My Dark Romeo: Chapter 51
My Dark Romeo: An Enemies-to-Lovers Romance
âAnd whatâs he doing now?â
I flipped on my back, setting my book on my mattress, feet dangling in the air.
Hettie leaned beside my doorframe. I wasnât sure at what point, exactly, Iâd lured her into my camp, but I no longer worried about whose side she was on.
Sometimes, it felt like we were roommates in a dorm. Or maybe teenagers stuck in a long summer camp abroad.
We shared the kinship of two young women forced to face an arduous man, who somehow stood their ground.
Hettie squinted into the sliver of space between the hinges. âHeâs still pacing from side to side, mumbling to himself that he knows youâre here.â
Snorting, I shook my head and reopened my book.
After a few pages, I asked, âAnd now?â
Hettie leaned forward and squinted, brows furrowed, hands pressed against the wooden panel. âI think heâs trying to call you again.â
I didnât bother checking my phone, which vibrated on my nightstand. Last time I did, it had racked up sixteen unanswered calls.
That was two hours ago.
The clock flashed ten at night, and Romeo still showed no signs of determent by my reluctance to see him.
âI can see you, Hettie.â His words seeped through the door. âIf you donât open up, I will fire you.â
Hettie cupped her mouth, suppressing a giggle.
âYouâll do no such thing,â I yelled, flipping a page. âAnd if you try, Iâll rehire her and pay her to be my friend full-time.â
âWith whose money, pray tell?â
âMine. Oh, I forgot to mention. I sold a couple of your designer watches to ensure Iâm not low on cash. You donât mind, do you?â
The silence on the other side of the door told me he was using every available drop of patience to make up for his cutting words to me earlier.
âOpen the door, Shortbread.â
âGive me one good reason,â I challenged, enjoying the exchange between us.
âSo you can explain to me how you managed to defy the laws of gravityâand in my eleven-million-dollar house, no less. My bathroom ceiling is splattered in green.â
This was what he cared about right now? My little skincare-routine accident?
I sure hoped liquid chlorophyll was as effective for my face as the magazines claimed, because it was absolutely effective on Romeoâs precious crown molding.
âYou should thank me. Your house needed some color. Everything is cream and beige here.â
âOpen the door.â
Boy, he sounded like a broken record.
âApologize first,â I cooed.
âFor what? Tarnishing my house with a vile green color or ruining a drill with a prototype that cost over eight hundred thousand dollars?â
âMy Lord, so expensive, and it doesnât even have a sunroof.â
Though I wanted to drag out our beef into the next century (and maybe the one following it), I knew things werenât black and white.
His father did hit on me today. Blatantly and in front of people, disrespecting his honest, loyal, and hardworking son.
If my suspicion was true, Romeo had been subjected to a terrible betrayal by Morgan and Senior. I was rabidly curious.
âOkay if I go?â Hettie faced me. âI mean, clearly, heâll sleep in front of your door if you donât open up.â
I nodded, closing my book, rising to my feet. âJust make sure he doesnât come in when you slip outside.â
âYou got it.â
I hugged Hettie goodbye. As soon as she darted out, I shut the door and locked it for good measure.
Romeo pounded on the wood from the other end. Someone was fast approaching the end of his patience.
âYou have exactly five seconds to open this door before I tear it down. Fair warning: I will not be reinstalling it, and your privacy will go up in flames, right along with your sexy clothes.â
It didnât surprise me in the least that heâd follow through with burning my revealing frocks. Just because heâd said something he shouldnât didnât mean he thought he was wrong.
Leaning my forehead against the wood, I closed my eyes, drawing in a breath. âI have conditions.â
âYour only condition is insufferable.â But the bite had fled his voice, replaced with something different, almost coaxing.
I ignored his words. âYou need to apologize for calling me a slut today. And promise me to never, ever say that again. Not about me. Not about anyone. Itâs a degrading word, designed to make women feel shameful for having the same needs and urges as men.â
Utter quiet wedged between us.
For a few seconds, I thought he mightâve taken off somewhere else. Maybe to find an agreeable wife.
âFine. I shouldnât have said that. Iâm sorry I did. I donât think youâre a slut, and I share the notion women shouldnât be shamed for their sexual urges.â
Though it never occurred to me to consider it before, his words incited a wave of relief. After all, we did get together after I snuck behind Madisonâs back with him.
âItâll never happen again,â he promised, somber. âEven if you decide to walk around naked. Which, regrettably, I am unable to rule out at this point, knowing you.â
A smile touched my lips.
I spun, eyes landing on the white rose. The rose that still survived. Kind of like our unlikely relationship.
âWhatâs the other condition?â A soft thud told me heâd leaned on the other side.
I pressed my palm against the wood, where I imagined he rested.
âYou need to tell me about Morgan and your father.â I swallowed. âEverything.â
The words soared past my lips before I could chicken out. Part of me wanted to take them back. To turn back the wheel and spare him the heartache.
But what about my anguish? As long as he punished me for someone elseâs sin, Iâd never find true happiness.
Silence seeped through the crack, lacing around my ankles, rooting me in place.
This time, I knew he was still there. Heard his labored breaths. Could almost feel his heartbeat thumping through the wood.
Finally, he broke it. âWhy?â
âSo, I can help you heal. Because you want to destroy whatever little is left of your fatherâs life more than you want to enjoy your own. And since my destiny will forever be chained to yours, I deserve to know where it all went wrong. When you decided that hate was more worthy than love.â
âHate is a more powerful drive than love.â
âNonsense.â My fingertips ran over the wood like it was his face, like I could caress him. Touch him. Take away his pain. âLove always wins. After every war, thereâs a baby boom. After every storm, spring sweeps in and everything blooms. Itâs always darkest before the dawn. Love is an effortlessly potent fuel. It is easier to maintain than hate. It doesnât consumeâit fuels. Youâre running on the wrong energy, dear husband.â
Another pause.
Another breath.
Then his footsteps carried him away from my room.
My heart sank.
He left.
I squeezed my eyes shut, thumping my forehead against the door.
Stupid. Stupid. Stupid.
What did you do that for? Why did you force him to open up when he clearly wasnât ready?
The steady thud of his footsteps reemerged after a few minutes, nearing my bedroom. âOpen the door.â
I swiveled, turning the key ever so slowly, knowing what awaited on the other side wouldnât be pretty. He stood before me, eyes bloodshot, hair tangled in an unkempt, devastatingly sensual mess.
His tie hung past the lapels of his work suit, the buttons of his dress shirt half undone. The sharp contours of his pecs peeked past.
He held two tumblers of whisky.
We stared at each other, and I knew nothing would be the same between us after this talk.
He offered me a glass. âWhat Iâm going to tell you wonât leave these walls.â
I stepped aside, head bowed.
âIâm not Morgan, Romeo. Iâll never let you down.â