Isaia: Chapter 5
Isaia: A Dark Mafia Romance (Dark Sovereign Book 9)
Isaia Del Rossa.
The name lingers in the air like a warning, and judging by the look on Mollyâs face, this is someone I should be running from. Yet here I am, frozen in place.
His approach is slow, deliberateâevery step controlled, as if the entire room bends to his will. People shift out of his way without even realizing it.
And then his dark gaze locks on to mine. I canât help but feel like Iâve been marked, chosen, and claimed. His focus is so intense, the rest of the world fades away.
âShit,â Molly hisses again, yanking on my elbow harder this time. âIâm serious, Everly, stay away from him. Heâsâ ââ
Her words die on her lips as he comes closer, and every ounce of oxygen in the room seems to vanish.
My heart hammers in my chest, each beat louder than the last. Heâs tall, broad-shouldered, and the energy radiating off him is suffocating, a dangerous magnetism that pulls me in even though every logical part of me wants to run the other way.
Last night, I knew my stranger who doesnât smile was intense. But now? This man walking toward me, his intensity is on an entirely different level.
âDo not fuck around with this guy,â Molly warns quietly, her fingers still gripping my arm like sheâs the only thing keeping me from stepping into a fire.
I snap my gaze to her, whispering back, âFuck around? I wasnât planning on fuckingâ ââ
âEverly?â
âOh, God.â Itâs him, and he just heard half the sentence I didnât get a chance to complete.
Molly looks like sheâs expecting me to spontaneously combust under his gaze. I can barely think straight, but somehow, I manage to turn and face him.
Nothingâand I mean nothingâcould have prepared me for the moment our eyes meet up close, with him towering over me like a palpable force that could rip the universe apart.
His irises are a burning, impenetrable black, a tempest brooding with raw ferocity and untamed power. Itâs mesmerizing and completely unthinkable that I didnât notice this last night.
I force a smile, hoping it hides the fact that my brain has short-circuited.
âHi.â
Hi?
Justâ¦hi?
Isaiaâs lips twitch slightly, not quite a smile, and the air between us buzzes with tension.
He doesnât speak right away, just watches me, and I swear heâs peeling back layers I didnât even know I had.
Finally, he speaks. âYou werenât planning on fuckingâ¦what, exactly?â His voice is velvet, smooth, but laced with danger.
âOh,â I clear my throat, trying to sound casual even though Iâm silently praying to die. âYou know. Fucking around. Justâ¦generally.â
Another twitch of his mouthâno smile, just a sinister quirk, like heâs enjoying my discomfort.
âGenerally?â he echoes, his tone drenched with a subtle mockery that has my cheeks burning.
âYeah, uhâ¦â I place my palms on my face, trying to hold on to some dignity. âCan we maybe, like, redo this?â
âRedo?â
âYeah. You walk in all brooding and menacing, like youâre plotting world domination, and I sit here pretending my friend isnât currently glaring daggers into the back of my head.â
I risk a glance at Molly. Sheâs pale, eyes wide with panic.
Isaiaâs gaze flicks to her for the briefest moment before returning to me, as if sheâs an afterthought. âAnd how do you think this scene should go, then?â
I swallow the lump in my throat, fighting back a shudder. âWell, for starters, you could stride in, leaving me unbothered instead ofâ¦you know, short-circuiting my brain.â
âBut whereâs the fun in that?â
I raise an eyebrow, trying to hold my ground despite the chaos going on inside me. âYou donât strike me as the type of guy whoâs into fun.â
âDepends on the kind of fun.â
Instantly the space around us narrows as tension hums in the air.
âLet me guess,â I start, trying to ignore how my pulse races. âYour kind of fun comes with a lot of rules.â
He leans closer, his gaze never leaving mine. âNot rules. Justâ¦no limits.â
âNo limits, huh? That can be dangerous.â
âNo more dangerous than your dog on a leash.â
I smile at that.
âCan I buy you a coffee?â
âThatâs the second time youâre offering to buy me a drink.â
âMaybe I just want to see what youâll say this time.â
Thereâs something about the way he says itâlike heâs laying down the first card in a game Iâm not sure I want to play, but Iâm too intrigued not to.
I gather my bag and stand. âA drink with a stranger will be reckless of me, donât you think?â
Isaiaâs eyes darken with amusement, and he takes a step closer. âMaybe. But Iâd make it worth your while.â
How he says it, his tone laced with suggestionâsends a shiver down my spine. His presence is magnetic, and I can feel the air between us growing heavier, charged with something I canât quite name but canât ignore either.
I bite the inside of my cheek, trying to maintain some semblance of control. âYouâre awfully sure of yourself.â
âNo limits, remember?â He leans in slightly, his whisper brushing against my skin. âI donât play by half measures.â
My breath catches, his words hanging in the air, daring me to take the bait. The pull between us is undeniable, and Iâm caught in it for a moment, helpless.
âAnd what if I donât want to play?â
His eyes gleam with that dangerous edge. âOh, youâre already playing, Everly. You just donât know it yet.â
I canât lie; Iâm intrigued. A little scared, but mostly intrigued.
âFine,â I say, lifting my chin. âOne coffee. But I have to warn you, Iâm not easily impressed.â
âChallenge accepted.â
âYouâve got until I finish my double espresso.â
Isaiaâs gaze flicks to Molly. âTwo double espressos. Back table.â
Mollyâs expression freezes, her earlier warning echoing faintly in my head like a distant alarm. But the longer Iâm in this manâs presence, the quieter it getsâuntil itâs barely there at all.
Once weâre seated, Isaiaâs frame dominates the space. Heâs slightly too big for the chair, the expanse of his back seeming to stretch the limits of it, making the small café feel even more cramped.
The way he settles in, though, is effortless, as if heâs used to commanding whatever space heâs in. Even here, in this too-small chair, he radiates power and control. Itâs unsettling how he can make a simple chair seem like itâs bending to him.
I lean back, studying him. âSo, whatâs your story?â
âWhat makes you think I have one?â
âOh, I donât knowâ¦maybe the way the entire café stopped breathing when you walked in? Even the coffee machine had the decency to go quiet.â
His lips twitch. âYou noticed that, huh?â
âHard to miss. Itâs like the universe shifts when you enter a room. If youâre trying to blend in, youâre doing a terrible job.â
âIâm not the blend-in type,â he says, leaning back. Even sitting, he takes up more space than he should, commanding attention without trying.
âYeah, I figured. So, what are you doing here?â
He quirks an eyebrow. âHere, as in this café? Or here, sitting across from you?â
âLetâs start with here in the café.â
âObvious, isnât it? Iâm getting coffee.â
I arch a brow. âJudging by the way people stared at you when you walked in, how people are still staring at you, my guess is they all know you, yet theyâre shocked that youâre gracing them with your presence. How come Iâve never seen you in here before?â
âMaybe you missed me.â
âOh, I doubt that.â
Molly sets our espressos down, and I glance at her as she turns to leave, wide-eyed, as if to silently scream, Get out now.
I pretend not to notice. âYou donât seem like the kind of guy who randomly grabs coffee with strangers.â
His expression deepens, but now itâs calculated. âWho said anything about random?â
I blink, caught off guard. âSo, this isnât random?â
âItâs as random as your dog wrapping her leash around my legs,â he says, but thereâs something unsettling in his tone, like heâs hinting at more.
I watch him grip the tiny espresso cup, his large hand making the cup look comically small. Coffee spills over the rim, and he curses.
I study him. âYouâre not built for delicate things, are you?â
âI have a nasty habit of ruining delicate things.â
Thereâs a double meaning in there, loud and clear, and itâs dialed up the heat a notch.
âSo, Everly,â he starts, saying my name like heâs testing out the taste on his tongue, âhave a surname?â
âBeaumont,â I say. âEverly Beaumont.â
âYouâre new to town.â
âWho said Iâm new?â
âI havenât seen you around.â
I lift a brow. âMaybe you missed me.â
He licks his lips and tilts his head slightly. âI doubt that.â
There it is againâthat unmissable rise in tension, the gentle chill that brushes along my skin. Itâs a heat, like a simmer that starts at the corners, slowly spreading through bone.
âWhere you from, Everly Beaumont?â
âHere and there.â I pick up my cup and take a sip, casually avoiding going into too much detail.
âHere and there,â he repeats, rolling the words over like heâs weighing them. âMysterious.â
âNot mysterious. Just private.â
âYou got family here?â
âNo. Itâs just me and Luna, passing through.â
He raises a brow. âPassing through? You got business in town?â
Those alarm bells are chiming slightly louder.
Thereâs interested, and then thereâs interested. Isaia? Heâs just too interested, and Iâm not sure I trust it. I canât afford toânot if he was sent to find me.
âMy friend seems to think youâre trouble,â I say, deflecting. âAre you?â
A shadow crosses his face, dark and dangerous. âDepends on what you consider trouble.â
âI consider intimidating men who wear leather jackets and suck up all the oxygen when they walk into a room to be the kind of danger they warn you about in thrillersâyou know, the part where every instinct says ârun,â but youâre too damn curious to move.â
âIs that your way of saying you find me intriguing?â
âThatâs my way of saying I donât make a habit of sticking around to see how it ends.â
âWhy not?â
âIt doesnât usually end well for girls like me.â
He slants a brow. âGirls like you?â
âGirls who attract trouble.â
âAnd what makes you think you attract trouble, Everly Beaumont?â Isaiaâs voice washes over me in an intoxicating wave. Thereâs a beat, a moment when our gazes are locked, the café buzz fading into the background.
âExperience,â I respond simply, looking away from him and back to my cooling coffee. âAnd men who like calling me by my first and last name are usually trouble. Plus, thereâs my friend whoâs still telepathically warning me to stay away from you.â
âYour friend doesnât know me.â
âI have a feeling the entire city knows youâ¦Isaia Del Rossa.â
I donât miss how his eyes narrow a little, the slight surprise that settles on his dark brows. He wasnât expecting me to know his full name, which is weird because evidently everyone knows who he isâexcept me.
Maybe I shouldnât stick around.
âWell, thank you for the coffee.â I get up and smile. Even if heâs a man with ill intentions, everyone deserves a smile now and then. âIâll see you around.â
âDefinitely,â he replies, and I hear the promise in that one single word.
As I walk out, I can practically feel his eyes on me with every step I take.
Clearly, the Del Rossa name means something in this town, and I need to either pack my shit and leave or find out exactly who Isaia Del Rossa is.