King of Wrath: Chapter 20
King of Wrath
Kaiâs punch snapped my head back with such force my teeth rattled. The taste of copper filled my mouth, and when my vision finally cleared, his frown came into focus like a photograph in a developing tray.
âThat was an easy dodge. Whereâs your head at today?â
âIt was one hit. Donât get cocky.â
âThree.â He grunted when my uppercut caught him beneath the chin.
âAnd that doesnât answer my question.â
I blamed the next words out of my mouth on the residual impact of his strike.
âI kissed Vivian over Thanksgiving.â Willingly. Of my own accord.
Weâd done more than that, but I sure as fuck wasnât discussing our sex life with Kai.
The engagement photoshoot kiss had been forced. Bali had beenâ¦hell, I didnât know what Bali had been other than a mind fuck.
Vivian had been asleep or pretending to be asleep after I got out of the shower, and weâd avoided discussing what happened in the week since. She probably thought Iâd rejected her for whatever reason, and I was too disconcerted to correct her.
Kai gave me a strange look. âYou kissed your fiancée. So what?â
Fuck. The kiss had screwed me up so much Iâd forgotten he didnât know I despised her family.
To him, our engagement was business, but most arranged marriages still involved physical intimacy before the wedding. If not sex, then at least something as simple as a kiss.
âIt was different this time.â
I shouldnât have done it. The kiss, opening up about my family, all of it.
Yet I did it anyway.
Somehow, someway, Vivian Lau had burrowed under my skin, and I didnât know how to get her out without losing a piece of myself in the process.
A knowing glint passed through Kaiâs eyes. âMixing business with pleasure. Itâs about time.â
âLook whoâs talking.â Kaiâs idea of fun was translating academic texts into Latin for no reason other than he was a showoff and bored as hell.
âWhat can I say? I prefer the company of words to people. Except for you, of course.â
âOf course.â He was so full of bullshit.
He laughed. âCheer up, Russo. Liking your fiancée isnât the worst thing in the world.â
Maybe not in his world. But it was in mine.
My efforts to avoid Vivian disintegrated when I returned home and promptly ran into her in the foyer.
âOh my God. What happened?â Her horrified expression confirmed what I already knewâI looked like a mess.
And if I had any lingering doubts, the mirror hanging opposite the front door smashed them into smithereens.
Bruised jaw. Blackening eye. A cut over my brow.
Thank fuck I didnât have a board meeting in the next two weeks.
âKai.â I removed my coat and hung it on the brass tree. My tone was indifferent, but an unsettling warmth unfurled behind my ribs at her concern.
Vivianâs brows pulled together. âKai hit you? He doesnât seem like the type. Heâs usually so calm andâ¦nice.â
Just like that, the warmth turned into annoyance.
âI told you, heâs not as nice as he seems,â I said in a clipped voice. âBut to clarify, we sometimes blow off steam by boxing. He happened to land more hits today since I wasâ¦distracted.â
Thinking about you.
âYou box for fun.â Vivian set the vase of flowers in her arms on the marble side table. âThat makes so much sense.â
âWhatâs that supposed to mean?â
âIt means you have a temper.â She straightened the stems, oblivious to my scowl. âIâm sure boxing helps, but have you ever thought about anger management classes?â A teasing note ran beneath her voice.
âI donât need anger management classes,â I growled. First, she was the reason Kai got the upper hand in the ring. Now, she was insulting me? âIâm in full control ofââ I broke off at her laugh. Realization dawned. âYouâre teasing me.â
âItâs too easy.â Vivianâs smile faded when she faced me again. Her eyes swept over my face, lingering on the nasty cut above my eye. âYou should ice your bruises and clean that cut, or itâll get infected.â
âIâll be fine.â They werenât my first or worst injuries from the ring.
âIce and disinfectant,â she said firmly. âNow.â
âOr what?â I shouldnât be indulging her, but she was so endearing when she tried to boss me around that I couldnât resist.
Her eyes narrowed. âOr Iâll place every candlestick in this house at uneven intervals and make sure your foods touch every. Single. Meal. Greta will help me. She likes me more than you.â
I took back what I said about her being endearing. She was fucking evil.
âMeet me in the guest bathroom. Iâm getting the ice.â
I didnât take well to people telling me what to do, but a reluctant wisp of admiration curled in my chest as I headed to the bathroom.
I leaned against the counter and checked my watch. I had a mountain of paperwork to review, and God knew I should stay the away from Vivian until I sorted out my aggravating feelings toward her. Yet here I was, waiting for a goddamn ice pack.
My injuries didnât even hurt. Much.
The door opened, and Vivian entered carrying two small ice packs.
âI told you Iâm fine,â I grumbled, but a spark of pleasure lit in my chest when she brushed gentle fingers over my jaw.
âDante, your skin is purple.â
âPurple black.â A smile tugged on my lips at her cutting look.
âPrecision is important, mia cara.â
âAre you trying to get a matching injury on the other side of your jaw?â
she asked pointedly, pressing one of the packs against my face. âIf so, I can help with that.â
âItâs not very sporting of you to threaten bodily harm while patching me up. Some might even say itâs hypocritical.â
âI donât like sports, and Iâm an excellent multitasker.â
âYet Asher Donovan and Rafael Pessoa, two sports stars, are on your dream husband list.â
I used to be a fan of both. Not anymore.
âFirst of all, you have to let that list go. Second of allâhold this over your eyeââVivian pushed the second ice pack into my hand while she dampened a washclothââdonât deflect from the main issue here, which is your utter refusal to ask for help.â
âI can handle a few injuries. Iâve been through worse.â Still, I didnât resist when she dabbed the cloth on my wound.
âDo I want to ask what you mean by worse?â
âI broke my nose the first time when I was fourteen. Some asshole was bullying Luca, so I hit him. He hit me back. It got ugly enough I had to go to the ER.â
Vivian winced. âHow old was the other kid?â
âSixteen.â Fletcher Alcott had been a real piece of work.
âA sixteen-year-old was picking on a nine-year-old?â
âCowards always pick on people who canât fight back.â
âSadly true.â She retrieved a bandage from the medicine cabinet. âYou said that was the first time you broke your nose. What happened the second time?â
My mouth curled into a grin. âGot drunk in college and fell on the sidewalk.â
Vivianâs laugh washed through me like a cool breeze on a hot summer day. âI canât imagine you as a typical drunk college student.â
âI did my best to erase any incriminating evidence, but the memories are there.â
âIâm sure you did.â She placed the Band-Aid over the cut and stepped back with a satisfied expression. âThere. Much better.â
âYouâre forgetting one thing.â I tapped my jaw.
I didnât know why I was dragging this out when I didnât want to be here in the first place, but I couldnât remember the last time someone fussed over me. It feltâ¦nice. Disturbingly so.
Vivianâs brow wrinkled. âWhat?â
âMy kiss.â
Pink crept over her cheeks. âNow youâre the one teasing me.â
âI would never tease about such a serious matter,â I said solemnly. âOne kiss for each of my injuries. Thatâs it. Would you deny a dying man his last wish?â
Her sparkling gaze held a touch of exasperation. âDonât be dramatic.
Youâre the one who said you were, quote-unquote, fine. But since you insist on being such a baby about itâ¦â She moved closer again. My pulse beat in my throat when she brushed her lips over my brow, then my jaw. âBetter?â
âMuch.â
âYouâre incorrigible.â Laughter bubbled beneath her voice.
âItâs not the worst thing someoneâs called me.â
âI believe it.â
She turned her head a fraction, and our eyes held.
The bathroom smelled like lemon cleaner and ointment, two of the unsexiest scents known to mankind. That didnât stop heat from sparking in my blood or the memory of her taste from flooding my mind.
âAbout Bali.â Her breath brushed my skin, warm and tentative.
My groin tightened. âYeah?â
âYou were right to stop things when you did. Ourâ¦what we did was a mistake.â
Something that felt suspiciously like disappointment snaked through my chest.
âI know weâre getting married, so weâll have toâ¦eventually.â Vivian skipped over the specifics. âBut itâs too soon. I had too much wine at Thanksgiving and got caught up in the moment. It was aâ¦â She faltered when my hands rested on her hips. âA mistake. Right?â
Her skin branded my palm through the layer of cashmere.
A hard smile flickered over my mouth. âRight.â
My touch lingered for a beat before I moved her to the side and headed to the exit.
I shouldâve stopped in Bali, and what happened before I stopped was a mistake.
We were both right.
But it didnât mean I had to like it.