King of Wrath: Chapter 5
King of Wrath
âWhat do you mean, you havenât talked to your fiancé since your engagement?â Isabella crossed her arms and leveled me with a reproving stare. âWhat type of ridiculous relationship is that?â
âAn arranged one.â The bar tilted before righting itself. Perhaps I shouldnât have had two and a half mai tais in a row, but my weekly happy hour with Isabella and Sloane was the one time I could let loose.
No judging eyes, no need to be perfect and âproper.â
So what if I was a little tipsy? The bar was called The Tipsy Goat. It was expected.
âItâs better that we havenât spoken,â I added. âHeâs not the most pleasant conversationalist.â
Even now, the memory of my first and so far only meeting with Dante sent a rush of indignation down my spine.
Heâd shown no remorse over skipping out on half our introductory dinner to smoke cigars in my fatherâs office, and heâd left without so much as a thank you or good night.
Dante was a billionaire, but he had the manners of an ill-bred troll.
âThen why are you marrying him?â Sloane raised a perfectly groomed brow. âTell your parents to find you a better match.â
âThatâs the problem. There is no better match in their eyes. They think heâs perfect.â
âDante Russo, perfect?â Her brow arched higher. âHis security team once hospitalized someone who tried to break into his house. The guy wound up in a months-long coma with broken ribs and a shattered kneecap.
Itâs impressive, but I wouldnât say heâs perfect.â
Only Sloane would think putting a guy in a coma was impressive.
âTrust me, I know. Iâm not the one you have to convince,â I muttered.
Not that Danteâs notorious ruthlessness mattered to my family. He could shoot someone during rush hour in midtown Manhattan and theyâd say the person deserved it.
âI donât understand why you agreed to any engagement at all.â Sloane shook her head. âYou donât need your parentsâ money. You can marry who you want and thereâs not a thing they can do about it.â
âItâs not about the money.â Even if my parents cut off my inheritance, I had plenty left over from my job, investments, and trust fund, which I came into when I was twenty-one. âItâs aboutâ¦â I searched for the right word.
âFamily.â
Isabella and Sloane exchanged glances.
This wasnât the first time weâd discussed my engagement or my relationship with my parents, but I felt compelled to defend them each time.
âArranged marriages are expected in my family,â I said. âMy sister did it, and so will I. Iâve known this was coming since I was a teenager.â
âYeah, but what are they going to do if you say no?â Isabella asked.
âDisown you?â
My stomach plummeted. I forced a tight laugh. âMaybe.â Absolutely.
Theyâd lauded my aunt for disowning my cousin after she turned down a scholarship to Princeton to open a food truck. Refusing to marry a Russo was a thousand times worse.
If I broke the engagement, my parents would never see or speak to me again. They werenât perfect, but the prospect of getting cut off from my family and being all alone made the mai tais slosh dangerously in my stomach.
Isabella wouldnât understand though. Culturally, we were similar, though she was Filipina Chinese instead of Hong Kong Chinese. But she came from a large, loving family who was okay with her moving across the country to bartend and pursue her writing dreams.
If I expressed similar desires to my parents, theyâd either lock me in my room and perform an exorcism or toss me onto the streets with nothing except the clothes on my back, figuratively speaking.
âI donât want to disappoint them,â I said. âThey raised me, and they sacrificed a lot so I can have the life I have now. Marrying Dante would help all of us.â
Familial relationships shouldnât be transactional, but I couldnât shake the sense I owed my parents a huge debt for everythingâthe opportunities, the education, the freedom to live and work where I want without worrying about money. They were luxuries most people didnât have, and I didnât take them for granted.
Parents took care of their children. When the children grew up, they took care of their parents. In our case, that meant said children married well and expanded the familyâs wealth and influence.
It was just the way our world worked.
Isabella sighed. Weâd been friends since we met at a yoga class when I was twenty-two. The yoga lessons hadnât lasted; our friendship had. She knew better than to argue with me about my family.
âOkay, but that doesnât change the fact you havenât spoken to him when youâre moving in with him next week. â
I fidgeted with my sapphire bracelet. I wouldâve pushed back on giving up my West Village apartment to move into Danteâs Upper East Side penthouse, but what would be the point? I would just be wasting my breath arguing with my father.
However, other than Danteâs address, I didnât have any details for the move. No keys, no building requirements, nothing.
âYou have to talk to the man eventually,â Isabella added. âDonât be a wuss.â
âI am not a wuss.â I turned to Sloane. âAm I?â
She glanced up from her phone. Technically, none of us were allowed to check our phones during happy hour. Whoever broke the rule had to pick up the tab for the night.
In reality, Sloane had been bankrolling our happy hours for the past six months. She put the work in workaholic.
âAlthough I disagree with Isabellaâs advice seventy-eight percent of the time, sheâs right. You have to talk to him before you move in.â An elegant shrug. âThereâs an art exhibition at Danteâs house tonight. You should attend.â
Dante owned a notoriously impressive art collection rumored to be worth hundreds of millions of dollars. His annual private exhibition showcasing his latest acquisitions was one of the most coveted invites in Manhattan.
We were technically engaged, and my lack of an invitation wouldâve been embarrassing had I not been so relieved.
After I move in, Iâd have to spend every night with him, so I was clinging to my freedom while it lasted. The prospect of sharing a room, a bed with Dante Russo wasâ¦unnerving.
An image rose in my mind of him sitting behind my fatherâs desk, eyes dark and posture arrogant, with tendrils of smoke curling around that boldly charismatic face.
An unexpected heat ran between my legs.
The press of his thumb against my lip, the smoky glint in his eyes when heâd looked at meâ¦thereâd been a moment, just one, when I thought he would kiss me. Not to show affection, but to dirty me up. To dominate and corrupt.
The warmth curled low until the heavy expectancy of my friendsâ gazes pulled me back to the present.
I wasnât in my fatherâs office. I was in a bar, and they were waiting for an answer.
The exhibition. Right.
A cold rush of reality doused the heat.
âI canât show up uninvited,â I said, hoping they couldnât see me blush beneath my alcohol-induced redness. âItâs rude.â
âYouâre not a random party crasher. Youâre his fianc é e, even if you donât have a ring yet,â Isabella countered. âPlus, youâre moving in soon, anyway. Consider it a preview of your new homeâwhich you canât move into unless you talk to him.â
I sighed, wishing I could rewind time by a month so I could mentally prepare myself for what was coming.
âI hate it when you make sense.â
Isabellaâs cheeks dimpled. âMost people do. I would go with you because I love a good party crashâer, house tour, but I have a shift tonight.â
By day, she was an aspiring erotic thriller author. By night, she served overpriced drinks to overgrown frat boy types at a dive bar in the East Village.
She hated the bar, its clientele, and its creepy manager and was actively looking for another job, but until she found one, she was stuck.
âSloane?â I asked hopefully.
If I were to confront Dante tonight, Iâd need backup.
âI canât. Asher Donovan crashed his Ferrari in London. Heâs fine,â
Sloane said when Isabella and I gasped. Neither of us cared about sports, but the famous soccer star was too pretty to die. âBut I have to put out the media fire. This is the second car heâs crashed in as many months.â
Sloane ran a boutique public relations firm with a small but high-powered client roster. She was always putting out fires.
She motioned our server for the check, paid the tab, and made me promise to call her if I needed anything before she disappeared out the door in a cloud of Jo Malone perfume and platinum blonde hair.
Isabella left soon after for her shift, but I lingered in the booth, debating what to do next.
If I were smart, Iâd go home and finish packing for my move. Nothing good would come of crashing Danteâs party, and I could call him tomorrow if I really wanted.
Pack, shower, and sleep, I decided.
That was my plan, and I was going to stick to it.
âIâm sorry, maâam, but youâre not on the list. It doesnât matter whether youâre Mr. Russoâs mother, sister, or fianc é eâ¦â The hostess raised a brow at my bare ring finger. âI canât let you in without an invitation.â
My smile didnât falter. âIf you call Dante, heâll confirm my identity,â I said, even though I wasnât sure he would. Iâd deal with that bridge when we got there. âThis is simply an oversight.â
Iâd gone home as planned after happy hour and lasted a total of twenty minutes before I caved to Isabella and Sloaneâs suggestion.
They were right. I couldnât sit around waiting for Dante when my move-in date loomed so close. I had to suck it up and see him, no matter how much he annoyed or unnerved me.
Of course, in order to see him, I had to get into the party.
The hostessâs face reddened. âI assure you, there was no oversight. We are meticulous inââ
âVivian, there you are.â
An aristocratic British accent cut smoothly through our standoff.
I turned, surprise coasting through me when I saw the handsome Asian man smiling at me. His flawlessly chiseled face and deep, dark eyes wouldâve almost been too perfect were it not for the simple black frames lending him a touch of approachability.
âDante just texted. Heâs looking for you, but you werenât answering your phone.â He came up beside me and retrieved an elegant cream invitation from his jacket pocket. He handed it to the hostess. âKai Young plus one. I can bring Ms. Lau in so we donât bother Dante on his big night.â
She glared at me but offered Kai a tight smile.
âOf course, Mr. Young. Enjoy the party.â She stepped aside, as did the pair of unsmiling, suited guards behind her.
Unlike nightclubs or bars, exclusive events like this rarely asked for IDs. The staff was expected to memorize and pair the guestsâ faces with their names on sight.
I waited until we were out of earshot before I turned to Kai with a grateful smile. âThank you. You didnât have to do that.â
Kai and I werenât close friends, but we often attended the same parties and chatted whenever we crossed paths. His thoughtful, reserved demeanor was a breath of fresh air in the narcissistic jungle of Manhattan high society.
âYouâre welcome.â His formal tone made me smile.
Born in Hong Kong, raised in London, and educated at Oxford and Cambridge, Kaiâs mannerisms were a clear reflection of his upbringing.
âIâm sure your absence on the list was an oversight on Danteâs part.â He whisked two glasses of champagne off a passing serverâs tray and handed one to me. âSpeaking of which, congratulations on your engagement. Or should I say, condolences?â
My smile blossomed into a laugh. âThe jury is still out.â
From what Iâd heard, Kai and Dante were friends. I wasnât sure what Dante told him about our engagement, but I was erring on the side of caution.
As far as the public was concerned, we were a happy, loving couple who couldnât be more thrilled to be engaged.
âSmart. Most people treat Dante like he walks on water.â Kaiâs eyes sparkled. âHe needs someone to remind him heâs mortal just like the rest of us.â
âOh, trust me,â I said. âI donât think heâs a god.â
More like the devil sent to work on my last nerve.
Kai laughed. We made small talk for another few minutes before he excused himself to talk to an old college friend.
Why couldnât I have ended up with someone like him? He was polite, charming, and rich enough to meet my parentsâ standards.
Instead, I was stuck with a brooding Italian who wouldnât know good manners if they slapped him in the face.
I sighed and set my empty glass on a nearby tray before I wandered through the penthouse, taking in the gorgeous architecture and decor.
Dante had eschewed the modern minimalism so popular with his bachelor brethren in favor of hand-crafted furniture and rich jewel tones.
Turkish and Persian silk rugs covered the gleaming floors, and lush velvet drapes framed floor-to-ceiling windows boasting panoramic views of Central Park and the cityâs iconic skyline.
I passed two sitting rooms, four powder rooms, one screening room, and one gaming lounge before I entered the long, skylit gallery where the actual exhibition took place.
I hadnât spotted Dante yet, but he was most likelyâ¦
My steps slowed when a familiar head of glossy black hair came into view.
Dante stood at the other end of the hall, talking to a beautiful redhead and an Asian man with cheekbones sharp enough to cut ice. He smiled at something they said, his expression warm.
So he was capable of normal human emotion after all. Good to know.
My blood burned a little hotter, either from the alcohol or from the sight of his real smile. I chose to believe it was the former.
Dante mustâve felt the weight of my stare because he stopped talking and looked up.
Our eyes locked, and the warmth disappeared from his face like the sun beneath the horizon.
My heartbeats crashed against each other.
A double-length hallwayâs worth of space separated us, but his displeasure was so potent it seeped through the air and into my body like a deadly poison.
Dante excused himself from his guests and stalked toward me, his powerful, muscled frame slicing through the crowd with the single-minded surety of a predator locked onto its prey.
Tingles of alarm cascaded down my spine, but I forced myself to hold my ground even as every self-preservation instinct screamed at me to run.
Itâs fine. He wonât kill you in public. Probably. Maybe.
âLovely party. Iâm afraid my invitation got lost in the mail, but I made it,â I said when he neared. I plucked a glass off a nearby tray and held it out.
âChampagne?â
âYour invitation isnât whatâs lost, mia cara. â The velvety endearment wouldâve been swoon-worthy had it not been for the darkness seething beneath the surface. He didnât touch the offered drink. âWhat are you doing here?â
âEnjoying the food and artwork.â I brought the glass to my lips and took a sip. Nothing tasted quite as sweet as liquid courage. âYou have exquisite taste, though your manners could use improvement.â
A hard smile slashed across his mouth. âHow ironic youâre always lecturing me on manners when youâre the one who showed up uninvited to a private event.â
âWeâre engaged.â I stopped beating around the bush and cut straight to the heart of the matter. The faster I got this out of the way, the faster I could leave. âWe havenât exchanged a single word since the dinner even though Iâm supposed to move in next week. I donât expect love declarations and flowers every dayââ though thatâd be niceââbut I do expect basic courtesy and communication skills. Since you appear incapable of taking the initiative, I did it myself.â
I finished my drink and set it down. âOh, and donât consider this me showing up uninvited. Consider it me accepting your invitation early. After all, you did agree to me moving in, did you not? I simply wanted a look at my new home before I committed to it.â
My pulse raced with nerves, but I kept an even tone. I couldnât set a precedent of backing down whenever Dante was upset. If he sensed any weakness, heâd pounce.
Danteâs smile didnât reach his eyes.
âThat was quite a speech. You certainly didnât have this much to say at dinner the other night.â The cold steel of his voice melted into rough silk as his gaze swept over me, gathering heat the farther it traveled. âI almost donât recognize you.â
The intimacy of his double meaning throbbed in my veins and dropped between my legs.
My tweed and pearls were safely tucked in the back of my closet now that Iâd returned to New York. Instead, I wore a classic black cocktail dress, heels, and my favorite red lipstick. Diamonds glittered around my neck and on my ears. It wasnât anything groundbreaking, but it was the best I could do when rushing to get ready.
However, the intensity of Danteâs scrutiny made me feel like Iâd showed up to a church reunion in a string bikini.
My stomach tightened when his gaze trailed from my face down over my chest to where my dress hugged my hips. It skimmed over the bare length of my legs, the perusal almost obscene in its laziness and erotic in its thoroughness, like the caress of a lover determined to map every inch of my body with his attention.
My throat dried. A flame ignited low in my stomach, and I suddenly wished Iâd worn a conservative suit again tonight.
It was safer. Less capable of fogging my mind with rough drawls and electric attraction.
What were we talking about?
âDifferent occasions require different approaches.â I grasped for words and hoped they made sense.
I cocked an eyebrow, praying Dante couldnât hear how fast my heart was beating. I knew it was physically impossible, but I couldnât shake the eerie sense he could see straight through me like I was made of nothing more than a thousand pieces of broken, transparent glass.
âYou might want to try that strategy sometime,â I added, determined to keep the conversation going so I didnât sink into the mind-numbing heat of his stare again. âPeople might like you better.â
âI would if I cared about othersâ opinions.â He dragged his eyes back up to mine, the picture of mocking cruelty once more. âUnlike some of my esteemed guests, I donât derive my self-worth from what people think of me.â
The insinuation hit me in the gut, and my skin went from overly hot to ice cold in the blink of an eye.
Nobody flipped a switch from tolerable to asshole faster than Dante Russo. It took every ounce of willpower not to toss the nearest drink in his face.
He had some nerve, but the worst part was, he wasnât wrong.
The insults with a grain of truth always cut the deepest.
âGood. Because I assure you, their opinion of you is quite low,â I snapped.
Do not slap him. Do not make a scene.
I took a deep breath and wrapped it up before I went against my own advice.
âAs delightful as I find our conversation, I have to excuse myself as I have other places to be. However, I expect all logistical information related to my move-in my inbox by tomorrow at noon. I would hate to have to show up in front of your building and reveal your incompetence to your neighbors.â I touched the diamond pendant at my throat. âImagine how embarrassing it would be if people found out the great Dante Russo couldnât coordinate something as simple as his fiancéeâs move-in.â
Danteâs glare couldâve melted the gold frames hanging on the walls.
âYou might not care what others personally think of you, but reputation is everything in business. If you canât handle your home life, how could you possibly handle your office dealings?â I took a business card out of my clutch and tucked it into the jacket pocket of his suit. âI assume you already have my contact information. In case you donât, hereâs my card. I look forward to your email.â
I walked away before he could respond.
The heat of his anger lashed at my back, but Iâd detected a tiny flash of something else in his eyes before I left.
Respect.
I kept walking, my heart in my throat and my feet moving faster and faster until I reached the nearest guest bathroom. Only when the door closed behind me did I slump against the wall and cover my face with my hands.
Breathe.
My surge of adrenaline was already fading, leaving me drained and anxious.
Iâd stood off against Dante and wonâ¦for now. But I wasnât naive enough to think that was the end of it.
Even if standing up to him had garnered me grudging points in his eyes, he wouldnât let an uneven score against him stand.
Somehow, Iâd entered into a cold war with my fiancé, and tonight was just the opening battle.