Savage Hearts: Chapter 40
Savage Hearts (Queens & Monsters Book 3)
Mal and I lie entangled in bed in the dark for a long time before he finally speaks.
âAre you all right?â He sounds somber. Like heâs worried he did something wrong.
âYou didnât hurt me, if thatâs what youâre asking.â
âYour throatâ¦?â
âYou couldâve squeezed twice as hard, and I wouldnât have felt it.â
He exhales in relief. âBreath play can be dangerous. We shouldâve talked about it first. Had a safe word.â
Dear god, hearing him say âbreath playâ and âsafe wordâ makes my imagination run wild with every kinky scenario people can engage in, in pairs, trios, or groups.
I picture him in the middle of a writhing pile of naked bodies at a sex club, godlike and glistening as he fucks every random hole in sight, and feel as if I might faint.
âHereâs a safe word for you: I have zero interest in hearing about your past sexual experiences. The thought of you doing what we just did with another woman makes me want to bury a hatchet in your chest and set you on fire.â
After a moment, he says, âThatâs too long for a safe word. Hard to remember in the heat of the moment.â
I hear laughter in his tone, the bastard.
âYou know what I mean.â
âYes, I do,â he murmurs, squeezing me. âYouâre jealous.â
âPfft.â
âDeny it all you want, but I didnât mention anything about my past. I simply suggested we needed to communicate about what we do together, then suddenly you were threatening me with death.â
Embarrassed because heâs right, I hide my face in the crook of his neck. When he softly kisses my throat, I whisper, âIâm sorry.â
âDonât be sorry. I know exactly how you feel.â
âYou do?â
âWhy donât you bring up your blond bodyguard again and see how I take it?â
That dials down my aggravation to a manageable degree. I burrow closer to him, closing my eyes. âNo, thanks. But can we talk about what happened at dinner?â
He peppers soft kisses down my throat and along my collarbone. âWhat happened is that you sassed the king of the Bratva, and he loved you for it.â
âYouâre sure he wonât change his mind later?â
âIâm sure. The man hasnât had anyone dare to even raise their voice to him for twenty years. He found your angry little speech very entertaining.â
âI canât figure out why he was so mad at you, though.â
He pauses kissing me to say thoughtfully, âMe neither.â
âAre you not allowed to kidnap people?â
He chuckles. I take that as a no.
âWhat were you guys talking about in Russian?â
âMostly business.â
âDid he tell you how he found out about me?â
âNo. I asked if it was the man he sent me to in New York to help me find Declan, but he said it wasnât. Said it was a dead man, an old friend of his who knew everyone and everything.â
âA dead man? Does he spend a lot of time on a Ouija board talking to spirits?â
âI didnât understand it either, but Pakhan said he wanted to introduce me to him.â His voice drops. âNow that heâd met you.â
âMe? What do I have to do with anything?â
âI donât know.â
âThis is all very strange.â
âYes. Especially the part where he told me to take a vacation.â
I lift my head and look at him. âA vacation?â
âA month off,â he replies, nodding.
âHas he ever given you time off before?â
âNever.â
âDonât you think thatâs odd?â
âI do.â
âSo what are you going to do about it?â
He smiles. âTake a month off.â
A dangerous thrill goes through me, like Iâm standing at the edge of a perilously high cliff, looking down. Aiming for nonchalant, I say, âWhere will you go?â
His smile is indulgent. âLook at you, trying to act innocent. You know exactly where Iâll go.â He presses the softest of kisses to my lips. âAnd with who.â
âTo the cabin,â I whisper, kissing him back. âWith me.â
Rolling on top of me, he takes my mouth in a deep, hot kiss, curling his hand around my throat as he does it. âYes, with you,â he says, voice husky. âMy mouthy little captive.â
I wrap my arms around his back, shivering in delight at the feel of his big, strong body against mine. âYour wrinkled gray tissue someone left in their pocket too long.â
âMy stubborn fighter.â
âYour homeless deer mouse with the tiny fang-like tusks.â
âMy world.â
Itâs said in a murmur as he gazes deep into my eyes with a look of adoration.
I swallow, my heart beating faster. âCan I say something now?â
âNo.â
âItâs super complimentary, though. Youâll like it.â
âI already know, baby. I can see it in your eyes.â
âOh. Okay. So the feelingâs mutual?â
âFucking hell, woman. Shut up.â
He kisses me again, giving me a very good reason to.
In the morning, we return to the cabin in the woods.
On the drive from the airport down the rutted dirt road, I gather my courage and ask Mal about Spider. Iâm hoping since weâre not in bed, he wonât get so mad.
Iâm wrong.
As soon as I mention his name, he goes stiff.
âHeâs alive.â
âIs he going to stay that way?â
âNot if you keep asking me about him.â
âIâm only asking because you havenât told me anything. The last I heard, youâd drugged him and told him to leave the country, but he hadnât.â
Heâs silent for a long time. Iâm not sure heâll ever answer me, but then he does, his jaw tight, looking straight out the windshield as he drives.
âHeâs still in Moscow. Sniffing around like a dog.â
âWhat are you planning on doing about him?â
âNothing.â
I examine his profile, but canât get a clue to what heâs thinking. Itâs like looking at a brick wall.
If the brick wall wanted to smash something, that is.
âIâm sorry that this conversation is pissing you off, but I have to know that heâs going to be okay.â
With slow, precise enunciation, he replies, âWhy is that so important to you?â
âMal, look at me.â
He clenches his jaw instead.
âCome on. Just for a sec.â
He draws an exaggerated breath, exhales, then glances in my direction.
As soon as our eyes meet, I say softly, âI donât have feelings for him. I never did. I promise you. But I liked him, and he was really nice to me. I donât want anything bad to happen to him. Okay?â
He holds my gaze for a moment longer then looks back out the windshield.
We drive for a while in silence. I let him work it over in his head without pestering him, and am finally rewarded when he says grudgingly, âIâve already put the word out that heâs off-limits. No oneâs to touch him. If anything bad happens him, it wonât be our doing.â
Relieved, I scoot across the seat and duck under his arm. Cuddling up to him, I kiss his cheek and whisper, âThank you, sweetie.â
He says vehemently, âI hate that Irish fucker.â
âI know.â
âSo should you. He shot you!â
âIt was an accident. Iâm sure he feels awful.â
My reply is a disgruntled growl. I kiss his cheek again, and he squeezes me closer into his side.
I decide to leave my questions about Declanâs future for later. In my heart of hearts, I already know the answers, anyway.
If Mal were going to kill Declan, he already would have.
We arrive at the cabin just as Poe is landing on the wood railing on the porch, squawking at us impatiently for treats.
The next few weeks are a blissful dream.
The snow starts to melt in the meadow. A riot of wildflowers springs up from the thawing ground. I perfect my target shooting skills and learn how to shoot a bow and arrow, though only at trees. I even start work on a book, a project I always dreamed of but never had time for.
When Mal asks me what the story is, I tell him itâs about a girl who doesnât know sheâs dead.
âLike that movie,â he says. âI see dead people.â
I smile at him. âNo, this is a love story.â
âA love story with ghosts?â
âKeep making that face, and Iâll never let you read it.â
He chuckles, kisses me, and leaves it at that.
We go to bed early and sleep late, sometimes staying in bed all day. We make love on every surface in the cabin, including up against all the walls. Iâve never been happier.
I promise myself that when Mal has to go back to work, Iâll call my sister. Iâll deal with ârealâ life, but not yet.
For the first time, Iâm happy, whole, and completely at peace. I feel like I was wandering lost in a wilderness, but now Iâve been found. I want to live in the cabin in the woods forever.
Until the day Mal goes into town to restock supplies and everything falls to pieces.
I shouldâve known something so beautiful was too good to last.