As quietly as I could I clambered through the window and landed in the soft soil underneath. There was a clear line from here to the shed, and with a little luck, no one would spot me before I got there.
I rushed across the dead winter grass and opened the shed without making any sort of noise that could alert Blaine’s bodyguards. I felt mighty proud of my own stealthiness as I slipped in through the door.
But before I could open my mouth and call out for Blaine, the scene I’d unwittingly stepped into clicked into place—in crystal clear high-definition. I choked, managing to strangle off a yelp of pure and utter horror.
The shed was fairly big, and immediately in front of me stood a couple of large barrels that half hid me from view. Perhaps that was why Blaine didn’t see me. Or perhaps it was because he was completely focused on the man he had tied up on a chair in the middle of the shed. There was plastic wrapping spread out underneath him and splatters of blood covered it. His body was covered in bruises and lacerations.
Blaine swung his arm, and the chain in his hand whipped through the air and cut deeply into the man’s flesh. He screamed, but a gag in his mouth cut off the sound so only a whimper escaped.
The world seem to spin. My knees gave in and I halfway fell into a crouch behind the barrels, breathing deeply to not make a sound, even though my chest was tight with horror and grief.
I’d seen this scene before. Too many times to count. My brothers, my father, and their men had done this in our basement. To enemies, snitches, and people who failed to pay up.
Torture.
Blaine was torturing that man.
Metal instruments and ropes on the wall spoke their clear language of what this place was. This shed in my backyard. It was a torture chamber.
I had run away from my family to get away from a world where rooms like this were a part of life.
Another whack of metal against flesh rung through the shed and was followed by another, muted whimper.
I don’t know why I had allowed myself to forget what he was.
As open as he had been with me last night, it didn’t change the fact that he was dangerous to the core. There might be more than ruthless violence within him. I’d seen it last night. But this… this was everything I’d feared my whole life, everything I’d fought to escape.
As quietly as I could, I crept back out of the shed and back to the window. It took a bit of climbing, but I made it back into the house.
My stomach roiled, and I made my way to the bathroom to throw up again. I wasn’t sure if it was from the pregnancy or the violence I’d witnessed.
The pregnancy. The baby.
I pressed a hand to my stomach as I curled up next to the toilet while my dry heaves calmed down.
No. I couldn’t bring a baby into this kind of world. I couldn’t doom an innocent life to live through what I had had to.
Which meant… which meant I had to save it. I had to go somewhere where the child growing inside of me would never be subjected to the violence in a family like the Steels.
Sorrow warred with determination as I walked up the stairs to pack the few necessities I could fit in my hand bag. When I was done, I found pen and paper and sat down to write a note.
Whatever else Blaine was, the moment between us last night had been real. And the emotions in my heart that had finally been let out while we made love were real too.
Perhaps it was for the best. If I stayed, I would never be able to get free from this world, because he would be there—pulling me back in. And if I didn’t get out now, I would soon be powerless to resist.
It’s funny how things become so crystal clear when we’re about to lose them. As I climbed back out of the window and found my way over the tall fence surrounding the garden, I knew I was leaving behind my one true chance at love.
But I knew all that mattered now was to protect the innocent life in my womb.
Even if it was from its own father.
Blaine,
I’m so sorry.
I can’t do this. I can’t be your pretend wife—I can’t live a life filled with violence.
I have left London and I will never be back. Please, if you ever felt anything for me, if what we shared last night was real, then don’t come after me.
Let me be free.
Mira.
* * * *
Chapter 21
4 Months Later
Mira
The smell of orange blossoms and sea swept over my face as I made my way through the narrow streets of Barcelona’s Casco Viejo. I’d rented a small flat above a butcher shop not far from the café where I worked most days, brewing coffee and serving tables.
As every time I made my way home, I was thankful it was only a short walk. My ankles were always terribly swollen after a day on my feet, and my lower back ached something fierce. The shouts and hollers from the people filling the streets marking the beginning of the evening’s social events only made me yearn for my bed all the more.
Sighing with relief, I let myself into the stairway that led to my tiny apartment and climbed the steps with a hand pressed against my swollen belly. Every time I stepped foot on stairs the baby within would begin to kick up a storm, and the only thing that could stop it from demolishing my bladder was apparently the light press of a hand.
“Just as difficult as your father,” I muttered while attempting to unlock my front door with the same hand that held the bit of shopping I’d done on my way home.
Blaine. I bit my lip to stem the onslaught of mixed emotions the thought of him always brought on.
He had been looking for me since the day I ran away. I’d thought he would either stop caring once it was obvious I’d left the country, or he would have respected my plea in the letter to let me go. I’d been very wrong.
My advanced pregnancy didn’t make the stress of having to pack up and leave every four weeks or so any easier to deal with, but of course, he didn’t know I was pregnant. I’d made sure to take all traces of the pregnancy test with me when I left so he would never know his runaway wife was with child.
I gave into the urge to flop down on my bed for a few moments before I had to start dinner. I was exhausted every minute of every day, and all I wanted to do after a long day’s work was to go to sleep—but the baby had other ideas. Getting by on whatever service job I could find wasn’t made any easier by my constant hunger. “Eating for two”—yeah, right. I scoffed and rubbed my belly as the baby moved restlessly within. If my pregnancy appetite was anything to go by, I was expecting at least quintuplets.
I ate my dinner in front of the open French door overlooking the bustling street below. Then I went to sleep on my narrow single bed before the nightclub a few roads over got too loud.
* * *
“Hello, little cunt.”
The menacing snarl ripped me out of my uneasy slumber with a start. My heart kicked into overdrive the second my eyes flew open, but it was much too late to react.
Someone pressed a cold, sharp edge to my throat and grabbed hold of my hair before I could even orientate myself.
I cried out from the sharp pain in my scalp, but quieted down instantly when the knife against my throat pressed in in warning.
He had found me.
“Please, Blaine, you’re hurting me,” I croaked. Even in my panicked state, even after I’d fled from him for four months after seeing him viciously torture a bound and helpless man, some part of my brain didn’t believe he would physically harm me. I reached up to put my hand against his to try to calm him—even if he didn’t mean me harm, the knife was a pretty vivid indication that he was furious.
The tug on my scalp instantly eased as he let go of my hair.
“Look, I know you’re mad at me—” I didn’t get to continue before, out of nowhere, the backside of a hand impacted with my cheek so hard I saw stars. The blow was forceful enough to throw me back down on the mattress.
“Blaine!” I cried, cradling my cheek. I don’t know what was
more painful—the smack, or the shattering of what I dimly realized was the last of my crushed belief in there being any goodness in the man my stupid heart had fallen for.
“Blaine. You think crying out for your husband will save you, you dumb cow?”
I froze stiff on the bed, my tears drying from sheer horror. I knew that voice. And it didn’t belong to Blaine.
The naked light bulb that was the sole source of light in my rented accommodation flickered on, and I was greeted with the very image that had haunted my nightmares since I was eighteen years old.
Above me, next to the bed, my brother Michael crouched down. He was holding a sharp blade in one hand, pointing it at me in an unspoken threat. Behind him I could see my father, his armed crossed over his stocky chest and his mouth pressed into a thin line, and over by the light switch stood my oldest brother Devlen. A gun stuck up from the waistband of his jeans.
I stared at them in abject terror, my mind threatening to slip into the blank space it had when they found me in London, just to get away.
“Oho, would you look at that!” Michael hooted. He pointed at my stomach with his knife. “Either she’s gotten fatter than ever, or Steel put a bastard in her whore cunt before she gave him the slip.”
My father moved closer and I cringed back against the wall, my hands automatically flying up to protect my belly.
“Well, well, well. No wonder Blaine’s been searching for you so desperately for the past four months, huh, Aignéis? And here I thought we might just get the pleasure of blackmailing the Steels for a couple of million while showing all of London how easy it is to humiliate the so-called greatest crime syndicate in the city. Turns out our prize sow’s got a little surprise for us.” He knelt down next to the bed and gave me a cold smile. “What do you think the Steels will give up in return for the safe return of an heir to the empire? The entire city?”
I shook my head and pressed my hands harder against my stomach. As much as I wanted to flee into sweet oblivion, I couldn’t—not when it would leave my unborn child at their mercy. “They don’t know about the baby. They won’t believe you.”
“I guess we’ll just see about that.” Quick as a snake, he twisted around and grabbed my hands so he could pull them up above my head and away from my belly.
I screamed and bucked, doing everything I could to get free, but Michael rolled up onto my legs so he could pin them against the mattress with all his weight. My father stuffed a cloth in my mouth, cutting off my screams for help.
“There we go. Get her top off—we want to show Daddy what we’ve got to offer in return.”
Michael gave me a lecherous smirk before he lowered the knife to my stomach. I whimpered in fear and tried to squirm, but all I managed to do was pull the muscles in my arms.
Slowly, letting me feel the tip of the blade against my skin as he cut, Michael slid the knife up along the middle of my camisole, letting my stomach and breasts spill out.
“Devlen, take the pictures,” my father said.
My oldest brother moved across the room and pulled out his phone.
“Make sure you get her face and stomach.”
“And the knife,” Michael added, letting the blade slide down along the scars on my stomach. “Just so he gets the idea.”
“I told you you’d regret the day you betrayed your family,” my father growled into my ear while Devlen’s phone flashed, snapping picture after picture of my exposed and pinned-down body. “And if your beloved husband doesn’t come through, you’re going to regret ever leaving the Steels’ protection. I’ll cut that baby from your belly with a steak knife if he doesn’t hand over control of London’s underworld. So what do you think, Aignéis? Does he love you and your baby more than he does the Family?”
* * * *
Chapter 22
Blaine
“We’re pretty sure she’s in Spain now, but where exactly we don’t know yet. Sorry, boss.”
I gritted my teeth and pressed “end” on the call, clenching my fist so tight around the phone the casing protested.
Four months. It had been four months since I came home to an empty house and a note that damn near tore my guts out, and I was no closer to finding Mira than I had been then.
Let me be free, she’d written. Perhaps if she had left me before I bared my soul to her, before I realized that she was the one person in this damn world that could ever make me feel whole, I could have let her go. I would have at least tried to. But not now—not when I’d finally tasted what true happiness was like. I couldn’t give that up again—I couldn’t give her up without destroying myself.
I had hunted for her myself those first two weeks, until Louis and Liam found me in Berlin.
That’s when I learned how my father viewed the “embarrassing situation”—as he called it.
The twins told me that he’d ordered me to return home immediately and not waste any more resources on chasing down my “floozy of a wife.” That he was furious with me for letting her escape and humiliate the family, and wanted me to cut all ties to her.
The only thing that kept me from disowning him then and there was Liam’s and Louis’ hasty promise that they would continue the search, and their reminder that I’d be no good to anyone, let alone her, if I disobeyed our father’s orders and ended up in America as a result. Or in prison.
Since then, each of my brothers had spent a week here and a few days there traveling around Europe under the guise of business arrangements. Even Marcus came to my aid, without ever being asked.
Currently, I had one of my men searching Southern France, the last known place she’d been. He would have to come home soon, though, to avoid rousing my father’s suspicion.
I cursed into the darkness of my room. Every time I had to pull a man home and replace him with another, it pushed back the search by several days, which was plenty of time for vital trails to go cold. Because of my own father, my wife was out there somewhere, alone and probably scared.
My heart spasmed. I knew why she’d run.
I saw the long, red hair snagged on the door to the shed while I searched the property for clues as to where she’d gone. She’d seen me interrogate the guy I’d snuck out of bed after our night together to find.
If she was scared, she was scared of me.
But when I found her, I would explain. I would make her understand, and she would see why I had to do what I did. She had to.
A beep from my phone pulled my swirling thoughts from the void they’d been circling. I looked down and saw the little email icon in the top right corner.
Probably Lester sending me written details of Mira’s possible whereabouts.
I swiped my thumb over the display to open the mail—and nearly dropped it on the floor.
What flashed up on my email were not simple instructions. It was a photo. Of Mira.
My heart skipped a beat. Two beats. Three. Then, with a burst of pain and sickening fear, it began beating again, pounding in overdrive behind my ribs as if it was trying to burst free.
Someone held down her arms above her head, but the photo cut off just above her terrified eyes. I did recognize the guy holding a knife to her scarred stomach, though. It was her brother—the one who’d come to my office.
I stared at her swollen belly until my retinas burned from the pain of my phone’s sharp backlight.
She was pregnant.
She was carrying my child.
And her sick family had them both.
* * *
“I don’t care if he’s sleeping!” I punched my fist so hard against the door frame, the pictures lining the hallway wall in my father’s home shook. Sharp pain in my knuckles made my hand spasm, but I was too angry to pay it any mind.
Wesley flinched—a look that would have been amusing on the nearly seven feet tall and four feet wide body guard if I’d been able to feel anything but rage and desperation just then.
“You know he’ll be pissed, Blaine,” he tried to reason with me. “He�
�s made his feelings about your wife known. I’m just trying to save you from yourself, here.”
“I swear, if you don’t go get him right fucking now, I’m going to kick in your goddamn teeth,” I hissed.
Something in my face must have shown how serious I was, because Wesley finally held up his hands in surrender and sighed. “Fine. I tried. Go sit in the drawing room. I’ll wake him.”
I spent the next fifteen minutes pacing back and forth in front of the unlit fireplace, periodically glancing at the email. As much as it hurt to the core of my soul to see my wife so scared and vulnerable, her image was the only thing that kept me grounded enough to not start smashing furniture. I needed to keep a level head for her. And for our baby.
When my father finally came into the parlor, he was wearing a silk bathrobe and a sour expression.
“What is this, Blaine? Wesley says you threatened him in order to get me up? If this is about that goddamn wife of yours, I swear—”
“It’s about my goddamn wife and your grandchild,” I hissed, shoving my phone up underneath his nose. “She’s pregnant, Dad. And the Clerys have her. They’re threatening to—” it took everything I had to finish that sentence “—to butcher her. And my child.”
I watched my father’s eyebrows raise a quarter of an inch as he took in the image.
“This is why I told you to stop raising hell. You’ve made it abundantly clear that she means a lot to you, with how you tore through half of Europe before I dragged you back here. Of course she was going to get herself kidnapped. And what do the Clerys want, then? Money?” He sounded exasperated.
His tone made me bristle. “She didn’t do this. They did.”
“Indeed, they did. And maybe if you hadn’t cut all our business ties with them and threatened to ‘gut them like fish,’ they wouldn’t have bothered hunting the little tramp down to get back at you. Now, what do they want?” My father folded his arms across his chest and leveled me with one of his trademark no-nonsense stares.
I Need A Bad Boy: A Collection of Bad Boy Romances Page 72