Savage Hearts: Chapter 26
Savage Hearts (Queens & Monsters Book 3)
I donât notice it at first, because itâs dark outside, there are no lights on inside, and I canât see more than a few feet in front of my face without my specs. But when he comes into the bedroom and starts lighting the candles that are all over the place, then sits down on the bed beside me, I notice his hands.
âWhat is that?â
He looks at the dark, rust-colored smear on the back of one hand and tries to wipe it on his coat sleeve. When it doesnât work, he chooses to simply ignore my question.
âHere. This should be enough to find a match.â
He sets a bulky pillowcase on my lap.
âWhatâs in this?â
âYouâd know if you looked.â
I pull it open and peer inside, surprised by what I find. âThereâs like four hundred pairs of eyeglasses in here.â
âYou have a flair for exaggeration. Has anyone ever told you that?â
âYes. My creative writing teacher in college described my aggrandizement of language as incredible.â
âIâm sure it wasnât a compliment.â
âI got an A in that class.â
âBecause he knew if he failed you, youâd have to take the class again. He couldnât bear to live through that twice. Try the glasses on. Iâll get you something to eat.â
He rises from the bed and goes around the cabin lighting candles while I try on pair after pair, looking for one strong enough. I call out, âWhy donât you have electricity?â
âI do have electricity,â he answers from the next room. âI just donât like fluorescent lights.â
âSo get LED.â
âDonât like those, either.â
I guess I should count myself lucky that he likes indoor plumbing.
âOh! I found a pair that works!â
With clear vision, I look around the room in awe.
The walls and floor are made entirely of knotty polished wood the color of honey. Heavy beams run the width of the ceiling. The doors are wood, too, and so is the bed Iâm lying in, which looks hand carved. There are several colorful wool blankets on the bed, and a large dark brown fur that I suspect is from a real animal.
A real big animal. Maybe a bear.
The furnishings are simple, rustic, and also have that hand carved feel. There is no computer, television, or clock in the room, but there is a bookcase and a fireplace.
Thereâs also an enormous stuffed moose head on the wall opposite me, gazing down at me with black glass eyes.
Itâs terrifying.
Mal returns to the room, and my terror increases.
âOh, my god,â I whisper, seeing him.
His face is covered with the same rust-colored splatter and smears that are on his hands. Itâs dried now, but I can tell from the way it dripped and ran down his jaw that it was once liquid.
Once-bright-red liquid that has turned dark from exposure to air.
âWhat?â
âYou have blood all over you.â
He reacts to that horrible piece of news as if Iâve just told him my zodiac sign: with total indifference.
He sets a tray on my bedside table, shucks off his heavy wool coat, throws it on a chair, then pulls his black Henley off and tosses that on top of the coat. Then heâs standing there naked from the waist up, and Iâm sitting in bed with my mouth hanging open, wondering if maybe Iâm suffering from a severe brain injury as well as a gunshot wound.
Itâs not possible for a human to be that beautiful.
I blink to clear my vision, but all I see swimming before my eyes are acres of muscular flesh decorated by a constellation of tattoos. His bulk is only surpassed by his height, which is only surpassed by the gut punch of that V thing leading from his washboard abs downward, like a pair of muscle arrows pointing to the goodies in his crotch.
Heâs tatted, ripped, and altogether masculine.
Devastated, I look away.
Iâve been blinded. Heâs seared my eyeballs. Iâll never be able to see again.
He sits on the edge of the bed and picks up a bowl of steaming liquid from the tray, as if all this is completely natural. As if he walks around half naked with blood on his hands and face every day.
Which, considering his line of work, is a possibility.
âTake a few deep breaths,â he says calmly, stirring a spoon around in the bowl. He knows my brain is malfunctioning.
âI wonder how many times youâll have to tell me that by the end of this week,â I say weakly, wanting to fan my burning face.
He holds the spoon to my lips and waits for me to piece myself back together. When I finally do, I manage to swallow a delicious spoonful of soup.
My assassin kidnapperâs homemade soup that heâs feeding to me like a baby.
Iâve lost my mind. Thatâs the only explanation.
âWere you able to rest while I was gone?â
âSome.â
He feeds me another spoonful of soup. âHowâs your pain level?â
âSplendiferous.â
âTry again without the sarcasm.â
âOn a scale of one to ten, itâs a forty-seven.â
âWithout exaggeration, too. If you can manage it.â
I accept another spoonful, trying to look anywhere but at his chest.
Dear god, his chest. His breasts are beautiful. Pecs, I mean. Is that what theyâre called?
Iâve lost half my vocabulary in the past sixty seconds.
âRiley. Your pain. How is it?â
âRight, sorry. Umâ¦painful.â
He gives me a stern look, but Iâm too distracted to find it scary.
âWhy do you have blood on you?â
âWork. Howâs your pain?â
âA little better. Or at least not worse.â
He seems satisfied by that, nodding and holding out another spoonful of soup. Weâre both quiet as I finish the bowl, staring alternately at the blankets, the wall, the ceiling, and the terrifying moose, anywhere but at him and his devastating beauty.
Then he sets the spoon and bowl aside and announces heâs going to take a shower.
He stands and heads to the bathroom, leaving me flattened on the bed, drained of energy by the sight of his body and the single word he used to explain the blood.
Work.
He was working today.
Doing assassin stuff.
Killing people.
My brain refuses to get a handle on it. I simply canât reconcile the idea of Mal the gentle, attentive caretaker who cleans my wounds and feeds me soup with Mal the guy who blows people away for a living. Who came to Bermuda to kill Declan.
Who may or may not have wanted to kill me.
Iâm thousands of miles from home, injured, in horrible pain, in a foreign country I was brought to while unconscious, where I might die of complications from the gunshot my bodyguard gave me or the bootleg surgery I underwent to repair it.
This is just too fucking much.
I start to cry again, hating myself with every tear that falls.
Sloane wouldnât cry in this situation. Sheâd already have made an escape vehicle from the moose head and burned the cabin down.
When Mal returns to the bedroom, Iâm lying with my arms flung over my face, dragging in big, shuddering gulps of air.
He pulls my arms away from my face and stares down into my watering eyes. Then he says something that sounds gentle and soothing, but I canât understand a word of it because itâs in Russian.
âYou know I donât know what that means.â
âYes. Which is why I didnât say it in English.â
âThatâs not nice.â
âYou wouldnât think that if you knew what I said.â
Biting my lip, I stare up at him. His wet hair is slicked back off his face. The white terrycloth towel wrapped around his waist is the only thing heâs wearing. He smells like clean skin and healthy male in his prime, and holy Ghost of Christmas Past, I canât look at him for one second longer.
I close my eyes, turn my head, and whisper, âWhy did you bring me here?â
He gently folds my arms over my chest and sits beside me. I can feel him looking at me, but refuse to open my eyes. After a moment, he asks his own question, ignoring mine.
âWhy did you take a bullet for me?â
âI donât know.â
âYes, you do. Tell me the truth.â
His voice is low and urgent. I imagine those beautiful green eyes gazing down at me with their usual penetrating intensity and wish with all my heart that I didnât currently look like Iâve been sleeping under a bridge.
I take a deep breath, let it out, and tell him the ridiculous truth in a voice so small, he probably canât even hear it.
âBecause I didnât want you to die.â
His silence is long and intense. He exhales. Then he lifts my hand to his lips and kisses it, brushing his mouth softly across my knuckles, turning my hand over and pressing his lips against my open palm.
He rises from the bed without another word.
I hear him moving around the room, opening and closing drawers. His footsteps recede. When they return, I open my eyes to find him fully dressed, boots and all. He lowers himself into the big brown leather chair in the corner.
He folds his hands over his stomach, tilts his head back, and closes his eyes.
âWhat are you doing?â
âGoing to sleep. So should you.â
âYouâre gonna sleep in that chair?â
âWhat did I just tell you?â
âHow can you sleep sitting upright? Isnât there a sofa in the other room that you can lie down on?â
He lifts his head and looks at me. âStop worrying about me.â
âButââ
âStop.â
When he can tell Iâm about to start pestering him again, he says gruffly, âYes, thereâs a sofa. No, Iâm not going to sleep on it. I need to be in this room. I need to hear if you cry out. I have to know if youâre in pain or you need anything. Donât ask me why, because I wonât tell you. Now go to fucking sleep.â
His eyes blaze at me for a few moments longer, until he closes them again and Iâm released from their burning power.