Rouge: Act 4 – Scene 40
Rouge: A Dark Billionaire Romance (Tattered Curtain Series)
Lacey
The night is misty with rain, but thanks to the covered flybridge on Kianâs yacht, I only feel the crisp wind on my cheeks as we float over one of the deepest areas in Lake Mead. The storm that started three days ago began to let up sometime last night after Kian came home from his poker game with Monroe. I donât know what the stakes were, exactly, but Monroe lost, and thatâs why weâre here.
Kianâs warmth seeps through my trench coat as he lightly grips my shoulders from behind, and I lean back against his chest. Heâs been downstairs helping his men, Lorenzo and Merek, with the details. I stare at the barrel sitting at the edge of the deck and resist shuddering at what weâre about to do next. It needs to be done.
âThank you⦠for everything,â I murmur.
âI would do anything for you, tine.â
He kisses me lightly, just above where my bandages were removed this afternoon. The pain is minimal with extra-strength ibuprofen, but heâs still treating me like Iâm made of glass. The parts of me that hurtâmy arms, neck, throat, backâare appreciative.
But where I ache? I need more.
His smoky, sweet amber scent has driven me crazy ever since Iâve been back in his suite, and yet he refuses to touch me beyond cautious caresses. Now, even the slightest brush of his skin on mine makes me shiver with desire. I plan to end my torture as soon as possible, whether he thinks Iâm ready or not.
âAre you in pain?â His voice is full of concern, mistaking my trembling. âYou can have the other drugs. It wonât bother me.â He tries to pull away, but I latch on to his forearmâright over his new tattooâto keep him close.
His question makes me gravitate to the chip in my pocket with my injured hand. He hasnât asked for it back and I donât want to give it up, but I feel guilty keeping it.
My decision made, I try to hand it to him.
âOh no, thatâs yours now.â He pushes it away before digging into his own pocket and coming up with an actual poker chip. His arm stays around me as he flips the chip in the air and leans me slightly with him as he reaches to catch it. âMonroe got this one for me. Itâs a new chapter. You can keep that one. This will remind me of whatâs important just as easily.â
An appreciative grin lifts my lips as I return the chip to my pocket. I squeeze it for good luck before asking the question thatâs been on my mind since this morning.
âWhat happens after tonight?â
âWhat do you want to happen?â His voice is gentle, but tears spring to my eyes as my fingers try to make a fist around my cast, reminding me of the broken wrist that I was told today may never properly heal, even with surgery.
âI⦠I want to dance.â
âFeck, Lace.â He strokes my cheek. âThen dance. Whatâs the point of being in charge if we canât chase our passion?â
I raise my cast. âBut the doctor saidââ
âThe doctors can feck off. Together, we have more money than God. Weâll get you the best surgeons.â
âBut what if that doesnât work?â
He gives me a pointed look. âI didnât think my tine could be stopped by the likes of a mere injured wrist. Weâll do whatever it takes.â
My chest feels airy and light with his promise. I hope heâs right, but even if heâs not, I donât have the energy to fight his resolve, nor do I want to. Itâs enough to give me courage for the rest of the night, though, and I hang on to it like a raft.
He must sense it, too, because he cups my cheek and exhales heavily before finally asking.
âAre you ready?â
I nod once. âMore than you know.â
His lips quirk up. âLetâs go down, then. Lorenzo and Merek positioned the barrel at the edge for us and promised to give us privacy. Theyâll head off in the tender to scout the area and make sure weâre alone on the lake.â
He wraps a soft blanket around my shoulders and over my head to protect me from the rain. As he guides me down the winding, narrow staircase, he reassures me one more time.
âUnless this lake dries completely, the concrete on the bottom of the barrel should bury and secure it in the sediment below.â
âAnd the rest of the world will think he ran away after almost⦠almost killing me?â
He grunts his assent. âThe Keeper protects many secrets, but the wild ace keeps the worst ones. I know which families have ordered hits on others, and after breaking into Baron Suites, I also know who went after your father. Monroe will disappear and no one will question the narrative we spread because they know that if they do, their own involvement will be exposed. They donât want to tumble their house of cards or be anywhere near myâor your fatherâsâwrath.â He smirks at me. âBesides, theyâll learn soon enough that my wee firecracker of a wife is formidable on her own.â
I smile at him and accept his offered hand. By the time we reach the deck, Lorenzo and Merek are already hopping into the small boat that accompanies the yacht. They drive off so quietly that thereâs barely any sound or wake in the water. The lights on the tenderâs bow and stern flicker the farther away they go until darkness swallows them completely.
Itâs just me, Kian, and the soon-to-be dead man.
âReady?â Kian asks again and I squeeze his hand in answer.
He leads me to the barrel that sits on the edge of the glossy wet deck and removes the metal lid. Inside, Monroe sits scrunched with tape around his hands and over his mouth. His brown eyes are black and shiny in the dark, begging Kian for forgiveness, as if my husband is the only one who has a say in this. Kian has made it clear that Iâll be ruling by his side once my fatherâs role as Keeper ends. I have no doubt that this is the first of many decisions weâll make together.
Kianâs voice deepens with cold rage as he gives the monster his final sentence. âMonroe Baron, you attempted to snuff out a fire before we had the chance to kindle it. You nearly extinguished the light in my life before she had the chance to blaze. Youâve tried so hard to be the water to our flame, water will be your end.â
I can barely make out Monroeâs question as he enunciates behind the tape, âWho put the hit out on me?â
âI did.â Kian pulls playing cards out of his suit jacket pocket and reveals his bloody joker card. âIâm the wild ace and this wild card is mine to do with as I please.â His gaze locks onto Monroeâs. âItâs a reward for my service. No reprisals from Garde families, no tipping off any authorities, no grudges. One free kill.â He juts his chin in my direction. âNot only that, but I have the support of my queen of diamonds.â
Monroe tries to swivel away as Kian stuffs the joker and the ace into his breast pocket. My husband then turns to me with the two halves of a worn queen of diamonds card.
âAny last words, tine? Once you use this card, itâll be played. Youâll no longer have the order over your head.â
My heart pounds in my chest at the sight of the card that was meant for me. Iâve only heard about this part of his job and I certainly never thought Iâd be joining in. But I didnât want to miss this. Iâm a McKennon now, and McKennon revenge is exactly what I need to make this right.
I take the card and use the dim light of the moon to analyze the two queens. One wields a sword and the other holds a red camellia.
âYou designed this for me, didnât you?â
Kian nods in my periphery. âThe queen of diamonds is also the queen of swords. Sheâs a compassionate leader and a symbol of change. But sheâs ruthless when she needs to be. Sheâs always been perfect for you.â
The compliment gives me the courage to remove Monroeâs ring from my pocket and step closer to the barrel. He yells angrily at me, but his scorn is lost behind the duct tape. Even on the brink of death, he glares at me with hatred and disrespect. He has no idea that Iâm the one who choreographed his last breaths.
After a deep inhale and exhale, I swallow past the pain in my throat and try my best to mask the hoarseness in my voice. I donât want to let this bastardâs last thoughts be satisfaction that he hurt me.
âYou tried to ruin my family. You nearly killed me and you took the life of an innocent solely because your pride was hurt. You are everything thatâs wrong with the Garde, and those ideals will die with you. But Kian and I will thrive.â
Despite Monroe fighting against his binding, I tuck both halves of the queen card and his ring into his breast pocket in front of the ace and the joker. As soon as itâs done, Kian begins to ready the diving equipment and hands me the mask. Monroe is so confused by our exchange, he lets me fit the goggles and mouthpiece halfway over his head before he starts to thrash again.
Kian ignores Monroeâs attempts to get free and plops the rebreather onto the manâs bound hands, before tapping the device once.
âThis heliox tank will allow you to breathe at greater depths. The lake is deep enough here that an ascent without proper decompression will kill you before you reach the surface. With the low water temperature at the bottom, what winds up killing you will be a contest between hypothermia, pressure changes, the amount of heliox in the tank, and your willpower. Iâm betting the last one gives out first.â
Monroeâs eyebrows shoot up at Kianâs wicked grin, but itâs me who gives the final decree.
âMonroe Baron, you isolated me knowing that it would slowly kill me inside. Then you beat me and left me to die. In your final moments, I thought it fitting that you finally learn what it feels like to be trapped.â
When I rip off the tape covering Monroeâs mouth, merciless satisfaction stirs in my chest, sparking what is no doubt a slightly unhinged smile. That, more than anything, seems to scare the shit out of him and he lets out a bloodcurdling scream.
Kian uses Monroeâs wide-open mouth to shove the mask the rest of the way over his petrified face and fit the regulator between his lips. He tries to writhe out of the barrel, but his efforts are useless since Merek and Lorenzo cemented him to the bottom.
Once the mask is on properly, I crash the lid on top of Monroeâs head and Kian snaps the latches. Muffled screams reverberate from the tin, but I have faith that Lorenzo and Merek have ensured no help is coming.
With the barrel clasped shut, Kian kicks the edge, toppling it overboard. It bobs for a minute and my heart pounds at the fear that it wonât sink. But as Kian begins to embrace me from behind, Monroeâs screeches grow more frantic and harsh banging slams against the metal as it loses inches to the lake that consumes it.
Once the water starts flooding into the metal, it fills quickly. Soon Monroeâs shrieks become garbled until the lid of the barrel finally dips below the surface and bubbles float and pop in its place. I watch them swell, burst, and swell again, hypnotized by Monroeâs doomed attempt to stay alive.
âThis is just the beginning.â Kianâs chin rests on top of my head and I feel it move as he warns me. âMonroe had a lot of families that supported him. Our fathers couldnât figure out the truth on their own because there were so many people who had the same lie, it was nearly impossible to sort out fact from fiction. Weâll have to decide how to punish the ones that tried to destroy us. I personally want at least a dozen more barrels right beside Monroeâs.â
Power flows through my veins. Whatever I decide, I know Kian will make it happen. Heâs proven that heâll not only go to battle for me, heâll start wars.
But do I want that?
I bite my lip before shaking my head. âThat canât happen if we want things to change. The way the Garde treats women, its own people, and those they consider beneath them is horrible. I want to change that.â
âLetâs change it, then.â
I glance up at him. âReally?â
âYeah, really. Once the Keeper position falls to us, we wonât stand for the shite that has had family conspiring against family for decades. Snakes like Monroe shouldnât be able to slip into our house unnoticed. Your father has plenty of secrets to take them all down one by one and cut them off at their knees. I wish weâd sent Monroeâs sister down with him, though. She was a right cunt in all of this. Hell, maybe your mam, too. No offense.â
I follow his glare to the slower-forming bubbles on the water.
âTheyâre both products of their environment,â I answer, my heart rate increasing at what it will mean when those signs of breathing stop. âMy mom got worse while my dad was away. Now that heâs back home, she wonât feel the immense pressure of keeping us alive. And as for Maeve⦠without a Garde-approved marriage sheâll neither have power nor access to her complete trust fund. For her, thatâll be worse than anything we could ever physically do to her. Power is what they all care about. If we take that away from them theyâll wish theyâd died instead.â
He chuckles. âThe new era of McKennon revenge. Fates worse than death, catered to the sinner. Thatâs the kind of punishment I can get behind.â
Quiet settles around us and I face the water again to find the bubbles have disappeared.
âDoes that mean what I think it means?â I whisper.
âDepends. Heâs hundreds of feet down, so his exhales could be taking a longer time to rise. But his rebreather only has an hour of helium and oxygen, less if he hyperventilates. Hypothermia could get him before that in as quick as thirty minutes if itâs cold enough.â
âAnd then heâll be gone,â I whisper.
âIf heâs not already.â
My pounding heart slows. We stand in silence while listening to the lake gently lap at the boat. The weight of years of turmoil, stress, and fear drifts away with the current, and I take a full cleansing breath for the first time in ages.