Their Cartel Princess: A Dark Reverse Harem Romance Box Set
Page 77
Could the saint see into the past, too? Could she tell Cora why her sister and mother had to die all those years ago?
A familiar scent hung in the air here, one that made her think of leather and hay. What about the present? Could Santa Muerte look into her crystal ball and tell her if Bailey was still alive?
Cora reached out hesitantly, touching the smooth marble forming a fold in La Flaca’s robe. It felt frigid and silky beneath her touch, like ice. She shivered again, but not from the cold of that marble. It had been a few days since she’d last thought about Bailey. What could have brought on—?
“Beautiful, isn’t she?” came a voice from behind.
Cora jerked. When she spun around, her mouth was already open in shock. She stepped back, heels bumping against La Flaca’s plinth.
“You look like you’ve seen a ghost,” the man said. Despite the mid-afternoon sun blazing down on the garden, the hoodie he wore over his pale vest was up, casting his face in shadow. But she’d recognized that voice, just as she’d recognized his smell without realizing it.
She forced out a breathless, “You’re not dead.”
Bailey chuckled. “That makes two of us.”
She put her hands over her mouth, shoulders jerking as she held back a sob.
“Ssh,” Bailey murmured, stepping closer as he lifted the first two fingers on his hands.
“I thought—” But then she stopped speaking. Finn had told her he hadn’t killed Bailey, but she’d heard the gunshot. And for hours, she’d thought he was dead. Even after everything Finn had told her, some part of her feared she’d never know if he’d lived or died.
There was a moment of frozen time, where all she could hear was the thumping of her heart, and then she shot forward and threw herself at him. He made a surprised sound when she struck him, but then he wrapped his arms around her tight, squeezing her so hard that she struggled for breath.
“I thought I’d never see you again,” she whispered into his chest.
“Life is funny like that,” he said, still holding her and seeming as reluctant as she was to let go.
She pushed away from Bailey, staring up at him. “What are you doing here?” She drew away, and he finally released her, his gray eyes dropping to the ground. Then he glanced around, grimaced faintly, and guided her to a nearby bench. Sitting, he pulled her down beside him.
He closed his eyes briefly, as if he was summoning up the courage to tell her something. Which terrified her, because she knew Bailey feared nothing except horses.
“Your father…” Bailey inhaled deep, and then twisted to face her on the bench. He looked as if he wanted to touch her, but he held back. Just like he always had.
“I know,” she said.
Confusion creased his brow. “You know?”
She nodded. Swallowed hard. “I was there.”
“You were?”
“When Zachary killed him,” she said, frowning too. “I was there.”
Bailey’s face cleared in an instant. “Tony’s dead?”
She shook her head. “Yes. Why…what were you—?”
“Holy fuck,” Bailey murmured, turning away from her and putting his hand over his mouth. He squeezed his eyes shut, and then turned back to her. “You were there?”
She gave a half-shrug, opened her mouth, and then closed it again as Bailey reached for her. He touched the tip of his thumb to the scar on her cheek, tracing it as it curved along her cheek bone.
So much had changed since she’d last seen him; when she’d been convinced he would be the man who’d turn her into a woman.
She began, “Listen, Bailey, there’s something you should—”
“It wasn’t me,” he cut in.
Cora stopped talking, her mouth working for a few seconds before she could find a murmured, “What wasn’t you?”
He sucked in his bottom lip, and gave her a long, hard stare. “He thinks I betrayed him, Cora. But he has—” Bailey paused, clearing his throat “—he had it wrong.”
She wanted to grab his hand, but couldn’t bear to think what would happen if he pulled away. “Papa? Why?”
“I never told anyone where you were.” Bailey shook his head and added reluctantly, “Anyone who didn’t already know.”
Ice flashed through her. She straightened her shoulders, and splayed her hands on her thighs so she wouldn’t fist them in her lap. “You work for Zachary, don’t you? You told him where I was.”
Anger illuminated Bailey’s gray eyes. He looked away, teeth teasing at the inside of his lip. He had a habit of doing that when he was worried about something. She’d seen it too often when her father didn’t come home on the nights he should have, or when the guards on the perimeter of Swan Manor radioed in with an alert. Most of the time, it was just a stray cat. Once, a mountain lion. But Bailey had always ushered her to her bedroom, checked the sealed up windows and then closed her bedroom door with a brief, hard look in her direction. As if to tell her that everything would be okay.
“No. You’ve got it wrong. Is there someplace we can talk?” Bailey rose, and glanced around again. “Somewhere private?”
“What? Why?” Frustration made her voice waver. “Tell me what’s going on!”
Bailey sank down hurriedly, lifting a finger to his mouth. “Ssh!”
“I’m sick of this,” she hissed. “Just tell me what—”
“I need you to trust me, Cora.” Bailey leaned closer. “Can you do that? Can you trust me?”
She blinked at him, taken aback by the quiet pleading in his voice. “Just tell me what’s going on, Bailey.”
A strange light played in his eyes. He dropped his gaze, pressed his lids closed, and whispered, “I work for—”
“Cora?” came a voice. “Is that you?”
Bailey’s mouth snapped closed. He widened his eyes at her, lifting his shoulders. She shrugged back at him and rose, leaning around some shrubs to see who’d called her. Neo was heading down the cobbled path—straight toward them.
“Mierda!” she whispered. She spun around, about to tell Bailey to hide.
But he was gone.
“Cora?”
She stepped out of the alcove, crossed her arms over her chest to ward off a sudden shiver, and gave Neo a prompting stare. “What?”
Neo walked past her and glanced into the alcove, frowning back at her. “Who were you talking to?”
“Me? Uh…” Cora glanced around until her gaze touched against Santa Muerte’s statue. She pointed out the statue. “I was praying.”
Neo gave a half shrug, and turned to face her. “I’ve been looking everywhere for you.”
“Well, now you found me,” she said in a tight voice.
Where had Bailey disappeared to? Where the hell had he come from? Where had he been all this time? Why had her father suspected him of betraying her? A thousand questions roiled in her mind, all just as important as the rest.
How did he find me?
“So?” Neo snapped.
“So what?” Her voice was as hard as his.
“Tell me what the hell you’ve decided.”
At first, her mind was too muddled for her to understand what he was asking. When she realized, she rolled her eyes at him. “Holy shit, that was like an hour ago.”
“Several hours ago,” Neo said, his jaw bunching. “This is serious shit, Cora. This isn’t the time for you to be—” he waved a hand around him, looking lost for words “—hanging around in the garden.”
“I was praying,” she said through her teeth. “La Flaca helps me figure out what to do.”
Neo snorted and glanced up at the statue. “This thing is ugly as sin. I don’t know why my dad had it put up.”
“We can talk tomorrow.” Cora turned on her heel and headed for her room, ignoring Neo’s bleated protest.
“You’d better have an answer,” Neo called after her.
In reply, she threw him the finger over her shoulder.
Hopefully, Bailey could make out where
she was going. She had no idea if her room was a safer place to talk—for all she knew, Javier had bugged the place—but it was better than the garden where annoying capos could ambush her.
Her footsteps echoed on the stairs, but no second pair followed. She paused outside her bedroom door for a few seconds, pretending to struggle with the handle, and then went inside. She perched on the edge of the settee, smoothed her hands down her thighs, and then shot up hurriedly. This had been where she and Lars had almost screwed, before Finn had burst through the door and thrown him against the wall. Her cheeks flushed with that memory, and she pressed the backs of her hands against her face.
Her bedroom door opened. Bailey sidled inside, glancing through the crack as he carefully pressed the door closed, and then turned to face her with a grim expression on his face.
“Who?” she asked, taking her hands away. Her voice was surprisingly steady, but lower than she’d anticipated. “Who are you working for?”
Bailey remained silent, and then strode toward her. But, instead of joining her on the settee, he sat on the edge of the coffee table. Thankfully; she’d probably have blushed even deeper if he’d sat in Finn’s armchair. He opened his mouth, but then everything slotted together in her mind like a carefully crafted puzzle game.
Bailey had gotten into a compound so secure, she was still trying to figure out how to escape it. He’d known where she was headed, and the only person who wasn’t at the manor that night who knew had been…
A shock wave went through her. “Javier,” she repeated quietly. “You work for Javier.”
“Hold on, Cora. There’s something you have to understand—”
But her slap cut him off. She shot to her feet, fumbling in the small of her back for her Taurus.
Bailey knocked the weapon from her hand with a casual flick of his. She opened her mouth to scream, but he slapped that same hand over her mouth and pressed her into the settee. His weight settled on her, trapping her despite how she squirmed.
“Shh,” he murmured. “Just listen.”
She struggled furiously, managed to get a scratch down the side of his face, but then his other hand was around her throat. Strangling her.
She’d been such a goddamn idiot. Bailey had been the perfect spy. He’d always known where her father would be. Papa had shared information with him that not even his lieutenants had known. And he’d probably sent everything directly to Javier. How long had El Guapo been planning this? Getting her here, marrying her off to his son, stealing every single penny her father had ever earned? But, soon, her concern with betrayal was swiftly replaced with a concern for getting air into her lungs. She stopped fighting, lifting her hands away from Bailey and holding them up. Surrendering, if only so she wouldn’t pass out and be completely incapable of preventing whatever the man had in mind.
He was older than her by at least twelve years. The first few weeks after her father had appointed him as her bodyguard, she’d been as sulky as any ten-year-old could be about a man smelling of leather and gun oil following her around twenty-four-seven.
Sometimes, he wouldn’t follow her into her room; but those were rare occasions. She’d yelled at him, thrown things at him. And he’d endured everything with a tiny quirk to his lips as if he could weather any damn thing that came his way.
And that’s exactly what he’d done.
She’d gotten used to him over the passing years, had sometimes even forgotten he was around. When she would cry after having a fight with her father, he would stand in the doorway; not moving, not doing anything. But a few minutes later, a bowl of pistachio ice cream would arrive and he’d set it on her nightstand, and then guard the entrance to her room. Sometimes, she’d let the ice cream melt. Other times, she’d eat it, glancing up at his back and wondering if he was being kind or if he just pitied her.
“Are you listening?” he whispered, gray eyes wide and fervent.
She pressed her eyes closed, trying to nod.
As if satisfied that she’d hear him without gouging out his eyes, Bailey carefully released the pressure on her throat.
She drew air, coughed, and wrapped her fingers around her throat as she tried to get out from under him. He wasn’t as large as Finn, but he was still bigger than she was. Stronger. He had, after all, been the one to teach her Krav Maga.
“I was clean when your father hired me,” Bailey said. “Just a guy trying to earn a living.”
“And then?” she couldn’t help a sneer tugging at her mouth. “Javier paid you more money?”
“He threatened my family,” Bailey murmured.
Could she really be angry with him? She knew she wouldn’t sit idly by if someone threatened Finn or Lars. So how could she expect Bailey to?
“You could have left. You could have gone to work somewhere—”
“No, Cora,” Bailey interrupted with a mutter. “My options were limited to one: watch the Swan family and report back everything to him. That, or he would kill my parents, my sisters…” He sighed, and slowly climbed off her. He rubbed the back of his neck, and took a few steps back. “But that’s not why I’m here.”
She cocked her head to the side. “Then why? Why are you here?”
“Gabriella made contact with me about a year ago,” Bailey said quietly. “I’ve been working for her too.”
Her shocked expression must have prompted the flow of words that came next.
“She found something. A message, an email, I don’t know. Something linking me with Javier. So she contacted me. Paid me double what Javier was paying to find out why he was so interested in Tony and his family.”
Her laugh was acidic as she pushed herself up and tugged her clothes straight. “And you expect me to trust you? Why the hell should I do that when you obviously have no issue with betraying people?”
Bailey looked away. “I agreed to that before…before we…”
She crossed her arms over her chest to ward off a sudden tremor. It didn’t help, of course; that chill wasn’t coming from the room’s air conditioning, but from the coldness in Bailey’s voice. When he glanced up at her again, his eyes were the color of melting ice.
“That was before I knew you, Cora,” Bailey said. He came to his knees in front of the settee, gaze imploring her.
“You were by my side for twelve years. How long did you need?”
“Leave the past where it belongs.” Bailey took a hold of her upper arms. “Please. That’s not why I’m here.” Bailey shook his head, then gave her a gentle shake as if he wanted to wring the truth into her. “I wasn’t the first. Javier’s been watching you since you were born.”
Something cold squeezed at her heart, and for a moment it felt like he had fingers around her throat again.
“The faster you tell me, the faster you can leave,” Cora snapped.
Bailey’s eyes burned at that, but he didn’t argue. Instead, he pushed back his shoulders, inhaled deep, and said, “Javier was the one who sent your father that death threat.”
“You’re wrong. It was a rival cartel,” she said, injecting as much venom into her voice as possible.
Bailey shook his head, mouth a thin, hard line. “I delivered it, Cora.” He squeezed her arms. “Me. Javier gave it to me to give to Tony.”
She leaned back from him, but he tugged her back with a yank of his hands. Her heart had frozen in her chest, as had her breath. There was a whine in her ears like she was losing consciousness as Bailey’s lips parted again. She didn’t want to hear. She didn’t want to know.
But Bailey told her anyway.
“Javier wanted your father on the run. If you say Zachary West killed Tony, then it had to be because Javier drove him straight into the line of fire.” Bailey gave his head a hard shake, his mouth thinning into a grim line. “Javier’s dead set on turning the cartel into an international drug ring. But Tony didn’t want to know anything about it. I guess it was just easier for Javier to get your father out of the picture.”
“But…what…what
does he need me for then?” Cora said, in a voice that was barely more than a whisper. “He can do whatever he wants now. I don’t want to be part of this.” Tears burned hot in her eyes, but she forced them back with a hard blink. “I won’t fight him. He can have it all.”
“Don’t you get it?” His lips pulled into an incredulous sneer. “You’re his patsy. If something goes wrong, you’ll get thrown to the wolves.
“The…” Cora managed.
Bailey shrugged. “A rival cartel, the DEA, the FBI…” His eyes glittered with a resounding hatred. “Does it matter? Something goes down, he makes himself scarce while they tear you apart.”
31
Too far back
Finn waited for Lars to beckon him before he joined him on the roof. They strode to the furthest point from the stairs, Finn a foot away from the glass wall that fenced the roof’s perimeter. Lars glanced around and took out the binoculars he’d stashed away under his jacket.
It seemed lunch had come and gone; there was but one lone sicario outside on the patio, having a smoke as he stared out over Javier’s land. Clouds had drawn over the sun, turning a bright day into a dull afternoon. Not enough for rain, but enough that the day’s heat fled sooner than it should have.
Time kept slipping away; it had taken them forever to hunt down a pair of binoculars. They’d eventually found some in the library—a massive, double-story room that smelled of furniture polish, old books, and—for some reason—Cora.
There was also a telescope, an ancient world globe, and books inside display cases that were probably mint first-editions of something that cost a few million each.
Lars had been salivating to take a closer look at them, but Finn had dragged him out of there before they could lose any more time.
He wanted to be out of here as soon as possible, if not sooner.
“Watch the door, would you?” Lars said as he put the binoculars to his eyes. Finn turned, scanning the bar and the top of the stairs in case someone decided they wanted to take a dip in the jacuzzi or, like them, admire the view.