: Chapter 20
Bad Little Bride
âHow does she know this?â Grandma asks.
âThat Philip wants to steal me away from my fiancé and claim me as his own?â I shrug. âHow should I know? I only found out the other night. Maybe she hired a PI.â
âI can hear your mind running, dear. Spit it out.â
I hold back a moment, deciding it canât hurt to mention it. âMy father and Mr. Mitchell were speaking at the fundraiser the other night. He mentioned something about a new business endeavor.â
âWhat did Mr. Fikile have to say about that?â
My silence has her looking up, her hands pausing on the tissue paper. âYou do realize you must tell him, just in case.â
I lean against the shelving, watching as she lifts the silky green robe from its box. âIs that your way of saying you will if I donât?â
âDespite what you may believe, Miss Revenaw, Iâm not here as a spy.â
âThe three-month supply of birth control sitting in a pile of ash in the fireplace says differently.â
âYes, well.â She takes a step back, staring at the robe on the hook she hung it on, only to pull it back down. âThe three-month supply hidden in your purple Louis duffle says otherwise.â
My eyes snap to hers and she simply stares me down before looking away. âThis should be worn, not hung.â She sets it out over the small, round ottoman. âAnd no, this is not for me to tell. You will need to, though, especially if there is an issue weâve yet to understand.â
âEnzo knew before I did that Philipâs family was angry with my dad for his refusal of even allowing a conversation about an arranged marriage,â I say as I stand, stripping off the pajamas I put on after my shower and tying the robe over me instead. âI guarantee he knows more about the Mitchells than I do.â I step in front of the mirror, admiring the piece all over again.
It looks even better than it did in the store this afternoon.
âAnd if he doesnât, he will after you tell him, likely before your visitors.â
Spinning, I lean against the mirror, crossing my arms, and ask the question Iâve been wondering all day. âWhy did he allow them past the guards?â
âFor you.â My head tugs back and she rolls her eyes. âWhen you came to Mr. Fikile, it was widely rumored he was after your fatherâs position. Now, youâre engaged, and that position belongs to Mr. Bishop. Trusting him around you, if you could call it that being every guard on payroll was hidden around the grounds hours before their arrival, was to show you what your impending union means to him. And before you make some sort of joke, let me assure you, the sentiment is unmatched.â
Trusting him around meâ¦
A thought hits me then, and I glare at the diamond studded heels she picked today that I have no intentions of ever stepping into. âDo you know who Nicholas Galley is?â
Grandma stills for a single second, then continues unboxing the items she refuses to let me help with. âI do.â
My eyes narrow and I step beside her. âAt the club, after Enzoâ ââ
âWas blinded by possessiveness and pulled an Enzo?â she offers.
A smile tugs at my lips, and I nod. âYes, that. Nicholas called him boss. Does he work for Enzo?â
âMr. Fikile employs many people.â
âWhat was he hired for exactly?â
âMr. Fikile employs many people for many things.â
âGrandma!â
âI despise that name,â she mumbles, finally facing me. âHas Mr. Fikile ever required the particular services the Galleys provide, yes.â She tips her head, pinning me with a very mother-like expression. âJudging by your line of questioning and the look in your eye, heâs worked for you too, something you may need to discuss with your fiancé.â
The problem with a motherly expression? It doesnât exactly work on me being I grew up without one. So I only shrug, having zero intentions of telling him. âIf thatâs the case, then Enzo probably already knows.â
âProbably, but you should still tell him.â
âBecause heâs so forthcoming with me.â
She follows me out of the room, turning on the firepit and opening the giant wall of windows, revealing the stars in the distance. âIâm not sure you realize the power you hold here, Miss Revenaw. If you want to know something, you need only ask.â
I grin, tipping my head. âThis is me asking.â
âMmhmm. You know what Iâm saying to you. Donât be cute.â
A genuine smile reaches my lips and I step out onto the patio as she does, watching as she fluffs the cushions and adjusts the chairs that were perfectly fine to begin with. âWould you like a glass of wine on the patio to end your evening?â she asks.
âThat sounds nice, thank you.â My gaze follows hers as she moves back inside the room, snagging on a corner door I never noticed before. It sits alone at the farthest edge of the room, almost tucked away in a small conclave you have to be looking at from this general angle in order to spot. âWhere does that door lead?â
A moment passes and she doesnât respond, so I spin to ask again, assuming she didnât hear me, only to find her standing still, eyes locked on mine.
A haze sweeps over me, but the longer we stare at one another, the clearer it becomes. She heard me.
She just doesnât want to answer.
âThat door,â I press, this time more firmly. âWhere does it lead?â
Her expression is as blank as the day I met her, chin held high.
âA room,â is all she says.
âWhat room?â
âMiss Revenawâ ââ
âWhat. Room?â
She hesitates a moment, a flicker of something in her eyes that looks a lot like pity, the reason for it clear with her next three words. âNot what roomâ¦â
Whose room.
The thrill of the afternoon is defeated by a thousand thorns, prickling across my body and thickening my skin through the metaphorical scars theyâre sure to leave behind.
The room I was tossed in when I first arrived is two flights of stairs below this one, down a fifty-foot hall, and around a corner that leads you to an entirely different wing of this mansion.
Iâve been sleeping a mile away from my husband, while his ex-wife sleeps next door.
I donât realize Iâve moved until Grandma speaks.
âWhat are you doing?â she asks as casual as ever, tailing my every move when I dart toward the opposite wall. Her eyes go wide when I take a chance, slamming my fist into a shelf similar to the one in my roomâmy old roomâand what do you know, a gun pops out.
Thanks for the tip, dear husband.
âA Smith & Wesson SD9. My favorite.â I flick my eyes from the weapon to her. âNo safety, just need a firm trigger finger.â
âMiss Revenawâ¦â she warns, backing up a step when I lift it into my hands. I donât miss the two slides she shifts to the right, as if trying to block off the doorway.
It only pisses me off more.
So she runs my bathwater and pours my champagne. What the fuck does it matter if the girl sheâs willing to take a bullet for is the one that I replaced?
Maybe she wishes I didnât.
What if she wants Katana to retake her position at Enzoâs side?
I lift the gun, aiming it at her head and tilt mine. âYou know why my family forgives me every time I fuck up, Grandma?â Her eyes narrow and I cock the gun, flipping my wrist toward the ground, so my ring is pointed to the ceiling, my finger hovering just over the trigger. âBecause they know Iâm batshit. You havenât seen that. Enzo hasnât seen that, but soon, if this shit keeps up, you will. Nowâ¦move.â
She fists her hands at her sides. âI cannot allow you to kill her.â
âAssuming you could stop me would be your first mistake.â I walk closer, pressing the gun to the underside of her jaw, and she lifts a brow. âAnd who said it was her whoâs dying today?â Grandmaâs confusion is quick. Good. Welcome to the club. âI need answers, Grandma, and Iâm ready to get them.â
âYou donât want to shoot anyone here.â
âBut I will.â
Grandmaâs attention snaps over my shoulder, her eyes blowing wide as her arms swiftly loop around my back, attempting to spin us around as she shouts, âNo,â just as I hear another voice rattle, âKill her and I kill you.â
I donât even tense, fear oozing from the newcomerâs tone so plainly, itâs disgusting, not to mention embarrassing. Grandma is still trying to spin me, which, aww! I knew she liked me, but not the time. I wrench from her grip and flick my eyes toward the ceiling at the sound of a safety flicking off.
Is this chick for real?
I donât move, giving her the best target you could ask for. You know, if youâre a take-them-from-the-back kind of girl. I, for one, want to see the look on someoneâs face before I ruin their fucking day.
I hold still for one second, two seconds, and just as I suspected, footsteps draw her closer.
Such a newbie.
I spin, sweeping my leg out, disarming and knocking her on her ass in one, perfect little twirl.
âAh!â Katana cries, scooting back with wide eyes, gripping her wrist like a little bitch.
âPathetic.â I scoff, picking up the gun she was holding, popping the magazine out and checking the chamber before tossing it at her. âClearly youâre no prisoner here.â
Her fearful eyes snap to Grandmaâs. âSheâs one of them, isnât she?â
âQuiet, girl.â
âShe was sent hereâ ââ
âI said quiet!â Grandma shouts.
âCall Enzo! Please!â she begs, tears pooling and running down her cheeks instantly.
And okay, what the fuck?
My mind clouds with confusion as I take her in but then footsteps race up the stairs. My heart beats double time as a million scenarios race through my mind, simultaneously trying to count how many sets of feet are barreling this way.
Their steps are heavy, a steady march of stomps, so theyâre coming in with more than the clothes on their backs. I count at least ten sequences, and my anxiety spikes higher, but I donât show it. I clamp it down, focus on the calm, and pretend Iâm unaffected, while internally comparing all the possible ways I could get out of this, trying to find the one with the highest probability of success.
Twelve men file into the room in the next second. They move in complete unison, rifles swinging from left to right, the spacing between them not off by a single inch as they surround the space like disciplined soldiers, creating a perfect circle around us. Right behind them and the last to filter in is the only man outside of Enzo Iâve ever seen in this house without a mask.
Minoâs expression darkens, and I take note of his hands, covered in shiny black gloves, a silencer sitting in both. I lift the gun in my hand, pointing it at Enzoâs second-in-command, fully aware doing so will end up with twelve pointed back at me. But the moment Minoâs eyes meet mine, thereâs a split second of confusion before they widen, and instantly his palms snap open, his guns falling to the floor.
I take a moment to glance around the room, assess the threat, assuming the guards are coming at me from the back, but they arenât. In fact, every single one has bowed their head, staring at nothing but their boots.
âWhat the hell is this?â the vicious bark that tears from Mino has my head snapping his way to find his fury isnât pointed at me. Heâs focused on Katana, still on her ass near the wall.
âMino!â she cries, jumping to her feet and hiding behind his frame, but Mino doesnât let her.
He shifts until his shoulders are aligned with mine, though keeping himself a few feet in front of me, and a strange sensation settles over me because itâs a protective maneuver.
Hmm.
Her head snaps between the two of us and she hugs herself. âSheâs after me.â
He frowns from me to her, and I could spit on him for the way his features soften the slightest bit. âShe isnât, and that alarm is not to be used as a toy.â
âShe had a gun!â
âStill do.â I smirk.
Katana cuts a quick glance my way. âShe was going to killâ ââ
âNo one was dying today,â Grandma interrupts, lifting her chin and heading for the door. âIf youâll excuse me, I have a library to see to.â
My head snaps her way and this time itâs her who scoffs, shaking her head on her way out.
âIs anyone going to explain this utter bullshit to me?â I ask, slowly looking from Grandmaâs disappearing form to Mino, gun still raised in front of me.
âThese are your men, Boston. They came in here to protect you. They are sworn to protect you at all costs.â He lifts his hands. âYou can put the gun down.â
I smile wide, a laugh leaving me. âThatâsâ¦cute. No thanks.â
âYou can see they lowered their weapons. Shit, I tossed mine the second I realized what I was walking into. As the woman of this house, our number one job when in this house is to keep you safe.â
âHow reassuring, considering just a couple of months ago, she was the woman of the house, which means your number one job was to keep her safe. So againâ¦â My features harden, and I move the gun back to Katana. âThanks, but no fucking thanks, so I suggest someone starts talking.â
He shakes his head. âIf there was something I could tell youâ ââ
I fire the weapon and Katana screams bloody fucking murder. Mino whips around, taking in the blood along her calf.
âIs there something you can tell me now?â I damn near sing, and Iâm aware the smile on my face is a little manic when he swiftly looks back to me.
âShe shot me!â Katana cries.
âItâs a scratch.â I roll my eyes. âStop being so dramatic.â
âStop her!â she keeps going.
My muscles tense, my other hand coming up, so Iâm holding the gun with both hands now.
âMino!â she shouts.
âShut up,â he growls at her, then refocuses on me. âSheâs not a threat. When it comes to you, sheâs nothing and you are everything. Youâre his wife.â
Katana gasps and I blink. Hard.
âWow.â I deadpan. âDropping the big secret, huh? It might have more of an effect if he didnât have two of us. You must really want her to walk out of here in one piece.â I cock my head. âYou know, I was only going to scare her into talking, but then she pointed a gun at my back, like a spineless bitch, so now she gets to stare down my barrel not knowing if or when Iâm going to take another shot, preferably until she pisses herself.â
âYou had a gun first!â
I laugh loudly, my head falling back slightly. âAnd?â
She looks at me like sheâs finally realizing that Iâm unhinged, but then Mino jerks in her direction.
âYou did what?â he hisses so low, so menacing she caves into herself, hand shaking where it hovers over the flesh wound on her leg, too afraid to touch it. âDo you have any idea what he wouldâ ââ
âLeave.â
The word is roared across the room, strong and loud and dominant. As if it holds some kind of superpower, every single person in the room reacts at once, silently following the command, but I donât take my eyes off Katana to spare Enzo a glance.
I swear to God if heâs come to protect herâ¦
Everyone inside files out, and Katana tucks her chin to her chest, giving him a wide berth as she steps around the space, limping like I ran her over when the bullet barely kissed her skin.
âKatana,â Enzo calls, and now I do look to him, only to find his hard gaze is locked on mine, even as he speaks to her. âWe had an agreement.â
My eyes narrow on his.
âIâm sorry, Enzo,â she whispers, voice thick with tears. âPlease donât give up on me. I need you.â
This bitch.
I lift the gun, quickly firing it off in her direction as Enzo jerks forward in attempt to grab it, but heâs too far.
Katana screams, cowering into a ball, and my lips curve at the meek little mouse.
âYour pet is foolish.â I bring the gun up, pointing it at him this time. âDoesnât she know curling into herself makes her an even bigger target, not that I need one. I could shoot her between the eyes, with mine closed.â
âTo your room, Katana.â He hasnât taken his eyes off me since heâs entered. Not once.
He knows I didnât shoot herâ¦this time. I shot two inches from her pretty face, so sheâd feel the wind of the bullet as it flew past her lips, sinking into the coal-colored wall.
She starts to walk out the door and a bitter laugh leaves me.
âWhy go all the way around when you can slip through the door that leads right to you?â
Enzoâs eyes narrow slightly, and I curse myself for commenting at all.
He waits until sheâs gone then takes a step closer, followed by another, and my arm holds strong and solid, stretched straight out, but he keeps coming until his dress shirt is pressed to the cold steel.
âJealousy looks very good on you.â His chest rumbles, his tongue sliding along his lower lip in the most distracting of ways.
âNot as good as red running down and ruining your carpet is going to look if I find out thereâs more going on between you and her than a little word play.â
âWould it bother you if there was?â
âThatâs the wrong thing to say when I have a gun pointed at your heart.â
âSo, thatâs a yes.â His hazel eyes shine with satisfaction as he stares down at me. âBut can you admit why?â
âIâm married to you.â
He hums, and I swear his chest puffs out.
âIf youâve fucked her in this room, donât expect me to sleep here anymore, not that youâve stepped foot into that bed since Iâve been in it. Either way, youâll have to chain me to the pretty posts for that to happen.â
His teeth sink into his lower lip. âIs that supposed to be a threat?â
His tone is like liquid smoke, sweeping over me with an unexpected heat, and I have the sudden urge to swallow. As if heâs all too aware, his eyes fall to my throat.
I quickly shift my hand, pressing the pistol into his neck, and his lips curve with a salacious smile.
âSo feisty, my little bride.â
âThis is me calm.â
The man groans. Groans.
Itâs deep and masculine and when he draws himself closer, our bodies now pressed together, I suck in a breath. I have a gun to this manâs throat, and not just any gun, but his gun, in his home. I could pull the trigger and end him right here, right now. His entire legacy would fall, just like that.
He has no heir.
No family as far as blood goes.
He has you, Boston. Youâre supposed to give him his heir. Secure his legacy. Make it stronger than ever before.
This time I do swallow.
I am his wife. He is my husband, but we may as well be strangers.
Strangers donât treat your pussy like the worldâs best ice cream in the middle of the stairwell.
I push the thought away as quickly as I can, refocusing.
Iâm not delusional. He could have disarmed me by now if he really wanted to, but he hasnât so much as made a move to try, and I donât understand why.
He doesnât know me, soâ¦why is he trusting me with his life?
I push the gun harder into his skin, needing him to snap, to fight for control and fuel the hatred I have to hold on to. He doesnât, and as I shove the muzzle into his skin, Enzoâs head falls to the side, his lips parted, and my gaze drops to the thick corded vein there, running from his jawline all the way down, disappearing beneath the collar of his dress shirt.
His pulse pounds before my eyes, hard and heavy, right there beneath my kiss, permanently marked into his heated flesh.
Before I know what Iâm doing, my knuckle has stretched from where itâs wrapped around the grip, greedily giving in to its own need to touch his now perfectly healed tattoo.
His eyes close, chest rumbling at the feeling, and the sound sends sparks across my skin, doubling down when he shifts the slightest bit.
My husband is hard. Thick and long and pressed against my hip. Suddenly thereâs a hollow ache between my legs, begging to be filled. Stretched.
I have no doubt heâd leave an addicting burn behind.
I donât know what the hell Iâm doing, but my body seems happy to take control, as Iâm on my toes, tongue flicking out without permission, licking across my lips on his skin. His salty, musky flavor explodes across my tongue and I think I start to shake.
I know I do when Enzoâs hand slides under my ass, yanking me harder against his erection, his giant palm clenching my ass cheek so hard it might bruise. He moans, long and loud into my ear, and I grow dizzy at the masculine sound. My eyes close, my forehead falling to his shoulder as I try to settle myself.
His fingertips bite into my skin, his free hand driving into my hair, yanking just slightly. He rolls my head to the side, stretching my neck wide and long until my eyes are forced to be locked with his.
My mouth opens, but before I can so much as form a word, Iâm spun, my ass now to his front, the gun tossed to the bed as his back hits the wall, arms locking around my middle to keep me where he wants me.
I fight in his grip, but he only chuckles, low and deep, in my ear.
âIf you canât tell, Iâm enjoying the struggle.â He grinds his hips against me.
I clench my eyes closed, my mouth pressing into a firm line, forcing myself to stop moving.
âI watch you, you know.â Enzoâs chest inflates with a full breath, his rough palms running long, hot strokes along my arms. âWhen you eat, when you sleep.â
âThatâs not creepy.â
He hums, deep in his throat. âI watch the sweat build across your skin when you dance until you can hardly walkâ¦which we will talk about one day. I watch you when you read, zooming in a little closer when I spot a flush creep up your neck.â
Anger heats my blood, embarrassment keeping my muscles stiff, but itâs the raw flame of need that keeps my mouth closed.
I shouldnât enjoy hearing this.
I should not get turned on learning my husband has not only robbed me of the future I thought he was giving me, but my privacy as well.
I should slam my head back into his face, break his nose and then his trachea.
Instead, I sink my teeth into my lower lip, pressing my ass into him a little more, and Iâm rewarded with a single grind of his hips against mine.
âDid you finish the one you started two days ago?â he wonders. âThe one where he sat her on his lap and told her to move like he was inside her?â
I gape, trying to turn and look at him, but he dips his face into my neck, and a strangled sound slips past my throat when his teeth bite down on the sensitive spot there. âHow did youâ ââ
âI finished it last night, while you were sleeping.â
I swallow, lost in the moment, but then my eyes land on the door at the corner of the room. I stiffen and Enzoâs arms tighten around me, completely aware of where my head went.
âIâve never touched her.â His voice is thick and strong as his mouth closes over my earlobe, slowly letting it slip free with a slight scrape of his teeth. âNot even with my lips.â
My heart beats a little harder in my chest, and I remind myself I have no reason to trust his word.
âI donât believe you.â
âYou will.â
And then heâs gone, out the door without so much as looking back, but itâs when I move to the bed to sit down that a small smile breaks over my lips.
He left me the gun, his way of telling me he trusts any move I feel the need to make.
I could go into that room next door right now, kill Katana if I wanted, and heâd accept it.
He might not like it, but heâd accept it.
So later that night, when I curl up under the thick black and emerald blankets and tell myself that is the only reason I stay in this room, it doesnât feel like a lie.