by Nora Flite
Breathing in loudly, I stood tall. “You don't need to believe in me. You don't need to trust me. But if you really only care about revenge, let me say this.” Scooping up her wrists, I held her in place. “You're no ghost. If you think you're invincible, untouchable, you're going to make a fatal mistake. And then you will become an actual phantom. For the sake of your goal, remember that.”
Marina was stiff, cement in her bones. Gingerly, she linked her fingers with mine. Then, she pulled them away. “You shouldn't have kissed me.”
Rubbing my tongue over my own lips, my smirk was a serrated blade. “No. I shouldn't have stopped.”
Jerking backwards, she looked ready to run. I hadn't moved, everything had happened within inches of where I'd been casually leaning. Her attention shot down to the toilet paper, then back to me. “I... I need to leave.”
Tilting my head, I slid my foot under the bathroom product. In a gentle, easy flip, I kicked it up and caught it. Narrowing my eyes, I offered it to her. I hadn't stopped smiling—I couldn't, not with her anxiety on my taste-buds. “Then I guess I'll be seeing you, Marina.”
She hesitated, like taking the toilet paper was a trap. Finally, she lifted her chin and grabbed it. “Thank you.” Her mouth opened, shut, and then she rounded me and headed for the exit. Looking back, Marina paused, gathering her words.
In the end, she said nothing.
With the crisp 'click' of the door fading, I pressed against the counter and stared at my ceiling. The air, the molecules, still vibrated like she was nearby. Grazing my lips, I looked at my fingertips and recalled the salt of her blood.
Yes. Marina was a drug.
My drug.
And I wanted to overdose on her.
****
I called Kite twice before he answered. I needed him to meet me at the Corner Velvet, to make sure he could watch the place while I went off to explore my leads. Anabelle could effectively run it, but Kite needed to be seen in public, behaving normally. Plus, I preferred he sign for deliveries, and we had one coming tomorrow morning.
“Sure man,” he said when I got through. “I can do it. Mind if I meet you there so you can show me where the paperwork is for the shipment?”
I came close to scowling. He should know this stuff. “Yeah. I can do that.” This wasn't a bad plan. It meant I could bring my bag of spare clothes and change at the bar, which was less suspicious than leaving the apartment in a disguise. I couldn't take my car, though. It'd be noticed if it was left behind the bar too long. Anabelle might ask questions. “Actually,” I said before he hung up. “New plan. Let's go together, you drive.”
He met me in the garage, his attention going briefly to my bag. “Planning a camp-out?” he teased.
Dropping the bag in the backseat, I climbed into the car. “It might be a few days. I don't know yet.”
“It makes me nervous that you don't know.” Revving the engine, he guided us out of the underground. It was bright out, the sun happy to shine and blind us. “And I hate that you're going alone.”
“It's safer alone.”
“It's safer with the two of us,” he grumbled.
Sighing, I turned up the radio. “Stop worrying. Ponder more on how you'll entertain Marina on your own.” The music that piped through the speakers was classical. It made me think about this morning. Quickly, I changed the channel. “What was she doing when you left?”
He tossed a look at me. “I don't know. Sleeping, I guess.”
I doubted that was true. “You didn't talk to her?”
Shrugging violently, Kite turned the car down the street. “No. Why does it matter?”
“It doesn't,” I agreed. “Except that you're acting strange.” Slowly, my eyebrows crinkled over my nose. “She was acting weird this morning, too.”
He slammed on the breaks, changing lanes abruptly. Someone honked behind us. “What?” he blurted, struggling to stare at me and also watch the road. “She came up to see you this morning?”
“Careful,” I said, keeping my voice calm. “Don't drive like an idiot. Yes, she came up because you apparently forgot to buy toilet paper.”
He was silent for a single heartbeat. “And then what happened?”
My mouth was a neutral line. “You tell me. What happened between you two that's gotten you both so uneasy?”
Kite took a slow breath. Pulling into the alley, he parked behind the Corner Velvet. The keys twisted, engine dying and the last of the white noise going with it. For a while, my best friend did nothing but sit there, staring at his hands.
The back of his head thumped against the seat. His eyes were shut. “Shit. Jacob, her and I fucked last night.”
A tiny, tiny sliver of ice inched into my belly. Pressing two fingers to the bridge of my nose, I started to laugh. It was a soft, gritty sound.
Kite rolled his head, cheek on the cushion as he watched me. “It's not that funny.”
“No,” I agreed. “But when I tell you what happened this morning, you might see the humor.” He sat up, eyes searching mine for the answer before I even let it roll off of my tongue. A tongue that still tasted like her. “Marina and I, we kissed.”
Lifting his head, Kite looked down his nose at me. “You kissed her, or she kissed you?”
“I kissed her, if you want specifics. Did you fuck her, or did she fuck you?”
Shaking his head rapidly, Kite grabbed the wheel and squeezed. “There's a question. I think it was both.”
My smile was brittle. “Interesting. So now what?”
“What the fuck do you mean, now what?” Kite was fidgeting, unable to decide if he wanted to hit something or freeze in place. I knew the feeling. “You're telling me you want her, right? Unless you kissed her because you were curious if she'd have a god damn heart attack and drop dead.”
Remembering the softness of her mouth, how it yielded to my roughness, I shivered. “No. I kissed her because I felt like it. Yes, Kite, I want her. I also don't plan to fight with you over her.” Pointedly, I faced him in the car. “You understand what I'm saying.”
He was flicking his stare from my face, to his fists. Never had two people in this shallow world been so connected, so in sync. Kite and I were beyond friends. Our bond was stronger than law or logic. We did everything for each other, with each other.
We always had.
“She doesn't change the rules,” he breathed. Setting his jaw, he offered his hand to me. It stayed in the air, waiting for mine. “I want her. You want her. That means we both get to have Marina...”
“Or neither of us does.” Clasping his palm, I crushed it tight. The tendons in my forearms flexed with the briskness of the handshake. It was a reminder, for us both, of who we were and why we were here. How we had arrived at this place, crawled up from the shit and dust and made our lives something new. Something worth owning.
Kite and I, we'd seen things—done things—that no one knew of. Just us, a pair of wretched creatures who would kill to live and murder to succeed. We were not good people. We were never under the illusion that we were.
This moment shot home the memory of our first oath. The oath. How we had become Blood Brothers, and our inability to end that. Our agreement and our rules were here to protect us both.
Greed led to tragedy and betrayal.
“We share her,” I said flatly.
“We share her.” Kite's eyes were brooding, but they flashed when he smiled. “It wouldn't be the first time.”
Chuckling, I let him go and leaned away. “No. I guess it wouldn't.” Thinking of the other women who had agreed to our rule, it brought a film of distaste. Not because I hadn't enjoyed them, no. It just reminded me of how they'd all failed. For so many reasons, there'd never been a woman who could keep up with us. The ones that held our attention, that clung to us and struggled to maintain our lust, inevitably crumbled.
No one had ever handled us both.
Marina wouldn't be the first... and knowing that sobered me.
That girl w
ith her tempting hips and perceptive eyes, she had no clue what we had in store for her. Beyond the reality of our plan to throw her to the wolves—or the Jackals—and free us from the risk she represented. Beyond all of the grimness. What waited for Marina would be too much for her.
In more ways than one, I felt in my heart that we would destroy her.
And I didn't care.
If it meant I got to taste her again...
I didn't care at all.
~ABOUT THE AUTHOR~
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A USA Today Bestselling Author, Nora Flite loves to write dark romance (especially the dramatic, gritty kind!) Inspired by the complicated events and wild experiences of her own life, she wants to share those stories with her audience.
Born in the tiniest state, coming from what was essentially dirt, she's learned to embrace and appreciate every opportunity the world gives her.
She's also, possibly, addicted to coffee and sushi.
Not at the same time, of course.
Check out her blog, noraflite.blogspot.com, also email her at [email protected] if you want to say hello! Hearing from fans is the best!
-Nora Flite
Check out more of
Nora's books!
The Body Rock Series:
Hard Body Rock
She thought she was stepping into fame:
Meeting Drezden Halifax should have been a dream. But dreams are supposed to be sweet¸ fragile things that whisk you away. Not monsters crafted from hard fingers, gritty vocal cords and a voice so powerful it could tear my guts right out.
Maybe my heart, too.
Becoming the guitarist for Four and a Half Headstones was everything I needed.
Too bad the band's lead singer is doing his best to ruin everything I am.
He thought she would solve his troubles:
Lola Cooper, god damn Lola Cooper. She was the perfect guitarist, fingers that could summon a sweet song or punch a chord. She's supposed to save my band, make us come out of this tour in one piece...
But I just want to tear HER to pieces.
No one should make me feel this way. One look at her, one smell, and I knew I'd have to have her. She does things to me that scare the shit out of me. Make me want to slam her on a wall and listen to her cries: eager or fearful, it doesn't matter.
I'm a monster...
And I don't even care.
Genre: New Adult Rockstar Romance
This is the first installment of the Body Rock Series
25,000 words
Slow Body Rock
He knew he was addicted:
I thought it'd be smoking that killed me. Lola is more addictive than tobacco could hope to be.
After feeling her warm body, touching her skin... even if it was an accident, I've given up.
The monster inside of me is going to consume her.
I'm too tired to fight it.
And I honestly don't want to.
She knew it was risking everything:
Why is he trying to mess up my ONE opportunity at success?
My very god damn existence?
I can't handle this pull between us... a gravity that wants to knot our bodies together and leave me merged.
Ruined.
I thought Drezden cared about his band, that he wouldn't dare do anything that might break them—and me—apart.
When did I become the one thing worth losing it all over?
Genre: New Adult Rockstar Romance
This is the second installment of the Body Rock Series
25,000 words
Flawed Body Rock
She wanted to be a rockstar:
I finally have everything.
Fame, presence, the world knows who I am.
Now my life is even harder.
What do you do when every eye watching you is full of jealous hate?
I'm strong enough to not let strangers hurt me...
But when it's my own brother, the stakes change entirely.
He just wanted her to himself:
My claws are in her, but I'm trapped, too.
Waking up, my first thoughts used to be about music.
Lola's changed all of that.
She consumes my dreams; my existence.
My band... the girl I'm obsessed with...
Is there room in this world for both of them?
If not, which do I choose?
Genre: New Adult Rockstar Romance
This is the third installment of the Body Rock Series
25,000 words
True Body Rock
He never wanted to look back:
I've always run from my past. It's what keeps me sane; whole.
But what if not facing it means losing the girl I love?
Telling her the truth must sound so simple.
It's a request that could leave me more broken—more hollow and wrecked—than ever before.
She never saw it coming:
Answers.
Answers answers god damn answers.
How far do I have to go to find out what I need? To get to the bottom of the filth and finally find the real person waiting? The man behind those delicious green eyes and intoxicating lips?
If Drezden won't talk to me...
I'll find someone who will.
But why does it feel like they're the one who's been waiting for me?
Genre: New Adult Rockstar Romance
This is the fourth and final installment of the Body Rock Series
29,000 words
Stand Alone Novels:
Only Pretend
If you hated your life—wanted to prove to the world that you could change—how would you do it?
I had a plan. I also had no family, no friends, and definitely no jerk of an ex-boyfriend who thought I was boring.
I was tired of being me.
In Vegas, I could be anything.
And then I saw him.
His hungry smile wanted a taste of the new me.
Only a boring person would have said no.
It was reckless to follow a stranger to his bed. Dangerous to take the drink he handed me. I thought the worst regret I'd have would be a hangover, a walk of shame through the hotel.
Except I didn't wake up in the hotel.
Or in Vegas.
I doubt my face will end up in the news. “Woman missing,” the headline would say. “A stupid person who thought she could be someone else.”
I'm not someone else. I was only playing pretend.
Too bad he was playing for keeps.
—Author's Note—This is a dark romance novel, it contains themes of violence and mature situations that could make readers uncomfortable.
Watch Me Fall
Pain, abuse, brutality. That was my life. I struggled and stressed; cried until I forgot what tears were. But I worked hard. I clawed to the peak.
And then I lost everything.
Most people would have shattered.
I'm not most people.
My dreams are gone, but that's fine. I could have lived this tiny, broken life. I could have suffered in silence.
Until I met her: Noel.
God, she's so alive. She makes me ACHE and I just...
I can't ignore her.
So I won't.
Noel thinks she can handle me. Survive me.
If she knew the truth—could see into my mind—she'd smarten up and run.
I'm so lucky she doesn't have a clue.
—Author's Note—This novel is a stand alone. It contains scorching sex, violent themes, and mature situations that could make readers uncomfortable.
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