Present
My groin ached, and I flipped over in bed, my cock tenting the sheet.
I reached my hand underneath and fisted it, slowly stroking the hard muscle.
Fuck.
How did that girl always do this to me? She had me about ready to break and go ask her for it instead. I knew she wouldnât come to my room last night after Iâd left her in the drawing room. I knew that.
I just hoped I was wrong.
God, I wanted her. I could chalk it up to being without a woman for so long, but noâ¦it was Emory Sophia Scott and how good her smiles felt.
All the frowns were worth the trouble for just one smile.
Or so I used to think.
The morning light streamed through my small attic window, warming my chest as everything tingled, and my dick swelled more.
I groaned, closing my eyes and wetting my palm with my tongue, diving back down and pumping my cock faster and tighter.
From the moment Iâd laid eyes on her, everything about her turned me on and there wasnât a single way I didnât dream about fucking her. It was an obsession from the start.
But why?
She was moody, intolerant, judgmentalâ¦and while I knew exactly where her distrust and hard heart came from, she refused to warm toward me after all this time. If she hadnât by now, she wouldnât.
Loving a guarded girl, I had realized, was a pyrrhic victory. The rare moments of happiness came at too great a cost.
But there she was, always in my dreamsâbeautiful and bareâletting me ride her and lose myself in her lips and scent.
I stroked again and again, my cock hard and fully erect, the images of her buried in my sheetsâsoft and sweetâfilling my head as my cock dripped for her.
And I went with it. Fuck it.
I tried to forget her with others. I went with women who looked nothing like her, so I could get her out of my system, but at the end of the day, it only hurt me more.
I tightened my stomach, feeling myself coming, and I envisioned myself inside her, going hard and making her moan.
Because maybe if I could screw her, I could leave, and it would be like someone flipped a switch where she no longer mattered.
âFuck me, baby,â I gritted out, tugging on my dick faster and faster. âCome on, spread your legs.â
In my head, there she wasâplastered to the mattress under my weight and my nose buried in her hair as I drove into her. She kissed me and smiled and God, she wanted it, the soft skin of her tight stomach sticky with sweat as I moved on top of her.
I tensed, jerked, and threw off the sheet, spilling all over my hand, cum shooting out, and I swear I could feel her tight heat over my cock. I knew exactly what she felt like.
I gasped and exhaled, melting into the bed as the orgasm wracked through me, and I grunted, letting it course.
Fuck.
Finally, I opened my eyes.
A pyrrhic victory. And here I was, pretty sure that no cost was too great to just be able to hold her. It kind of scared me what Iâd pay.
Rising from the bed, I grabbed a cloth and cleaned up, tossing it down the laundry chute before yanking a towel that was hung over the chair and wrapping it around my waist.
Rory was always in the steam room before the rest of us were awake. I needed some time alone with him, and it had to be today.
Descending the stairs, I headed down the hallway, almost hesitating at her room, tempted to make sure she was fine, but I passed it by and jogged down the next set of stairs, heading through the foyer.
Taking a left in the quiet house, I walked down the dark hallway, toward the natatorium, and entered, swinging open the frosted glass door of the steam room.
As routine as a serial killer, Rory Geardon sat on the tiled bench, leaning against the wall as vapor billowed around him.
He opened his eyes.
âHey,â I said.
He jerked his chin at me. âHey.â
âGoing hunting soon?â
âYeah.â He sighed. âYou coming?â
âMaybe.â I could use some fresh air, but I wasnât leaving her in the house alone, either.
I sat a few feet away, the heat coating my skin like a blanket.
I loved steam rooms. It detoxed me, relaxed me, and reminded me of home. The one at Hunter-Bailey in Meridian City was twice as big, and it was where Michael, Kai, and I had some of our most important business meetings. If I wasnât too hungover that day.
âSo, Devilâs Night, huh?â Rory mused at my side. âThis Thunder Bay of yours is starting to sound like an adult Disneyland.â
I grinned. âI miss it.â
He grabbed an extra towel heâd brought in and wiped down his face. âEven though thatâs where your family is?â
He assumed I didnât want to see my family. He thought my parents sent me here, so why would I want to go back? Like Micah and Aydin, Rory didnât have any faith or trust in the ones who gave up on him. There was no going home for them.
Not really.
But my situation was different. âI didnât deserve to go to prison, but⦠I mightâve deserved this.â It got me clean and sober. âBesides, the family I chose would never send me here. Theyâre what Iâm returning to,â I told him.
âWell, Iâm never going home,â he replied. âI know that without a doubt. My mother wonât risk it.â
Meaning it wasnât a choice of going back. He never thought he was actually getting out.
And after what he did, I had to agree they werenât completely unjustified in their concern.
Rory was like the Terminator. Rule of law or not, the mission was the only thing he saw. It was like tunnel vision. Those kids deserved what they got, and maybe he seemed to enjoy himself, but whether or not he was wrong was a matter of opinion.
As the son to an ambassador to Japan, he was a liability.
To me, he was perfect.
âAnd if I do get out of here,â he continued, âsheâll give me some hotel to run on some low-population island somewhere where I wonât draw notice.â
âWill you draw notice?â I asked.
He breathed out a laugh but didnât answer the question.
âYouâre not unique,â I told him, resting my head against the wall and closing my eyes. âEveryone has that point of absolute clarity where conscience isnât a factor. We are who we are, and we want what we want, and thereâs no question of what has to happen. The only difference between you and the rest of the population is that you reached that point and most people will never reach it.â
Not many have the opportunities to be driven to a point of despair or survival and look danger in the eye.
âWhat you did was calculated,â I said in a gentle tone. âIt needed to be done.â
Heâd found Micah, but he still hadnât found a home, and I had no intention of leaving him to rot here.
âIâm lucky,â I said, almost to myself. âI have a family full of people who know what going over the edge feels like. They know thereâs a place inside of us where you make the rules instead of follow them. Iâm not alone.â
Out of the corner of my eye, I saw him turn his head and look at me.
âTheyâre a storm,â I told him.
He remained silent for a moment, and I could feel the wheels turning in his head. Heâd fit in nicely with my friends.
Leaving the thought to linger, I rose to my feet and walked for the door to go shower.
âWhat did she do to get sent here?â he asked before I had a chance to leave.
I gripped the handle, still.
Dread settled inside me, because sheâd interrupted my plans, and things had changed whether I wanted to face it or not.
Would I proceed, considering her a factor?
It wasnât even a question.
âJust like the rest of us,â I said, âshe knows what she did, and no one here is innocent.â
I left the room, but instead of heading to the showers, I charged back up to my bedroom, the house still asleep as I closed the door and placed a steel bar underneath the handle.
Walking to the bed, I pulled off the fitted sheet, lifted up the mattress, and flipped it over. It toppled, partly on the bed and partly on the nightstand, the lamp falling over and extinguishing.
Reaching inside the tear on the bottom, I slid my hand between the springs and pulled out the black laptop, walking it over to the table near the window for some light.
I opened it, powered it up, and waited for the chat to load.
Are you there? I typed.
Copy, he wrote after a pause. He wants you extracted. Soon.
Not yet. Thereâs aâ¦development.
I didnât want to say too much in case someone was spying on us, and where she was concerned, I didnât know who was involved.
Is there anything youâre not telling me? I asked.
Such as?
I cocked an eyebrow. Have you sent anyone else in?
I waited a moment for his response, and then the letters flashed in green. No.
Youâre sure?
I donât lie to you, he said.
I exhaled, relaxing my shoulders. Okay, then. It wasnât my people.
Either Michael, Kai, and Damon were working on their own, or someone else was behind this. I still knew nothing, but at least Iâd ruled out anyone on my end.
More text came in. How many and when? he asked.
At least four, I typed.
But then I noticed Taylor outside, leaning against the glass solarium door, peering in at something.
What was he doing?
Quickly, I typed the rest, finishing my sentence. Maybe five, I told him. Hold until you hear from me.
Through the glass roof, I spotted two figures moving. I thinned my eyes, trying to make it out.
Aydin.
He was holding Emory.
I reared back, my gaze sharpening.
Are you safe? Came the next question.
But I was gone.
Closing the computer and storing it, I pulled on some sweat pants and buttoned them up before jogging down the stairs. I yanked the steel bar away and threw open my bedroom door.