Dangerous Innocence: Chapter 20
Dangerous Innocence (Five-Leaf-Clover)
I was frustrated over Lorcanâs lack of urgency. He didnât mind waiting for a week, however I did. But approaching Russian gangsters myself seemed like a very bad idea.
I took a long walk through Central Park as had become a habit in my short time in New York to clear my head.
A twig broke behind me when I meandered up the narrow pathway through a thick area of trees in the park. I glanced around but couldnât see anyone. I picked up my pace when suddenly a hand clamped over my mouth and I was pulled off the pathway. I struggled, disoriented, until I was turned and looked up into Desmondâs face. He wasnât in a police uniform.
âI always wear civilian clothes. Makes certain investigations easier.â He lowered his hand. âDonât scream.â
âI wonât,â I said, still breathless from fear.
âWe donât have long. Your husband has his spies everywhere, and I donât need a target on my head nor do you.â
âArenât you on their target list because of what you do?â
âI havenât led any investigations against Five-Leaf Clover yet.â
I narrowed my eyes. âWhat do you want from me?â
âLetâs cut to the chase. We both know you donât love Lorcan. This marriage is a joke. The only reason why you donât run far away from your husband is your sister.â
My eyes widened. âMy mother called the police. They didnât know anything.â
Desmond laugh, his eyes searching our surroundings. He barely looked at me, always busy making sure nobody was close. âIf you really want to find your sister, Lorcan wonât be the one to help you.â
âWhy?â
âBecause heâs involved.â
I froze. âHow do you know? Lorcan told me something very different.â
âIs it really a surprise to you that he wonât admit to being involved in your sisterâs disappearance? Heâs slowing down your investigations, isnât he?â
I didnât say anything.
âYour sister needed money when she came here, and like any cunning woman, she went looking for it in a man. Lorcan has lots of money and little patience.â
âNo one from the community saw them together.â
Desmond chuckled again. âYour sister tried to trick your husband, and he didnât like that one bit.â
âWhy are you telling me this? If you know Lorcan hurt my sister, then why arenât you arresting him?â
âBecause my bosses want the Five-Leaf Clover on a silver platter. They donât care about one morally grey girl.â
I gritted my teeth. âYou want me to gather information? To be your mole?â
âI donât know how much information you can even gather, or if any of it will be useful, but if you donât want to end up like your sister and you want a slim chance of maybe still finding her alive, then you should help me however you can.â
I stepped back, closer to the pathway. âI canât just trust your word. I need proof that Lorcan met Imogen, that heâs involved.â
Desmond gave me a tight smile. âIf you can wait that long. I have all the time in the world.â
I turned and ran. I didnât like Desmond. He was creepy and strange but he was police and Lorcan was a criminal. One of them was lying, but I wasnât sure how to find out who.
Despite my initial frustration over the week-long wait for more information, the days passed in a flash. I was busy organizing and booking Finnâs flight, talking on the phone with one of the men who would accompany him to make sure they knew about Finnâs needs, and cooking for the potluck. I avoided the park and tried not to overthink Desmondâs words. I had a bad feeling about him. Heâd seemed too pushy and needy, as if he would do anything to make progress, even lie.
I didnât trust Lorcan nor Desmond.
I was at an impasse, at least until Lorcanâs meeting with Sergej or until Desmond decided to show me proof. I really hoped the latter wouldnât be the case, because it would just be bad for Imogen, it would be bad for me, bad for Finn and even Mum. What a mess.
Lorcan looked amused when he carried two baskets filled with food into the small kitchenette in a side room of the church.
âYouâre trying to win them over with delicious food. Very clever.â He pulled me against him and kissed me. Of course, an elderly lady from the community came into the room at that moment. My cheeks blasted with heat and I mumbled an apology, but she just winked at Lorcan.
âYouâre the devil,â I whispered in his direction when we left.
The look he gave me sent my head into overdrive with worry. He was up to something.
Walking into church with Lorcan at my side, as husband and wife, I felt a brief flash of shame. This was a bond weâd made before God, but it was nothing but a lie. Lorcan touched my lower back, urging me onward, and I realized Iâd stopped right after the threshold, unwilling to parade our sham of a marriage before everyoneâs eyes.
But Lorcan wanted us to be seen and so we headed to the very front and sat down. The whispers and curious glances followed us the whole way.
Seamus and his wife soon took their seats beside us.
Gulliver sent me an appreciative nod. He seemed to be the person who was the happiest about the bond, except for Lorcan. My husband definitely found great satisfaction, physically and mentally, in having me tied to him.
I listened halfheartedly to Gulliverâs drivel and was glad when Mass was over. In the past, Iâd loved these moments of self-reflection, but now I felt like a fraud.
âTime to confess our sins,â Lorcan murmured in my ear.
I rolled my eyes. âAbsolution of your sins doesnât work if you intend to keep sinning. Thereâs no free ticket out of sin, even if you have a priest on your payroll.â
Lorcan shrugged. âOne day I might stop sinning. Until then weekly confession will have to even my balance.â
âIâm sure thatâs not how it works,â I repeated. Lorcan held my hand tightly as he led me toward the confessional box. Uncle Gulliver was still busy chatting with a group of elderly ladies. We were the first people to arrive at the confessional. People obviously knew that it was Lorcanâs turn first, and they didnât want to be near when he revealed his sins. I had to admit Iâd rarely confessed in the past, not because I had never sinned but because Iâd never felt comfortable talking about it.
âIt looks as if my uncleâs still busy. Maybe you should consider skipping confession today.â I wanted to get out of church as fast as possible. The potluck would be easier to handle. People would chat about food and not sinnings.
Lorcan grinned, as usual enjoying my discomfort. âIâm afraid I canât do that. We both have sins to confess.â
He pulled me into the confessional box with him then pressed his lips to my ear. âYou used me to acquire information, sweet Aislinn. Use our marriage as a device to get what you want. You donât honor the holy bond of matrimony.â
Used him? He fucked me every night like an animal! And we both enjoyed it. He certainly wasnât suffering. And I never even wanted this marriage.
As if he could read my thoughts, he chuckled low in my ear. âAn outburst of rage is a sin too.â
âYouâre talking to me about outbursts of rage?â I whispered indignantly. âI donât go around beating people with steel chains.â
âItâs therapeutic. Maybe you should give it a try.â
His dry humor almost made me laugh despite the horrible truth of his words.
âThis week, I talked to a few old Russian friends about your sister â¦â
My eyes widened. Why hadnât he said anything before? âWhat did you find out?â
I momentarily forgot that he was one of my main suspects when it came to my sisterâs disappearance, mainly for lack of other leads and because Desmond had planted the seed of doubt in my mind.
âQuid pro quo, sweet Aislinn.â He sucked my earlobe into his mouth then bit down lightly, his palm cupping my breast and squeezing. âFirst you suck my cock then you get the answers you desire.â
âI wonât do that in church!â
âPity. Iâm sure you can gather the information by yourself.â He made a move as if to leave the confessional.
I grabbed his arm. âNo.â
Lorcan locked the booth once more and smirked down at me. âYou want information, and I want to spill my come down your throat right here, right now.â
I closed my eyes briefly, trying to forget where we were. This could be a dressing room or some sort of other booth.
âAre you praying?â
I opened my eyes and got down on my knees before I could change my mind. In the dim light, I could see Lorcan removing his huge member from the confines of his fine dress pants. My mouth almost watered at the sight. What was wrong with me? Iâd never been like this. Guilt reared its head. We were in a church, and I was hungry for Lorcanâs dick.
âSuck my cock,â he ordered.
I gave him a disbelieving look. âArenât you feeling the slightest bit guilty? Weâre in church.â
âAnd Iâm sure spilling my cum down your sweet throat will make me sing hallelujah. Now suck me.â
I leaned forward and took him into my mouth. He smelled of soap as if heâd cleaned himself right before Mass because he knew Iâd have his cock in my mouth right after. I circled his tip and sucked on it while my hand cupped his balls.
âDeeper.â
Lorcan cupped the back of my head and slowly worked his shaft into my mouth until I choked and coughed. I was starting to get into it, and Lorcan too, judging by his low breathing. He halted, allowing me to find a slow rhythm with him so deep in my mouth.
âGood, Aislinn. This is so fucking good.â
I hummed, my core clenching at his praise.
Steps sounded and a door creakedâ¦the door to the booth on the other side of the confessional.
I tensed and pulled away, but Lorcan bent down. âIf you stop before I tell you to, I wonât give you the information.â
âThis is blasphemous,â I muttered.
âYou really think God doesnât have bigger problems than two people getting it on in a man-made confessional?â
âIâm here to listen to your sins,â Gulliver said.
I shook my head, my lips stilling on Lorcanâs tip.
âOh, Father, I have sinned,â Lorcan droned as he gripped my head and slid his tip into my mouth. The saltiness of his arousal bloomed on my tongue.
He raked his fingers through my hair, nudging me forward, beckoning me to take even more of him into my mouth. His tip pressed against the back of my throat, and I fought my gag reflex from fear of making a sound. My eyes watered as he took my mouth with deep, slow thrusts.
âSon, Iâm here to take your confession,â Uncle Gulliver said.
I closed my eyes as Lorcanâs cock stroked along my tongue and pressed against the back of my throat.
âI threw someone into the Hudson a couple of days ago, with a rock attached to his feet.â
My eyes shot open and locked on Lorcan. He, too, was watching me, a smirk playing on his face as he took my mouth while confessing gruesome crimes. He kept talking, revealing more horrors in a calm, unapologetic voice, and I kept sucking him. To my horror, I soon became uncomfortably damp between my legs. Despite his horrendous words, my body responded to Lorcan, as always.
Maybe I was as monstrous as my husband.
âOh, Father,â Lorcan said, sounding tormented but the vibration in his voice wasnât from restrained emotion. His balls pulsated under my fingers, and then he spilled into me. I had trouble swallowing with his cock buried so deeply in my mouth. Lorcan pulled out a bit only to establish a slower rhythm of pumping into me, still shaking from the intensity of his orgasm. I didnât shy away, kept sucking him. By now, my arousal trickled out of me and so were the tears. I couldnât believe what I was doing, what it was doing to me.
Iâd waited for marriage to have sexâalbeit not intentionally, but Iâd given it up for all the wrong reasons to the wrong man. And worst of all, I enjoyed it. Lorcan stilled, his eyes closed and his chest heaving. When his eyes opened again, they held the same hunger as before, and my body exploded with bone-deep need.
âI need time to think about my sins. Give me a moment,â Lorcan drawled, not even hesitating to lie to a priest. I wasnât sure why this even still surprised me.
âOf course, son.â
I almost rolled my eyes at Gulliverâs benevolent tone, when he usually always bowed to Lorcanâs every command.
Lorcan stroked my hair as if I were a good kitty cat. I sat back and let his cock slide out of my mouth. I wiped my mouth in disgust, furious at my husband, at my body, at the situation Imogen put me in. I shoved to my feet, righted my clothes and my hair, and left the confessional before Lorcan could force me to do more. But what could possibly be worse than what we had already done? Maybe heâd fuck me right on the altar?
The elderly ladies gave me curious looks when I fled the confessional. I was just glad that Gulliver hadnât seen me, though one of the old ladies would probably mention something to him.
I needed time to think, even if my own thoughts often frightened me nowadays. I had to come to terms with what was happening, had to figure out a way to stop it. Lorcan was twisting me into someone I hardly recognized. Had this wanton girl always been part of me? Had she lay dormant, waiting for a sinner to awaken her. I choked on a laugh. I was going crazy.
I hurried down into the crypt and kneeled on the cold floor behind a stone sarcophagus. I could still taste Lorcan, still feel him. I closed my eyes. Maybe he was trying to show me how easily I was lured to sin. Maybe he hoped Iâd feel better about his sinful ways. But having sex in church and drowning someone in a river were entirely different levels of sin.
Right?
I wasnât sure what Gulliverâs answer would be to that. Heâd probably be more horrified by my confession than Lorcanâs. Soon, the distant murmurs of the congregation faded away. Theyâd probably moved out to the courtyard where the potluck would take place. I got up, my legs stiff from the cold and I dared to return to the nave.
It was empty except for an old man leaving the confessional. Not sure why and what I could confess, but I headed for the booth and went inside.
âIâm here to collect your sins,â Uncle Gulliver said.
Iâd always been honest in the confessional box, never omitted my sins. Until today. I couldnât tell my uncle that Lorcan had fucked my mouth during his confession, that Iâd eagerly sucked him off and gotten off on it. That my panties were still soaked with my lust, that just thinking about it made me cringe with shame and quiver with lust.
âI married a murderer,â I said instead of all the sins I should have confessed.
There was a pause. Gulliver must have recognized my voice, and my confession probably was a pretty obvious clue too. âLove isnât a sin, and marriage is a holy bond, child.â
âEven if love and marriage are both a lie.â
âMarriage canât be a lie if itâs agreed upon before God, and love sometimes takes years to build.â
Love. There would never be love between Lorcan and me. Lust. Oh, yes. Plenty of lust. But wasnât lust a sin too?
âMarriage isnât easy. Itâs not supposed to be. Itâs about sacrifice. God tests us that way too. Donât fail.â
I shook my head. Was this really about God wanting this marriage? Or Gulliver being worried about getting in trouble with Lorcan? I considered telling him about talking to Desmond. But that wasnât a sin. Or was it because I was doing it behind Lorcanâs back? Because it might lead to me betraying my own husband? I wasnât sure what the rules were in this case. I supposed Gulliver would amend them to fit Lorcanâs desires.
âLorcanâs been looking for you. You shouldnât cause your husband worry.â
Gulliverâs words tore me from my thoughts. He seemed eager to get me out of the confessional box. Maybe he was worried what secrets I might reveal. âOf course not,â I said. âThank you for listening to my sins.â
I got up, not waiting for another word from Gulliver.
Seamus was waiting in front of the booth when I left and he escorted me outside toward the courtyard where someone had already placed my food on the table. Lorcan stood beside it and was chatting with a group of men who were digging into my cottage pie. I went over to them with a forced smile. Soon, more people hovered in front of my table, eating my food and praising it. Nobody seemed to have noticed the embarrassing episode in the confessional box. Lorcan, of course, kept giving me barely veiled hungry looks that made my neck flush with heat and my blood pulse with rage.
âYou should open a restaurant, my dear,â one of the older ladies said.
âShe should,â Lorcan agreed.
âItâs actually always been my dream to open up an Irish restaurant with classics but also modern interpretations.â
I flushed when Lorcan regarded me curiously. I always felt silly when I talked about it.
âThe Plough Pub needs a new owner. We need good food from home in our community. The last cottage pie I ate was a disgrace,â another older woman said.
âWeâll see what we can do,â Lorcan said.
I wondered if he was being serious. Would he really help me open a restaurant?
And what the hell was I thinking?
I considered working with the police, betraying my husband, and running from him as soon as possible. I didnât have a future in New York. Definitely not as a restaurant owner through Lorcanâs charity.
I was glad when the potluck was over. My brain needed a break from all the possibilities.
Once we were in Lorcanâs car and on our way home, I relaxed slightly, but my reprieve was short lived. âYou ran before I was done with you.â
I gave him a confused look, unable to follow his train of thought.
âIn the confessional.â His smirk got my blood pumping again, but not in arousal for once.
âYou made me suck your dick in front of my uncle!â
âHe didnât see it, didnât even realize what was happening, Aislinn.â
âBut I know what I did. How am I supposed to face him?â
âWith a little practice, youâll get used to sinning.â
I crossed my arms and looked out of the window.
âIs your pussy still wet?â
I sank my teeth into my lower lip, scoffing. âIâm not going to fuck you now. Iâm mad at you.â
âAngry fucking is the best fucking.â
Lorcan and I didnât have a relationship in the traditional sense. We fucked like animals. I wished I could pretend I didnât enjoy it, but my body was aflame with pure lust the second I saw my brutal husband. Despite my words in the car, we ended up in bed.
I hated myself a little for this. At the same time, I felt a sick satisfaction when I thought about Patrick, who was probably getting less action than me.
âIf you really want to open a restaurant, Iâll support you. I think itâll do you good to have a purpose and to get out of the house for other reasons than to snoop around. And once youâve found your sister and realize she doesnât need saving, itâll be something else to keep you busy.
I turned on my side. Lorcan was already facing me, and it brought us very close. I flushed at the sudden proximity. While weâd already seen each other naked several times, and it rarely embarrassed me anymore, these intimate moments that werenât of a sexual nature felt foreign. Lorcan and I were strangers.
âWhy do you care? Wouldnât you prefer if I spend the day at home, cleaning and cooking, and waiting for you.â
Lorcan gently tapped my forehead. âWhatâs in there needs a challenge, something to keep busy or youâll just get in trouble, sweet Aislinn.â
I huffed. âI wasnât prone to trouble before you came into my life.â
âI wasnât the one who auctioned himself off in the Cunt Yard.â
âWonât you ever stop reminding me?â
âI donât think so.â
He chuckled and I couldnât help but laugh a little too. âI want you to have your own life. I have the clan, and it keeps me very busy. You should have something too.â
âSoon, Finn will be here. I wonât have time to work in a restaurant all day, much less to build a concept, a menu, and everything else thatâs involved in creating a successful business.â
âTrue. But if you decide to keep him here, heâll be in daycare or kindergarten eventually. Thatâll give you time, and no one will mind if you have him in the restaurant. Youâll have staff. Youâll be the boss. No oneâs going to tell you when to work.â
Was Lorcan really considering having Finn live with us indefinitely? I had a feeling when Lorcan imagined having a son, it was someone to follow in his footsteps, someone who didnât have a stutter or spasms. Maybe he liked the general concept of a child under his roof but I was sure heâd soon grow tired of the responsibility.
âSure, but itâll be my restaurant, my responsibility. I canât just show up a couple of hours per day. I want to cook and be around.â I sighed.
The fact I was even discussing this seemed surreal, but it also made me ridiculously giddy. A restaurant had always been a very distant dream. With Lorcan by my side, it was a possibility, but I didnât want to use Lorcanâs power and money.
I shook my head. âMaybe one day. Not yet. Not until Iâve found a routine here with Finn and I know what happened to Imogen.â
âYou donât want to rely on me,â Lorcan mused with a hint of bitterness.
âI want to reach my goals alone.â
âThatâs not how marriage works. Maybe one day youâll allow yourself to really consider this a marriage.â
I didnât say anything. Lorcan always pretended like his heart was in this marriage, but I didnât believe that. Maybe, as with children, he liked the general idea and had an idealized image of marriage in his head from what he witnessed with his parents. âOur marriage is based on blackmail.â
âDoesnât mean it canât develop in the right direction.â
âI still donât even understand why you wanted to marry me in the first place. Iâm sure you had many opportunities to marry an Irish girl.â
Lorcan traced a finger along my arm and hip. âI liked you the first moment I saw you.â
âSo it was solely physical.â
âSex is important, attraction too, but there was more. I liked the modest small town girl vibe you gave off with that hint off sass. I knew you were the kind of lass whoâd drink a Guinness with me after a hearty meal, who wasnât unfamiliar with hard work.â
I laughed indignantly. âIâm from Dublin.â
âYes, but deep down you arenât a big city girl. You like the quiet corner, the dark alleys. You like the next-door pub and familiar faces.â
âYou could see all that from one look at me in church?â
âA few more looks to be honest, but yes. Iâm good at reading people, but I have a feeling you still hold on to a few secrets.â
âDoesnât everyone? Donât you?â
âWe all do. Some to protect others, some to protect us.â