Savage Hearts: Chapter 10
Savage Hearts (Queens & Monsters Book 3)
When I return to my perch in the belfry, Declanâs house is dark.
The only lights that remain burning are the landscape floodlights and in lamps in three rooms on the first floor.
One of those rooms is a bedroom.
I canât see much from this angle, but I can see French doors with curtains drawn over. Thereâs a small, private patio off the room, decorated with pots of blooming flowers.
An armed guard passes by the patio, rifle at the ready.
Theyâre crawling all over the property, these guards.
As if it makes a difference.
I donât know if Declan and his entourage have already gone to bed, or if they went somewhere else after I left the restaurant, because I didnât come straight here. I drove around the island, thinking. Trying to clear my head.
Of her.
The waif.
Iâm angry with myself that I frightened her.
Iâm even more angry that I care that I frightened her.
I never care about scaring anyone. No matter their gender. Iâve been the recipient of peopleâs fear for so long, it no longer means anything to me.
But hers did.
I hate that.
When I close my eyes to draw a breath, an image of her terrified face pops up against my eyelids. I allow myself to sit with it for a moment, taking pleasure in the details.
Everything about this girl is in the details.
Sheâs not tall, like Declanâs woman. Sheâs not flashy, or curvy, or sexy, or anything obvious that would catch a manâs eye.
Sheâs like a little bird that looks plain at first glance. Only when you focus your attention can you see the incredible intricacy of her feathers.
The ring of gold around her pupils.
The flecks of it all through her sweet brown eyes.
The fine arch of her brows.
The perfect bow of her upper lip.
The way the small bump on the bridge of her nose makes her glasses sit slightly askew.
The way light reflects off her poreless skin, making it glow.
The way she looked at my mouth and made me feel like a wild animal.
I open my eyes, and she disappears. I exhale, breathing easier.
Until she reappears again, this time on the patio of the bedroom on the first floor.
Sheâs still with him. She didnât take the money and leave.
My heart starts to pound so hard, I have to grip the rifle with both hands to steady myself. I stare through the sights at her magnified image and watch as she walks slowly to the edge of the patio.
She picks up one of the flower pots and hurls it over the balustrade.
The pot lands intact on the grass on the other side and rolls a few feet before stopping.
She picks up another pot. This time, she hurls it against the patio itself, jumping back to avoid the jagged shards of clay as the pot smashes against the stone and disintegrates.
Then she starts to pace.
It appears sheâs talking to herself.
Angrily.
Anger rises in me, too, as burning hot as the midday sun on this hideous island. Not because of the money I gave her. Money means nothing to me.
Because the longer she stays with him, the more danger sheâs in from his sick appetites.
And what the fuck has he done to her?
That sheâs enraged is obvious. Is she also hurt? Has he beaten her? Raped her? Savaged her in some way only a man like him could?
I might be a killer with a reputation to match the level of my skill, but a man like Declan OâDonnell is a worse thing even than me.
Every person whoâs felt my rifleâs bite has earned it. They had blood on their hands. They were more vicious than rabid wolves, to a one.
They werenât innocent.
Though she sells herself, this girl is still an innocent. Sheâs a doe, not a wolf. I saw it in her eyes.
Sheâs a little bird caught in a lionâs trap.
And if I donât do something, if I donât try something else, sheâll be devoured.
She isnât your problem, Malek. She isnât why youâre here. You already tried to help her. Forget the waif. Focus.
No. I canât focus until I know sheâs safe.
What the fuck is wrong with you?
I donât know.
Something, though. This isnât like you. Youâve never done this before. Whatâs wrong with your head?
Itâs filled with her.
Abandoning the argument with myself, I stand and make my way down the belfry stairs, sighing heavily.
Itâs time to do something stupid and dangerous again.