My Dark Desire: Chapter 66
My Dark Desire: An Enemies-to-Lovers Romance (Dark Prince Road)
If Farrow moaned the word porn one more time, Iâd fuck her on this jet and create our own, audience be damned.
âHold up.â Her tongue poked out of her mouth as she struggled to angle the camera at her chilaquiles without them resembling baby food. âDallas and Ari want food porn pics.â
I relaxed against the leather, annoyed by the constant distractions. Octiâs friends from Korea had decided today would be the perfect day to hit her up and tell her to stay strong through the media bloodbath.
Sheâd finally hopped off a call, only for Dallas to hound her about the in-flight snacks in their group chat.
âMr. Sun?â From the couch, Natalie raised her phone. âYour lawyers are on the line.â
Sheâd crashed in Manhattan over the weekend to check on my properties there, hitching a ride back to Maryland with us.
Eileen, however, stayed in the city. I couldnât wait to tell Mom I took a stab at my engagement and accidentally killed all chances of it ever forming a relationship.
There was nothing wrong with Eileen.
In fact, she only had one shortcomingâshe wasnât Farrow.
But that was enough to kill the deal.
âLawyers?â My brows knitted together. âPlural?â
Normally, they called me one at a time.
âYes, sir. All three.â Natalie unplastered herself from her seat, patting off cracker crumbs from her suit as she handed me her phone. âTom is on the call, too. I think it might be important.â
âDo you now, Einstein? I wonder what gave it away.â
Farrowâs head flew up from her phone. She shot me a worried look.
I inwardly cursed, abhorred by the unwelcome diversion.
For starters, Iâd planned to use the plane ride to talk to Octi about us.
More specifically, if âusâ could ever exist beyond the scope of tearing each otherâs clothes off and engaging in endless verbal foreplay.
And secondly, on the car ride here, Fae had mentioned she had something to tell me about Eileen.
Farrow twisted her golden hair into a high bun, untucking her legs from under her ass. âWhat are they saying?â
I took the phone from my assistant, who continued to hover. She bounced from heel to heel, just staring at me.
âNatalie?â
âYes, Mr. Sun?â
âKindly fuck off.â
She nodded, albeit with visible displeasure, stuffing her laptop under her armpit and moving to the cockpit. Farrow clutched my sleeve.
I interlaced our fingers, squeezing. âEverything will be fine.â
Her eyes clung to mine. âHow do you know?â
âBecauseâ¦â I traced the beauty mark beneath her eye with my free hand. âIf you lose this case, what I have in store for Vera will be infinitely worse than whatever punishment the law can deliver.â
âItâs a marvel you havenât ended up in jail.â
âOnly to those naïve enough to believe in the legal system.â I leaned Natalieâs phone against the snack box, switching it to video conference. âTalk to us.â
Deanneâs face popped up first. âMiss Ballantine?â
âYes.â Fae raised her hand like we were in preschool. âIâm here.â
âDo you consent to Mr. Sun hearing this conversation? It contains some sensitive information.â
âYes.â Farrow nodded. âGo ahead.â
A lick of pride prodded me, confirming what I already knew.
I was Fucked with a capital F.
âWe might be better off having this conversation in person.â Tom pulled out a notepad. âA lot of delicate evidence to go over.â
âI literally donât have the self-control to turn down dairy-free dessert.â Fae scooted halfway into my seat to get a better angle. âWhat makes you think I can wait the entire plane ride to hear your news?â
Our elbows brushed, and that alone ignited something possessively depraved inside me.
Tom brought a pencil to his lips. âHmmâ¦
â
âYou heard her.â I rubbed circles on her thigh with my thumb, relaxing against the backrest. âSpill the beans before I spill out your guts.â
âIâm just trying to make sure nobody falls apart here.â
âIâm already in pieces.â Farrow waved. âPlease, just continue.â
âWe found out something alarming.â Tom paused. âAs in, criminally disturbing.â
Farrow licked her lips. âHas Vera committed a crime?â
âIt appears so. An egregious one at that.â He hesitated. âMiss Ballantineâ¦â
âYes?â
âAre you sitting down?â
âNo.â Fae bared her teeth, eliciting a grin from me. âIâm up on both feet, dancing the Copacabana.â She jerked her thumb to the leather upholstery behind us. âWhat do you think?â
Guess she hadnât forgiven him for blowing her cover and triggering the media storm.
Tom shrugged, going for the kill. âVera hired someone to kill your father.â
Silence.
Utter silence.
The kind that penetrated through eardrums.
âIâm sorry,â Tom added, as an afterthought.
The words floated in the air, choking us like nerve gas. I searched Fae for signs of pain, recognition, agony.
All I could find was bitterness.
Tom scratched his temple. âAre we good to continue?â
Deanne stopped typing. âLetâs give her a minute.â
But Fae didnât need a minute.
She shot up, pacing. âThatâs impossible. Dad died in an accident. The valetâ ââ
âKnew exactly what he was doing.â Tom reached for a folder, flipping it open. âA man by the name of Eugene Thomas. He was the valet involved in the alleged accident, as Iâm sure you know.â
âAlleged?â Fae closed her eyes. âHe didnât even know Dad or Vera. His foot got stuck on the accelerator.â
Tom flipped through pages, yanking out a sheet.
âI found a burner phone Vera purchased two months prior to the incident.â He held up the paper as if we could make out the tiny print. âThese are records I pulled from it.â
Fae stopped pacing. âWhat do they say?â
âVera withdrew 200k from a secret savings account. She also shared multiple brief conversations with a number that tracked back to Thomasâ wife.â
Farrow squeezed the bridge of her nose. âWhat does his wife have to do with this?â
âNothing. She had stage 4 cancer. Needed a pricey experimental drug.â He set the paper down. âGene did it for the fast cash.â
âHe was counting on being charged with involuntary manslaughter.â Farrow planted her fists on the table, piecing the rest together. âHe knew theyâd give him a light sentence in minimum security. Why wouldnât they? He has a baby and a wife with cancer. It was an âaccident.ââ
âPrecisely.â Danâs face popped up. âRecords show Mrs. Thomas made a full recovery after the treatment. While her husband is locked up, various charities help her with bills, groceries, and childcare. She even has a new house.â
Tom whistled. âFive years is a small price to pay for all that.â
Bryan adjusted his camera, finally giving us his face. âWe have all the evidence. The receipts. The written communication. Vera thought using a burner phone and VPN would cover her tracks. Turns out, she still missed a few steps.â
The six of us simmered on the info.
Fae broke the silence with a whisper. âBut⦠why?â
âInsurance money.â Tom waved his folder. âI looked through Veraâs joint tax returns with your dad, along with their financial statements. They spent more than they made.â He paused. âVera liked to buy pretty things.â
Farrow plopped onto the seat opposite me, staring at the ceiling without really looking. âShe still does.â
âThat may be true, but right now she can only afford them at Walmart.â Deanne produced another document. âVera spent the insurance money as soon as it hit her bank account.â
âEugene Thomas.â Farrow rubbed her forehead. âCan you tell me a bit about his background? His family?â
Tom flipped through pages. âSure.â
As we waited for him to find whatever he was searching for, the plane began its descent.
A flurry of texts dropped from the top of Natalieâs screen in quick succession.
Jilly Bean:
Is your boss still playing hard to get ?
Jilly Bean:
Or is he getting too hardâ¦
[Smirking Emoji]
Jilly Bean:
You have to figure out what the housekeeper did to make him screw her.
Jilly Bean:
This is your way in.
Jilly Bean:
Get knocked up, and weâre gold.
We can finally open the company.
I made a mental note to fire Natalieâand not drink anything she handed meâwhile Tom answered Octi.
âEugene Thomas. Twenty-Eight. Parents never married. His mom registered him under her last name. He grew up without a dad, since he traveled around the world for work. They reconnected during his court case. Both his parents visit him once a week in prison.â
She edged forward, hungry for more. âWhat are their names?â
She had an angle.
Farrow always had an angle.
I enjoyed this side of her most. It reminded me of our first official encounter.
Herâhot as hell in lingerie, setting down Go pieces like a savant.
And meâsoaking up the view as her tongue swiped across her lips.
Any other time, and Iâd be rock hard.
âMom is Paula Thomas. Dad is⦠wait, let me find it.â Tom clucked his tongue. âAh, there it is. Dadâs name is Andras Horvath.â
Farrow closed her eyes.
And all I saw was red.
Andras.
Everything clicked into place.
My temperature hiked up to a level more suitable for an oven. Farrowâs nostrils flared. I suspected the same thought ran through both our minds.
How weâd deliver punishment to Andras and Vera.
Another thing I enjoyed about Farrowâwe shared the same thirst for vengeance.
âI know this is a lot to take in.â Deanne collected her phone, holding it to her face. âBut there is a silver lining to all of this.â
Fae plopped against the backrest. âMustâve missed it.â
âJustice, Miss Ballantine. Forget about the lawsuit. Our next step is to bring this to the authoritiesâ ââ
Farrow waved her off. âDo whatever you need, but Iâm confronting Vera as soon as we land.â
âMiss Ballantine.â Bryan shot forward. âThat is highly unadvisable. Anything you do or say may hinder ourâ ââ
âCope,â Fae interjected, and I couldâve kissed her then. Beneath the eye. On her beauty mark. Iâd wanted to kiss there for a while now. âIâm going to hunt Vera down.â
âThe best revenge is justice.â Deanne raised both hands, like she was corralling a wild animal. âTrust me.â
âYouâre a lawyer. I would never trust you.â
This time, I did kiss Farrowâon her beauty mark, then down her jaw.
âButââ
âShe made up her mind.â I finally intervened, over this. âAny mess this creates is yours to clean.â
Dan collapsed against his seat. âIâm not Superman.â
âFor the money I pay you, you fucking should be.â
Deanne sighed. âI liked you better when you werenât wrapped around a womanâs finger.â
Yes, but I liked myself less.
âSee how you like unemployment if you continue to overstep.â
She grinned. âItâs called retirementâ ââ
I hung up and tossed the phone on the couch, tucking my chin on Farrowâs shoulder. âAre you okay?â
âI will be.â She leaned her head back, resting it on my neck. âI think.â
The amount of strength this woman had in her fingernail alone could detonate a nuclear bomb.
âOf course, you will. Youâre the strongest person I know.â
âAnd I intend to deliver the cruelest blow.â Her gaze caught mine. âBut first, I need to break.â
âBreak?â
âYou knowâfall apart. Cry like a baby. Let myself break for all the times I refused to.â
âBreak.â I pressed a kiss to her shoulder, cheek, temple. âIâll put all the pieces back together.â
Even if itâs the last thing I do.