Savage Hearts: Chapter 28
Savage Hearts (Queens & Monsters Book 3)
For the next few days, Mal is strangely silent. He doesnât leave me alone again. Whenever I wake up, heâs in the room, sitting in the leather chair, watching me.
He helps me take short walks around the cabin, letting me lean on his arm as I wince and shuffle.
He takes my temperature, cooks my meals and feeds them to me, gives me water and medicine, and helps me in and out of bed when I have to use the bathroom.
When I ask him why he doesnât own a television, he shakes his head. When I ask how anyone can live without a computer, he sighs. He rebuffs almost all my attempts at conversation, especially if it has anything to do with his lifestyle or something personal about him.
On day four of the silent treatment, he asks out of the blue if Iâd like to take another bath.
âYes,â I say, relieved heâs finally back from wherever he went inside his head. âIâd like that very much.â
Looking pensive, he nods.
Heâs sitting on the edge of the bed with his elbows on his knees and his hands hanging down, staring at the rug. Itâs dark outside. All the candles in the cabin are lit, giving it a warm, homey glow.
When he doesnât move or say anything else, I ask tentatively, âDid you mean now?â
As an answer, he rises, goes into the bathroom, and turns on the bathtub faucet. He comes back and picks me up in his arms.
I donât argue that I should be walking. Heâs not in the mood for my sass, that much I can tell. I just let him carry me into the bathroom and undress me, feeling hideously self-conscious again but trusting now that he wonât make it more awkward for me than it already is.
When Iâm lying in the water and his hands are in my hair, he starts to speak to me again in Russian, like he did the last time he gave me a bath.
He talks and talks, his voice low, the cadence of the foreign words hypnotizing.
Thereâs emotion in his tone, but itâs not anger. If anything, it seems like the opposite. Like heâs trying to get me to understand something of vital importance to him.
I want to ask him what, but I donât.
I know he wonât answer.
When heâs rinsed me, dried me off, and put another of his huge clean shirts over my head, he announces itâs time for my stitches to come out.
âOh. Okay. Do I have to go to a hospital for that?â
The look he gives me is insulted. He picks me up and brings me back to bed.
He fluffs the pillow under my head, pulls the sheets up to cover my crotch, lifts the shirt up to just under my breasts, and peels off the bandage. From a drawer in the nightstand, he removes large tweezers and a pair of surgical scissors, both wrapped in plastic.
Anxiety blooms over my skin like a rash. âIs this going to hurt?â
âNo. Youâll feel a tug or two, but thatâs all.â
I nod, knowing that heâd tell me if it was going to be painful.
He opens the tools, cleans them with a gauze pad and a sharp-smelling liquid from a brown bottle, then leans over me and goes to work.
After a moment, he says, âYouâve healed well. This scar wonât be bad.â
Iâve resisted looking at the wound until now, so thatâs a relief to hear. When I lift my head and peek down at my uncovered stomach, however, the relief evaporates, replaced instantly by disgust.
âNot bad? Itâs hideous!â
âYouâre exaggerating again.â
âIâm Frankenstein! Look at that gash! Itâs a foot long! And why the hell is it shaped like a lightning bolt? Had the surgeon been drinking?â
âHe had to go around your belly button.â
âCouldnât he have made a crescent moon? I look like Harry fucking Potter, times ten!â
âStop shouting.â
Groaning, I let my head fall back to the pillow. âSo much for wearing bikinis.â
âYou could get a tattoo to cover it up. Add to your collection.â
His voice remains even when he says that, but thereâs an echo of warmth in it that gives me pause.
âIâm sensing you have something youâd like to say about my tattoos, Mal.â
Snipping and tugging at the ugly black stitches, he quirks his lips. âJust curious.â
I sigh and roll my eyes. âWhere do you want me to start?â
âWith the one on the inside of your left wrist.â
The speed with which he answers makes it obvious heâs been thinking about that one for a while. Itâs a single line of cursive black writing and consists of four words:
Remember Rule Number One.
âWell, if you must know, that oneâs my favorite.â
âWhatâs rule number one?â
âFuck what they think.â
He stops mid-snip and looks up at me. âWhoâs they?â
âEveryone. Anyone else but me. Itâs a reminder that other peopleâs opinions donât matter. To live my life how I want, regardless of outside pressure. To be unapologetically me.â
After a moment, he nods slowly, satisfied. He goes back to work, teasing out a severed stitch and placing it to one side on the old bandage. âAnd the words âyou canâ on your right ankle?â
âI used to say âI canâtâ to my mom a lot when I was little. It was just an excuse for something I didnât want to do, or something I thought was too hard, but she wouldnât let me get away with it. Sheâd just stay calm and say, âYou can.â And then I would, because I didnât want to disappoint her. The tattoo reminds me to keep going when I want to give up.â
Iâm quiet for a moment, lost in memory. âMy mom was the best friend Iâve ever had.â
Mal glances up at me, his eyes piercing. âWas?â
I nod. âShe died when I was a kid. Ovarian cancer.â My voice drops. âItâs not a good way to go.â
âThere arenât any good ways to go. Some are just faster than others.â
âMy great grandma died in her sleep at ninety-nine. That seems pretty good.â
âSure, if you didnât have to live to be ninety-nine to get there.â
âWhatâs wrong with getting old?â
âDonât know many elderly people, do you?â
âNot really. Why?â
He says cryptically, âOld age isnât for the faint of heart.â
The little pile of snipped black stitches is growing. And he was right: Iâve barely felt a tug. Heâs good at this.
From what I can tell, heâs good at everything.
âWhat about the dragon on the nape of your neck?â
I grimace. âBig yikes.â
âTranslate.â
âI got that during my Game of Thrones phase. I was obsessed with Khaleesi. A little boss bitch who owned three dragons and kicked butt all over the men? Yes, please. Wait. Is thatâ¦is that a smile Iâm seeing?â
âNo,â he replies instantly. âThatâs just the face I make before projectile vomiting.â
âHa.â
âAnd the pattern on the back of your right arm?â
âI thought it was pretty. What about that big scary hooded skeleton on your back?â
He gives me a look that says Think about it.
âOh. Right.â My laugh is small and embarrassed. âHow about that line of text going up your ribs? What language is that?â
âCyrillic.â
âWhat does it say?â
âNo past, no future.â
âWow. Thatâs dark.â
âThereâs not much humor to be found in my line of work. Except if itâs black.â
âMakes sense. What about that big red V on your left shoulder? That one looks fresh. Is it someoneâs initial?â
âNo.â
âIs it a Roman numeral?â
âNo.â
âThen what does it stand for?â
Finished with removing the stitches, he sets the scissors and tweezers aside, balls up the bandage with the cut up pieces of thread, puts it on the dresser, then looks at me.
âVengeance.â
I open my mouth then close it again.
âWell, well, well,â he murmurs, his gaze intense. âLook who finally got quiet.â
I bite my lower lip. His gaze drops to my mouth briefly, then he looks back into my eyes.
Honestly, I canât think of a single thing to say. There is nothing to say. There are no words for this situation.
After a tense few moments pass, he says, âYou havenât asked me to take you home.â
Thereâs a question in there. The question is Why not?
To avoid his penetrating gaze, I glance down at my stomach. Then I slowly pull the shirt down, covering my scar.
âOkay.â
âThatâs not an answer.â
I donât have an answer, at least not one that makes sense. I feel him staring at me in blistering intensity, and my cheeks start to burn.
Heâs about to say something when a sharp noise makes me jump. It comes from the window on the other side of the room and sounds like a person is standing outside in the dark, rapping their knuckles on the glass.
My voice turns high with panic. âWhatâs that sound? The wind? A bear? A serial killer?â
Cool as a cucumber, he says, âItâs Poe.â
âWhatâs a Poe?â
Rising from the bed, Mal crosses the room and slides up the windowpane. Cold night air rushes in. Onto the sill hops an enormous black crow, fluttering its wings.
The thing probably weighs twenty pounds. It has glittering black eyes, a razor-sharp beak, and a frightening air of intelligence.
It looks at me, squawking like Satan sent it for my soul.
âOh, god!â
âNo, Poe.â Mal holds out his arm. The creature hops onto his forearm, looks up at him, and makes a chattering birdy noise of affection.
âYouâre shitting me. You have a pet crow?â
âDonât talk about him like heâs not in the room. Youâll hurt his feelings.â
I canât tell if thatâs a joke or not, because his face is serious. Like it always is.
âDo you want to feed him?â
I look at the bird with trepidation. Unimpressed, it stares back at me. âWhat does it eat?â
Mal deadpans, âHuman eyeballs.â
I say drily, âGreat, youâre a comedian now.â
He sits at the foot of the bed and holds his arm out toward me. The bird hops down to his wrist, head bobbing. I let out a small sound of fear.
âAmuse him for a minute while I go get his food.â
The crow flutters down from Malâs arm and lands on my thigh. It feels like someone dropped a toddler on me. The sound of fear I make this time is louder.
Mal rises. Before he turns to leave the room, I could swear I spot a smirk on his face.
Poe stands defiantly on my leg, adjusting his wings and glaring at me.
Trying to sink as far back into the pillow as I can, I say faintly, âHi, Poe. Um. Nice to meet you. I hope youâre not a carrier of the plague.â
Squawk!
âWas that insulting? Youâll have to excuse my manners. I donât often have conversations with winged creatures.â
Squawk!
I get the distinct sense this fucking bird wants a better apology than the one he just got, so I add lamely, âIâm sorry for saying that thing about the plague. It was rude. Umâ¦you have very pretty feathers.â
I know the glint of satisfaction in its eyes isnât my imagination, because it emits a softer squawk and starts grooming its feathers.
Mal returns to the room holding a small dish. When Poe sees him, he caws in excitement, hopping up and down on my leg and probably causing bruises. Mal hands the dish to me. I peer over the edge and see that itâs filled with small brown pellets.
âWhat is this?â
âCat food. Crows love it.â
As if to prove his point, Poe flaps his wings, lands on my chest, pokes his head into the bowl Iâm holding, and starts eating.
âMal?â
âYes, Riley?â
âThereâs a giant crow on my chest.â
âI can see that.â
âIs it dangerous?â
Poe stops gobbling cat food pellets for a moment to turn his head and glare at me.
With faint laughter in his voice, Mal says, âOnly to people who refer to him as âit.ââ
Poe stands on my chest, waiting.
Feeling like an absolute idiot, I apologize to the bird again. âSorry, Poe. Iâve only ever had goldfish. They donât have nearly as much personality as you.â
Poe produces a quiet, rambling series of clicks and grating rattles to show his displeasure with me, then he starts eating again.
Iâve been dismissed.
The three of us are silent until Poe finishes off the cat food. Then he flies back to the open window, making me jump as he takes off from my chest.
With a final farewell squawk, he flies off into the night. Mal closes the window behind him and turns back to me, leaning against the wall and crossing his arms over his chest.
âDo you have any other animal friends I should expect for a visit?â
âThereâs a family of raccoons who comes over from time to time.â
âAny bears?â
âNot friendly ones. Time for you to go to sleep.â
âAre you this bossy with all your patients?â
âAre you this mouthy with all your doctors?â
âOnly the ones I like.â
Thereâs a pause where he simply stands and stares at me, his eyes warm. Then a miracle occurs: he smiles.
Itâs beautiful.
He murmurs, âGo to sleep, Riley Rose.â
âHow can I sleep with you standing there staring at me?â
âYouâve been doing well with it so far. Now close your eyes.â
I heave a sigh, flop my arms dramatically at my sides, then obey him and shut my eyes.
I must fall asleep almost immediately, because I remember nothing after that.
When I wake up in the morning, Mal is sleeping on his side next to me in bed, his arm under my neck, a leg thrown over both of mine, his big warm hand splayed over my belly.
Right over my scar.