by Calista Fox
His hands moved upward and he ripped apart the buttons on my blouse.
“No!” I screamed through all the pain and fear.
“I told you this could have gone so much smoother for you. Now … I get payback.” Cupping my breasts through my bra, he squeezed roughly. Too rough. I cried out again. “That’s what I like to hear. And, Jesus Christ, these are nice tits. I’m going to rub my cock between them, pushing your head down, making you suck me hard.”
I screamed again. It didn’t matter that no one could hear me. I yelled out for Dane, Amano, anyone. I wailed loudly, even if not coherently.
His hands shifted, shoving under my skirt. He jerked down my panties to mid-thigh, then knelt behind me. I thrashed against my bindings, but he clasped my calves and held them as steady as he could, so I couldn’t kick him.
“Let’s see how hard I can make you come when I eat your pussy.”
“No!” I hollered once more. “Stop touching me! Please, God, stop touching me!”
Vale had been at the bar. He’d known that, in addition to the reptiles, I didn’t want anyone but Dane to touch me.
This was torture. I wasn’t even sure he wanted to rape me. I didn’t believe that had been his intent all along. He was doing this to torment me—Dane, too. And dear God, once Dane saw me—if he ever saw me again …
I sobbed a little harder, struggled more against my restraints. This would kill Dane. What would the retaliation for this be?
“Let me go now,” I said. “Don’t go any further. This is too much. Dane won’t let up. This will only make it worse for your family and the others.”
“We can handle Dane,” Vale assured me. “And if knowing what I’ve done to you cripples him … that’s even better.”
“Stop touching me!” I yelled again.
His hands hadn’t moved from the backs of my thighs, but I knew it was only a matter of seconds until—
A resounding thwack echoed all around me, followed by the jolting of my body as Vale’s hands tore from my legs and he let out a furious and agonized roar.
My eyes flew open. I saw him sprawled on the floor inside the dining room. Dane stood over him, a board in his hand.
Amano’s arm was around my waist in the next instant. With his free hand he retrieved a knife from his pocket, flicked it open, and slashed through the tie binding me. I collapsed against him.
A startled and clearly injured Vale attempted to roll onto his side and either stand or crawl away. Dane didn’t give him the chance.
Through my crimson-tainted vision, I saw Dane kick my assailant in the gut, so that he flopped onto his back again with a low grunt. Then Dane was on him, his fists pounding and making contact no matter how desperately Vale tried to deflect the blows. I heard the cracking of bones. Blood splattered everywhere. For several moments, I was riveted, unable to think, process, accept what my gaze remained locked on. I didn’t even think about the gun Vale had. Clearly, it didn’t matter that he was armed—he couldn’t get to it with Dane’s vicious attack.
I barely even noticed Amano maneuvering me just so in order to yank up my panties while still holding on to me so I didn’t drop like a ton of bricks at his feet.
Dane continued to punch, and the bones snapping became gruesome to listen to. Finally, it registered in my mind the length he was willing to go.
He’d kill for me.
And I almost let him.
“Dane,” I squeaked out. “Enough.”
He kept at it. Vale’s legs vibrated, then stilled. His entire body went limp.
“Dane!” I mustered the strength to shout. “Stop! You’ll kill him!”
Dane could have been a professional boxer. And he unleashed a violent rage that horrified me. Mostly because, in that dark part of me, I knew he deserved this revenge. I wanted him to get it. I wanted Vale to pay for what he’d done to the hotel—and, especially, what he’d done to me.
So much so that I could have retracted my protest. Let Dane finish what he started.
But then my mother’s words taunted me.
I don’t know what sort of people you associate with—I’m not even really sure who you are.
I wasn’t so sure, either.
“Dane,” I called out again. “Just stop. It’s over!”
Wrenching myself free of Amano’s loose embrace, I hurled myself forward, tackling Dane, shoving him off Vale. I lay sprawled across Dane, breathing heavily.
“That’s homicide.” I pointed my finger toward Vale. I had no idea if he was dead or alive. He was certainly unconscious. “You’re not a killer.”
“I have the right,” Dane shot back. “I have every right!”
“No,” I insisted, staring into his wild, dark eyes. “You don’t. This isn’t who you are. This isn’t who I am!”
“Ari,” he said with conviction. “This is exactly who I am.”
I tried to climb off him, tried to stand. Amano had to swoop in and lift me to my feet while holding me firmly to him. I quaked and a peculiar dreadfulness consumed me.
Dane stood, breathing heavy. He extended a bloody-knuckled hand to me. “Ari.”
I shrank away.
“Ari,” he said again, his gaze connecting with mine. “Christ … Your face.” His jaw clenched. His irises burned with fury. “Goddamn it. Look what he did to you! And he would have raped you. Goddamn it.” The fury was like nothing I’d ever seen, heard, witnessed. Not even my parents’ poisonous tantrums had been this treacherous.
“We can’t do this,” I told him, my voice cracking. “We can’t be these people. This is too much, Dane. This is all just too much!”
“Ari, I’ve said from the beginning that I would do anything to keep you safe.”
“But I’m not safe if I lose you to this rage. Can’t you see that? It’s because of me that you’ve refused to draw a line. It’s because of me that you’ve gone this far.”
“Just let me help you,” he quietly offered as he took a step closer.
I moved backward, forcing Amano to as well. “I am as much a destructive force as you are—don’t you see that?”
“Ari. Baby, I—”
“No,” I said as tears flowed down my cheeks.
“I’m not the bad guy here,” he insisted.
“I know that. But Vale might be dead, Dane. Dead!”
His head snapped back at my angst, my pain. As though I’d slapped him.
To Amano, I said, “Take me home, please.” My gaze was still locked with Dane’s. “To my house.”
“Of course,” Amano agreed. Though I was sure he gave a questioning look to Dane, whose eyes didn’t leave mine.
“Don’t do this,” he said, his tone pleading, tearing at me.
“I have to,” I told him as the sobs welled in my throat. “And you have to let me go. This is wrong. What’s become of us is wrong. My fault as much as yours, but still … It’s wrong, Dane.”
The panic over those words made my chest hurt. Like someone had ripped out my heart.
“I love you,” he said with steely conviction.
“I feel the same—and it’s devastating us both. This is not healthy, Dane.” I could barely breathe, as though I’d been gutted. Shredded from the inside out. It took all the willpower and resolve I possessed to finally steal my gaze from his.
“Get me out of here, Amano.”
He had to do most of the work, because my legs were wobbly. When we reached the front door, he seemed to realize I wasn’t wearing shoes and lifted me into his arms. He carried me to Dane’s Escalade and carefully deposited me in the passenger’s seat. Then he collected my muddied bag and phone and put them in the back.
I kept my eyes on the windshield, looking straight forward, not glancing out the side window to see if Dane would appear.
I didn’t want to know what he’d do about Vale or how he’d clean up this mess. All the blood in someone’s partially constructed house.
I couldn’t allow myself to think of anything at the moment. The demon
s clawed at me, but I mentally fought them back so I didn’t fall apart.
As was his normal practice, Amano uttered not a word as he drove me to my townhome. I was grateful for the silence. It helped me to concentrate on blocking everything from my mind. Everything.
When he delivered me to the front door, he dug out my keys and unlocked the dead bolt. I stepped inside and he followed so that he could set all of my belongings on the kitchen counter.
Finally, he said, “Ari … whatever I can do.”
That started the waterworks again. I turned to him. “Can you get my stuff from Dane’s? My suits are in the dressing room and there are some clothes in the two top drawers. A tote in the bathroom. Not the silver robe and nightgown. I don’t want them.” My voice was scary. Distant sounding, yet laced with a fragility that made me fear how strong my freak-out would be when he left me.
“I’d rather take you to the hospital,” he told me.
“They’ll ask questions. You know that.” I stared unwaveringly at him. I knew this Secret Service–type lifestyle was something he’d embraced for decades, after all, whether he knew Dane’s Illuminati association or not. “I can’t exactly say I walked into a door, right?”
His jaw clenched. Then he said, “At least let me clean you up. See if you need stitches.”
“I’ll do it.” I wanted to be alone. I felt the hysteria coming on and I needed for him to leave. “Will you please just get my things?”
“Yes.”
I could see he didn’t want to walk out on me, but I said, “Before Dane makes it home.”
“Right.”
Likely I tested his loyalty to Dane. But in the end, I suspected he knew that Dane would want him to do whatever I requested. Do whatever needed to be done.
“Lock all the doors and windows,” he said, his worry making me shudder. “Don’t open up for anyone but me.”
“I promise.”
He gave me another unfaltering look that conveyed remorse, an apology, condolences. Making me wonder exactly how fucked up my face was. The pain throbbed in wicked beats but a certain numbness flowed through me.
The misery of losing Dane eclipsed the physical agony.
chapter 24
When I was alone, I went into the bathroom. A peculiar sickness moved through me. Seconds later I was curled over the toilet, heaving. It took some time to get past the sights and sounds in my head. Then I pressed a damp washcloth to my mouth and the nausea eased.
I brushed my teeth and stripped off my clothes, wanting to burn them. Destroy all evidence of the evening so I never had to think about it or confront it, ever again. But that was impossible. Because I couldn’t burn away the memory.
Cranking on the hot water, I waited until it steamed my bathroom. I wanted it as scalding as I could stand. I needed it to overpower every other feeling, every emotion. I needed it to obliterate the hands that had squeezed my breasts and clasped my legs. To incinerate the words that had been whispered in my ear.
I was creeped out, disgusted, revolted. The list went on and on. Literally, worse than scorpions was another man, any man other than Dane, touching me the way Vale Hilliard had.
Standing under the spray that made me squirm with its intense heat, I let it wash away the blood and tears. I stood under the water as long as I could, but it couldn’t dissolve the pain seizing me. I sank onto the edge of the tub and the sobs came hard and fast, making my body quake again.
I wept for everything I’d started to believe in with Dane—the love, the bond, the dream we’d been building together. I wept for all that I had just lost—him, the faith I’d finally embraced, the hope that I could be different from my parents and grandparents, the optimism surrounding something that had made me come alive and had brought so much pleasure.
I was thoroughly wrecked. And so disassociated from myself. Like appendages were missing.
It took a small eternity for me to finally shut off the water and grab a towel. I patted it against my face, the trickles of blood staining the white material. Still feeling numb inside, I swiped at the steam on the mirror and bit back a gasp at the reflection staring at me. The cut on my forehead didn’t look as though I needed stitches, though I’d definitely have to keep an eye on it—and it promised to leave a scar. I squirted Neosporin on a Band-Aid and applied it to the laceration.
Inspecting the bruises made me cringe. My entire right cheek was black-and-blue. My jaw was bright red. My lip was split, though thankfully not bleeding now. Regardless, I was a fright. My dad couldn’t see me like this. He’d wig on a level I couldn’t even begin to process. And it’d be a good week or so before I could cover the remains of the damage with makeup.
I also worried whether my cheekbone might be fractured, but I’d monitor it as well.
Somehow, the physical wounds didn’t compare to the emotional ones. I’d left Dane at that house and, with him, I’d left a huge part of me. Making it difficult to breathe. But what was I to do? Just thinking of the ferocity of his wrath on Vale was petrifying.
Yet the devastated expression on Dane’s face when I’d told him to stay away. My God. That recollection sent razor blades through me.
I wiped away more of the fat drops that wouldn’t stop flowing. My doorbell rang and I jumped. Then I realized it was Amano. I wrapped the towel around me, adding my thick terry-cloth robe. I pulled the sash tight at my waist. I was still crying when I glanced through the peephole and opened up for him.
He arranged my clothes and bags neatly on the kitchen table.
Then he turned to me. “You don’t look any better.”
“I’ll never be better,” I said. More tears fell.
“Ari. Vale Hilliard isn’t dead. He’ll recover in a private facility. He won’t come near you again.”
“Dane has seen to that?” I asked a bit acridly. I didn’t understand how all of this worked.
“It’s complicated. Hilliard has disgraced his family by failing the charge given to him.”
Really, who were all of these people that they had such control over these background Machiavellian machinations? It was too surreal.
“So it’s over?”
With a nod, he said, “I think so. Dane’s with Ethan right now. They’ll figure it all out. But, Ari, he’s—”
“Don’t,” I softly pleaded. “I can’t talk about him. I don’t want to hear anything about him, Amano. What I want,” I explained as the apprehension and agony ripped through me, “is for you to take my laptop back to 10,000 Lux and tell Dane I quit. He’ll have to find someone else to fill the Events Director position.”
From what I’d gleaned over the months, Amano was not an expressive man. But he was running the gamut this evening. He dragged a hand down his face and said, “Ari, he’ll never accept that.”
“He has no choice.”
“You don’t understand what you’re saying … suggesting … doing.” He shook his head in dismay.
“I can’t be with him, around him. Not after what happened. What I saw.” My eyes closed. I envisioned Dane whaling on Vale. My lids snapped open. “There was no stopping him. I had to tackle him, Amano. He could have killed that man. I can’t be a part of that. Not now. Not ever.”
“Sometimes the lines aren’t black and white, Ari. There’s a lot of gray area when you’re dealing with billions of dollars and people who want things from you that they can’t let go of—and they won’t let you out of their crosshairs.”
“I’m going to naively stick with the adage that two wrongs don’t make a right.”
“Understood.” He headed to the door but spared a glance over his shoulder. “I’m going to stay in the SUV tonight, outside. If you need me.”
“Amano. You don’t have to make all these sacrifices for me. I’m not with Dane anymore.”
The tears flooded my eyes again.
“I can see that.” He watched the fat drops crest the rims and roll down my cheeks. “I’ll be here anyway.”
“Wait.” I reached for
his arm. “Wayne Horton. I think he’s your inside guy. Vale had him work on-property to send everything awry.”
“You’re sure?”
“Best guess.”
“Okay. Thank you. Call me if you need anything.”
I nodded. He left me to the crying jag that started anew.
How, exactly, would I exist post–Dane Bax?
I shoved a chair from the kitchen table under the doorknob because I was that terrified someone from Vale’s faction might break in. Despite the bodyguard holding vigil in the parking lot. Then I made sure all the windows were locked and I searched for things sturdy enough to set in the metal tracks to keep anyone from being able to slide open a window in the event they could bypass the locks. If there was a fire, no way in hell would the firemen get to me unless they crashed through my patio doors. Over those I pulled the drapes closed.
I settled on the sofa, my pulse still rapid. My heart aching like nothing I’d ever known before.
Deep in my soul, all I wanted was to be wrapped in Dane’s arms, engulfed in his heat and essence. I wanted all the beautiful and sensual sensations he evoked to chase away the terror and the shattered feelings.
Burrowing under the throw, I tried to clear my mind and calm my churning insides. I was highly alert to all the sounds around me, fearful even though I believed the threat had faded for now, with Vale in a hospital and Amano practically at my doorstep.
It wasn’t so much the shadows and the unknown that taunted me. I was devastated, missing Dane already and needing him so much. Especially now, after everything I’d been through.
But I refused to turn on my phone. I couldn’t renege on my convictions.
We were done. Through. End of the tragic love story.
That’s when the really awful, body-wracking sobs came.
And didn’t subside …
* * *
I didn’t check the next day to see if Amano kept his watch on me. Or the next.
I didn’t have to, because he rapped on my door a couple of times to let me know he had Dane’s physician with him. No doubt someone from the private facility where Vale recovered. Someone who stuck to patient confidentiality and didn’t call the police over this sort of thing.