Empire of Lust: Chapter 9
Empire of Lust: An Enemies with Benefits Romance
âAnd now what?â I cross my arms over my chest, pretending Iâm not in fact barely trying to toe the line. At this point, thereâs no doubt that alcohol is probably flowing in my system instead of blood.
The cold air bites my skin with the consistency of a venomous snake, but I keep my lips shut to prevent my teeth from chattering.
Any semblance of warmth is provided by a hand thatâs crushing mine. Anonymousâs strong fingers have been holding my own hostage for the past half an hour after he led me out of the house.
When I tried to protest, he said either I go along with this holding-hand thing or I could resume my previous position on his shoulder.
This asshole has an infuriating way of giving stupid choices that arenât really choices in the first place.
Weâre now walking down the streets that are filled with blinding lights and a horde of people.
Iâve never liked the nice side of town. So even when Callie comes here any chance she gets, I avoid it with everything in me.
The nice side of town smells of dollar bills, expensive perfumes, and a luxury weâre not allowed to breathe near. So until I make my own way to this place, Iâd rather not be here.
Anonymous stares ahead, but he doesnât seem absorbed in the festivities, the joy, or the endless people in costumes of different colors and shapes. If anything, he appears bored by it all. However, he still stands out in the middle of it, and that has little to do with his mask and more to do with his whole aura.
His black slacks and T-shirt stretch across his muscles, hinting at some sort of physical discipline. Which makes sense, considering the way he knocked someone out earlier. But thereâs more perfection than his physical superiority. Itâs his presence, his edge, and his well-spoken manner.
Heâll probably grow up to be a man of power, like the people my father works for.
Maybe heâll be so much worse.
And yet, I canât help being trapped in his orbit with no chances of ever wrenching myself out of this trance.
Iâve never felt so drawn to a person before, so caught up in someone that I want to hear their voice and stay in their presence for as long as possible.
âAnd now what?â I ask again.
âNow, we walk, femme fatale.â
âCanât we do that without holding hands?â
âNo, because youâll run away.â
âThis is called kidnapping.â
He tilts his head in my direction and for the dozenth time tonight, I wish I could take that mask off and see whatâs truly beneath it. Is he really a monster?
âWith all these people around?â
âThe presence of people or the lack thereof doesnât deny the kidnapping.â
He lifts a shoulder, his voice completely neutral. âIâm kidnapping you, then.â
My heart squeezes and my lips fall open. Is he for real? I mentioned kidnapping so itâd rattle him a little and heâd think that the hassle this situation presents isnât worth it. I thought there was at least an eighty percent chance heâd let me go, but he completely ignored that risk factor.
âYou really donât care that I would report you to the police?â
âYou have no evidence or facial description. Your report will sit on the incompetent policeâs desk for days, months, and then will be thrown into the archives.â
I dig my nails into his hand and attempt to scratch the skin.
He tsks, voice dripping with amusement. âDo you watch CSI a lot?â
âWhat? Why?â
âI assume the show is behind your attempts to get some DNA off me. I advise you to drop it, though. Not only will you complicate things for yourself, but your parents might pay the price for dragging me through the mud. See, my father takes offense when the family name is touched, and he has dangerous friends.â
I donât release my hold on his hand. In fact it, I dig my nails in deeper. âI donât have parents.â
His pace slows and I suddenly become the sole subject of his previously scattered attention. The shift is subtle, but itâs so intense that I swallow.
âMy, my. You keep getting more interesting. Why do you not have parents, femme fatale?â
âThatâs none of your business.â
âMaybe I want it to become my business.â
âWhy?â I meet the gleaming color of his eyes. Theyâre definitely light gray or dark blueâor a mixture of both. âWhy would you want to know about me?â
âBecause you interest me. Which, by the way, is an emotion hardly stirred within me.â
âShould I be honored?â
âYes. You should also answer my question.â
âIf I do, will you let me go?â
âI would say yes, but that would be a lie and Iâm sure you donât prefer that option. We should adopt an honesty policy.â
âHonesty is just an illusion invented by people to allow them to manipulate others.â
âYouâre too smart.â
âFor a girl or for my own good?â
âYouâre too smart for your age. But thatâs a good thing. If you use your brain the right way, youâll go places.â
I pause, my nails subconsciously easing off his hand. Thatâs the first time someone has praised my brain without sounding condescending or full of pity. Even my teacher said being too smart is not a good thing for a woman on our side of the ghetto.
Aunt Sharon said itâll get me killed.
And yet, this stranger, a boy in nothing more than a mask, said the words Iâve been longing to hear from someone.
Anyone.
As long as they believe in me. As long as someone out there wants to see past my origins and into my actual soul.
But then again, he doesnât know where I come from, so maybe heâll change his mind once he figures out my zip code.
âAnd how do you know that?â I ask, feeling a bit sober all of a sudden.
âI just do. Now, for that honesty policy. Care to take part in it?â
âOffer me something first.â
âLike?â
âWhy did you take meâor, more accurately, kidnap me?â
âYou heard a detail you shouldnât have been privy to.â
âIf you were so concerned about the arson or whatever your friends were plotting, you wouldâve ratted me out or stayed to take part in the action. You definitely wouldnât have chosen to promenade me like in some medieval time.â
His chuckle echoes in the air like the most haunting piece of music. And the worst part is that I canât stop being drawn to it. I canât stop staring at him and his height and broad shoulders.
âTrue on all accounts. The reason I took you, or kidnapped you as you prefer to label it, is as I previously mentioned, Iâm bored and youâre interesting. In a nerdy kind of way, which is unusual for me. I only like girlsâ bodies and have zero interest in their minds.â
âYouâre a misogynistic pig.â
âAnd youâre a fan of labels. But I like your sense of intuition. Itâs a fucking turn-on.â
My stomach cramps and I donât understand the emotions that slash through it at the same time or how my temperature rises despite the cold.
He stops and my eyes widen when I expect him to do something. Instead, he picks a wide wool scarf from a vendor on the street, throws the man who sells them a one-hundred-dollar bill, then releases my hand to wrap the scarf around my neck and arms.
I stare up at him, dumbfounded.
âYou might want to stop looking at me as if Iâm the holy messiah. Thereâs nothing remotely sin-free about me.â
âWhy did you buy me this?â
âBecause judging by your chattering teeth and trembling limbs, youâre cold. This happens to be an easy fix.â
âI donât want to owe you.â
âYou donât. Consider it compensation for kidnapping you.â His voice becomes amused at the last part.
And I canât help the feeling of internal and external warmth that floods me.
He interlinks our fingers again and continues walking. We remain silent for a while, and I find myself too focused on his touch, his warmth, his fingers that stroke mine, then stop and start again in a chaotic yet soothing rhythm.
I pull the scarf tighter around me to hide my creepy attempt to breathe more of him in. Itâs the first time Iâve found male cologne soâ¦enticing.
âArenât you forgetting something?â he asks after a while, his head tilting to the side.
âForgetting what?â
âI offered you a truth. Now, itâs your turn. Care to share?â
âThereâs nothing to share. My mother died and my father is as good as dead.â
âAs good as dead,â he repeats slowly. âI imagined that type would be common, but not this common.â
âYouâre familiar with the experience?â
âIf you mean having a useless father who wouldâve been better off dead, then yes, Iâm extremely familiar.â He strokes the back of my hand, but the gesture isnât affectionate; however, itâs not threatening either.
Itâs a mixture of both. The gray that slashes through the black and white.
The calm that precedes and comes after a storm.
Said storm manifests in his eyes as they pin me down through the mask. âSeems you and I have more in common than I initially thought. Maybe thatâs why you stood out to me in the first place.â
âIs that a good thing or a bad thing?â
âIf youâre lucky, neither. If not, both.â
âAnd how do I know whether or not Iâm lucky?â
âYouâll know when itâs time.â
âWhy canât it be now?â
âThereâs no excitement in knowing when the goal is going to score. Predictability is boring.â
âNot always.â I stare at him, once again trapped in the way his height and build nearly fill out the horizon. âAnd donât tell me youâre a jock?â
âWhat makes you think that?â
âYour analogy about goals.â
âAnyone could use that analogy. Itâs not a privilege thatâs exclusive to jocks.â
âWell, are you?â
âWhat if I am?â
âI would be surprised. Youâ¦seem well-read.â
âAnd all jocks are supposed to be fucking idiots? You know, those same stereotypes paint redheads as witches that should be burned at the stake.â
âIâ¦didnât mean it that way. Itâs just that all the jocks I know are arrogant assholes.â
âAnd Iâm the exception?â
âNo, youâre the king of the crowd. Why did you become a jock when you seem well off?â The jocks from our school are chasing the NFL dream to switch social classes.
âTo control the bursts of adrenaline.â
My steps falter, partly because of his answer. Partly due to his tightening hold on my hand. âWhy do you need to control it?â
âSome of us are wired differently and have an abundance of that stuff, so we search for coping mechanisms to control it.â He motions ahead. âWeâre here.â
I lift my head and realize that weâve not only strayed away from the main street, but there are also no people, bright lights, or indistinct chatter.
In short, all the elements I used for some fake sense of protection.
The only thing that exists in front of me is a dark dirt road surrounded by tall bushes with no end in sight.
âWhat is this place?â I try and fail to prevent my voice from shaking.
âPrivacy.â
âAnd who told you I want privacy?â
âYou might not, but I do.â
âYou promised weâd stay in a public place.â
âNever promised anything, I said I would grant you that option, and I did for the past hour or so.â
âIs that your way of making me lower my guard?â
âCould be. Is it working?â
My lips purse and moisture stings my eyes, and I hate this feeling of utter helplessness. I canât believe I was lured by him. Not that I had any chance of pushing away his advances, but at some point, I thought maybe he cared.
Turns out, Iâm the only one in that boat. Everything that led to this moment was probably calculated to have me fall for his charms.
And I did. With embarrassing ease.
âWhat will happen now?â I spit out to hide the pain. âIf I say no, will you finish your friendâs job and force me?â
âForce you? No. Force you to admit you want this as much as I do? Yes.â
âAnd how will you do that?â
âIâm going to do something, and depending on your reaction, Iâll either keep you or let you go.â
I donât get a chance to say anything, because he tugs on my hand thatâs in his and brings me flush against his chest.
My heartbeat roars and Iâm sure he can hear the frantic thumps against his rib cage. But any attempts to regulate it vanish in the cold air when he slowly lifts his mask.
I canât breathe.
And it has everything to do with what Iâm seeing.
He only revealed his square jaw and sensual lips, but itâs enough to make me yearn for more.
More of him.
Of this.
His eyes shine in the darkness from behind the mask as he dives straight to my lips, capturing them with a harshness that knocks the living breath out of my lungs.
My chest and stomach explode in a myriad of emotions as he thrusts his tongue inside and unapologetically feasts on mine.
Then two of his fingers clutch my chin, tilting it up to get more access. To devour me like an animal would.
Until I have no choice but to melt against him.
Logically, I should fight.
Logically, I should try to run.
But logic doesnât exist on Devilâs Night.
Logic is the last thing on my mind as I let him ravage me with an intensity Iâve never experienced before.
Maybe Iâll never experience it again.
And I know, I just know that he probably wonât let me go.
And maybe I donât want him to let me go either.
My thoughts are reinforced when he releases my lips, and whispers against them, âI decided to keep you, after all.â