Dance of Madness: Chapter 11
Dance of Madness: A Dark Enemies To Lovers Mafia Romance
Four years ago:
This is a super fucked-up way to lose your virginity.
Iâve thought that from the second I agreed to meet him in this empty warehouse converted to an artistâs loft that smells like old paint and sawdust.
At night, andâ¦alone.
But here I am.
My shoes scuff against the hardwood floor as I move through the open space. Itâs quietâor would be, if my pulse would only stop pounding in my ears.
Itâs colder than I thought it would be. Iâm dressed in black, as agreed, but despite the clothes I feel exposed. Hyperaware of every breath I take as it mists the inside of the plastic mask covering my face.
That was the plan: no identities. Weâve never had them, so why start now?
Just this meeting in the real world, face-to-faceâ¦so to speak. One night to explore everything weâve talked about. Every sick fantasy. Every twisted desire. Everything Iâve told him, despite never telling another soul in my entire life.
I donât even know his name. Or his voice.
Just the âvoiceâ that comes out on paper. For almost a year now.
The first time I read The Sorrows of Young Werther, I was fifteen.
Mom had just died.
It was only three weeks since the funeral, and nothing made sense yet. Iâd gone back to school because thatâs what you do when the world endsâyou pretend it hasnât. You smile and nod when people tell you theyâre sorry and then go back to your life like youâre not drowning.
I remember the whole class groaning when our English teacher assigned the book. Most people didnât make it past chapter one.
I read the whole thing in a single night.
Then I read it again the next day. And again the day after that.
It was messy and emotional and wildly dramatic, filled with yearning and idealism and a crushing, aching sadness that felt like it had been carved out of my own chest. Werther was self-absorbed and ridiculous, but I loved him.
Not because he was admirable. Because he made me realize the ache Iâd been carrying didnât have to be my entire world, head, and heart.
I clung to that.
It was the first time I felt understood by something written on a page. Like somewhere, a dead German author from three hundred years ago had felt what I was feeling and found a way to write it down.
I didnât tell anyone how much it meant to me. It felt too personal.
A couple of years later, I was killing time at the New York Public Library while waiting for rehearsal to start. On a whim, I looked it up in the catalog. Crazily enough, they had a rare edition, one of the oldest English translationsâand in circulation, too, which felt insane. What kind of idiot would check that out?
Apparently, one like me.
Scratch that.
Two idiots. The book was already checked outâby someone named Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. Or rather, my guess was, someone with a nerdy sense of humor whoâd put that name on their library card application.
I placed a request to be notified when it was returned, and a few days later, I got an email.
It wasnât until after I brought it homeâwith my own fake-name library card: Fräulein von B, a character from the bookâthat I found the note tucked inside: hand-written, folded twice, wedged between two pages like a secret.
Apologies for hanging onto this. I didnât realize there were other Goethe masochists in the city. You have questionable taste, but I respect it.
Cocky. Casual. Just irreverent enough to make me roll my eyes.
But it did make me smile.
So much so, that when I returned it three days later, I left my own note in response.
The next time I took the book out, there was another note.
Thatâs how it started.
We started leaving each other notes tucked between the pages of that rare edition. Sometimes weâd take the book home for a weekend, sometimes weâd sneak our notes into it on the shelf.
A month in he admitted he was a guy, though Iâd already guessed.
He was smart. Funny in a dry, mocking way that made me want to reciprocate. A few years older. He never signed his name or told me much of anything that identifiable about himself, but his voice came through as clearly as if we were speaking face-to-face.
He made me laugh. He asked real questions. Moreâhe listened to my answers.
After a few months, he suggested we stop checking the book out altogether. Said itâd be safer to hide it somewhere in the stacks.
He chose the location: a shelf in the back corner of the philosophy section, hidden behind a row of dusty encyclopedias. We moved locations a few times.
And thatâs how we communicated, letter after letter, note after note.
We wrote to each other for a year, staying totally anonymous.
At first, the letters were about literature. Music. Family. Grief. The way the world could make you feel invisible, even when everyone was looking right at you.
But slowly, theyâ¦changed. We started telling each other the stuff we couldnât tell anyone else.
The dark stuff.
He confessed he had violent dreams. That sometimes he woke up breathless, itching for carnage, and that although it scared him, he couldnât ignore it.
I told him things I still canât believe I shared with anyone. I told him my fantasies about being held down. Chased. Taken against my will.
He never judged me. He said he understood.
The letters got longer. Rawer. More intimate. At one point, we even made a plan to meet. I suggested the time and place. But then I panicked.
I told him my family wasâ¦complicated. Powerful. Dangerous. That they wouldnât understand, and that they might hurt him if they found out.
He told me his family was dangerous, too.
I didnât think he understood. Eventually I outright said that my family was mafia.
He didnât flinch.
Mine too, he wrote.
After that, things shifted again.
The letters got sharper. The edges more honest as we careened toward something real and reckless.
He gave me words for things I didnât know how to explain. I gave him every piece of myself I could through pen and paper.
And now, Iâm here to give him the rest.
Tonight weâre meeting not to have a friendly chat or to see each otherâs faces. Weâre meeting specifically so that I can live out my fantasy. Heâs going to show me that dark side. Heâs going to let me explore it with him.
And Iâm going to give him my virginity.
My sanity.
My stomach twists, but Iâm not afraid. Not of him, or whatâs coming. If anything, Iâm scared of how much I want it, and him. Whoever he is.
Itâs probably stupid. Dramatic. A little pathetic.
Maybe Iâve confused connection with obsession. Maybe Iâve built something up in my head that wonât exist after this night. But I donât think so.
Either way, itâs too late now.
I pull the note from my pocket again. Itâs folded and refolded, worn at the creases. His last words to me burn into my eyes:
My throat is dry as I tuck it away.
I want the chase. Thatâs the scariest part.
I want the roughness. The hands that donât ask permission. The game that feels like it might not quite be one.
I want to give it all away to someone who knows exactly how to take it.
The presence hits me suddenly.
I never hear a door open. I donât hear footsteps. I just sense a shift in the air behind me, like a storm sliding into the room.
Then I turnâand heâs there.
Tall. I know that, because weâve already talked about how Iâm on the taller side, but he looms a full foot over me.
Dressed in black and masked, like me. He says nothing at first, just watches me, his breath low and steady, waiting to see if Iâll bolt.
I donât.
Not yet.
He steps closer, and I feel the heat of his body before he even touches me. His fingers graze along my jaw, then slide down under my chin to tilt my face up. His mask, like mine, is plain. No features, just blankness to hide the boy behind it.
âYouâre sure about this?â he asks.
I shiver, realizing itâs the first words Iâve ever heard him speak. I like his voice.
A lot.
I nod. He pauses before tilting his head to the side slightly.
âIâm only going to ask once.â
âIâm sure,â I whisper.
His fingers tighten slightly. âYour safe word is green.â
I nod again. Weâve talked about safe words.
Then he lets go and slowly backs away into the dark.
I donât move.
For a second, I think thatâs it. That maybe this was a test, and Iâve already failed.
Then I hear the scrape of his boots behind me. My pulse skips, and my skin erupts in tingles and shivers.
âIf youâre waiting to start,â he growls from the shadows. âWe already have.â
I hear the flat smack of his shoes against the hardwood floor, and the rough intake of his breath, like heâs eager for this.
I turn, and I run.
The warehouse is huge, full of overlapping, crawling shadows. I sprint through the dark, lungs burning. The sound of his footsteps follows close behind.
Closer, closer, so fucking close.
I donât want to stop. Iâve never felt this alive.
Itâs not just fear. Itâs adrenaline. Itâs the heat from being wanted in a way that isnât restrained or polite.
I dart around a pillar. Then another. I canât see him, but I can feel him, like static crackling over my skin: his breath first, then the whisper of his hand almost catching my sleeve. Then nothing.
Thenâeverything.
He slams into me from behind, and I go down hardâknees scraping against concrete, palms breaking my fall. His weight crashes down on me, one hand fisting my hair, the other clamping down on my hip.
I scream, but not in panic. Itâs a cathartic release.
He tears at my clothes. My leggings are yanked down, my shirt shoved up. The cold air hits my skin and I donât fight it.
I donât want to.
I hear him panting. Hear his zipper lowering, the low growl that rumbles from his throat when he shoves my thighs apart. Feel the hot, fucking huge, heavy dick against my ass as he pulls my leggings further down and roughly pushes my legs even wider.
The swollen head sliding down, parting my slick, eager lips.
He thrusts in brutally, viciously, so hard that tears spring to my eyes and the wind is knocked from my lungs. Iâm barely aware of whatâs happening until heâs on his tenth thrust.
And Iâm loving. It.
Loving the way it feels like heâs breaking me in half. Like heâs tearing me apart and putting me back together with every glorious, rough pound of his big cock.
My cheek is against the floor. My mouth is open. My body is splitting open and falling apart and giving in all at once.
Honestly, I thought it would hurt more.
I thought Iâd cry.
But after that first ram into me, it doesnât, and I donât.
I let go.
In that moment, heâs not a stranger.
Heâs the only person whoâs ever truly seen me.
âYou know, I lost a bet with myself tonight.â
He hasnât rolled off me yet. What started as me face down on the ground turned into him pulling me onto my hands and knees and railing the absolute shit out of me. Then we switched so that I was on my back, with him on top of me, between my thighs, his hand around my throat as he fucked me into oblivion.
Even with a gun to my head, I couldnât tell you how many times I orgasmed over the last hour.
Weâre still lying like that: his body over mine, my legs around his muscled hips, his hands on either side of my face. Through our masks, I can see his eyes.
Bright, venomous green.
And heâs still inside me.
Itâs only now that weâve stopped moving that I realize just how raw I am. The delicious bruises covering my body and the ache between my thighs. The hardwood under me presses into my spine where my shirtâs pushed up, and I suddenly feel how bare I still am.
Yet it doesnât bother me at all. Not just because as a dancer Iâm pretty used to my own nudity.
Itâs deeper than that.
I chide myself, shoving the thought into a little corner in the back of my mind.
We never agreed to that. We never talked about that at all. Thatâs not what this is.
Tonight was about release. Sex, and just sex. He knew I was a virgin. Weâve spent months talking about kinks and desires and fantasies. And he finally flat out asked me if I wanted to experience mine, which happen to be his, too.
Needless to say, I said yes.
But thatâs all this is: sex. An exploration of our dark sides. It is not anything more, no matter how much intimacy weâve built through our letters.
So, while this feels likeâ¦everythingâ¦I refuse to let myself go to that place where I start getting all starry-eyed and emotional about it. Thinking about âthe beat of his heart against mineâ or anything nauseatingly romance-y like that.
Nope.
Even as Iâm thinking that, though, Iâm caught off guard by the way his green eyes pierce my blue ones. Theyâre looking through me, flaying open what few parts of myself Iâve never shared with him. In other wordsâ¦not much.
âSo,â he smirks. âStill think this was the worst way to lose your virginity?â
I huff. âIn the top five, easy. Top five worst, that is.â
âThanks for clarifying.â
I giggle under my mask.
âYou bit me, by the way.â
âDid not.â
âDid so. My shoulder,â he grunts, glancing down at his muscle, where there areâwhoopsâteeth marks. âDefinitely.â
âWell part of it was that I was supposed to fight you.â
âYeah, I was expecting a knee to the nuts, not a wolverine gnawing my arm.â
âWell,â I laugh, âmaybe you deserved it.â
For a moment, itâs weirdly normal. Two strangers, wearing masks, naked and entwined on a warehouse floor, catching their breath after an hour of hardcore consensual non-consent play, like this is justâ¦something people do.
I want to take my mask off. I want to take his off, and look at each other without anything between us.
Iâm trying to work up the courage, trying to push past the voice that says Iâm being an idiot, that Iâm letting my friend Evelinaâs peachy-pink happy-ever-after princess perma-vibe influence me, when the sharp staccato crack of gunfire sprays the side of the building and blows out one of the windows.
I scream, my body clenching in on itself both from the gunshots and the sudden absence of his body as he disentangles himself and rolls away from me.
âGet dressed!â he roars at me, his muscles tight as he reaches for his discarded jacket and yanks a gun out. âNow!â he yells.
I scramble, heart jackhammering as I crash back to reality and grab my clothes.
âWhatâs happening?!â I scream.
He pulls on his pants and double-checks the magazine of his gun with practiced hands before ramming it back in.
âGo out the back.â
His voice is pure steel, devoid of emotion.
âWhat the fuck!?â
âI told you I was mafia!â he barks at me as I pull my shirt over my head.
âSo am I!â I blurt. âBut this isâ ââ
âNot what youâre used to?â He checks the safety on his gun and then cocks it. âWell, welcome to my world.â
I shove my hair back from my face, when suddenly, I notice something, and my heart drops.
The pair of Louis Monte Noir diamond earrings, which were a gift from my mother on the last birthday of mine that I had with her.
Oneâs missing.
I start to scrabble on the ground to find it. Then Iâm screaming as another window blows, and bullets slam into the wall behind me. I gasp as he suddenly yanks me to my feet and drags me toward the rear of the loft.
âGo out the back. Be quiet, stay low, donât stop.â
He shoves me toward the hallway. I whirl just as heâs about to let go of me.
âWait!â I shout. âWhat about you?!â
The mask makes it impossible to read his expression, but his green eyes stab into me with an intensity that makes me shudder.
âDonât worry about me. Not my first gunfight rodeo.â
We stay like that, barely a foot apart, both of usâwell, meâshaking as fresh gunfire slams against the outside of the building, shattering more windows. Yelling men draw closer.
âI donât know who you are,â I hiss. âWhat ifâ ââ
His head tips to the side. âSure you do. And If I dieâ¦â
He lifts a shoulder.
âThen Iâll haunt the fuck out of you.â