King of Wrath: Chapter 8
King of Wrath
Despite what Vivian thought, Iâd scheduled my Europe trip before she moved in. A majority of Russo Group brands were headquartered on the continent, and I blocked off a month every year to hold in-person meetings with the heads of our European subsidiaries.
This yearâs timing just happened to be extremely convenient.
However, I made sure to keep tabs on Luca and Vivian while I was gone. Iâd assigned Luca a sales role at one of our jewelry subsidiariesâ retail stores. He was a people person, and putting him in a back office somewhere would only spell disaster for him and the store in question. According to the store manager, he had a rough startâmy brother had never been punctualâ
but by the time I returned to New York, he seemed to have settled, albeit begrudgingly, into his new role.
Vivian, on the other hand, had taken to her new surroundings like a duck to water. Greta and Edward gushed about her in every report, and I came home to find a new painting in the gallery, towels monogrammed with D&V in the bathrooms, and fucking flowers everywhere.
âDante, relax your expression,â Winona said. âGive me a smileâ¦thatâs it! Perfect.â
The camera shutter clicked in rapid succession.
Vivian and I had spent the morning taking engagement photos in Central Park. It was as excruciating as Iâd imagined, filled with fake smiles and faker embraces as Winona guided us into poses designed to show off how in âloveâ we were.
âVivian, put your arms around his neck and move closer.â
I stiffened when Vivian obliged and took a tentative step toward me.
âCloser. I can practically drive a tractor between you right now,â
Winona joked.
âDo as she says so we can get this over with,â I ground out. The sooner I put more distance between us, the better.
âYou grow more charming every day.â Vivianâs voice was so sweet I couldâve drizzled it over pancakes. âEurope truly did wonders for your personality.â
âCloser,â Winona encouraged. If she picked up on our hostility, she didnât acknowledge it. âOne more stepâ¦â
Vivianâs breasts grazed my chest when she closed the remaining gap between us.
My muscles went rigid.
âDante, put your arms around Vivian.â
For fuckâs sake.
Since I just wanted to get the torture over with, I set my jaw and placed my hands on Vivianâs hips. Heat seared through the silk of her dress, and her damned apple scent crawled into my lungs again.
Neither of us moved, afraid the slightest shift would inadvertently bring us even closer.
âI received an interesting call from my accountant when I was in Paris,â
I said in an effort to distract myself from our disturbing proximity. âOne hundred thousand dollars charged to my Amex in one day, including ten grand on flowers. Care to explain?â
âYou gave me a black Amex, I used it,â Vivian said with an elegant shrug. âWhat can I say? I like flowers. And shoes.â
Translation: You were an asshole before you left, and I took it out on your bank account.
A subtle but petty act of revenge. Good for her.
There was no one more irritating than someone who didnât stand up for herself.
âClearly,â I said, trying not to breathe too deep so her scent didnât envelop me completely. âAnd the towels?â
âThey were a gift from my mother.â
Of course they were.
âLet me know in advance the next time you leave for a month,â she said. âI want time to plan a party, redecorate the living room, maybe come up with a robust shopping list. Itâs amazing how much you can do with no spending limit.â
I narrowed my eyes.
I didnât care about the credit card usage. Luca once spent a million dollars on a ridiculous twenty-four-karat solid gold bathtub for a pajama party. A hundred grand was nothing.
What pissed me off was the way Vivian rearranged everything while I was gone. The towels and flowers were just the tip of the iceberg. There was new art on the walls, aromatherapy piping through hidden diffusers, and a massage room where the gift-wrapping room used to be.
I left for a month and came back to find my home transformed into a fucking Club Med.
âYou had a good time while I was gone, did you?â A dangerous current twined around my words.
âI had a wonderful time.â Vivian threaded her fingers through my hair and tugged hard enough to hurt. She smiled. âThe house has been so pleasant without all the scowls and grunts.â
âHere I thought youâd miss me.â I tsked. âIâm hurt.â
âI would apologize, but catering to your feelings isnât part of our arrangement. Itâs just a business deal. Remember?â
A reluctant smile touched my mouth.
Touché.
âLook at you two. So sweet.â Winona sighed. âDante, why donât you give her a kiss on the lips? Itâll be the perfect photo to wrap up the shoot.â
My smile disappeared.
Vivian went stiff in my arms. âThatâs not necessary,â she said quickly.
âWe donâtâ¦we donât like PDA.â
âThereâs no one here except us,â Winona pointed out.
Iâd pulled some strings and reserved swaths of the park for the photoshoot. I hated public crowds. Too loud, too unpredictable, too there.
âYes, butâ¦â Vivian faltered. She looked like a rabbit caught in headlights.
Annoyance flared at her horrified expression. I didnât want to kiss her, but I didnât appreciate how she acted like kissing me was the equivalent of getting bitten by a poisonous snake.
âWe really donât feel comfortable kissing in front of any third party,â
Vivian finally finished.
She tried to step back, but my hold on her hips prevented her from doing so.
My annoyance deepened. Weâd agreed to play the part of a loving couple in public, but she wasnât acting particularly loving.
âIf you donât want to, thatâs fine, but itâs not an engagement shoot without a kiss.â Winona looked puzzled by our hesitation. âI promise I wonât be scandalized.â
âRight.â Vivian scraped her teeth across her bottom lip.
Christ. If she waffled any harder, sheâd have a prime spot on Sarabethâs brunch menu, syrup and all.
Instead of waiting for her to make a decision sometime in the next century, I dipped my head and brushed my mouth over hers. Softly, just long enough to hear the camera shutter click again.
Vivianâs body morphed from stiff to rigid. Her lips parted on a sharp inhale, and I tasted something sweet flavored with a hint of spices.
My blood thrummed.
It was just supposed to be a quick kiss for the camera. I should pull back, but her mouth was so warm and soft I couldnât resist another taste.
And another.
Before I knew it, my hand slid up of its own accord. My fingers sank into her hair and evoked an overwhelming urge to deepen the kiss. To wrap my fist around all that silk and tug until her mouth opened fully for me, letting me explore and plunder at my will.
My blood thrummed louder.
I blamed my senseless actions on the month apart. Absence made the heart grow fonder and all that crap.
It was the only plausible reason why kissing Francis Lauâs daughter didnât make me want to scrub bleach all over myself.
Vivian tilted her chin up a fraction, giving me better access. Myâ
âWe got the shot!â Winonaâs voice yanked us apart as suddenly and violently as if someone had fired a gun.
One second, we were kissing. The next, my hands were gone from Vivianâs hip and hair, her arms had dropped from around my neck, and my heart was racing like Iâd just completed an Ironman Triathlon.
Vivian and I stared at each other for a frozen second before quickly looking away.
The kiss had lasted less than a minute, but my mouth turned with the imprint of her lips. Heaviness settled on my skin like a cashmere blanket as Winona rose from her crouching position.
âYou two might be the most photogenic couple Iâve ever worked with.â
She grinned. âI canât wait for you to see the final photos.â
âThank you,â Vivian said, her face pink. âIâm sure theyâll be great.â
âAre we done?â I removed my jacket and ignored her reproving look.
Weâd done the damn shoot. What more did she want?
And why was it so fucking hot in the middle of October?
âYes, Iâll email you a link to the gallery in two weeks,â Winona said, unfazed by my curt reply. âCongratulations again on your engagement.â
Vivian thanked her again while I brushed past her toward the stairs leading away from Bethesda Terrace. I needed to put more distance between us immediately.
Unfortunately, Vivian soon fell into step with me again, and we walked in silence toward one of the park exits while I cursed myself for my lapse of judgment.
Not just the kiss, but the photoshoot altogether. I shouldâve hired someone to Photoshop us into the park. That way, I wouldnât have to deal with⦠this.
The restless buzz beneath my skin. The tightening of my muscles when her scent wafted into my nose. The memory of her mouth on mine.
It wasnât about the kiss, which weâd had to do if we didnât want to arouse Winonaâs suspicion.
It was about the fact Iâd lingered.
Vivian finally spoke when we passed through the exit onto 79th and Fifth. âAbout the kiss back thereââ
âIt was for the photo.â I didnât look at her.
âI know, butââ
âAre you hungry?â I nodded at the food cart on the corner of the street.
I would rather bathe in acid than discuss what happened.
Vivian sighed but dropped the subject. âI could use some food,â she admitted. Her eyebrows winged up when I stopped in front of the food cart.
âWhat are you doing?â
âBuying breakfast.â I pulled a crisp twenty out of my wallet. âTwo coffees and signature bagels. Keep the change. Thanks, Omar.â
While I wanted to get away from Vivian as soon as possible, I was damn hungry. Weâd woken up too early for breakfast, and I couldnât buy food without getting some for her too.
I was an asshole, not a boor.
I turned to find her staring at me like Iâd sprouted horns and feathers in the middle of Fifth Avenue.
âWhat?â
âYouâre on a first-name basis with the owner.â
âObviously.â I slid my wallet back into my pocket. âI run here in the mornings when I have time, and Iâve tried all the breakfast carts around the park. Omarâs the best.â
âHere I thought you only ate caviar and human hearts.â
âDonât be ridiculous. Caviar tastes awful with human hearts.â
Vivianâs laugh evoked a strange sensation in my chest. Heartburn?
Investigate later.
I took the food and handed one of the paper cups and wrapped bagels to her. âI pay for quality, not price. Expensive doesnât always equal good, especially when it comes to food.â
âFor once, we agree.â She followed me to a nearby bench and tucked her dress beneath her thighs before sitting. âWe should check the temperature in hell.â
The corner of my mouth kicked up, but I flattened it before she noticed.
âOne of my favorite restaurants before it closed was this tiny little place in Bostonâs Chinatown,â Vivian said hesitantly, like she was deciding whether or not to share the information with me even as the words left her mouth. âIf you werenât looking for it, youâd miss it. The decor looked like something out of the early nineties and the floors were suspiciously sticky, but they had the best dumplings Iâd ever tasted.â
Curiosity got the better of me. âWhy did it close?â
âThe owner died, and his son didnât want to take it over. He sold it to someone who turned it into an electronics repair shop.â A wistful note entered her voice. âMy family and I ate there every week, but I guess we wouldâve stopped going even if itâd stayed open. They only go to Michelin-starred places now. If they saw me eating from a food truck, theyâd have a coronary.â
I took a slow sip of coffee as I processed what she said.
Iâd assumed Vivian was fully under her parentsâ thumb, but judging by her tone, all was not perfect in the Lau family.
âMy brother and I used to go to this place in midtown when we were kids,â I said. âMoondust Diner. The neighborhood was a tourist trap, but the diner had the best milkshakes in the city. Two dollars, glasses almost as big as our heads. We went there every week after school until our grandfather found out. He was furious. Said Russos donât frequent cheap diners and assigned someone to walk us home straight after school. We never went back after that.â
Iâd never told anyone about the diner, but since she shared about the dumpling shop, I felt compelled to reciprocate.
The kiss really had fucked with my head.
âTwo-dollar milkshakes? I wouldâve been a dentistâs nightmare,â Vivian joked.
âMine wasnât my biggest fan either.â
The Moondust Diner still existed, but I wasnât a kid anymore. My sweet tooth had faded, and I didnât have time for trips down nostalgia lane.
We ate quietly for another minute before I said, âThings must have changed quite a bit after your fatherâs business took off.â
I could always use more intel on the Laus, and if anyone knew Francis well, it was his daughter.
At least, that was the reason I gave myself for not leaving even though Iâd finished my food.
âThatâs an understatement.â Vivian traced the rim of her coffee cup with her finger. âWhen I was fourteen, my mother sat me down for the talk. It wasnât about sex; it was about expectations for who I should and could date.
I was free to be with anyone I wanted as long as they met certain criteria.
That was also the day I found out I was expected to have an arranged marriage if I didnât find anyone âsuitableâ within a certain time.â
Iâd suspected as much. New money families like the Laus typically tried to enhance their social status through marriage. Old money families did it too, but they were more subtle about it.
âI take it your parents werenât fans of your exes.â If they were, Vivian and I wouldnât be engaged.
âNo.â A shadow passed over her face. âWhat about you? Any exes you thought about marrying?â
âI wasnât interested in marriage.â
âHmm. Iâm not surprised.â
I slanted a glance at her. âMeaning?â
âMeaning youâre a control freak. You probably hatedâand still hateâ
the idea of someone coming in and upending your life. The more people in the household, the harder it is to control your surroundings.â
My shock mustâve been evident because Vivian laughed and gave me a half-teasing, half-smug smile.
âItâs pretty obvious in the way you run your household,â she said. âPlus, during meals, youâre anal about your foods not touching. You put the meat on the upper left side of your plate, vegetables on the upper right, and carbs and grains on the bottom. You did it at my parentsâ house and on my first night at your place, before you left for Europe.â
She sipped her coffee, managing to look regal even while drinking from a paper cup. âControl freak,â she summarized.
Reluctant admiration swept through me. âImpressive.â
Iâd been particular about my foods touching since I was a child. I didnât know why; the sight and texture of mixed foods just made my skin crawl.
âIt comes with the job,â Vivian said. âEvent planning requires strong attention to detail, especially when youâre dealing with the types of clients I have.â
Rich. Entitled. Needy.
She didnât need to say it for me to know what she meant.
âWhy event planning instead of the family business?â I was genuinely curious.
Vivian shrugged. âI like jewelry as a consumer, but I have no interest in the corporate side of the business,â she said. âRunning Lau Jewels wouldnât be a creative endeavor. It would be about stockholders, financial reports, and a thousand other things I donât care about. I hate numbers, and Iâm not good at them. My sister Agnes is the one who likes that stuff. Sheâs the companyâs head of sales and marketing, and when my father retires, sheâll take over as CEO.â
There wonât be a company left to take over after Iâm done.
A small twist of unease tugged at my gut before I dismissed it.
Her father deserved what was coming to him. Vivian and her sister didnât, but ruin and collateral damage went hand in hand. It was the cost of doing business.
âWhat about you? Did you ever want to do something else?â Vivian asked.
âNo.â
Iâd spent my entire life preparing to take over the Russo Group.
Pursuing another career path had never even crossed my mind.
âMy father refused to take over the company, so it was up to me to carry on the Russo tradition,â I said. âAbnegating was never an option.â
âYour father could but you couldnât? Seems unfair.â
âThereâs no such thing as fairness in the business world. Besides, my father wouldâve been shit as CEO. Heâs the type of guy who cares more about being liked than getting the job done. He wouldâve run the company into the ground within years, and my grandfather knew it. That was why he didnât push him into taking an executive role.â
The words came out of their own accord.
I wasnât sure why I was telling Vivian about my family. An hour ago, I wouldâve rather jumped off the Empire State Building than spend another minute playing nice with her.
Maybe the kiss had short-circuited my brain, or maybe it was because this was my first moment of semi-peace since my grandfather died.
The past few months had been headache after headache. Funeral arrangements, Francisâs blackmail, Lucaâs bullshit, the engagement and Europe trip and regular business and social obligations I had to keep up with.
It was nice to sit and breathe for a minute.
âSpeaking of my parents, theyâd like to meet you,â I said. Introducing Vivian to them was a headache Iâd hoped to avoid, though Iâd known the chances of fending them off for a year or however long it took to break the engagement were slim. âWeâre spending Thanksgiving with them.â
According to Christianâs report, the Laus werenât big on Thanksgiving, so Vivian shouldnât be too upset about missing the holiday with her family.
Not that I cared if she was.
âOkay.â She paused, obviously waiting for more information. When I didnât provide any, she asked, âDo your parents live in New York?â
âA little farther.â I tossed my empty coffee cup in a nearby trash can.
âBali.â
For now. My parents hadnât spent more than three consecutive months in one place in decades.
Vivianâs mouth parted. âYou want us to fly to Bali to meet your parents for Thanksgiving?â
âWeâll be there for a week. We leave the Sunday prior and come back the following Monday.â
âDante.â She sounded like she was struggling to keep calm. âI canât just go to Bali for a week with less than two monthsâ notice. I have a job, plans ââ
âItâs a holiday weekend,â I said impatiently. âWhat are you planning?
The Macyâs Thanksgiving Parade?â
She crumpled her bagel wrapper with a white-knuckled hand. âI have to be back that Monday morning for a client meeting. Iâll be tired, jet-lagged ââ
âThen weâll leave Saturday instead.â My parents were the ones whoâd insisted we stay a week. Vivianâs work gave me a good excuse to cut out early. âWeâre taking my jet, and weâll be staying at my parentsâ villa. Itâs not a big deal. Weâre going to Bali, for fuckâs sake. Everyone wants to go to Bali.â
âThatâs not the point. We should be consulting each other on this type of stuff. Youâre my fiancé, not my boss. You canât just tell me to jump and expect me to jump.â
God, this was tedious. âConsidering Iâm the one who paid for your shoes and flowers, I think I can do exactly that.â
I knew it was the wrong thing to say the second the words left my mouth, but it was too late to take them back.
Vivian stood abruptly. A breeze blew her skirt around her thighs, and a passing jogger gawked at her until I chased him off with a glare.
âThank God you showed your true colors again,â she said, her cheeks flushed. âI was beginning to think you were human.â She threw out her cup and wrapper. âThank you for breakfast. Letâs never do this again.â
She walked away, her shoulders stiff.
Behind his cart, Omar shook his head and frowned at me.
I ignored him. Who cared if thatâd been an asshole thing to say? Iâd already let my guard down more than I shouldâve that morning.
Vivian was the daughter of the enemy, and I would do well to remember that.
I stayed on the bench for a while longer, trying to recapture the magic from earlier, but the peace was gone.
When I returned home, I found a check waiting on my bedside table for exactly one hundred thousand dollars.