King of Greed: Chapter 8
King of Greed (Kings of Sin, 3)
âI have to run to a meeting, but make yourself at home,â Sloane said.
âJust remember the house rules. No smoking, no shoes on the carpet, and no feeding The Fish outside of the prescribed hours and amounts, which are taped to the table next to his bowl. Any questions?â
âNo. All sounds good.â I mustered a small smile. âThanks again for letting me stay here while I figure things out. I promise Iâll be out of your hair soon.â
Out of all my friendsâof which there were only three or four total, but that was an issue for another dayâSloane was the least warm and fuzzy.
However, both Vivian and Isabella lived with their significant others, and despite her general lack of visible emotion, Sloane always went to bat for her friends.
I was tired of living in a hotel, and she hadnât hesitated when Iâd asked if I could stay with her while I went apartment hunting. And sheâd greeted my arrival with a mug of coffee, a stiff hug, and a Karambit knife wrapped with a bowâfor basic defense or offense, depending on how pissed I was at Dominic, she explained.
âDonât worry about it.â Sloaneâs face softened the tiniest smidge. âWeâll get drinks later. You and I can bitch about men while Viv and Isa pretend theyâre not in sickeningly sweet relationships.â
My laugh came out rusty but genuine. âItâs a plan.â
Itâd been a week since I told Dominic I wanted a divorce. None of my friends seemed surprised by my decision to leave him, which said all there was to say about how other people perceived our relationship.
My phone lit up with an incoming call.
Dominic. Again. Heâd been calling nonstop over the past week, and every time his name popped up, it was a fresh stab in my chest. Still, I couldnât bring myself to block him yet, so I let his calls roll to voicemail. I havenât listened to any of them since the first one; it hurt too much.
âWhat do you mean heâs in Mykonos?â Sloaneâs quiet fury chilled the air as she left for her meeting. As a high-powered publicist who ran her own boutique public relations firm, she was always putting out fires for her clients. âThat is unacceptable. He knows he should be here for the meetingâ¦â
Her voice faded, followed by the slam of the front door. Dominicâs call also ended, and I breathed a sigh of relief only to tense again when another incoming call rolled right into his missed one.
Pearson, Hodder, and Blum.
Waves of anxiety buffeted my stomach. I wasnât sure what was worseâ
hearing from my husband or from my divorce attorney.
âAlessandra, this is Cole Pearson.â The deep voice settled some of my nerves. Cole was one of the top divorce attorneys in the country. He cost an arm and a leg, but he was the only one who stood a chance against Dominicâs fleet of high-powered lawyers.
âHi.â I put him on speaker while I unpacked my suitcase.
I needed something to do with my hands or Iâd dissolve into an even bigger mess. âHow did it go?â
The waves intensified as I waited for his answer.
Iâd filed for divorce a few days ago and, in true Cole fashion, heâd expedited the process so he could serve Dominic the papers today. I wanted to get the divorce over with quickly before I lost my nerve or he somehow convinced me to go back.
Most days, I was sure I was doing the right thing, but there were other days when I woke up in an empty bed and missed him so much, it hurt to breathe. I havenât been happy for a while, but I couldnât forget eleven years together just like that.
âWe served him the papers,â Cole said. âAs expected, he refused to sign.â
I closed my eyes. Knowing Dominic, he would drag this out for as long as possible. He had the money and power to tie us up in the courts for years, and the thought of sitting in limbo for that long made me nauseous.
âLuckily, we have provisions for that.â Cole didnât sound too worried, which made me feel slightly better. âWeâll push the divorce through one way or another, but I want you to be prepared. This is Dominic Davenport.
It could get ugly.â
âEven though we donât have children and I donât want any of his assets?â The penthouse, the cars, the jet. Dominic could have it all. I just wanted out.
âThe problem isnât the assets, Mrs. Davenport,â Cole said. âItâs you. He doesnât want to let you go, and unless you can convince him otherwise, itâs going to be a long fight.â
âIâm so sorry, but Mr. Davenport is in meetings all day.â Dominicâs assistant, Martha, sounded only marginally apologetic. âHowever, I can take a message and have himââ
âItâs an emergency.â My fingers tightened around my bag strap. âIâd like to speak to my husband directly.â I emphasized the second to last word.
It didnât matter that he would be my ex-husband soon if I had my way; as long as we were married, I had certain perks, which should include seeing him without his assistant treating me like I was a vagrant whoâd wandered in off the street.
Her eyes swept over me, probably taking in my lack of visible injuries and physical distress. âI understand, but Iâm afraid heâs booked back-to-back. Like I said, Iâm happy to take a message and have him call you back at his earliest convenience.â She ripped a Post-It note off the pad on her desk. âIs this related to a social event or some sort of home issue?â
My skin flushed. Normally, I wasnât a violent person, but I was hungry, tired, and irritated after my call with Cole. It took every ounce of willpower not to grab Marthaâs coffee and toss it in her smug, condescending face.
âNeither.â I dropped my polite tone. âIf Dominic is currently in a meeting, I can wait. I assume he has to eat lunch at some point, correct?â
Martha pursed her lips. âHe has a lunch meeting at Le Bernardin. Mrs.
Davenport, please, I must insist youââ
âWhatâs going on?â A cold voice interrupted her mid-sentence. We both froze for a split second before our heads swiveled toward the now-open door to Dominicâs office. The sun backlit his frame, and the width of his shoulders filled the doorway, making him look even more imposing than usual.
My throat dried, and the leather bag strap dug into my palm before I forcibly relaxed my grip.
âMr. Davenport!â Martha jumped up from her chair. âYour call ended early. I was just telling Mrs. Davenport that youââ
âRepeat that.â Dominic stepped into the main office. The shadows peeled away from his form, revealing chiseled cheekbones, stormy eyes, and a frown that could deter Satan himself.
He wasnât looking at me. Instead, he pinned his attention on Martha, who shrank beneath his ire. âI said I was telling Mrs. Davenport thatââ
âMrs. Davenport.â The words were lethal in their quietness. âAs in my wife. If she wants to see me, she sees me. Donât ever prevent her from doing so again or the only part of a New York office youâll see is the outside when I throw you out. Understand?â
Marthaâs face paled to the point of resembling chalk. âYes, sir. I understand.â
Vindication battled with sympathy for dominance. In the end, the latter won out.
âThat was harsh,â I said quietly as I followed Dominic into his office.
He still hadnât looked at me.
âNot as harsh as she deserved.â Instead of sitting, he leaned back against his desk, the picture of cool confidence, but when his eyes finally met mine, the exhaustion in them tugged at my heartstrings in a way that had me biting back my concern.
It doesnât matter. Itâs not your job to make sure heâs getting enough rest.
Dominicâs gaze swept over my face, lingering on my eyes and mouth.
âYouâre not getting enough sleep.â
My skin heated. âThanks a lot.â I guess he wasnât the only one who looked tired.
I tucked a strand of hair behind my ear with a self-conscious hand. I hadnât been getting enough sleep. Iâd thrown myself into researching how to open a physical store for Floria Designs, which was a longtime dream, and when I wasnât working, I was agonizing over the divorce. Anxiety and overwork werenât exactly a winning beauty combo.
âYou know what I mean.â He brushed a thumb over my cheek with agonizing tenderness. âSleep or not, youâre always beautiful.â
My chest clenched. If only he was this attentive when our relationship wasnât on the brink of ruin.
I usually got a small brush of his lips or brief, blissful moments of our bodies connecting in the middle of the night, but he hadnât touched me like thisâcasual, familiar, intimateâ in ages.
I should move away and put some much-needed distance between us, but I couldnât help leaning into him. One minute. Thatâs all I need.
âIâm not the only one who hasnât been sleeping.â His dark circles and sallow complexion gave him away, but still, he was so beautiful it hurt.
âItâs difficult to sleep when your wife refuses to pick up your calls,â he said quietly.
A painful lump blocked the flow of oxygen to my lungs. Donât let him get to you.
I forced myself to step back and ignore the flash of hurt in his eyes.
âIâm not here to discuss our sleep habits,â I said, purposely skipping past the second part of his statement.
Dominicâs confident mask snapped back into place, erasing any hint of vulnerability, but his gaze burned into mine with unsettling intimacy.
âThen why are you here, amor?â The velvety nickname caressed my skin and sent an involuntary wave of nostalgia crashing over me.
âI canât believe you speak Portuguese.â I shook my head, still in disbelief over how heâd conversed with my family over dinner in their native language. âWhen the hell did you learn to speak Portuguese?â
âIâve been attending lessons at the Foreign Languages Institute every Wednesday night.â A tiny grin tugged at his lips as he rinsed t he last plate and placed it on the rack. Weâd offered to do the dishes since my brother had prepared the food and my mother had disappeared immediately after dessert with her latest boy toy. âClose your mouth, amor, or a fly will get in.â
âYou told me you were working Wednesday nights,â I accused.
âI was. I was working on learning Portuguese.â Dominic shrugged, a hint of color rising on his cheekbones. âThis is my first time meeting your family. I figured it would be a nice thing to do.â
An ache unfurled behind my ribcage. âYou didnât have to do that. They wouldâve loved you regardless.â
Learning foreign languages didnât come easily for him, but the fact that heâd done it anyway because he wanted to make a good impression on my familyâ¦
The ache deepened. God, I adored this man.
âMaybe, but I wanted to.â Dominicâs face softened. âFaria qualquer coisa por você.â
The weight of the memory nearly crushed me before I sucked in a painful breath and shoved it aside.
That was then. This was now. Focus on the now. âCole told me you refused to sign the papers.â
My answer doused the room in ice.
The warmth vanished from his expression, and Dominicâs jaw flexed as he straightened to his full six feet, three inches. âOn a first-name basis with your lawyer already, I see.â
He might as well have slapped me in the face.
Anger flared hot and sudden at his implication. âDonât even think about playing the jealous husband card. Not when you didnât care who I spoke to or hung out with before I dented your egoââ
âYou think this is what this is about? My ego?â His eyes flashed.
âDammit, Ãle, itâs been a week. One week, and you already have that asshole lawyer serving me divorce papers. We havenât even tried to fix things yet. Thereâs marriage counselingââ
âWe tried that once, remember?â I fired back. Itâd been a few years ago, when Iâd been so frustrated by his long hours, Iâd talked him into going to couplesâ therapy. âYou didnât show up because of aâsurprise, surpriseâwork emergency.â
He probably didnât even remember. I hadnât asked him to go again because the only thing more humbling than exposing our relationship woes to a stranger was having your husband skip the appointment altogether. The memory of the counselorâs pitying gaze stung to this day.
Dominicâs mouth snapped shut. His throat worked with a hard swallow, and silence thundered in the wake of my response. âYou have two weeks to sign the papers, Dominic,â I said. âOr this will turn into a war, and we both know thatâll hurt your bottom line more than it does mine.â He had a multibillion-dollar company to run; I didnât.
I didnât want to get into a legal fight with him, but if that was what it took, that was what Iâd do. I needed to take control of my life again, and I couldnât do that without closing this chapter with Dominic.
No matter how much it hurts.