âWeâre flying to Baltimore?â I climb onto the private jet, frowning around. âWhat about your car?â
âDamian will take that back.â Tigran collapses into a luxurious leather seat and sighs. âThis is faster.â
I frown at him and squint out the window. Iâm nervous and feeling a little sick. âI havenât been on a plane in a really long time.â
âLucky you.â
I hesitate and then choose the seat as far from him as I can get. I curl up in the big chair, pulling my knees to my chest, and he sighs before coming back to me. He slumps down in the seat beside mine. Not too close, but still, too close.
âDo you have to sit there?â I ask, frustrated by the way I react when heâs near. Like my body has a mind of its own.
He looks at me for a long moment as the crew gets the plane prepared to take off. I squirm a little under that gaze, hating the way my eyes keep drifting to his lips.
âWhen was the last time you ate something?â
Thatâs not what I expected him to say. âUh, this morning, I think.â
âDasha, pisik, you need to take better care of yourself.â
âIâve had other things on my mind. You know, like leaving the only home Iâve ever known to move in with a stranger?â
He chuckles, low and intense, and flags down the flight attendant. Sheâs a pretty woman with high cheekbones and huge tits. He barely glances at her, which is a surprise.
Sheâs easily a ten, while Iâm a six-and-a-half, and the half is being generous.
âMy wife needs something to eat. Whatâs available?â
âWell, sir, thereâs no mealâ ââ
âI asked you whatâs available, not what you donât have.â
She laughs nervously. âOf course, sir. I believe thereâs a gourmet cheese and cracker plate?â
âThatâll do fine.â She scurries away, and Tigran leans toward me. âI want you to eat everything she brings.â
âWhat if I donât want to?â
âIâm not asking permission. Youâre my wife now, which means youâll take care of yourself. No more forgetting to eat.â
âWhy do you even care?â
He grunts as he looks away. His face screws up like he doesnât know how to answer that question before scowling back at me. âBecause itâll help you get through this without fainting again, and I donât feel like peeling your unconscious body off the floor for a second time.â
My hands grip my knees tighter. âRight, that makes more sense. Itâs not altruistic, right? Just making sure I donât become a burden.â
âExactly.â He smirks and leans his head back. âNow you get it.â
The flight lasts barely half an hour. He sleeps the whole time, and I reluctantly eat. I hate to admit it, but he was rightâit makes the stressful experience slightly better.
As soon as weâre up, itâs like weâre coming back down for a landing. Iâm busy eating, and I donât even realize I should be freaking out.
At least, until the runway slips into view and weâre hurtling toward it.
I feel myself tensing like itâs the last thing Iâll ever see. How did I end up here? With a man I donât know? A bossy, selfish asshole who only cares about making sure I do whatâs expected of me?
Like have his babies.
âCrap,â I whisper to myself, terrified to my core. âOh, crap, oh, crap. Ohâ ââ
Tigran reaches out and takes my hand.
I stare at it. Callused, thick, strong. I hold tightly, not really caring that itâs him, as I squeeze my eyes shut. Iâm desperate for comfort right now, and he gives it to me. The fearâs still there, but it dims when heâs touching me, and before I realize whatâs happening, the plane touches down.
I yelp, but he holds my hand tighter as the plane brakes and slows down.
âYouâre okay,â he says gently. âWeâre down.â
âRight. Iâm fine. I did it.â
âAnd you even finished all your crackers. Iâm proud of you.â
I glare at him. âAre you always like this?â
âNot always. Just with you.â His eyebrows raise, and he looks down. âYou can let go of my hand if you want.â
I had forgotten about that. I quickly shove his palm from my lap and turn my back on him, arms wrapping around my body. âIâm fine, okay? Would you stop looking at me?â
âIf I have to,â he says, and Iâm pretty sure I hear a smile on his face.
I refuse to look. Iâm not giving him that satisfaction. Instead, I watch the airport filter past as the plane taxis to the private terminal.
Baltimoreâs a lot like Philly. The row homes are mostly red brick. There are green spaces, lots of rundown neighborhoods, and tons of life. People mill around the streets, even in the late evening as the sun sets. Thereâs a downtown with skyscrapers, and I can almost smell the inner harbor.
Another one of Tigranâs drivers takes us into an upscale neighborhood. The houses here are in great shape, with lots of glass and windows. Roof decks, gastropubs on every corner, life, movement, and excitement.
Itâs overwhelming to a girl who hasnât been out of her suite much in the last decade, but itâs also fascinating.
âSometimes I feel like the world moved on without me,â I murmur, forgetting for a second about my husband.
But heâs always got to remind me that heâs there. âYou act like the horse-drawn carriage was the primary mode of transportation when you were last moving around outside.â
âNo, obviously not, but itâs justââ How do I make him get it? That everything just looks different?
âTry to explain,â he says patiently.
âI was a little kid back then. Mostly I remember what the city was like from the perspective of a thirteen-year-old. Now Iâm twenty-five, and itâs likeâ¦â
âEverythingâs smaller?â
âYeah, that, but also itâs just different.â Iâm frustrated with myself because I canât put it into words. The way trains and buses arenât magical anymore. Buildings arenât incredible. âEverything lost its shine.â
âYouâre jaded,â he says like he completely understands.
I look back at him. âI donât feel jaded, but maybe thatâs the right word.â
âI was like that too, you know, back when I was young. I thought the world worked one way, but as I got older, it became clear that it just doesnât work at all.â
âThatâs pretty depressing.â
âLiberating, I think. Now that I understand life doesnât mean a thing, I have the freedom to do what I please.â
I shrink away from him. âI think life has meaning.â
âDo you? Funny, coming from a girl whoâs been hiding from life for more than half of hers.â
I turn, about to argue, but it dies in my throat. What if heâs right? I always imagined my life had purposeâthat even if I was hiding away, I still mattered. What if his sad, nihilistic viewpoint is real, and nothing really matters at all?
And all Iâve done is waste my time?
But no, I wonât think that way. He can be all doom and gloom. Even though Iâve been a shut-in, I still think thereâs good in the world. Maybe Iâve been hiding from the bad stuff, but Iâve tried to keep myself open to everything else.
Just in my own ways. Through books, movies, TV, and the internet.
The car pulls up in front of a large, modern house right across the street from the water. Itâs enormous and beautiful, in some of the most prime real estate in the entire city.
âHere we are,â he says, getting out of the car.
My jaw drops open. He pops the trunk and grabs my bags, waving off the driver and doing it himself. I scramble out, and the second my feet hit the pavement, I think this has to be some mistake.
âYou live here?â I ask when he starts toward the front door.
âYou should see the Sarkissian mansion. Youâll like that. Secret passages and lots of blood-stained carpet.â He laughs like thatâs somehow a funny joke.
This is my home. A big, black front door waits for me. Tigran wrestles my bags inside, grunting as he goes, and I canât seem to move.
I know what will happen once Iâm in there.
I wonât come back out.
This is the end for me. I know it, and Tigranâs got to know it too. Thereâs no way Iâll work up the courage to leave the house again once Iâm in the safety of this big, beautiful place. Unless I turn and run, Iâll be trapped.
Because Iâm going to trap myself.
âDasha, come inside,â Tigran says from the doorway. He beckons for me and holds out a hand.
I donât want to. I look away, toward the car, and wonder if I could steal it. But I donât even know how to drive. I never learned. What was the point?
Now I wish I had done something, anything, these last twelve years.
âDasha,â he says again, this time a little more insistent.
âComing.â I hang my head and follow him into the house.
The door shuts behind me.
âIâll give you a tour later,â he says as I catch glimpses of an upscale home. Dark, gleaming floors, expensive oil paintings on the wall. Tasteful statues, vintage furniture. Big, gold-framed mirrors. A sitting room with a piano, an office thatâs clearly his, a gourmet kitchen.
An older man is cooking soup at the stove. âWelcome home, Tigran,â he says, walking slightly stooped. Heâs got wispy graying hair and a very kind, gentle smile. âAnd this must be your wife.â
âDasha,â I say, introducing myself.
âThis is Vito; he runs the house.â
âLovely to meet you. Technically, Iâm Mr. Sarkissianâs valet, but I do most of the cooking and coordinate the staff. If you ever need anything, and I mean that literally, come find me. Iâll help.â
âThank you,â I say, totally overwhelmed. My father had staff, but they only came around occasionally to clean twice a week.
âIâll get her bags upstairs,â Tigran grunts. âThat smells good, Vito.â
âYouâll enjoy it, I hope. Just a little something I threw together.â The older manâs eyes sparkle and his smile is shockingly calming. âNothing like nice, warm soup to make you feel at home.â
Tigran heads to a back staircase. He lugs my bags up, muscling them all alone. I hurry after him, and he takes me to a room on the right.
âThis is yours,â he says, taking a key down from the top of the doorframe and handing it to me. âNobody else has one. Only you and me.â
âThatâs⦠good?â I donât know how to feel as he pushes inside.
Thereâs an expansive, comfortable sitting room. Couch, coffee table, a television over what looks like a real, working fireplace. Bookshelves filled with books and tasteful portraits of barking dogs and a summer village on the walls. Itâs like straight out of a magazine.
âLiving room, bedroom, bathroom.â He gestures around him and walks over to the windows. âAnd a view of the harbor.â
I follow him and stare down at the water. âItâs beautiful,â I say before I can stop myself. I glance over, thinking heâll make fun of me, but heâs staring outside too.
âYeah, it is,â he agrees, and he seems much gentler than I wouldâve expected.
But it only lasts a moment. He turns away, gesturing impatiently at my bags.
âUnpack and get settled,â he commands, heading to the door.
âWait,â I say, a sudden panic coming over me. âWhat am I supposed to do?â
He pauses to look back. His face is cloudy and dark.
âGet settled. Live your life. What else is there?â
Then heâs gone.
Leaving me alone in a strange room, in a strange house, surrounded by total strangers.
The reality of my situation hits me. I feel small, crushed, ground to a pulp. All the panic Iâve been suppressing finally hits, but instead of curling up on the couch like a catatonic mummy, I surprise myself.
By ripping the art off the walls.
I donât even know why I do it. I start with a nice little house in a meadow somewhere and toss it on the floor. I knock over a statue of an elephant, yank books off the shelves, and pile them in a corner. I toss stationery off the desk and root around in the bathroom until thereâs not a single monogrammed towel in sight.
I rip the place to shreds, piling all the fake, soulless decorations in a corner, and when Iâm done, it looks like the place was hit by a hurricane.
Finally, I feel calm enough to drag myself into the bed and bury myself under the covers.