My Dark Romeo: Chapter 11
My Dark Romeo: An Enemies-to-Lovers Romance
Karma must be on a lunch break, because a full twenty-five minutes had elapsed since I wished my fiancé would drop dead, yet he remained very much alive.
So did my anger as I dragged my luggage to the doorsteps myself, waited for Romeo to finish a sudden business call, and debated whether to smash down his door with the shovel Iâd spotted resting against the greenhouse.
In the end, I eavesdropped on the man I would soon share a home with.
I sat on the top step and observed Romeo, elbow on my knee, chin clasped in my palm. The sun cracked through a marshmallow-white cloud, pouring the first rays of sunshine as dawn crawled up the sky.
The light haloed around my fiancé.
For a moment, he appeared angelic.
Then he opened his mouth.
âThe shipment requires extra security. I donât have to tell you activity among armed rebels has spiked in recent months.â
Pause.
âOr do I?â
Weapons.
They were talking about weapons.
The imported snacks Iâd eaten on the plane churned in my gut.
âMess this up and I assure you, your next job will require an apron and extensive knowledge of operating an industrial fryer.â
Romeo killed the call and turned to me, again jarred and annoyed by my existence. âHettie is in the kitchen, should you require food. If anything needs fixing, Vernon can be reached on the intercom. I understand itâll be difficult for you, but refrain from wreaking havoc on my property. In the city, actually.â
âYeah, because Iâm the destructive one between us.â I rose, dusting off my sleeping gown. âBro, you sell death for a living. Who are you trying to fool?â
âNext time you bro me, I will confiscate your phone, TV, and snacks. You will handle yourself in accordance with your pedigree.â
âIâm a person, not a golden retriever.â Then, before I forgot, I added, âBro.â
A muscle in his jaw threatened to jump out of his skin. âHave you finished, Miss Townsend?â
âI havenât started.â I clutched my suitcase handle. âYou sell weapons to the highest bidderââ
âThat is factually incorrect. Itâs not always the highest bidder.â Already, he appeared bored with this conversation. âUnfortunately. Patriotism is the root of most geopolitical disputes and is too dichotomous for full-rounded individuals.â
That wasnât even in English, so I refused to speak to his point.
âYou provide armies with the means to kill people,â I explained, as though he was a toddler. âAnd you do it for the sake of money.â
âItâs not for money.â
âIf not money, then what?â
He didnât answer, advancing to the front door and entering the code. â4-8-1-0-4-3-2-4-1-5. The code rotates once a week.â
âYou expect me to remember that?â
At this point, I needed to build an ark to save myself from drowning in his bull-crap.
âThereâs a cot in the shed, should you forget.â
I didnât budge, refusing to step through the doors without regaining at least some of my dignity. âLetâs make a deal.â
âA deal requires each party to possess leverage. I know what I have. I also know what you do not. What could you possibly exchange?â
His utterly unmoved glare raked down my body, from my head to my bare feet.
I resisted the urge to cover myself, slamming the door shut to busy my hands. âNot that. My body is a temple.â
âAnd you litter this temple with three tons of sugar-laced, artificial-flavored junk food every third hour.â
Judging by his glowing review of me, I suspected that he wanted me to be more refined.
I refused.
If you had to change yourself to be accepted, you didnât need that person in your life in the first place. Because it wasnât you they wanted to be with. It was their version of you.
There would be no universe in which I caved to Romeo Costaâs expectations.
Harsh laughter fizzed up my chest. âYou believe you hold the power in this relationship, donât you? Well, hubs, youâre wrong. Weâre equals.â
A feral grin hiked up his cheeks. âEquals? From a woman with no life goals. No dreams to speak of.â
âI do have dreams.â
A baby.
Well, babies.
Plural.
Somehow, I knew heâd find that unworthy.
And heâd be wrong.
Every dream is worthy. Even if it is tiny and insignificant to one person, it may be impossible to another.
Romeo waited for me to elaborate.
I didnât.
He filled the silence with, predictably, more bull-crap. âIt is unwise to anger the man who holds your fate in his palm, Miss Townsend. Consider this advice my second gift to you.â
âSecond?â
âThe first was when I spared you a lifetime of mockery. Dallas Licht sounds like the name of an STD clinic.â
Did he think this was about Madison?
It wasnât.
I didnât even like Madison. Not really.
I just didnât want Romeo, either.
âFine. Wanna know what my wish is?â I advanced on him, poking his chest dead in the center. âFor you to quit your job.â
âGive me one good reason.â
âBecause what you do disgusts me.â
âWhat I do will finance your existence. At least until your trust fund kicks in.â Romeo punched in the door code again. âAnd you can continue your life as you always have. Without responsibilities. Without a purpose.â
The adrenaline in my body crashed, burning my energy with it.
I pivoted, realizing I wouldnât win this argument. âIs Zach single?â
âIrrelevant. He wouldnât touch you with a gun aimed at his head.â
âThatâs all right. Weapons have never been my kink.â I licked my lips, grinning. âHeâs hot.â
âHeâs incapable of any emotion that isnât boredom.â
âAt least he is cordial about it. Heâd still be an upgrade from you.â
He ignored my barb, pushing the door open. âGet inside and find a room to lodge in. Anything other than the master. That one is mine.â
âAww. So territorial. Why donât you piss on the carpet, just to mark your ground?â
âThe only pissing happening is you pissing me off. I suggest you work on your likability skills during the time Iâm gone.â
âWait. Where are you going?â
It was hard to keep up with what was happening. I tried gathering my wits like they were scattered marbles on a sleek floor.
âItâs called work.â He turned, descending the steps back to the car, which heâd left running. âYou wouldnât be familiar with the concept.â
âItâs five in the morning.â
âWar never stops. It rages all hours of the day.â
My mouth hung open. âYou canât be serious.â
âI can be nothing but serious, Shortbread. I forgot to mentionâI do not have a sense of humor.â
In that moment, hungry, frozen, and confused, I truly wished to die.
âYouâre just leaving me here?â I didnât know why Iâd asked. I already knew the answer.
Without a single backward glance, Romeo slammed the door to his Maybach.
His answer came in the form of exhaust smoke and a faint trail of dark laughter.