Sweet Obsession: Chapter 10
Sweet Obsession (Ruthless Games Book 1)
I freeze mid-step, then turn to glare back up at the house.
Marcus is lounging in the door frame, his arms crossed over his bare chest and the half-smile Iâm learning to both love and hate curving his lips.
He shrugs slightly. âYou said you wouldnât let me drive you home. I said okay. So Theo will.â
I grit my teeth. Jesus. Thatâs why he relented so easily back upstairs. And thatâs what he was tapping out on his phone after he checked the time. He was calling in his backup.
And that backup arrived in less than five minutes.
Itâs both impressive and disturbing how close these three men all seem to beâthe way they function as a unit and always have each otherâs backs.
Iâm almost envious of it, in a weird way. Although right now, I hate it.
âI hope you have exact fare, because thatâs all I can accept.â Theo winks at me, clearly amused by his own joke. âSorry. City policy.â
Goddammit. Why does he have to be so fucking charming?
My gaze shifts from the man in the car to the one still leaning against the door frame. Theyâre both watching me, and even though thereâs a few yards of space between me and each of them, I still feel boxed in.
Marcus knew exactly what he was doing when he sent that text to his friend. He was taking away my other options, narrowing my choices down to exactly two.
Accept a ride home from him. Or accept one from Theo.
âFine.â I turn back once more to meet Marcusâs gaze as I speak. My voice is hard, and something about my angry, cold expression makes him straighten a little, as if he wants to step toward me.
To do what? Apologize?
Doubtful.
I donât want to let him get near me again, though. I donât need any more of his mind-obliterating touches tonight.
Iâm pissed at him right now, just like I was when I came to the house. Regardless of what happened during the hours in between, I want to stay that way. Itâs the only emotional response to this man that makes any sense. All of my other feelings toward him are a chaotic mess I canât even get a handle on.
So before he can move, I pivot on my heel and walk quickly toward Theoâs car, yanking the front passenger door open and sliding inside. I roll the window back up, and I donât look toward Marcus again as the car pulls smoothly away from the curb.
I donât know what kind of car it is, but even I can tell itâs a nice fucking ride. It probably cost more than two years of my rent. The inside has a pleasant smell, a mixture of that distinctive âcar leatherâ scent and something else. Something woody and a little sweet, like dark cherry and oak.
I have a feeling that scent is coming from Theo, and I do my best to ignore the way it tickles my nostrils, warm and addictive.
We drive in silence for a few minutes, with only the soft sound of the radio filling the car.
I donât bother to tell him where I live. Iâm sure he already knows.
His gaze flicks over to me a few times as he drives, one large hand resting languidly on the wheel, his muscled forearms stretching the rolled sleeves of his Henley. The expression on his face is a mixture of curiosity and amusement, and I try to keep my own features on lockdown so he canât read anything on my face.
The air outside has turned cold in the absence of the sun, and my tank top feels too thin and flimsy. I rub my amputated arm with my good one, wishing I could properly wrap my arms around myself.
Theo reaches over and turns a knob on the dash, then flicks the air vents so that warm air blows toward me. He presses another button, and the seat beneath me begins to heat up.
The warmth relaxes my tight muscles a little, and despite myself, I find my gaze flitting over to study his face.
âSo do you just do whatever Marcus tells you to all the time?â I finally ask. âAre you at his beck and call twenty-four seven, or what?â
Theo grins, keeping his gaze on the road. âNot exactly. But when he needs me, yeah. Iâm there.â
âWhy? Are you his groupie? Did you lose a bet to him or something?â
Iâm needling him a little. I want to get a rise out of one of these guys, and Iâm still pissed about the way Marcus basically forced me into accepting a ride home. Iâm pissed that there are three of them and only one of me, which means they always have the advantage.
The smile slips from Theoâs face, and when he turns to look at me, his expression is dead serious. âNo. No bet. But Ry and I would follow Marcus into hell if he asked. We owe him. A lot more than any single debt.â
My stomach dips a little at the sudden change in his demeanor. From what Iâve seen, heâs the most easy-going of the three men, which makes it disturbingly easy to be drawn in by him, to be taken by his charm.
The way heâs speaking right now, though? The darkness that hovers behind his blue-green eyes? It makes me positive that heâs been through just as much shit as his two friends have.
âWhy? Whatâs your deal? Are you guys in a gang or something?â
Fuck. I told myself I didnât want to know anything else about Marcus or his friends. But this feels like it doesnât count, because Iâm not asking Marcus directly. And my curiosity is too powerful to ignore.
Besides, if I want to have any chance of getting them out of my life, maybe I should be learning more about them. Gathering information to use against them if it comes down to it.
Theo chuckles. Itâs a freer sound than Marcusâs laugh, as if he can actually still find humor in things. âNah, not exactly. Weâre just close friends.â
âWhat do you all do?â I glance around at his fancy as fuck car and his casual but clearly expensive clothes. âLet me guess. You designed an app that took off and made you millions.â
He laughs again, seeming truly amused by that. âNope. Good guess though. Ryland and Marcus are both involved in their family businesses.â
âAnd you?â
âIâmâ¦â He shrugs lightly, shifting his grip on the wheel. âTrying to get my own thing going.â
âWhat thing?â
He cocks a brow at me. âYou ask a lot of questions, donât you?â
I scowl. âOh, so you three are allowed to basically stalk me, to beat up muggers in alleys and follow me around and drive me places in the middle of the nightâbut Iâm not allowed to know anything about you?â
The shifting light of passing streetlamps moves over his face as he grins. âFair point. I like that youâre curious about us.â He glances at me. âMarcus isnât the only one who owes you, you know. When you saved his life, you probably saved ours too.â
âIt was an accident,â I say automatically.
The words feel more and more like a lie every time I utter them, and the look Theo shoots me lets me know he doesnât believe it for a second. I donât want him to push for a different answer though, so instead, I distract him with a question of my own.
âIf you and Ryland both owe me like you said, how come he hates me so much and you donât?â
Theo flicks his blinker on and makes a smooth right turn. âRy doesnât hate you.â
âCouldâve fooled me.â
âHe doesnât.â He runs his free hand through his golden-blond hair. âHeâs just⦠protective.â
Like Marcus fucking needs protecting from anyone.
I snort. âYeah. Okay.â
âHeâll come around.â
I donât answer that, because the honest truth is, I should have no reason to want Ryland to come around. It shouldnât matter whether he likes me or not, and talking about him like this makes it seem as if heâs part of my life in a way that makes me uneasy.
As if heâs a permanent part of it.
As if our lives will always be entwined, no matter how hard I try to break the connection.
Or maybe even how hard he does.
âWhy donât you hate me then?â I ask, running my fingertips over the soft leather of the seat. âWhy are you nice to me?â
Theo pulls to a stop, and I realize with a start that weâre back at my place. The drive went by faster than I realized, and I almost donât want to get out of the cozy bubble of the car.
He leaves the engine idling and turns to face me more fully, brushing a hand through his tousled blond hair again. âBecause I donât think you deserve to be punished for doing the most selfless thing a person can do.â
âIt wasââ
I canât even finish the sentence this time.
Theo watches the lie die on my lips, then nods slightly, as if heâs glad I didnât finish. His gaze travels over my features, soaking me in. Thereâs something warm and open in his expression, and it makes me feel like heâs seeing all of meâor at least much more than I usually allow strangers to glimpse.
Just like Marcus, heâs slipping past all my defenses. But where Marcus blows holes in them and barges through, Theo just taps on them lightly until, unbidden, they open for him.
I donât think Iâve ever met a person who I innately wanted to trust more.
And that scares the fuck out of me.
âWell, uh, thanks for the ride.â Dragging my gaze away from him, I unclip my seatbelt.
âAnytime.â One side of his mouth tilts up. âBus fare is on me tonight. Oh, and heyâif you ever need a bus to take you anywhere else, just let me know. We run special routes for beautiful women with rose tattoos.â
He rattles off his number, and I nod quickly, a little surprised that heâs offering to drive me around outside of this late-night favor to his friend. I know all three of these men have been following me, but I thought Marcus was the driving force behind it all, the one whose obsession brought them crashing into my life.
But the way Theoâs talking to me, the way heâs looking at me, it doesnât seem like heâs doing this for Marcus at all.
Does he know what happened between me and Marcus tonight? How much do I still smell like sex? Look like sex?
My hair has to be a mess, and I wouldnât be surprised if Iâve got bite marks and hickeys all over my chest and neck. I probably look like I just got out of a gang-bang.
I canât quite figure out how I feel about the fact that Theo knows I fucked his friend. All of this is such a jumbled up mess that nothing makes logical sense. Nothing fits the normal rules of behavior.
Trying to shove down the flush I can feel coloring my cheeks, I twist a little to open the door with my left hand and then slide off the heated seat and into the cool night air outside my apartment.
I push the car door shut, and as it closes with a thunk, the window rolls down again. Theo dips his head, dropping it nearly sideways so he can grin up at me.
âGoodnight, Rose. Sleep tight.â
I give him a jerky nod, rattled by his use of a nickname for me. Itâs the same thing he called me at the bar, and the easy familiarity of it unnerves me.
Without saying anything else, I turn and hurry up to my apartment, fishing my keys from my pocket. The 3B decal is still somewhere in Marcusâs house, resting wherever it landed when I hurled it at the floor.
The memory of why I went over to his house in the first place, along with everything else that happened after I arrived, makes me feel suddenly exhausted. The day I spent doing boring office work downtown feels like another lifetime entirely, not something that happened less than twenty-four hours ago.
So much has happened since then.
So much has changed.
With a sharp shake of my head, I wrench the door of my building open and dart inside quickly. Once Iâm safely tucked away in my own apartment, I chuck my keys on the coffee table and sink down onto the couch.
I sit there for a few minutes, letting the rough, worn fabric of the cushion beneath my palm ground me.
Then I dig into my back pocket and pull my cell phone out. Resting it on my lap, I type in the number that Theo gave me and hit âadd new contact.â
I donât know why I do it.
Iâm never going to call him.