: Part 1 – Chapter 8
The Finisher (Dark Verse Book 4)
ZEPHYR HAD ONCE GONE on a school trip from Los Fortis a hundred miles south, and that had been the most adventurous sheâd ever been. Aside from that, the only trips sheâd been on had been to visit her aunts who lived an hour away. Sheâd never left the country, much less the continent, and never been on a flight, much less one like this.
Victor and Diaz, another guy sheâd been introduced to, less hot but more charming, sat in the back of the private plane as their security detail on the trip. Hector was staying back, clearly being Alphaâs second-in-command, to keep everything under control for the two days theyâd be gone.
She looked around the inside of the private jet sheâd been ushered and strapped onto, at the lush beige seats and gleaming wooden table and the neat walls, and it truly sank in for the first timeâheâd made it. From the boy she had first seen with the torn clothes to the man who now wore an expensive leather jacket and owned a private jet, heâd made it out, and though she couldnât tell him, she felt something like pride bubble inside her. And lord, she wished Adrianaâthe kind, dying woman who had befriended a scared little girl in a strange place to give her comfortâcould have seen her son now. Sheâd have been proud.
Zephyr turned to the window and blinked rapidly, trying to clear away the burn in her eyes and the sting in her nose. He was suspicious about her motives anyway, and she didnât need to give him more reason to think she was crazier and cried at nothing.
A slender blond with really nice hair handed them some water. âWould you like anything else?â
Zephyr thanked her. âJust a quick question, is that your natural hair color?â
The blond blinked in surprise. âYes.â
Damn. âItâs a lovely shade. Youâre rocking it.â
The attendant gave her a surprised smile and left, and she turned to see the man across from her watching her as though he was trying to figure her out.
âWhat?â she demanded, slightly conscious of the way he was analyzing her.
He didnât say anything for a while, just studying her, and Zephyr tried to relax, wondering what went on in his head.
âLetâs get some things straight between us,â he said as preamble, and Zephyr braced herself. âYour grandmotherâs fund might be the excuse youâre giving to me, and a whirlwind romance an excuse youâre giving your family, but I know you have another motive for marrying me. The only reason youâre my wife right now is that Iâm intrigued. I donât know what your endgame is, but I will figure it out, so donât think Iâm fooled for one second.â
God, she hoped he figured it out, but if he didnât remember her after spending all the time with her, she doubted he would. But she wouldnât tell him that. Knowing how cynical he was, it would backfire in her own face. His lack of memory probably had something to do with his eye injury. Maybe, his brain had blocked some stuff out to protect him. Sheâd seen that happen in movies but it was realistically plausible, and until she spoke to someone who knew trauma about it, she wasnât going to say a thing and risk retraumatizing him.
No, she had to make him love her all over again, this new him with this new her. It could happen.
âAnd I donât know where you got your information about me,â he continued, his voice rough and deep, reminding her of wilderness. âBut I will find that out too. I hope it ends up being only for your grandmotherâs heirlooms because you wonât like the alternative.â
He was kinda hot when he was threatening her, though she doubted heâd appreciate it if she said that to his face at the moment.
âNow I just need to figure out if youâre one hell of a liar or not.â
Zephyr took a sip of her water. âIâm an open book.â
Alpha mimicked her movement and drank his water, the motion of the muscles in his neck very sexy. God, heâd gotten sexier over the years, and she had no shame in admitting she wanted him in bed, out of bed, against the wall, whatever way she could have him.
âJust in case youâre not a liarââ he placed his glass on the table between them, his hand enhancing the fragility of the glass, ââconsider this a simple warning not to expect anything romantic from this relationship. My curiosity about you does not equal romantic interest. If you expect anything on those lines, you will be disappointed. I donât love.â
Liar. He did love, he just didnât want to. But she knew he had his shields in place, and this Alpha clearly had a shit ton of trust issues, so she didnât take his warning lightly. Sheâd have to wade through these waters with the baggage of his past and hope they could make it to the shore.
âToo bad,â she shrugged lightly. âI tend to get attached to my lovers.â
âIâm not your lover,â he reminded her.
She smiled.
âI wonât be your lover either.â The side of his jaw ticced. âLust leaves me empty now. Itâs better in the long run anyway.â
âSo Iâll be what⦠your roommate?â she huffed a laugh.
He tapped his fingers on the table between them. He liked tapping things. God, her brain was a smutwreck.
âYou can have your own room.â Tap, tap, tap. âFor the duration of the marriage, letâs just share each otherâs company. I find you interesting enough. We can be cordial, but itâs best not to complicate things more by adding anything sexual in the mix.â
âWe have chemistry,â she pointed out.
âA pity kiss doesnât count.â
Pity kiss, her ass. Heâd been as into it as she.
âItâs hot chemistry,â she leaned forward.
He shrugged. âI had chemistry with my sister-in-law to be. Doesnât mean I acted on it.â
Oh wow. Zephyr blinked and processed the fact that she would get to meet someone heâd considered being with.
âChemistry lies, Zephyr,â he went on after dropping that bomb.
âThen what tells the truth?â She tilted her head to the side, curious about his thought process.
âHeart,â he stated, no affliction in his voice.
âAnd what does yours say?â
The unscarred side of his lips lifted. âNothing. Fucker hasnât spoken in years. Itâs a dead, scarred piece of useless muscle.â
God, it hurt her. It hurt her that heâd built himself a tower with walls so high it had become impenetrable.
âYou are hope, sunshine. Hope for a better life.â
The boy whoâd told her that clearly lived on the tower, unreachable. But she would scale the walls if she had to, get to the top, and rescue her lover. She would give him hope again if it was the last thing that she did.
His plan to stay away from her wouldnât work, but she kept that to herself. She would tempt him and seduce him until he gave in. There was nothing more powerful than a woman on a mission. Telling him her plans involved some solid skin slapping probably wasnât for the best for now.
She raised her glass of water to him. âTo chemistries that lie.â
He raised his. âAnd hearts that die.â
Oh boy, he had no idea the CPR she had planned for him.
They went quiet, but companionably. Zephyr took out her ebook reader and pretended to be engrossed in a novel while covertly watching him; he simply looked out the window, lost in thought. The attendant came again with some overloaded sandwiches and Zephyr put her reader down, happy to have an excuse to engage him in conversation again.
âI thought youâd be working on your laptop or something, master of the universe as you are,â she teased, unwrapping her sandwich.
âI canât read,â he told her simply.
Zephyr paused, completely taken aback. She hadnât been expecting that reply.
Her surprise must have been evident on her face because he explained. âI didnât grow up with much money. My ma sent me to school but I dropped out after she passed away.â
âIâm sorry.â She extended her hand and gave him a soft squeeze, surprising him. âYou mustâve learned to read by then.â
âYeah, but when this happenedââ he pointed to his eye patch ââreading smaller things got hard. I just stopped after a while.â He seemed to shake himself, watching her curiously with his single eye. âI donât usually talk about it.â
A little piece of her heart melted. âYour secret is safe with me.â She gave him a small smile and watched him look away, clearly uncomfortable at having shared so much. She let him be, noticing now how he slowly peeled the wrapper on his sandwich mostly with his left hand and wondered what little everyday things that most people took for granted he had to work hard to accomplish. Was everything in his house sound-controlled? Did the injury affect more than his vision and memory? His hearing? His sense of balance? Sheâd seen him fighting and moving well enough but was that natural or something heâd trained himself to do?
Something occurred to her then. âIs that why you didnât reply to my texts?â
He looked up, putting the sandwich down. âI donât like phones. And I donât text anyone. People who have my number are business contacts. They just call.â
And there sheâd thought heâd ghosted her. She needed to be more considerate of his new body, and the ways it affected him. âSo I can just call you now?â
He grunted, focusing on his sandwich.
âWill you save my contact as wifey?â
The look she got would have flayed the flesh from a lesser mortal.
Chuckling, she took a bite of the chicken sandwich, the cheese melting in her mouth, and groaned before stopping herself, finding him looking at her. The insecurity reared its ugly head, especially when eating with people. Used to people nagging her about what she ate, she half-expected him to do the same, half expected him to go âthatâs a lot of cheeseâ or âyou should eat only twoâ.
He looked at her mouth, simply picked up his own sandwich, took a bite, and nodded. âHmm.â
And that was that.
Zephyr sat for a second, looking down at the bread, processing what just happened.
Nothing had really happened, but something had happened.
Born in a family of tall women with perfect figures who didnât gain an inch no matter what they put in their bodies, Zephyr had always been well-intentionally teased about being short and full-figured by her mom, her aunts, her cousins, everyone. Zen, though adopted, fit in more with their familyâs genetics than she did.
When sheâd been nineteen, a hormonal imbalance had made her rapidly gain weight. Sheâd spent the next few years on medication, bringing the hormones and the weight down, and ended up being curvy as hell, only amplified by her short height. She did Pilates diligently, her body was flexible and strong, and now even though she was the healthiest that sheâd ever been, people around her somehow always ended up telling her, in the most well-meaning way possible, to lose a few more pounds. Sheâd look âso much prettier.â She was already fucking pretty. She had her own sense of style, she took her medication, and took care of her body. But it was the first time someone, aside from Zen, had eaten with her and not pointed it out.
Maybe it was because his own body was imperfect by other peopleâs standards. Maybe it was because he was a man who didnât even notice or think about it.
Whatever it was, he just did it.
And then, he expected her not to have any romantic notions. She was already a goner.
She took another bite of the delicious sandwich, enjoying the companionable silence as they both ate, silently falling a little more in love with the new him, enough for the both of them until he could catch up.