Corrupted Chaos: Chapter 1
Corrupted Chaos: An Enemies to Lovers Forced Proximity Romance
âItâs not me. Itâs you.â My boyfriend of almost a year patted my shoulder with his soft, sweaty hand.
I wanted to tell the jerk that someone didnât break up with that lineâit was supposed to be the other way around. But all I could do was stare at his phone in shock.
Weâd dressed as Harley Quinn and the Joker for my work party. It was an early October Halloween one, and Iâd been excited, even put together a really good costume, but as we were about to get out of the car, his phone had beeped with a text.
I didnât think much of it when I grabbed it off the seat for him, but when the screen flashed a pair of completely fake breasts at me, I had to tap the message open.
Who wouldnât?
Text after text after text came up.
Gerald Johnson III was everything Iâd wished for. Kind of. The neat box of emotions Iâd built for myself really complimented his even-keel attitude. He was your average working man with soft cheeks and blond hair, a quiet demeanor, and was amicable to almost everyone he met. Iâd thought everything about him other than his job was perfect. He had work trips that took him around the world. But his father owned a big investment firm, and thatâs what they had to doâor at least, thatâs what he told me.
And itâs not like I didnât trust him. Iâd been on the trips. Heâd shown me he was truly working on them.
Or so Iâd thought.
His last trip had been two whole months long, and two weeks into him returning home, he wanted nothing to do with me. So much so that I started to question if I was good enough, if something was wrong with me. Had I pushed him away?
Which, now Iâd like to say, was absolutely legitimate, considering the texts. But it wasnât my fault. It was his. I held the phone up for him to see, only for him to reply with that line. âItâs not me. Itâs you.â
My fault? How was him cheating on me my fault?
âItâs me?â I squeaked out, the lid of the jar that kept my dark side locked away turning just a bit. âLet me guess, I drove you to message this Lucy girl your dick on a platter. A platter, Gerald! Really?â
He shook his head full of blond hair and frowned at me with puppy eyes I used to think were cute. âBaby, I didnât want you to find out this way, but honestly, do you think I wanted to come home to this?â
He motioned at me. I peered down at myself, not exactly sure what he meant.
âI told you I needed you to try harder with this workout thing and to let loose a little. Instead, you didnât try at all.â
My heart dropped as my blood pressure skyrocketed. Break ups were always a mixed bag of anger and sadness but this time I was clinging to the anger.
I geared up to tell him off, but he kept going instead of letting me talk. âDonât get me wrongâI love how you look. I do. But you know I have a standard to uphold. I need a girl whoâs going to look the part. Lucy does. And you wonât even drink much with me at our charity events. You know that my dadâs company really needs me to have a social butterfly on my arm. I think we just need a bit of time apart for you to work on that.â
âA bit of time apart?â I sounded like a broken record repeating what he said. Did he think we could get back together after this? Was I dating that much of an idiot?
Heâd come home, yet his mind was still far away. I couldnât even get his attention long enough for a good lay, not that he was ever that great in bed. Sleeping with him was trying to scratch an itch that was just a centimeter out of reach. But Iâd been celibate for two months and I needed to stop that dry spell.
Now, he was trying to tell me I was no fun.
âLook, I donât want things to end this way. Maybe we can work on it.â His brow furrowed while he tried to make puppy dog eyes at me.
âOh really? Should we text Lucy then and tell her youâre done withââ
âNo!â he yelped and grabbed his phone away. âItâs . . . why donât we do this? Iâm only breaking up with you for now. Like I said, Iâve always enjoyed you, Izzy. Justâ¦honestly, Iâve been talking with my father and some of my friends. We think maybe you need to lose a few pounds before we get married, get into a better place where you donât work so hard and can be on my arm a little more, you know? Itâll be good for us to take a break, date around, and circle backââ
âGerald, I do not want to marry you.â I blurted out, my body cringing at the idea. Then, I enunciated each word, trying to make clear that this relationship was over. âAnd I donât want to work on things.â
âLook, I know youâre mad. But remember what your therapist said.â
My eyes bulged. Was he really going down that road? If so, I think my therapist would have understood if Iâd clawed his face apart right then. The jar creaked open a bit farther.
âSee. Youâre getting mad. You do have a temper and a tendency to react when youâre hurt. So I have to deal with that too. Itâs a lot. How do you think it feels for me to be dating an addict, Izzy?â
There it was. The thing heâd always promised me didnât matter. He promised to not use it against me and the motherfucker just did. âBut, Gerald, you saidââ
âI know what I said. I meant it. Itâs just really hard to have a good time when I know you canât drink too much or indulge in new things because youâre scared of your âaddictive personality.ââ He air quoted himself like it wasnât a real thing. âLucy is a nice breath of fresh air on the side. If you met her, youâd understand. We should all get brunchâit might smooth things over a bit.â
Nope.
Iâd sort of always known this guy wasnât the one for me. I should have had butterflies when he kissed me, right?
I should have wanted him home early from a work trip rather than for him to stay another day.
I should have, but I never did.
Everything with him was mediocre, but Iâd tried. Iâd stopped myself from breaking up with him time and time again because I knew that some things werenât meant to be only emotional highs or lows. If I didnât miss him when he was gone, so what? That was me being an adult and handling our separation maturely.
Now, though, it all made sense. âIâm going to go ahead and make this easy for you. Weâre done.â
âSugar, take a deep breath.â He pouted like a child.
âGerald, donât call me. Donât text me. This is over.â I opened the car door, but he grabbed my arm.
âIzzy, I do love you.â I sort of believed him. He was sweating now and cracking his knuckles with his other hand like he didnât want this to end. âPlease, sugar. I really do.â
He leaned in to kiss me. I think I was so shocked I didnât react at first, the whiplash of his speech caught me off guard. Then his hand went up my shirt like he was trying to cop a feel.
I jerked away and shoved him. âAre you kidding me right now?â
âWe were always good together like this. Letâs take some deep breaths and go to brunch with Lucy, baby. Itâll all be fine. We need you.â
âWe?â
âMe,â he corrected. âI need you. I love you.â His eyes were attempting the hooded, sultry look, but instead he appeared drowsy and stupid.
âThe fact that you think we were good together anywhere just proves that this was never a match to begin with.â I stopped myself from saying more. I was better at controlling my temper now.
My therapist was right about that.
âGood riddance, Gerald Johnson III.â I rolled my eyes and ripped my arm away from him as I got out of the car.
Of course, the man couldnât let a breakup be clean and easy. He had to roll down his window and make a fool out of us both. âGood riddance? I gave you everything. I just needed a little something in return. Not a whore going to a costume party with her big ass out. That should be for me to see only anyway.â
Right.
So, this is probably a good time to state that, as a twin, I wasnât the good one. Delilah was. She got the good grades, she was the one who never rebelled, never caused too much of a stir. The one who smoothed over a situation instead of making it worse.
I, on the other hand, barely made it through high school and got sent to juvie when I was so loaded I attempted to shoplift. I donât really remember it. It was a low point for me.
I had my reasons and I kept them locked away in a box under my bed.
This was who I was though. Even though I always had a family that showered me with love throughout my whole life. Addiction can affect anyone.
I didnât need to come from a troubled family or past to have drugs hook their claws into me. Fentanyl worked fast, manmade and potent. It took one time experimenting with a friend, and I was hooked. A few bad occurrences later, and that was it.
But juvie shaped me into one of the lucky ones. I got clean, I went to rehab, I tried not to look back.
Still, I wasnât the good twin. I really tried to be someone like my valedictorian of a sister. But if I was honest with myself, I was the fucking fireball you threw in when you wanted hell, not the angel whoâd bring you heaven like my sister.
Quite frankly, Iâd dressed as Harley Quinn for a reason. My shirt had Daddyâs Lil Monster printed across it, and the red lipstick contrasting against my pale face makeup gave the impression of outrageous behavior.
The costume was all about fun but suddenly, it felt right. I wondered why I was holding back. Why did a woman always have to suppress her emotions so she wouldnât offend anyone else? We were entitled toâno, we deservedâthe space to feel when weâd been wronged.
My costume fit the bill tonight.
I strode right back up to his car and dug into my purse. I didnât normally carry around spray paint, but earlier that day when Iâd been getting the last parts of our costumes, I saw the red spray paint on sale and couldnât resist. It was a vibrant bloodred. The perfect shade to draw the eye for a painting, or a bold color choice for restoring a piece of furniture.
I loved doing both things. They calmed my mind in a way most things couldnât.
The spray paint would serve as such a good part of my next piece, but it was about to serve another purpose.
My steps slowed as I uncapped the can. Had he not been so dense, he could have taken the hint and driven off as I shook it.
âIzzy, what are you doââ
The red spray went right through the window and into his face. âThe sex between us was never good,â I informed him in a monotone.
He screamed and hit the button to close his window as fast as he could.
I didnât stop spraying. I started to write asshole across the sleek black door, but he peeled away, finally realizing his mistake.
That mistake of his wasnât breaking up with me before the early Halloween party at the office. It was dating me at all in the first place.
I sighed a breath that felt fresh, clean, not as heavy as it had been, and looked up at the clouds. A moment of freedom outside my jar, setting free all the frustration and rage, felt freaking fantastic, like Iâd been stuffed within small confines and finally got to stretch. I smirked at the sky. Some higher power up there should have known a Gerald the Third wasnât made for an Izzy the First. I was too tweaked underneath it all to deal with someone everyone thought was such a stand-up guy, I guess.
Although, telling my family Iâd lost him was going to be a bitch. My mom had smiled the first time she met him, like he was going to solve all her problems with me. âHeâll help settle your soul, Izzy,â sheâd said.
How wrong sheâd been.
âSo, guess that relationshipâs over,â a deep voice rumbled from the shadows of a side street.
I jumped at the sound and spun around. I knew that voice. I could place it anywhere. I knew it and hated it with every fiber of my being, even though I hadnât heard it all year. âJesus, Cade. What the hell? Have you been there the whole time?â
Cade sauntered out of the shadows like a man made to be in them. I may have been the only one who thought that though. My whole work team claimed we were lucky to work under Cade because heâd accepted the proposal from Stonewood Enterprises that got them those nice corporate vacations and raises.
I didnât correct anyone, but I knew better. Stonewood Enterprises, along with Cadeâs whole Armanelli family, worked with the government. They ran the nation together, and we were simply a part of whatever they wanted us to be doing. Cade wanted me off government work. So, he got his ridiculous way.
Even so, Iâd tried to breach the system over the last year time and time again. Every single time, I hit a barrier. And he had the audacity to hack my laptop half the time to tell me to knock it off.
It was a pastime that I slowly started to let go of. I thought I had a good enough life with my boyfriend, and the work at Stonewood Enterprises, although boring, paid the bills nicely.
âLong enough to see you spray paint his face and ruin his car.â
âHe deserved it.â
âDid he though, Harley Quinn?â Cade cocked his head and eyed up my costume. âYou want to call the cops and turn yourself in or let him do it?â
Why was he asking me that question? Anyone whoâd seen this go down would have stayed hidden, not wanting to be caught in such an awkward moment. Yet, Cade thrived in it. He smiled at me like he was right in his element.
âAre you enjoying yourself?â I threw up my hands. âWhy are you even here?â
âWhy wouldnât I be?â
It was a ridiculous question. Cade ran cybersecurity teams for the government, the Pentagon, and for Stonewood Enterprises. He flew around the world, worked on top secret projects, and never, not once, had stepped foot into our data security teamâs office. Even though, technically, he had the biggest office there, he was never seen on our floor. âYou havenât been to your office at Stonewood Enterprises since the day I started.â
He rubbed his five-oâclock shadow. âRight, and what day was that again?â
I still had the spray paint. âI should spray you in the face too.â
He outright laughed at me, and it gave a whole new meaning to fingers itching to press something. My blood boiled even hotter than it had with Gerald. âAre you laughing at getting me moved or me wanting to spray you? Because I assure you neither is a joking matter.â
âWhy do you have that spray paint anyway?â
âI paint at home when Iâmâ Itâs none of your business.â
He hummed. âPrivate about some things, huh? Werenât so concerned about privacy when you were shouting about your sex life a minute ago.â
âWhat you heard between Gerald and me is none of your business.â
He shrugged in his three-piece suit. âEverything about you is my business, baby doll.â
âMade that pretty clear to me a year ago,â I grumbled, ready to let all my demons out of the jar. Iâd rehearsed what Iâd say to him if I ever saw him again. Without even asking me formally to stop doing something, heâd had me moved instead.
âAh, the real Izzyâs out to play tonight, I see.â
My gut clenched at the fact that he noticed, that he saw how I kept something hidden from everyone else. I hated that he so easily perceived what others couldnât, so I acted like I had no idea what he was getting at. âWhatâs that supposed to mean?â
He sighed like he didnât want to be bothered with my antics and started to walk toward the building. âIf you want a trip down memory lane from a year ago, go ahead and get your bitching out.â
âMy bitching?â I stomped my foot. âYou deliberately dangled a doubled salary over my whole teamâessentially forcing me to agree to move to corporate for a sham of a dealâbecause you wanted me off the Albanian trail.â
âIf you say so.â He shrugged his shoulders and chuckled, opening one of the large glass doors to Stonewood Towerâs entryway for me.
I marched past him, annoyed that he chuckled as if what heâd done was some insignificant inconvenience. âYou upended my livelihood to prove a damn point.â
His eyes narrowed at my tone. âUpended? You got a bonus, more time off, and your team moved with you. Iâm still waiting for my thank you.ââ
âAnd you know Iâm still going to say, âfuck you, asshole,ââ I said, stepping right up to him and lifting my chin so my words hit home loud and clear.
He rolled his lips between his teeth. And he grew bigger, darker, meaner. Then the smile that spread across his face was wide, showing his teeth as if ready to inflict harm. That was what men in power got: everyoneâs fear. I could tell he wasnât used to my tone, used to someone pushing back at him. âI really enjoy when you say it with a punch like that. When you really mean it.â
I literally growled and brushed past him toward the elevators. âI donât know why youâre concerning yourself with anything here at Stonewood Enterprises. Weâre fine without you.â
âYeah, looks like my employees are doing great things on the street with spray paint.â His tone held condescension.
âThat was between me and my boyfriend.â I wanted to pull out my pigtails, scream, and go home like a big baby. The man could grate on every one of my nerves within seconds and I knew he was trying to.
âWell, ex-boyfriend now,â he pointed out.
I couldnât handle him or my emotions anymore. And honestly, that little fact coming from his mouth probably stung more than the whole breakup.
âWhatever, Cade.â I scoffed. Now that the lid of my attitude had popped off, I wasnât sure how to put it all back in the jar. âIâm not in the mood tonight.â
No one risked talking to him like this. I knew that. A good hacker could dig up dirt, the best one could ruin your life, unearth all your skeletons, or send you to jail.
It was like we all knew Cade had something on everyone. And I knew from the few times in the past Iâd been around him, no one crossed him for that very reason.
That wasnât why I despised him though. Heâd acted as though I couldnât be trusted, and then heâd literally moved me to a place where I was no risk.
And I was still striving to prove him wrong. I donât know why. Quite frankly, it made this whole situation even more embarrassing.
âMy ex-boyfriend wonât report me. It would ruin his precious reputation,â I sneered, dropping the spray can back in my purse.
âHe should report you. Thatâs a criminal offense, ruining the dickâs car. Potentially his eyes.â
I narrowed my gaze at him. I had expected him to twist the metaphorical knife by telling me I was a fuck-up, but instead heâd called Gerald a dick. Even the slightest display of care from him had me pursing my lips, the rage dissipating. The ball of shame expanded in my gut, and the embarrassment of being caught in my childish act of retaliation was catching up to me. Letâs not forget the fact that Iâd been dumped too.
I wondered if heâd heard my exâs cruel words before Iâd sprayed him.
My vision blurred, and I knew he saw my chin tremble. âMaybe he will, then. Or maybe you can send the security tapes in and file a police report yourself.â
He took one step forward and tugged on a lock of my blonde hair before rubbing it between his fingers. âI deleted it from the cameras already.â
His admission, the way he touched my hairâit held me captive in a way it shouldnât. âWhy would you do that?â I whispered, peering up at him.
âYouâre my employee. It would look bad for us.â He shrugged, and his finger twined around a lock as he stared, like he was trying to crack a code. âYou dye your hair for this?â
âItâs just temporary spray-in stuff.â I waved my red-painted nails in front of my face, attempting to focus on his small talk rather than the terrible start to my night or the fact that my body was reacting to a man I considered my enemy.
âItâs too much for a work party.â Cade stepped back, taking in my whole outfit. âYou tried way too hard for this, dollface.â
At least Iâd made the effort to dress up and come to this party. The man in front of me didnât put forth an effort for anything. I roved my own gaze over him and tried not to sneer at his suit but the man was coming to a Halloween party without a costume. ââDollfaceâ?â
âHarley Quinnâs a household name after the movies. We all know her nicknames.â
I rolled my eyes. Cade would never give us a glimpse into his life; not even if it was only to reveal that heâd read all the comics. He was happy to pry into everyone elseâs life but would never divulge any small detail about his.
âWhatever. I read the comics, and I like her. And it was supposed to be cute withââ
âGerald would have been a terrible Joker,â Cade said as he scratched at his eyebrow, the streetlight playing over the strong lines of his face. In comparison to Cade, every man would have been a terrible everything. Cade could have played Psycho, Joker, Michael Myers, Batman, Superman, or whatever he wanted and pull it off. He had the height, the sharp, haunted bone structure, and maintained a great physiqueâalthough I wasnât sure how. He always seemed to be hunched over a device or computer when I saw him.
Except now.
âYou do realize you shouldnât even know his name, right?â I pointed out because Cade had a bad habit of prying into my life.
âI know everything about you,â he whispered, and my whole body shivered in a way it never had with Gerald, in a way it only did when Cade talked to me. âIncluding that you went above and beyond with this costume.â
âWell, you canât knock me for trying when you donât try for shit.â I snapped my mouth shut. I was still mad. I shouldnât let my emotions control me or make me lash out at my superior. And he was that, even if he was never around.
To my surprise, he pulled a mask from his jacket pocket as he tsked. âSo quick to assume I donât do shit, huh?â He emphasized my foul language and then stuck it back in the pocket, obviously not ready to put it on.
âA Scream mask?â I lifted a brow, not apologizing. âYou enjoy Skeet like the rest of us?â
âItâs an easy costume if you donât want to participate but have to.â
âOf course you donât want to participate,â I mumbled, throwing my hands up and turning to walk toward the elevators.
Cade was in charge because he was the best, but his lack of enthusiasm for being a part of the team was quite frankly disrespectful, especially when Iâd wanted a team lead position since the moment I joined Stonewood Enterprisesâ data security group. Iâd made it my mission to live and breathe my job. It was what kept me focused, kept my mind from straying to other things, and probably what kept me healthy most daysâboth physically and mentally.
If I didnât get sleep because I was working on cracking a code or helping another team member with an algorithm, all the better. Half the time, I did it because Cade never answered when a team member called or texted him.
I think most of the team had deleted his number.
âWhy would I want to participate when I can do more productive things?â He sounded off behind me, like he couldnât just let the matter be.
Would it be bad if I told him to stop following me and take the stairs up to the top of the building? It was 110 floors. And I knew the scenery would be appealing enough. The building had been designed specifically for the Stonewoods with its shape and silhouette giving the illusion of a wave rising to the sky. On the interior, a cascading waterfall surrounded the elevator, bringing the exterior architectural theme inside. With plush leather lounge chairs in the lobby, marble floors, and crystal chandeliers, it didnât feel like we were ever walking into work. Itâd probably take him the whole night to climb to the top floor, then I wouldnât have to see him.
âOh. I donât know. Maybe because you have a team here thatâs been working for you all year that you havenât seen and theyâre all very excited about the costume party,â I said.
âAre you?â he asked, and I saw one corner of his full lips lift. There was no way he could know I wasnât actually excited. I put in enough effort to appear so. He waved his key fob in front of the elevator doors.
âEven though Halloween is weeks away and a childrenâs holiday, I dressed up, didnât I?â I placed my hands on my hips.
As the elevator doors slid open, he walked in and replied, âYou did dress for the party. Ass hanging out and all.â
Cade Armanelli.
He was truly a villain, heartless and cruel.
His words, although just a repeat of my exâs, felt like a sucker punch to the gut coming from him. I told myself it was because of the embarrassment, because my boss had heard it. Still, I gaped and shook my head at him, my blonde pigtails waving back and forth. âYeah, thatâll do it. Iâll wait for the next elevator or take the stairs.â
His hand shot out and gripped my elbow to yank me in before the doors closed behind us. I stumbled forward on my white heeled boots, almost falling into him. He caught me just an inch from his body.
This close, I had to really crane my neck to look up at him, his height something heâd always had over me. Those eyes of his could have been the same color as honey if he was sweet. Instead, they burned dark into me just like whiskey would have burned going down my throat.
As if he could read my mind, he dragged a finger across my collarbone, up my neck, and then to my chin. âYouâre too sensitive, Harley Quinn.â
âIâm not,â I whispered, held captive by how softly he touched me, by how much it affected me. Iâd always been drawn to Cade. Even though I hated him, I could never ignore the gravitational pull he had over me.
âYou let a man you didnât even care about almost bring you to tears down there. You let him see the fire in you when he didnât deserve it.â His finger traced along my jawline as if he were contemplating something.
âThe fire?â I squinted at him, trying my best to understand him but knowing my body was taking over. And maybe the same was happening to him, because this man was supposed to be the one who kept his distance, who didnât indulge in idle conversation, and who didnât have time for small events like this one. âAre you okay?â
His jaw ticked. âIâm annoyed that I had to come out tonight for this, and Iâm even more frustrated by seeing a member of my team acting foolish. Why waste your anger on him?â
âYour team? Youâre barely here. You have teams all around the United States. Focus on them. And honestly, should I be madder at him or you for repeating his words?â
âMe?â He let go of my arm and took the mask from his suit jacket, then slid it on slowly. I donât know why my breath caught as I watched him. This wasnât a horror film. I wasnât in danger.
Or maybe I was.
Cade could do more damage to me than anything in Scream ever could.
He leaned in near my ear and whispered, âI definitely deserve your anger. And Iâd enjoy you throwing it at me, baby doll.â
I gasped at his admission and cocked my head to try to get a read on him. Yet, all I saw was that mask as he stepped back and rocked on his heels.
âYou donât make any sense.â I folded my arms across my chest, not sure I wanted to be anywhere near him, not sure why I was getting turned on by him staring down at me in that mask. He was a mobster underneath the whole businessman façade, and I needed to get out of this elevator and away from him.
He wasnât a neat little box like Gerald. He was a ticking bomb, and I would end up collateral damage if I stayed anywhere near him.
âDoes your boss really have to make any sense?â he asked.
âWell, you did just try to tear me down like my exââ
He cut me off, his voice low and muffled behind the mask. âI said your ass was hanging out. I didnât say if it was a good or bad thing.â
The elevator neared the top of the building, voicing the number of each floor we passed. Only ten to go, and Iâd get away from him.
I shook my head. We both knew what my ex had screamed at me. âEven if you donât repeat that I should be working out, we both know what he said right before. So if you want to insinuate it too, fine.â I shrugged, so over the night. I really didnât care if he saw the tears swimming in my eyes. He wanted me at my breaking point, and now he had me there. I leaned in. âBut you know what, Iâm done being polite. So fuck you, Cade Armanelli. You can go to hell right along with my ex.â
He lifted his mask just to smile at me, as if heâd won, as if heâd pushed his insanity on me. That sinister smileâit was scarier than any Halloween mask could ever be. âYou think Iâm just like your ex?â
What could I say? Most men were probably like Gerald. They wanted a woman I could never be. Sweet, put together, in shape, without baggage.
Cade held my gaze, and a silent battle waged between us. Did he expect me to admit all my feelings out loud to him? Because I definitely wouldnât.
I shook my head and glanced away. âYouâre all the same,â I grumbled, more to myself than to him.
Our conversation was about to ceaseâfive levels to go. Cade pulled out his phone, obviously he was done talking. Great. Iâd go to the party and get the hell out of there fast. This night was proving to be the worst, anyway.
Except the elevator screeched to a stop.
The lights flickered, then went out.