcasm. âJust once, then?â
âJust once,â I repeated, a smile pulling on my lips.
âIâm not your babysitter.â
âCouldâve fooled me.â
His expression darkened around the edges. I didnât know why I was practically poking him with a stick, but the filter that was usually in place had drifted away with the last saxophone note.
His tone was rough and dry. âKeep opening your mouth, assault you.â
I didnât believe he meant the sexual variety, though thatâs how I regrettably decided to take it. I brought the cigarette to my lips and inhaled. His gaze met mine through a breath of smoke.
âIâll be sure to tell my next attacker that only my gets to assault me.â Somehow, a suggestive nature filled the alleyway so heavily a passerby couldnât miss it. My expression was thoughtful, though my heartbeat played the conga in my chest. âIâm sure youâre running out of ways to ruin menâs lives, anyway.â
âItâs called a repertoire, Elena. They can be used again.â
âHmm. And whatâs next on the list?â
âWhoâs being assaulted?â His voice was bland, like we were talking about the weather for the third time.
I lifted a shoulder. âMe.â
His gaze went cold, but his tone stayed impassive. âThe entertainment for tonight would be watching him bleed out.â
Nothing about his expression told me he was exaggerating. âWell, it wouldnât be a normal evening with you around if there wasnât some blood involved.â I paused. âThough, I guess you did all right at our last supper.â
The smallest yet darkest smile pulled on his lips. âGuess I did.â
Butterflies erupted in my stomach. That mischievous, wicked smile was the exact reason women liked bad boys.
I needed some air.
Bending down, I put the cigarette out against the concrete before tossing it in the restaurantâs dumpster. Butts and trash already littered the alleyway; I didnât want to contribute.
Nicolas still leaned against the door, and so I stopped in front of him and waited. He held out his phone to me. âMy list. Write it now.â
I frowned at the cell phone and then looked at him.
His expression was serious, and truthfully, with this attraction spiraling out of control, zinging under my skin like electricity, I didnât have it in me to argue with him. I grasped the phone and took a few steps back. There wasnât any way I could think with him standing so close.
I opened his notes and typed in Adrianaâs dress size, shoe size, and even bra size. He didnât look like a man to skirt around details. When it came to her hobbies and likes, I couldnât help myself.
I smiled, but then his phone pinged and it fell from my lips.
I stared.
Who was he?
The image was of a woman, naked. Blond hair, coy smile, big breasts.
.
I glanced at him to see he was only waiting for me to finish. I turned the phone around. His gaze stayed on mine for a second before giving it a glance. Not a blink.
âThis is Tonyâs girlfriend,â I accused.
âIs it?â
I couldnât tell if he was amused or annoyed. Couldnât tell if he didnât know who this was, or if he was playing stupid. Did he get so many random pictures of naked women he couldnât tell them apart? Anger sparked in my chest.
âStop sleeping with her,â I said coldly.
Now his darkness was the amused variety.
My grip tightened on the phone. âItâs wrong.â
He lifted a shoulder. âTit for tat.â
I paused. âYou donât have a girlfriend.â
though that usually didnât mean much to a man in this life.
âDid.â
A strange discomfort curled in my chest.
I blinked, trying to sort this out. âYou guys are sleeping with each otherâs girlfriends to, what? Get back at each other?â
Not a word from him, and his gaze told me there wouldnât be one.
âHe loves her, Nicolas, whether he knows it or not.â
His expression turned to ice. âYouâre a champion for love, are you? Personal experience, maybe?â
My eyes narrowed. I didnât know what he meant, but I was too angry to care. âYouâre marrying his sister, so itâs not fair anymore.â I had no idea what I was saying, but I wasnât taking his side.
His laugh was dark.
He didnât like me taking sides. Did he think Iâd pick his?
A sudden thought, a need to know, came to me, and it escaped my lips before I could stop it. âAre you going to be faithful to Adriana?â My heart thumped to an awkward beat. That was the most invasive thing Iâd ever asked anyone, and it left a foreign and regretful aftertaste on my tongue.
His gaze leveled on mine, not liking my question either, but he kept his words deep and smooth. âDoes she expect me to be?â
Of course she didnât.
Not one woman expected that in this worldânot when work for a man was considered going to a strip club. Not when money and power corrupted. And not when women like Jenny threw themselves at rich and attractive men. It was why I didnât want a husband as handsome as him. He didnât even have to work to be unfaithfulâit would sit right in his lap.
I shook my head, this conversation chafing me with frustration. âYouâre evading. Answer the question.â Maybe if he said the words, showed me how disloyal, dishonest, he was, then I could put this fascination for him aside. I was more interested in his reply than even my sister would be.
He pushed off the door. âYou answer .â
My response was calm and suicidal. âYou can have your phone back after you answer my question.â
His condescending stare burned me, and then, with the tiniest shake of his head, he came in my direction.
My heart leapt and I backed up, but then my bare back hit the alley wall and the cool concrete sent a shiver down my spine. I was trapped, cornered, and frazzled enough I couldnât think clearly. Didnât think at all.
I dropped his phone down the front of my dress.
He froze two paces away. Stared at where his phone had gone. And then ran his tongue across his teeth in a type of roguish disbelief.
âYou honestly think thatâs going to stop me from taking it back?â
I had no idea why Iâd done it. For once in my life, I wished for the Sweet Abelli to save me. Her calm, collected ways wouldnât have gotten her into this mess in the first place. I swallowed down my breathlessness.
âThat would be inappropriate.â
Both of our gazes dropped when the phone fell from my breasts to my stomach, before catching on the tight fabric near my hips. His phone was stuck below my navel.
His eyes came back to mine. âFrom what Iâve learned, kissing is platonic these days. Reaching up your dress canât be much worse.â
My stomach fluttered. âYouâre reaching up my dress.â
âThree seconds, Elena.â His words were short, pissed. I knew he meant I had that long to give it back to him.
I didnât know what I was doing or when Iâd suddenly acquired a death wish, but my gaze met his for a consecutive three seconds. Quietly and maturely, I said, âYou havenât answered my question.â
His stare flicked to the concrete, and when it came back to me burning hot, I knew I was in trouble. A surge of expectation leaked into my bloodstream but was doused with unease when he took the remaining steps toward me.
His shoulders blocked the alleyway, his heavy presence slowing my breaths. He wasnât gentle. With his amber gaze on mine, he gripped a fistful of my dress near my thigh and tugged it up, jerking me in the process.
He fisted the fabric, skimming it up my legs. Every inch of my skin sizzled, and an empty ache formed low in my stomach. When he made contact with my bare thigh, I had to bite my lip to hold in a whimper. His palm was rough and hot enough to burn. And God, a man had never smelled so good. I wanted to nuzzle my face in his neck so I could get more of it, all of it.
It wasnât lost on me that I was criticizing him for being unfaithful to Adriana while fantasizing about him doing the same thing with me. The thought was only fleeting because his presence, his warmth, brushed it aside.
I didnât know if he had slowed, or if this moment was so significant I was experiencing it in slow motion, but it quieted, the sound of my ragged breaths filling the alley. A slight breeze made its way through the sliver of space between us, making me aware of how hot I was. Iâd never felt warmer in my life.
He pressed closer against me, his jacket brushing my arms, his watch cold on the smooth skin of my inner thigh. One hand was braced on the wall beside my head, trapping me, but what he didnât know was that I didnât want out.
Once heâd touched bare skin, his gaze hardened, before flicking down as if in reluctance. The empty ache between my legs pulsed. I couldnât help but to part my thighs, to imagine him slipping a hand between them. Cupping me over my thong. Pulling it to the side and pushing a finger inside of me. My palms lay flat on the cold, concrete wall on each side of me, and a buzz sounded in my ears.
His jaw tightened, and his fingers gripped the inside of my thigh. Sparks ran from the heat of his hand straight to my clit, all my blood drumming in that area. Heâd only have to run a palm across the fabric to realize how disturbed I was, how wet this was making me. How much I wanted him.
But he didnât do any of that.
He only grabbed his phone.
His thumb brushed over the thin string of my thong on my hip, pulling it down a bit before his hands left me. As my dress fell to brush the asphalt, his voice was rough against my ear.
âYou already know the answer.â
He stepped back and tilted his head toward the door, in a way of telling me to get there, now.
Too breathless to do anything else, I headed in its direction, a whisper of an ache trailing behind.