My Dark Desire: Chapter 32
My Dark Desire: An Enemies-to-Lovers Romance (Dark Prince Road)
The first sign that I needed to pause the brakes on the trainwreck that was my situationship with Farrow Ballantine came from Natalie, of all people.
She cornered me in the conservatory, where I sat with six laptops open, trying and failing to track multiple markets on the tiny 12-inch screens. âDid something happen to your office?â
Yeah. Farrowâs in it.
I wasnât avoiding her.
On the contrary, sheâd spent the past three days since the sauna incident dodging me every time I rounded a corner.
Occasionally, sheâd dip into my office and revisit our Go game, moving a stone here or there, but only when I wasnât inside. Which, pathetically, forced me to set up camp in the opposite wing of the manor.
I didnât look up from the screens. âIs there a reason youâre here?â
âJust concerned.â
You and me both.
Since when did I rearrange my life to suit the needs of another person that wasnât blood related to me?
Better yet, since when did Farrow Ballantine become someone whose thoughts, actions, and emotions I considered at all?
I shot up from the chair, startling Natalie when it pelted across the room. Her jaw almost dislodged itself after I began pacing the floor-to-ceiling windows.
Back and forth.
Back and forth.
I was going to erupt.
Three days.
Three fucking days.
Three days since Farrow confronted me in the sauna, forcing me to question my own sanity.
Three days since I felt her cum drip on my fingers and kneaded her assâher fleshâwithout coiling or vomiting.
Three days since the tight walls of her wet pussy caged the tip of my cock inside them, squeezing it for dear life .
What would fucking her bareback feel like?
That very question consumed my days and devoured my nights.
I was a man obsessed, and I couldnât focus on anything other than relishing the feel of her.
Suddenly, I couldnât remember why or when I found human skin appalling. I wanted hers on mine twenty-four seven.
Which brought me to my next problem.
Farrow showed no signs of warming up the cold shoulder sheâd given me since that day. I craved any sign of life from her. Any proof that she wanted my touch as much as I wanted hers.
And so, I found myself taking lengthy trips in my orchid garden, meditating four times a day instead of three, and roaming the hallways of my mansion like a haunted ghost, hunting for signs of her.
She was everywhere, and yet, nowhere at all.
In the random appetizer on my lunch tray that hadnât changed for seventeen years.
In the extra sheet on my bed beneath the comforter when the temperatures dropped with the season change.
And in my office surveillance feeds, which I checked to make sure that sheâd actually come to make her Go move.
Astonishingly, she completed her job to my satisfaction.
Iâd gone through every maid in the DMV to the point where I dumped ludicrous investments into robotic cleaning equipment in hopes I never had to deal with human incompetence again.
But under Farrowâs care, the manor never looked better.
The problem? She moved things aroundâyet again, forcing change on me.
She put flowers in vases. Shifted furniture from one place to another. Drew back all the curtains to let natural light flood in.
I shouldâve found it silly that she took pride in making my house a home. That she grinned to herself when she rearranged a fruit bowl on one of my kitchen islands or tilted a painting to the perfect angle.
She seemed completely content avoiding me, while I was on the verge of clawing my own skin off. Why werenât we talking? Teasing each other? Touching each other?
I was like a baby who had just figured out how to walk.
I wanted to do it all the time. Touch her hair. Her cheeks. Her tits. Her pussy.
On the fourth day of our radio silence, I finally cornered her.
She was in my garden, of all places, eviscerating a white rose bush to fill my six-figure art vases.
I figured she wouldnât take it well if I told her those roses shouldnât be placed in urns that were essentially historical treasures, some over 600 years old. The exposure to moisture alone would eviscerate their value.
The simple black-and-white maid dress clung to her curves, highlighting every arch and bend. Her hair, like molten gold, framed her shoulders and face.
She wore earbuds in her ears, bobbing her head back and forth as she took scissors to my well-tended flowers. She didnât hear me coming, even when I stood about a foot away from her.
Her scent drifted to my nose. She smelled of summer and sin; of the sun kissing a flower in bloom.
Since she wore clothes, I didnât think twice before tapping her shoulder to grab her attention.
She jumped a little, staggering from the bushes, and plucked her earbuds out of her ears. âJesus, Zach. You scared me.â
Right back at you. I am fucking terrified of you, Octi.
Instead of saying this, I knotted my fingers behind my back and pinned her with a dissatisfied glare. âMay I ask you a question?â
âNo.â
âIâll ask one anyway. Why am I getting the silent treatment?â
âWhat silent treatment?â She dumped a pile of roses into a bucket, wiping her hands over her apron. âYou have used every opportunity to tell me Iâm the help. Why would I seek you out and strike up a conversation?â
She was downplaying what we were, and it pissed me off. I had to take a deep breath and count to ten backwards.
I never got angry.
What the hell was happening?
âYou and I struck a deal,â I drawled, towering over her, using every ounce of my self-control not to lash out at her. Iâd always pitied my colleagues and friends who succumbed to emotions at the most trivial inconvenience. âAnd right now, you are not fulfilling your part of the bargain.â
âAnd you are?â She turned back to the bushes, grabbing the shears from the muddy ground and attacking the roses in full force. This wasnât cutting. This was decapitating. âI began fulfilling my end of the bargain, yet here I am, three weeks in, and I have no lawyer, no private investigator, and no lead to start fighting Vera with.â
So, this was why she was angry and ignoring me? Because she thought Iâd forgotten about my promise to her?
My jaw tensed. I had to massage it to stop myself from barking at her. âArrangements have been made.â
They were not, in fact, made.
Iâd planned to prolong the inevitable as much as I could.
âUh-huh. Sure. Super secret arrangements that nobodyâs ever heard about.â More rose-cutting. She was relentless. At this rate, sheâd leave my garden completely bare. She had no idea what she was doing. âHow very convenient that you kept it all under wraps.â
âIâm working on it.â My lips barely moved when I spoke.
Behind us, the balcony doors clicked open. Mom and Celeste Ayi, no doubt. We had lunch together every Friday.
Only, this Friday, Iâd forgotten on account of the fact that Iâd just discovered pussy and wanted my next meal.
âI donât believâ ââ
I grabbed Farrow by the arms, past caring what Mom and Ayi might think, and turned her to face me. âIâm afraid you are going to have to believe me. You have no choice. Weâve entered a business agreement. That makes us partners right now. When I said I made arrangements, I meant it. We have a meeting with my team of lawyers and a private investigator today at four. I was waiting for the stock market to close before the meeting.â
She blinked fast, her face jumping from emotion to emotion, starting with confusion and ending with hope.
And then she did something completely terrible.
She smiled.
She smiled, and I felt it everywhere in my body.
âYou did that?â
âYes,â I grumbled. âI told you I would. You should probably change into your normal clothes for the meeting.â
I did a quick once-over, angry that sheâd made me explain myself. Iâd never been in this situation before.
She nodded, fingering the velvety petals of a rose in her bucket. âI will.â
Pause.
I wondered if she knew my mother was watching. Probably not. She seemed deep in thought.
Farrow raised her gaze to meet mine. âDo I need to pay anything? A retainer? Aâ¦â
âIâll take care of everything.â I shook my head. âYou just have to show up and give us a rundown of whatâs happening.â
She nodded. I felt desperate for something. I didnât know what.
My fists balled at my sides.
Turn around, Zach. Walk away.
Instead, I just stared at her, hostility radiating off me in waves. Waiting for⦠What? A thank you?
I didnât want her to thank me. Thanking someone was formal in Chinese culture. It signified distance between two people, and I wanted her close.
âWell?â She licked her lips, scanning my face, seeming unsure herself. âDo you need something else?â
Your attention. Your impossible words. Your sweet pussy. Especially your sweet pussy.
âFor you to stop murdering my roses,â I blurted out instead, prying the sheers from her fingers. âYou have no idea what youâre doing.â
She laughed a little. âI finished cleaning the entire place and got bored. Humor me.â
I said nothing.
I was, in fact, humoring her. Letting her get away with things I never would anyone else.
âZachâ¦â Farrow frowned. âDo you want me to touch you?â
Yes. No.
Jesus, I have no fucking clue.
I felt like I was regressingâBenjamin-Buttoning myself back to high school, where I didnât know how to think, feel, or act around girls.
I tossed the shears into a bucket of fresh roses sheâd slaughtered. âYou can touch me, I suppose.â
Though the kind of touching I had in mind wasnât something I necessarily wanted my immediate family to witness.
Her lips twitched, not quite a smile. âTry again.â
My nostrils flared. âPlease, touch me.â
She raised a brow, clearly amused. âWhere?â
Anywhere.
Everywhere.
But I had to keep it SFW, seeing as Celeste Ayi was probably ready to break out the camcorder and offer industry tips.
âFace,â I hissed out, humiliated and elated all at once. My whole body trembled with the admission. âI want to feel skin on my face.â
It would be the first time since the accident. Since his blood dripped into my eyes, running down my cheeks like tears.
We stared at each other, and for a moment, the world ceased to exist. Birds did not chirp. Clouds did not sail overhead. My mother did not watch us with her disapproving glare.
Farrowâs chest moved with a ragged breath. She set the bucket of flowers down on the ground, her hands rising up to my face.
âTell me something to distract you,â she instructed, her smile soft, her voice silk. âSomething about the octopus.â
I shut my eyes. âIt has three hearts.â
âI bet it loves big.â
Her hands almost reached my face. I could feel them hovering in front of it. I stopped breathing altogether, bracing myself for it.
âIt is a tragic creature,â I countered, popping one eye open. âIt can never love. It is programmed to consummate its reproductive purpose, procreate, then perish right after. It never stands a chance to live.â
âCouldnât you call me a kitten, then?â Farrow scrunched her nose, looking annoyingly adorable. âIâd even take a bunny.â
âKittens are a generic choice. Bunnies belong in Hugh Hefnerâs mansion.â I opened the other eye now, shaking my head, resolute. âYou are an octopus. Smart. Sophisticated. Tragic.â
And then it happened.
Her palms clasped my face from both sides, bracketing my cheeks. I sucked in a breath and slammed my eyes shut. Her warm, damp skin pressed onto mine.
I forced myself to open my eyes. To look at her.
Her nails grazed my skin. A shudder thundered down my spine.
âLook at me, Zach.â She smiled. She smiled. âYou can do this. You can touch. Feel.â
We stood in the garden like two trees, sturdy but fragile, swaying gently with the wind, and I couldnât bear it. How everything slammed into me all at once.
The memories. The disgust. And the guilt for wanting to feel her skin, still, even though my father was dead, and I couldnât even remember his dying words.
âWhat happened to you?â she croaked.
I shook my head.
I couldnât tell. Couldnât repeat it for my own ears to hear, let alone hers.
âDoes this feel okay?â
I thought about it. âItâ¦Â feels.â Good. Bad. Complicated. âAnd thatâs more than I can ever ask for.
â
âZachary,â Mom barked from the balcony, dousing the moment with ice. âYou are late, and we are hungry.â
Farrow unclasped her hands from my face, darting a step back. Her neck flushed. âIâll see you at four.â
She turned away from me, picking up the bucket of roses and scurrying toward the front door.
âDonât leave,â I croaked, the voice coming out of nowhere.
She paused but didnât turn to face me.
âDonât go,â she whispered, and I didnât know why, but everything felt tragic all of a sudden. Like the octopus, creating life just to end her own.
Swiveling on my heel, feeling the sting of her hands on my face, and knowing I wouldnât try to scrub it clean of her touch, I made my way to the balcony.
Mom and Ayi sat on the marble banisters, staring at me like Iâd just landed in a cornfield on a spaceship with a Spongebob propellor hat on my head. Perplexed did not begin to cover it.
They looked like they were having an out of body experience.
âYou should be careful with the staff.â Mom spoke loud enough for Farrow to hear. âYou donât want a sexual harassment lawsuit.â
I didnât answer.
Growing up, people always told me, âSo good you survived.â
But had I really survived that crash?
I didnât think I did. Iâd lost too many parts of myself that day.
Still, I lived without living. After allâsurvivors are pros at going through the motions with the weight of everyone left behind on their shoulders.
And for twenty-one years, that was my fate.
Until now.
I was making progress. Slowly coming alive.
Lights were too bright. Food oversaturated with taste.
But I was no longer dead inside.
And that frightened me.