Twisted: Chapter 15
Twisted (Never After Series)
âWhatâs this?â
Aliâs voice comes from the far corner of the kitchen, but I donât break my gaze away from Yasminâs face. In fact, I tighten my hold on her jaw, my thumb possessively caressing her cheek before releasing her and jumping back like Iâve been caught red- handed.
âAli, Iâ â Running a hand through my hair to leave it tousled, I shake my head. âI can explain.â
Aliâs face is rigid as he stares between the two of us, his arms crossing over his chest. âExplain fast.â
âBaba,â Yasmin starts.
I cut her off. âIâ¦I love her.â
Aliâs brows shoot to his hairline, and he steps farther into the room, his hand jerking out to steady himself on the counter. Although today he looks fine, Iâm reminded how much weaker he is than normal.
âIâm sorry, old man,â I continue, forcing sympathy into my voice. âThis isnât how we wanted you to find out.â
âIs this true?â His voice is incredulous, like he needs a second opinion. He turns his sallow eyes to Yasmin.
She doesnât reply for what feels like an eternity, her teeth digging into the corner of her lip instead. I step in closer to her, grabbing her hand and tangling her clammy fingers with mine.
Our eyes meet, and I swear to God I can feel the hatred radiating from her stare. I allow my grin to widen as I look down at her and wink. She frowns, tearing away her gaze until sheâs staring at the TV thatâs still showing Alexanderâs crash.
Slowly, she turns her head until sheâs staring at her father.
âYes,â she whispers.
Satisfaction rushes through me like a waterfall.
Ali looks at me, his face scrunching in displeasure. âBut youâre so .â
I let out a chuckle. âNot as old as you, at least. We didnât mean for it to happen, Ali, but the heart wants what it wants.â Bringing up our combined hands, I press a kiss to the back of hers. âTell him, gattina â
She stiffens. âWe didnât mean for it to happen, Baba.â
â
did it even happen?â he asks. âHow? Why didnât you say anything before now?â
She glances down at her lap, her voice breaking as she speaks, but her nails dig into the back of my hand until they slice through my skin. âI was afraid of disappointing you. Andâ¦I didnât want Julianâs position in your life to be harmed.â
Ali sighs, walking closer to her and taking her free hand in both of his. âAnd is who you love?â
She swallows, glancing up at him and then looking away after only a few moments like sheâs unable to hold his gaze. âIt is.â
He blows out a slow breath and nods, leaning in to kiss her forehead before he steps back and looks at the two of us. âThen heâs who youâll marry.â
I grin, my body buzzing with the thrill of success.
Yasmin visibly slumps, and I move my hand from hers, sliding it up her arm until it grips the back of her neck. She straightens immediately, pasting a wide smile on her face.
Leaning down, I press a kiss to her temple, speaking low so her father doesnât hear. âYouâve been a very good girl.â
âWhatâs wrong, Yasmin? Is this not what you want?â Ali asks.
Tears spring from her eyes, dripping down her face, and while I know theyâre most likely out of sadness or frustration, she does a good job at pretending theyâre from joy.
âIâm just happy, Baba.â She shakes her head, reaching up to wipe the wetness from her cheeks. âI expected for you to be angry with me.â
He nods, understanding pouring from his gaze. âIâm a man on the last leg of his life.â
âDonât say that,â she whispers.
His brows draw in. âItâs the truth. Even if my footprints have been set in stone, wonât be here forever. I have no time for anger. Iâd rather spend it finding peace. Heâs not who I would have chosen for you, sweetheart, but if youâre happy, Iâm happy.â
Yasmin sucks in an audible breath, her entire body going rigid at his words.
I should feel vindicated, relieved even, that she didnât figure out he would have accepted her lover until now when itâs too late and sheâs already played into my hand, but instead of feeling relief, my stomach twists violently. After everything Iâve given him, after everything Iâve done, Iâm still not enough. He should be honored that Iâm choosing his worthless daughter, and yet heâs so blatant with his disregard.
Itâs a slap across my face.
Worse, itâs a knife in my back. I swallow around the feeling of not being good enough, the same feeling that was responsible for many sleepless nights as a child, and push it so deep down that itâs smothered.
It doesnât matter if Iâm not his choice. Iâm my choice, and Iâm the only person whoâs never let me down.
One day soon, Iâll have complete control of Sultans, and Iâll take joy in watching everyone whoâs ever thought I wasnât good enough choke on their words while I hold the universe in the palm of my hand.
âNow.â Ali claps his hands together, moving back and staring at the two of us. âHow about a wedding?â
âTinashe, friend, tell me what the problem is,â I ask, leaning back in my desk chair, peering out over the skyline of Badour from the wall of windows in my office. The sun is just setting, oranges clashing with pinks until the view creates a stunning glow across the tops of the shiny skyscrapers.
âJulian,â Tinashe breathes out, sounding relieved. âDarryn is happy that youâre coming into his territory and trying to steal the lost lamp out from under him.â
I grab a pen, tapping it on the desk, irritated that I have to deal with this situation at all. âRemind me again, old friend, why I pay you?â
Thereâs a long beat of silence before his deep voice comes over the line again. âIâm not a miracle worker, Julian. I can get you a lot of places and make friends with a lot of people, but I am no genie. I canât wave my arms and suddenly make it okay for you to come in illegally and smuggle out relics from other countries.â
I scoff, tossing the pen in my hand down, watching as it rolls across my desk. âDarryn Anders couldnât care less about smuggling relics. He practically coined the operation.â
Tinashe clicks his tongue. âBut he does care about someone else trying to beat him to the lamp. Heâs been there almost a decade looking for himself.â
Sighing, I pinch the bridge of my nose. âAnd thatâs our problem how?â
âHe wants you gone. Period. Iâm just looking out for the people you have here on the ground. Darryn isnât known to be with his points.â
I shake my head, annoyance pouring over me like rubbing alcohol on wounds. The last thing I want to do is give in and reason with Darryn, but his resources there are much stronger and rooted in years of work, whereas ours is a newer venture. I need to be smart about this, treat it as a business deal instead of something Iâm fighting against. Lull him into a false sense of comfort so that he doesnât cause us more problems down the road. Once I have the lamp, it wonât matter. Weâll leave the area, and he canât do anything else to get in my way.
âDoes Jeannie know about this?â
Tinashe chuckles. âJeannie knows about everything, Julian. Thatâs why sheâs the lead.â
My fingers tighten around my phone, annoyed that she hasnât said anything about Darryn Anders directly to me. Actually, I havenât gotten a single email from her since she told me about the new spot she wanted to look the other day, and if she already knew about Darryn, itâs irritating she didnât include that in her update.
âLet me see what I can manage,â I say.
Tinashe grunts and I hang up before he can say anything else. I bring up Ianâs number and send him a text.
Before I can even put my phone down, it vibrates again in my hand, and the bad mood thatâs been coiling around my back cinches a little tighter.
flashes across the screen.
Indecision weighs down my shoulders. I run my tongue over the front of my teeth, my fingers tap, tap, tapping on my desk as I watch the call go to voicemail. Only then do I let out a breath, guilt swirling in my stomach at the fact that I didnât pick up again.
I make a mental note to call her nurse, Jessica, and make sure she doesnât need anything, which she shouldnât. I put her up in a gorgeous four-thousand-Â square- foot home on the lake, giving her the best care money can buy.
And still, itâs not enough to get her off my back.
A voicemail notification pops up and I press Play on speaker, my motherâs voice filling the room.
âVita mia, itâs mommy dearest.â
Her voice is low and soft, as though she can barely muster up the strength to whisper, which only further proves I made the right choice in not picking up the phone. Thereâs no escaping her doom and gloom when she wants to spread it to the world.
âJust trying to get ahold of you, you know? Itâs lonely here all by myself.â She sighs. âJessica says youâre a busy man, but what type of kid is too busy to call his mother? Anyway, I hope I get to talk to you soon, and I hope youâre not lying in a ditch somewhere, God forbid. Not that Iâd ever be called if you were. Itâs like Iâm a stranger even though I gave you life, but you know, that must not mean as much these days as it did when I was growing up.â
Reaching over, I press a key on my computer keyboard to light up my screen, pulling up my emails as I listen to her drone on.
âI donât know if you care, since you canât even pick up the phone, but the doctors arenât sure how much longer I have left. It could be any day now, so I pray I get to hear your sweet voice again before itâs too late. Youâre the only thing that keeps me going.â
The need to check in on her surges through my chest, but itâs anger that burns my heart. For years, her words would bleed into my conscience, make me think that time was limited and she was going to die. But you can only cry wolf so many times before people stop believing.
âTi voglio bene, piccolo,â she finishes.
Glancing down at my phone as the voicemail ends, I reach out, pressing the Delete button, a quick flash of guilt mixing in with the other emotions and making me sick to my stomach. Instead of focusing on the feeling, I jump up from my chair and leave my office, heading down to the bottom floor of Sultansâ headquarters where we create the lab- grown diamonds.
Weâve only started manufacturing our own diamonds in the past few years, and it took a hell of a lot of convincing Ali that it would be worth it. He doesnât think they hold the same value, but it doesnât matter what thinks. What matters are the consumers, and after the clean diamond trade act tightened regulations on conflict diamonds, lab- grown gems blew up in popularity.
People want to believe theyâre contributing to the of the world instead of the bad, and synthetic diamonds are a way to market to that need.
Mainly, however, we use the synthetic diamonds to cut and polish the ones mined, and then we sell off a large portion of the rest to third- party sellers.
I walk down the aisles of the discolored concrete floor in the manufacturing warehouse, through the HPHT cubic press machinesâ giant light- blue machinery with six sides that apply immense heat and pressure to create the synthetic diamondsâ and allow my mind to focus on the employees who are clearly aware of my presence, based on the way theyâre lingering on the edges of the aisles and not coming to greet me.
Other than the sound of the equipment and a faint beat of music from the offices in the far right corner, itâs quiet.
Truth be told, I donât come to other departments often, but every once in a while, I make a surprise visit, just to ensure things are running as smoothly as the department managers tell me when I get the weekend reports. Normally, when I show up places, it disrupts the workflow more than helps, because people are on edge when Iâm around.
Clearly.
But right now, I donât really care. I need the distraction from both the tumultuous emotions bleeding through my system courtesy of my nagging mother and from the annoyance of Darryn Anders trying to take what I want.
Something vibrates in my pocket and my footsteps falter. I reach in my pocket and pull out the phone, smirking when I realize it isnât cell ringing but Yasminâs.
flashes across the screen and I silence the call, slipping it back in my pocket, satisfied that it isnât the boy trying to contact her again. It was easy enough to break into her phoneâ having her fatherâs birth date and hers isnât exactly a passcode to guessâ and once I did, it was childâs play putting a stop to Aidan meeting her two nights ago. I simply pretended to be Yasmin and told him something had come up with her father, and when he replied, I left him on read. A tendril of satisfaction wraps around me when I realize that he hasnât attempted to reach out again.
But fortuitous for me, because I canât have him in my way.
Especially when Yasmin is so close to becoming mine.