Devious Lies: Part 3 – Chapter 37
Devious Lies: A Standalone Enemies-to-Lovers Romance
War brewed within me, fueled by envy.
I blinked at Nash, wondering how he could stand there with a fucking Turkey & Ruffles sandwich held out to me like this was normal. He arched a brow as if to tell me my opinion of myself was built on a lie.
We stared at one another until he brought the sandwich to my lips again.
I let him continue feeding me, accepting another bite. It gave me time to hide my uncertainty. Handling our proximity shook me, but handling his words crippled me.
After I finished the sandwich, he washed and cut strawberries, then set a bowl of them on the counter. Sliding the freezer open, he scooped vanilla bean ice cream into the bowl and finished it off with Torani white chocolate and marshmallow syrups.
Fucking hell, I felt like the Eastridge princess I used to be as I brought a spoonful of bliss to my mouth.
The same ice cream flavor and toppings I would eat when a busted-up Nash broke into the mansion for ice.
His eyes remained on my lips as I chewed. They followed a path down the column of my neck when I swallowed. I was a zoo animal, on display for a feeding show. Or maybe I was the prey getting prepped to be fed to the predator.
âWhat about the question you owe me?â My voice sounded hoarse. Dry despite the ice cream that coated it.
âThis isnât Twenty Questions.â Disdain dripped from him like the ice cream melting from the side of the bowl. âYou overestimate my generosity. You already got a favor and free life advice. Iâm neither a Magic 8 ball, nor Oprah.â
Thumbing the falling liquid from the ceramic, I sucked it into my mouth, stopping when I caught his intensity.
âHumor meâ¦â I thrust the bowl out, hoping he wouldnât take it. âOr Iâm suddenly feeling very full and would appreciate it if you could finish this. We wouldnât want to waste this food, would we?â
âWhy does this feel like a fucking mistake?â he muttered, but he stepped closer with each word, his movements pressing the bowl back to my chest. His breath grazed my forehead, tickling my cheek. âWhatâs the damn question, Little Tiger?â
âSingapore.â
âSurely, that overpriced education did better than this.â Nash toyed with a strand of my hair. I wonder if he realized he was doing it. It mightâve been the first time heâd initiated contact with me. âThatâs not a question. Ask an actual question.â His fingers paused. âLast chance.â
âWhy Singapore?â
âWhy not?â
Slipping my hair from his fingers, I spooned more ice cream into my mouth. âAn honest answer or Iâm never eating another sandwich from you.â
I hadnât intended to, despite my stomachâs protests, but the trade-off was worth it.
Nash shelved the syrups and faced me. âI like Singapore.â
I realized my mistake too late. Iâd asked the wrong question. Irritation blossomed in my chest, but I tamped it when I realized his redirects meant there was a lie to unravel here, a secret to be fleeced.
I wanted it.
I needed to own all his secrets.
Craved it.
If not for proprietorship, then for the sake of leveling the playing field.
âWhy that property?â I pressed, setting the finished bowl onto the counter. My breath tasted like strawberry, vanilla, chocolate, and marshmallows. I wondered what his tasted like.
He rinsed the bowl in the sink and deposited it into an industrial dishwasher. âThatâs a second question.â
âItâs an add-on to the original question.â
Nash shook his head and returned to me with a napkin in his hand. âAlways breaking the fucking rules.â
When he offered it to me, I ignored it, darted my tongue to the corner of my lips, and swiped off the white chocolate. He tracked the movement, whereas I tracked him.
His throat bobbed. The napkin crumbled in his grip. I imagined he wanted to loosen his collar or run his hand through his hair. Three times, because I made him uncomfortable. I made him want to leave.
âAlways trying to make the fucking rules,â I volleyed back and cleared my throat, unsure how to feel about our proximity. The laps my blood raced didnât feel very healthy. âNo one made you king, Nash.â
He spread his arms like an eagle in flight, taking up so much space he consumed me. âYouâre standing in my kingdom, Winthrop. I own the air you breathe, the land you walk on, the company you work for. I own North Carolina.â
I didnât doubt his words for a second. It struck me how much the tables had turned. The fallen Winthrop princess. The unrelenting king who had taken her place. My heart rattled my chest as our fairy tale sunk in.
Not Disney.
Brothers Grimm.
In which a cruel king rules over a stolen kingdom, and a poor servant lives in the tyrantâs line of fire.
Only, I knew how those fairy tales ended.
When the people ended.
âAll Iâm standing on is a bed of false promises.â I begged my stomach to steady. It churned, full of favorite foods and lies. âYou like Singapore, sure. Thatâs not an answer. Not all of it.â
Nash leaned against the counter, hands shoved into his dress slacks pockets. âItâs the one youâre getting.â
âWhy wonât you tell me?â I edged forward until we stood toe-to-toe. I needed him to look at meâreally look at meâand understand I was dead serious. âIâm not going to judge you, Nash. We push each otherâs buttons. I say youâre cruel. You say my name like itâs a curse and a sin. But have I ever, for a single second, made you feel like I thought of you as anything less than you are?â
âNo.â The truth sat between us like an unwelcome visitor, lingering too long as we wondered how it had even gotten there. He rubbed at the back of his neck before returning the palm to his pocket. âThe building next door.â
âWhat about it?â
âI stayed there once. Delilah and I ate at the restaurant on the roof. Outdoors. No ceiling. Shitty fucking food, but I felt high enough in the sky to touch Dad, far enough from Eastridge to breathe, and close enough to the ground to convince myself it was reality. Itâs the only time I ever wanted to do this. Run Prescott Hotels, instead of burning it to the ground. Iâm buying the building next to it and constructing a skyscraper thatâs taller, better, closer to the moon.â
I tipped my head back and eyed the ceiling, wishing we stood outside. âHow was the sky?â
âWhat do you mean?â
Muttering a magic word, I sloped my head back to him. âWere there stars?â
âItâs the cityâ¦â
âWhat does that mean? Yes or no?â
âNo, there werenât stars.â
âA starless night,â I whispered, enchanted, unaware that Iâd edged myself against him.
It happened so fast.
Our lips crashed together, our teeth clanging.
It wasnât a nice kiss, because he didnât deserve a nice kiss. No matter how much the world thought of him, no matter the savior Eastridge and the press considered him to be, no matter how much everyone at Prescott Hotels or the soup kitchen raved about him, he didnât deserve nice.
Not from me.
Never from me.
He kissed me like the villain he was. Rough and unrelenting. I pulled at his body, skin, neck. Anything I could get my hands on. Sliding my tongue into his mouth, we warred with each stroke.
His hands met my waist and lifted me easily. I wrapped my legs around his back, groaning when he placed me onto the countertop and ground against me. Whatever skin I could reach, I stole, touching it like it was mine. Pretending it was mine.
And by the end, we were panting, and his shirt had a tear down the side, and mine laid somewhere across the room without him ever actually pulling it off.
âLagom,â I whispered, resting my forehead to his, chasing my breaths.
He tasted like something permanent. Something that would be etched on my lips long after we parted.
And it felt wrong.
The kiss felt wrong.
Not because he was my boss.
Not because he was cruel.
Not because everyone would hate us for it.
Not because his brother was my best friend.
Not because I used to think I was in love with Reed.
But because nothingâand I mean fucking nothingâshould have felt this good.
And anything that did?
Had to be wrong.
Nash breathed against my lips, still parted as he exchanged breaths with me. âWhatâs lagom?â
My hands fell to his chest, thrilled by his heartâs tempo. It matched mine. âNot too little. Not too much. Just right.â
I didnât believe in perfect, but I believed in lagom.
It meant right, but not necessarily perfect.
And in a world filled with devious lies, it was a truth I latched onto.
Nash dipped his fingers beneath the hem of my jeans, brushing his thumb against the crease of my thigh and sex. âWhy not say perfect?â
I shook my head, appalled by the idea. âPerfection is unattainable. Itâs stained by the suffering required to chase it. Perfect is something you think with your head. Lagom is something you feel with your heart.â
His fingers ran a path along my underwear, knuckles brushing so much skin.
âWhy are you looking at me like that?â I asked and moved back, but his grip tightened on my waist, shifting me closer for a moment before he released me.
âI thought of a word.â He mouthed it like I do, looking a little ridiculous and endearing for once. âIs that what itâs like?â
âLike a cure?â
Nashâs eyes took in the space between us. âNo.â
He didnât elaborate, and I didnât want him to. Not if heâd ruin magic words for me. He wielded the power, and I was too protective of words to risk it.
âWhatâs the word?â I asked.
Desperation didnât suit me, but I needed to know.
Nash brushed a thumb across my cheek and slammed his lips against mine. He kissed me like I was nuclear and he needed to destroy me to save himself. His tongue slipped past my lips, stroking mine. I gripped his shirt, and he gripped my hair, running his hands through it in a way that had me begging to pant cafuné.
It ended too soon, before I could even appreciate that itâd begun. Disappointment slithered inside me, expanding at our distance.
âItâs late,â he said, pulling away from me. âSecurity in the plaza makes their rounds in an hour.â
My shirt had been torn down the middle like a vest, so I wore it backward and used Nashâs suit jacket to cover my exposed spine. He managed to look dangerous with the mussed hair and ripped shirt, whereas I resembled a kid playing dress-up.
We walked to the hotel in silence, stopping at the entrance. I opened my mouth when I realized heâd never told me the word, but I shoved my curiosity down my throat and replaced it with my own magic words.
Nyctophilia.
Basorexia.
Ibrat.
Nash eyed my lips, watching them form and pocket the words.
âIâm driving you home.â He nodded in the direction of the parking garage. That would go horribly when he realized I didnât have a home. âBefore you waste our time arguing, itâs non-negotiable. Itâs late, dark, and cold enough that I see your nipples every time we pass a streetlamp. I know you donât have a death wish, so your stubbornness will only come off as stupidity.â
Ignoring all but his first sentence, I backed away, inch by inch. âIâm good.â My shoulder lifted. âMaybe you donât know me as well as you think you do, Nash,â I taunted, a little pissed that he never told me the word.
âEmery.â
âStop saying my name like itâs a demand.â
âEmery.â
My eyes dipped to the penance tattoo I wanted to taste. I allowed myself two seconds to study it, turned, and walked away.
I pivoted when I remembered how persistent he could be. Better to let him scheme where I could see him. He already had his phone pulled out when he glanced up at me, like heâd known I would return.
Dick.
Heâd already opened the Uber app. âWhere do you live?â
Shit. Shit. Shit. What do I do?
I kept my mouth shut and held my hand out. As soon as his phone touched my fingers, I moved the dot on the app to a random residential neighborhood close by. Giving him my back, I leaned against the hotel, tapped my fingers on the glass, and stared at the sky.
Iâm starting to think Nash isnât the villain, Starless Sky. Maybe you are.
Nash held out his palm. âMy phone.â
Oh.
I glanced down at it, my eyes pausing on the Eastridge United app before I returned it to him. Of course, he had the app. He owned it. But did he have a pen pal? He didnât seem like the type.
Then again, if I used it for phone sex, maybe he did, too.
That, I could see him doing.
Jealousy coiled around my throat. I pulled at the collar of my tee, forgetting the huge rip as I flashed Nash with some serious skin.
Ignoring him, I tipped my head at the sky.
Shut up, dude. Even the moon is jealous of the stars. And you, Starless Sky, have no stars. I bet that makes you jealous of everyone.
When I lowered my head, Nash still studied me, so I watched him back, daring him to break the silence. Secretly thrilled at the feeling of his eyes on me.
I had no intention of kissing Nash tonight, but if I had to explain it, Iâd chalk it up to the look in his eyes when he told me about the starless night in Singapore.
Nash reminded me of a favorite song. One you play so often you think you canât stand anymore. But in the silence, when the world is quiet and your brain is pliant, the chords repeat in your mind, and you remember itâs your favorite melody.
I broke first, dipping my eyes until he followed suit, much slower than I had. We stood a foot apart, neither of us talking as we stared at our phones. He was probably playing Candy Crush, but I opened the Eastridge United app to check if Ben was on. I squashed a smile at the sight of the green dot.
Flicking a glance at Nash, I angled my screen away from him. I didnât need the headache of him catching me on his app and accusing me of whatever shitty things he thought Iâd done. Cryptic comments my pride didnât allow me to ask about.
Ben didnât reply for a minute. I slanted a glance at Nash. Brows furrowed, he typed something fast. My head fell again before he could catch me staring.
A car honked twice. Dragging my attention from the screen, I caught the telltale Uber sticker before approaching. Nash opened the back door for me, which I ignored. I slid into the passenger side.
Gifting me a scowl, Nash tapped the window, indicating I lower it. I didnât, but the driver listened. The frosty air bit my skin as the carâs heater seeped outside. Nash made a show of pulling out his phone, taking a picture of the driver, then photographing his license.
âDerrick Atterberry, of 8143 Adair Lane, I have your face, your driverâs license, your name, your address, and your license plate number.â Nashâs forearms rested on the open window frame, his hands dangerously close to touching me. âNod your head if youâre following me.â
Derrickâs throat bobbed. He nodded his head like the Usain Bolt bobblehead on his dash.
Nash held up his phone. âI also have the numbers of every important politician along this coast, including the president; an ability to lie my way into and out of any situation; an ethical code that sits somewhere between Jordan Belfort snorting cocaine off his mistressâ asscheeks and using toddlers as test subjects for torture à la MK-Ultra; and a strong repertoire for vengeance, including but not limited to one-starring your ass on Uber.â He paused. âDid I tell you to stop nodding your head?â
Derrick cleared his throat and swiped the sweat off his forehead. âNo.â
âAre you not following?â
âNo. I mean, yes.â His fingers gripped the steering wheel tighter. âI mean, Iâm following.â
âThen nod your fucking head.â
Derrick nodded his head. He didnât stop, even when Nash continued.
âGet her home safe, wait until her fucking front door closes, and Iâll spare you the receiving end of a wrath youâve never known and are unequipped to survive.â He reached into my wallet and tossed three hundreds at the driver. âDo whatever she says,â he slid three more hundreds into the inner pocket of his suit jacket I wore, brushing against my hard nipple, âand sheâll give you the rest.â
My heart still hiccupped as we left Nash behind, skipping a beat every few seconds. The side mirrors showed him watching the car until we left his line of sight. I should have assured the poor driver Nash hadnât meant any of that, but AâI think he did and BâI remembered what Nash once said about not kissing.
I brought my fingers to my lips, grazing them. I couldnât get my mind off his lips on mine. Worseânot knowing why heâd done it would drive me crazy.
âCan you mark the ride as finished on the app, then take me back to the hotel?â I asked when the driver arrived at the random house address Iâd chosen.
âUhhâ¦â
Furrowed brows hovered over his eyes. They peeped at the three hundred-dollar bills littered across the center console. He hadnât picked them up. His hands had shaken too much on the drive here. They still plastered to the steering wheel. Positioned ten and two like a Boy Scout, even with the brakes on.
I reached into my jean pockets for the money. My hand brushed against the note Nash had given me at the soup kitchen before I remembered heâd placed the money inside the jacket pocket. I pulled out the note and retrieved the hundreds from the inner pocket.
Waving the bills, I offered the most innocent expression I could muster. âIâll give you these regardless, but he did say to do whatever I tell you. Please?â
On the drive back, I pressed the car light on and read the note, hunching my shoulders to cradle it with my body.
Nashâs version of an apology.
I shut the light off, folded the note as carefully as I could, and peered out the window at the sky.
Not bad, Starless Night. Not bad.