King of Greed: Chapter 17
King of Greed (Kings of Sin, 3)
âIf we die here, Iâm blaming youuuu!â the oncoming wave crashed over me and swallowed my last word. The world silenced, and for an endless moment, I hung suspended underwater.
Then I resurfaced, spluttering, to Marceloâs raucous laughter.
âYouâre out of practice, irmã. â He lay on his board, his face shining with brotherly teasing. âYou used to out-surf me.â
âThat was years ago.â I dragged in a lungful of sweet air, my body aching from the force of my wipe out. âManhattan isnât exactly known for its waves.â
Despite the humiliation of eating it in front of everyone on the beach, my blood buzzed with adrenaline. The water, the sunshine, the salt-laced airâ¦it was good to be home.
Even though Marcelo and I grew up in New York, where our mother had lived for the majority of her modeling career, weâd spent every summer and holiday in Brazil as kids. It was only after I got married that my trips had tapered off to once a year.
Still, Iâd always considered Brazil my second home, and I was glad Iâd convinced my brother to join me in Buzios for a last minute but long overdue sibling vacation. Weâd arrived on Wednesday and spent the past two days eating, swimming, and catching up. New York felt like worlds away.
Marcelo observed me, his amusement fading into something softer.
âYou look much happier than when you landed. The vacation has been good to you.â
âYeah.â I glided my fingers through the water, watching the sunlight sparkle on the surface. âI shouldâve done this a long time ago.â
I didnât know why Iâd felt like I couldnât visit without Dominic. God knew he went on enough trips without me. Perhaps if I had, I wouldâve gained the clarity to speak up sooner.
Would things be different if Iâd put my foot down the first time Dominic missed an important date? Maybe. But I couldnât change the past, so there was no use dwelling on what ifs.
âPerhaps,â Marcelo said. âYou sounded sad the last few times we spoke on the phone.â
How Iâd sounded hadnât compared to the sadness Iâd felt, but I kept that to myself. âItâs an adjustment period, which is why Iâm here. Adjusting.â
It was working. Sort of. Iâd only thought about Dominic a dozen times a day since Iâd arrived instead of the usual two to three dozen.
Baby steps.
âHmm.â My brother didnât look convinced. âAnd what happens when you go home?â
âIâll cross that bridge when I get there.â
I hadnât booked my return flight to New York yet. Luckily, the upcoming holidays meant construction work on the store was slowing down, and Iâd put the online shop on hiatus. Isabella had offered to keep an eye on things while I was gone. Sheâd worked for Floria Designs before sheâd gotten published, and she still helped out occasionally when I needed an extra hand. She was one of the few people I trusted to manage the contractors in my absence.
âI donât want to push, but we have to discuss the elephant in the room sometime,â Marcelo said gently. âWhen was the last time you talked to Dominic?â
I flinched at the mention of his name. My brother and I had avoided the topic of my divorce like the plague since weâd arrived, but he was right. We had to talk about it, and I guess heâd been waiting for the right time to bring it upâaka a time when we were relaxing in public so I couldnât lock myself in my room or use our activities as a deflection.
âLast week,â I admitted. âBefore I called you. We were at the same restaurant, and he saw me on aâ¦he saw me when I was having dinner with a friend.â I returned Marceloâs scrutiny with a hesitant look of my own.
âIâm sorry. I know you guys are close.â Marcelo and Dominic had hit it off right away, partly because theyâd shared similar struggles with dyslexia growing up and partly because my gregarious brother could charm a rock if he needed to.
I was protective of Marcelo, whoâd been bullied relentlessly in his younger years, and though Iâd already loved Dominic when theyâd met, their easy friendship had made me fall even harder.
âDonât apologize. Itâs your relationship,â Marcelo said, his voice gentling further. âI liked Dom a lot, but weâll never be as close as you and me. Youâre my sister. Iâll always have your back.â
A lump formed in my throat. âDonât get all sentimental on me, Marcy.
Itâs still your turn to take out the garbage tonight.â
His laugh made a quick return. âFine. I shouldâve known buttering you up wouldnât work,â he teased. âBut seriously, donât worry about me. Do whatâs good for you, and thisâ¦â He swept his arm around the beach. âThis is good for you. You jumped straight from taking care of me to your marriage. Itâs time you enjoyed life without worrying about others.â
âI didnât mind taking care of you.â
âI know. But that doesnât make what I said less true. You skipped your own senior trip to help me study for an English test. Youâve spent your life living for others. Now you can finally live for yourself.â
I watched other beachgoers splash around us while Marceloâs words replayed in my head.
Iâd never thought of it that way, but he had a point. Our mother had spent our childhood working, partying, and dating increasingly rich but dubious men. I was the result of a one-night stand with someone sheâd been too drunk to remember; Marcelo was the son of a married Brazilian businessman whoâd threatened our mother with bodily harm if she ever told people about their affair.
We were half-siblings, but despite being born only two years apart, Iâd acted more like his mother than his sister until we were both adults. I couldnât rely on our actual mother to parent him properly, so Iâd done it myself.
Perhaps that was why Iâd slipped so easily into the role of Dominicâs spouse. I was used to being the support instead of the star in my own life.
I was trying to change that with Floria Designs and my divorce, but all big changes took time.
âEnough maudlin stuff.â I swallowed the emotion crowding my throat and nodded at the horizon. âYou want to talk about living? Talk about that giant wave thatâs coming toward us.â
Marcelo cursed, and soon, all thoughts of Dominic, neglectful mothers, and absent fathers drowned beneath the exhilaration of living. New York would always be there; this moment wouldnât.
Once we got tired of surfing, we retired to the sand for sunbathing and drinks. We stayed at the beach for another two hours until golden hour painted the sky with oranges and yellows and exhaustion tugged at my eyelids.
âI think itâs time to call it a day.â A yawn split Marceloâs face. âWeâll repeat tomorrow. Or not. I might just pass out and sleep.â
âNo sleeping. Weâre on vacation.â I packed up our towels while he took care of our cooler.
âIsnât the point of vacation to sleep?â he grumbled, sounding like a preteen again.
âNot when youâre with me.â
âFine.â Marcelo rolled his eyes. âTake the girl out of a relationship, and sheâs suddenly a party animal.â
âHey, Iâm rediscovering myself, okay? Itâs like Eat Pray Love, but without the pray or the love.â That earned me a loud snort.
I glanced at a couple kissing near the shore on our way back to the villa.
The womanâs red hair blazed like fire against the sunset, and the guy had the lean, muscled build of an athlete or outdoors enthusiast.
I watched as he broke the kiss halfway through, threw his girlfriend over his shoulder, and walked deeper into the ocean with admirable ease.
âJosh, donât you dare! Iâm going to kill you!â she screamed a second before he tossed her into the water. She grabbed him at the last minute and he fell in with her, their laughs and curses echoing across the empty beach.
A wistful smile pushed through the ache in my chest. God, I missed those heady days of young love. I was only thirty-one, but I felt like Iâd lived a lifetime in terms of relationships. Jaded, worn out, heartbroken.
What a prize after ten years.
Whoever the couple was, I hoped theyâd have a happier ending than I did.
Marcelo and I arrived at our street right as twilight melted into dusk.
Our mother owned a vacation home in Buzios in addition to her apartment in Rio, where sheâd moved after retiring from modeling, but she rarely used the villa. I was convinced sheâd forgotten it existed.
âWhatâs for dinner?â I asked. Marcelo and I had subsisted on alcohol and snacks all day, and since my cooking skills were subpar at best, he was in charge of the food while I handled the cleanup.
âFeijoada,â he said, naming a traditional black bean and pork stew. âIâm too tired to come up with anything more creative.â
Since it was a heavy dish, most people ate it for lunch, not dinner, but I would never say no to my brotherâs feijoada regardless of the time of day.
âWell, you know Iâll never turn downâ¦â My sentence trailed off when a cab stopped a few feet away from us. A man got out of the backseat and retrieved his suitcase from the trunk.
It was too dark to see his face clearly, but his height and build looked alarmingly familiar.
Stop. Itâs not him. Youâre in Brazil , for Christâs sake. Not New York.
Marcelo squinted into the evening. âIs it just me or does that look a lot like Dominic?â
Sweat coated my palms. Breathe. âDonât be ridiculous. Not every tallââ I interrupted myself when the cab pulled away and its headlights cast the manâs face into sharp relief.
Blue eyes. Chiseled face. A casual expression as he approached us like he hadnât popped up out of nowhere in freaking Buzios wearingâ¦were those shorts? I hadnât seen Dominic in anything more casual than a T-shirt and jeans in years, and even that was rare.
âHi.â He stopped in front of us, looking relaxed and devastatingly handsome. âBeautiful night, isnât it?â
âWhat are you doing here?â This couldnât be happening. I must be hallucinating after getting heatstroke from our beach day. âAre you following me?â
âIâm on vacation,â Dominic said calmly. âIâm long overdue for a break, and since itâs Thanksgiving, I figured Iâd head somewhere sunny. New York is pretty miserable this week.â
âThanksgiving was two days ago.â
âYes, but itâs still Thanksgiving weekend. â His smile, though brief, hit me harder than I cared to admit. âIt counts.â
I crossed my arms, grateful for any barrier that separated us. âAnd of all the places in the world, you happened to vacation here?â
A shrug. âI love Brazil.â His simple reply didnât conceal the intimacy of his meaning.
I love Brazil. I love you.
The unspoken words wrapped around me, holding me captive long enough that Marcelo cleared his throat. Loudly.
I startled and tore my eyes away from Dominic. Iâd forgotten my brother was there.
âSo, uh, where are you staying?â His gaze darted between me and his ex-brother-in-law.
This time, Dominicâs smile contained a hint of devilishness. âAt Villa Luz.â
Villa Luz belonged to a Brazilian socialite who occasionally rented it out to VIP guests when she wasnât using it. It was famously large, lavish, and decorated to the nines.
It was also located smack dab next to our own villa.