Dance of Deception: Chapter 32
Dance of Deception: A Dark Forced Marriage Mafia Romance
Lyra sleeps as if sheâs still running.
Her breath is slow, but every so often, a twitch jolts through her and I watch her brow furrow and her lips part with a soft, barely-there murmur. Like her body doesnât realize that sheâs safe now.
I exhale, running a hand over my jaw, tension still wound tight beneath my skin. I knew the news would hit her hard. I knew the second I looked up and saw the bar TVs switch from the game to the breaking news, saw the images of the bunker on the screen.
But I wasnât expecting her to shut down completely like this.
She looks fragile curled up against the sheets, her breathing steady but too shallow, like part of her is still bracing for impact.
A dangerous, possessive feeling roars through me. I remember thinking before that this is something I have never felt for anyone but family. But itâs even stronger than that. This cuts into my very skin and burns like fire.
My phone vibrates against the nightstand.
I glance at Lyra one last time before sliding off the bed.
The house is silent as I make my way downstairs and into the backyard, along the narrow stone path that leads to the rose garden my mother, Giada, loved to care for so much.
Itâs getting overgrown these days, the blooms tangled together in a way thatâs more wild than elegant. I frown. I should fix that.
The Stag is waiting for me.
He stands just beyond the roses, half in shadow, his hands in his coat pockets. Motionless. Patient.
He doesnât rush into conversation. Doesnât even move until Iâm close enough for the moonlight to catch his features, angling across his face.
Heâs who I called when this all went down. Because there are questions that need to be answered. Now. And he excels at this sort of work.
âI went to exhume the fucker myself,â he says as casually as mentioning going to the grocery store. âJust to be sure.â
My jaw tightens. âAnd?â
He lifts his chin slightly, eyes locked on mine. âIt appears Arkadi was cremated.â
âThatâs it?â I murmur hollowly. âThatâs all you found?â
He lifts his shoulders. âWish there was more to tell you. But there was nothing suspicious about his death,â The Stag continues. âHe was stabbed in his cell during the night by a gang member already doing four life sentences.â His mouth twists slightly. âWho bragged about it after.â
Of course he did. Thatâs a badge of honor behind bars.
The Stag pulls a piece of paper from his pocket and hands it to me. Itâs the medical examinerâs report of Arkadiâs passing: death by multiple stab wounds and massive blood loss. Signed, Iâs dotted, Tâs crossed.
I glance back at him. âThat bunker they talked about on the news tonight. The two dead girlsâ¦â
The Stag nods slowly, his eyes stabbing into mine unblinkingly.
âThe world is full of bad people,â he growls. âPeople who feel even less than you and I do.â He smirks slightly. âCopycats happen. Dahmer had easily a dozen.â
I watch him for a long moment before I nod. âThanks.â
âHappy to help.â He nods past me up at the house, the sounds of the city humming around us. âHow is she?â
âSheâll be fine.â
The Stag nods. Then, without another word, he turns and slips back into the shadows, disappearing into the night.
I make my way back inside, threading through the darkened halls, up the stairs.
Lyra is still sleeping, now curled up on my side of the bed, as if she reached for me in my absence.
I slip in beside her, watching the way her lashes flutter slightly and her fingers clutch at the fabric of the pillow.
She stirs, her body shifting under the sheets before her eyes slowly open and then find mine. The fear is still there, buried deep. A silent war behind her gaze.
I brush my knuckles along her jaw. âHeâs confirmed dead. Heâs gone, little dancer.â
I pull her closer, letting her head rest against my chest. She exhales, all the tension in her body finally unwinding.
Her monster might be slain. But now, Iâm going to remove the last of his claws still stuck in her skin.
âCome with me,â I murmur.