My Dark Desire: Chapter 51
My Dark Desire: An Enemies-to-Lovers Romance (Dark Prince Road)
Like all gusts of hope, mine died a slow, cruel death.
Iâd hoped for another blowjob from Farrow before lunch.
Instead, I received numerous interruptions from Natalie, impeding my scheduled video conferences and business calls.
Then, Mom dropped by to complain about my lack of response, urging me to download a tracking app in case I ended up in a ditch somewhere.
Genuine tears leaked from her eyes, and I knew the latent anxiety from learning of the crash never actually left her.
Oliver came next with an absurd request to borrow my home for an orgy. I kicked him out, literally, but he only pivoted, asking me to do it againâharder.
And still, no sign of Octi.
I checked the surveillance cameras.
Hallways. Kitchens. Living areas.
Nowhere.
Stop with this obsession. Concentrate on your work.
Two hours in, that proved impossible. I tried to feed myself the excuse that I was checking in on an unruly employee as I rose from my seat and made my way to her room.
I knocked on her door, feeling like a certified idiot. It was my house. She was under my payroll.
Why did I feel so out of control?
âFarrow. I know youâre in there.â No answer. I pressed my elbow to the door, my nostrils flaring. âYour carâs parked out frontâwhere I should be parking, by the fucking wayâand all my healthy snacks have been raided overnight.â
Finally, her unapologetic voice came from the other side of the wood. âThose cashew energy balls are the bomb. You need to buy more of them.â
Sheâd spoken with her signature sass, yet I picked up on something fragile. Brittle, even.
My hackles rose all the way to the sky.
âOcti?â I replayed the last forty-eight hours, sifting through my memories. âDid I do something wrong?â
âShockingly, no. Itâs not you.â
âCan I open the door?â
âIâd rather you didnât see me like this.â
âLike what?â
âVulnerable.â
âFarrow.â I closed my eyes, drawing a breath. âIâve shown you the darkest, most depraved sides of me. I bared my soul to you. All Iâm asking is to catch a glimpse of yours.â
The world tilted on its axis as I waited for her answer.
Finally, she said, âYou can come in.â
I pushed the door open and stepped inside, closing it behind me. Natalie lurked somewhere in the houseâConstance, too, maybeâand I felt protective of Octiâs privacy.
She lay in bed, her long legs tangled in the satin sheets, her face buried in a pillow.
She wore nothing but an oversized sweatshirt, somehow looking lovelier than any girl Iâd ever seen in a ballgown. Her golden hair splayed across the pillowcase like liquid sun rays.
Something tightened in my chest at the sight of her.
This better be a heart attack, Zachary, Momâs voice warned inside my head.
I rushed to her bedside. âWhat happened?â
Iâd never seen her cry or anything close to it. In fact, one of the reasons this woman appealed to me so much was the fact that she was stronger than tungsten.
âWho did this to you?â I demanded.
My hands found her back, rubbing it back and forth as I sat on the edge of the mattress.
Face still buried in the pillow, she fished her phone out from under her chest and tossed it in the general vicinity of my hand. âThis is what I woke up to.â
A New York Times article popped on the screen, the headline bolded.
Farrow Ballantine:
Prodigy, Talent, CHEAT.
âCheck out the news tab under my name.â The silk muffled her moanânot quite a cry but a sign of her obvious misery. âJust have a bucket ready in case you need to vomit.
â
Dozens of scandalous headlines graced all of the leading sites.
Farrow Ballantine Officially Kicked off the Olympics for Throwing Match.
Fencer Farrow Ballantine Lost on PurposeâShould Team USA give her another chance?
Farrow Ballantine âCheatedâ the System:
A report.
Nothing about these headlines surprised me.
Iâd dug all this up in my deep-dive prior to hiring her.
Shortly before returning to the States, Farrow had thrown her last match in Seoul.
The little cheat somehow managed to keep it under wraps, handling this internally with USA Fencing and the Olympic Committee.
That I didnât know how sheâd pulled off.
The woman had less connections than a prepaid phone.
âMy future as a fencer is done. Iâm toast.â She shifted, hugging her pillow to her chest. âIâm never going to make it to the Olympics now.â
I checked her cheek for wetness.
Nothing.
Still, she sniffled, fighting a fresh wave of tears.
âYou need to tell me what happened, Octi. From the beginning.â I brushed her hair away from her face, mainly as an excuse to touch her. âThink you can do that?â
She rolled on her back. I got a full glimpse of her face now. Nose pink, eyes bloodshot, hair a tousled mess.
I balled my hands into fists to stop myself from breaking something.
Farrow licked her lips. âPromise not to judge?â
The one who needs judgment is me.
Much to my horror, you could set the entire world aflame and Iâd hold your fucking earrings and cheer you on from the sidelines.
âPinky promise.â
She scooted up, plastering her back against the headboard as she peeked at me.
Her teeth sank into her lower lip. âMy last day in Seoul, I did something⦠bad.â
âElaborate.â
âIâd just received a phone call that Dad died in a freak accident. A distant aunt told me. Not Vera. Not Reggie or Tabby.â Her gaze dropped to her lap. âI tried reaching Vera via email and phone. I even sent a neighbor to knock on her door, but she dodged me.â
I swore, looped an arm around Faeâs waist, and carried her onto my lap, her hair spilling down my leg like a golden waterfall .
Fae blinked up at me, relaxing into my thighs. âLater that day, I found out that sheâd canceled the card Dad set up for me to use in Korea. She emptied my joint bank account, too, including my personal savings I kept there. She knew I wouldnât be able to buy a plane ticket home without that money.â
I ran my fingertips down her head, massaging her scalp, mostly to distract myself from the rage stewing inside me.
Fae rested her cheek against my abs. âShe didnât want me at Dadâs funeral. Probably to hurt me, but with the added bonus of convincing people that I didnât care when she presented his will.â
Her pink-rimmed eyes glistened with unshed tears.
Lucky for me, Vera was nowhere near our vicinity. Spending the rest of my life on death row sounded like a depressing existence.
I kneaded a knot out of her neck, gliding my thumb down its column, hoping to ease her tension. âEveryone who knows you knows you love your dad.â
âNo one here really knows me except you.â She scrunched her nose, rubbing away tears that refused to spill. âI had options. I wonât pretend that I didnât. Ariâs a chaebol. Heiress to a ginormous fortune. I could have gone to her for a loan. She wouldnât even ask me to pay it back. And my other fencing friends wouldâve chipped in for a plane ticket if Iâd told them I needed the money.â
My hand drifted up her nape to her jaw now, just touching her.
Marveling at the fact that I could.
Marveling at the fact that she let me.
And knowing I needed to do something with it, or Iâd hunt Vera Ballantine down.
âBut I was so dangâ¦Â proud.â Faeâs expression darkened, her gaze fixed on an invisible spot on the ceiling. âMy pride wouldnât let me beg for money. Not even to attend Dadâs funeral.â
She curled to her side, burying her nose into my stomach. âI spent my entire life helpless against Vera, Reggie, and Tabby. But this marked my first fight against them without Dad behind me. I wanted to show them I could hold my own.â
Shame oozed from her pores. âI wasnât thinking straight.â The fabric of my dress shirt muffled her voice. âIâd just lost my dad. I was broke, all the way across the world, with two days to get a ticket home. I couldnât see the future. Not my fencing career. Not the Olympics.
â
Farrowâs fingers curled into tight fists against my thigh. âThe day Dad died, he was supposed to fly to Korea on a red-eye. To watch me at my competition. My last bout before I returned to the US for Olympic qualifiers. Enter Laura Müller. Rich, young, and talented, but nowhere near the skill level required to beat me.â
She sucked in a breath, the tips of her ears turning pink. âHer dad approached me weeks before, insinuating he wanted to strike a deal. That the competition meant nothing to me, since Iâd still make it to the North American qualifiers, beat everyone there, and cinch my spot on Team USA.â
I uncurled her fists, soothing away the nail marks on her palm.
âBut for Laura⦠winning against a fencer like me would give her the confidence to compete in the European qualifiers.â Faeâs shoulders tensed. âOf course, I said no. Then, I went on with my life as if nothing had happened.â
âBut that morning of the competition, I suited up, mere days from Dadâs funeral with no way to get there.â She gulped, closing her eyes. âI sat in the locker room and thoughtâ¦Â What could it hurt? So, I struck a dealâ¦â
A lone tear rolled out of her right eye, cascading down her cheek and disappearing inside her sweatshirt.
âI agreed to lose the match in exchange for a ticket to D.C. and unlimited legal fees.â Faeâs jaw set. âI knew Vera would do something fishy with the will. That Iâd need to lawyer up. It seemed so easy. So harmless. No one was supposed to find out.â
I traced the bridge of her nose. âHow did they find out?â
Iâd watched that match several times on YouTube after Tom had given me Farrowâs full background report. Obvious grief lined her bloodshot eyes.
The announcer even noted the recent passing of Faeâs father. For all intents and purposes, any performance she gaveâgood or badâshouldâve been believable.
I still hadnât figured out this missing piece of the puzzle. How Farrow got caught.
âVera.â Farrow snorted. âHow else?â
I am going to kill this woman.
Slowly. Painfully. Enthusiastically.
âI made it to Dadâs funeral in the nick of time.â A shaky breath rattled Faeâs chest. âJust as they started lowering his casket into the ground. I flung myself over it and hugged it hard, crying on top of it.â
A bitter chuckle crept up her throat. âIt was a big scene. And the last time I cried.â She paused, deep in thought. âBefore now. Before you.â
Cruel thoughts trickled into my head.
Useless, unrealistic thoughts.
Let me be your shelter, Farrow Ballantine.
Let me redeem you as you redeem me.
I bundled her hand in mine, squeezing hard. âWhat did Vera do?â
âMade a huge scene, of course. She tore me straight from the casket and onto the ground. Her relatives had to scrape her off of me. Then she started yelling at me. That I had no right to show up there. That I wasnât invited.â
A small grin played on Farrowâs lips. âI clapped back, like I always did. Which was how I landed across the world in the first place. Sheâd gotten sick of my âunrulyâ ways. I always refused to let Vera, Reggie, and Tabby bully me around.â
A ribbon of pride looped around my chest. It used to frustrate me that Farrow refused to take shitâparticularly from me. But Iâd grown to look forward to her sass, seeking it out every day.
You are so royally fucked.
As if she could hear my thoughts, Farrow sighed. âTabby screeched loud enough to burst my eardrums. But how did she even get here, Mom? And Reggie gave up the gig. I thought you said you emptied her bank account. Enough people heard her to send gasps across the crowd.â
âThen, what happened?â
âVera dragged me behind a tree and told me sheâd spoken to Lauraâs mom. That she admitted to the bribe. They must have let it slip because they considered her my de-facto mother. They definitely didnât think Vera would go running to the Olympic committee with the info.â
âWhat happened after?â
âThey fined me out of my ass. Overnight, my reputation crumbled into ruins among officials. Team USA dropped me from the qualifiers. The only reason it didnât escalate was because of Andras. Everyone reveres him.â
âHeâs never won a medal.â I ran a hand down my jaw, remembering the dossier Iâd read on him. âNever had a fencer whoâs won an Olympic gold.
â
âHeâs rough around the edges. Has the personality of a traffic jam. Only Iâve ever managed to stick with him. It doesnât matter though. Thereâs an urban legend around the community that all you need is one session with him to medal. Itâs true. The last four womenâs medalists trained with Andras. They just didnât take him as a coach, because heâs a raging asshole.â
âAnd Vera? She just went along with sweeping everything under the rug?â
âVera agreed not to run to the media if I stayed in my lane and did all her dirty work.â
The rest of the puzzle clicked into place.
Why Farrow became Cinderella 2.0.
Why she still practiced fencing with hopes of competing in the Olympics.
And why sheâd spent the morning in tears with her chance officially gone.
âIâll never be able to do this professionally.â Fae shook her head, hopping to her feet and ambling toward the window. âThat dream is gone. Dead. Just like my father.â
âWhy did Vera leak it?â
Fae hugged herself as she looked out at the rose bushes. âVera found out I have a private investigator and a herd of lawyers sniffing around. She found Tom going through her trash in the middle of the night.â
Motherfucker.
âHow do you know?â
âShe texted me.â
Guilt rocketed through me.
Iâd brought Tom into her life. I killed her fencing dream.
Farrowâs shoulders caved as she hugged herself tighter. âIâm not even sure Andras will still work with me. I was his shot at an Olympic gold.â
âHas he reached out to you yet?â
I picked up her phone, scrolling through the nasty articles. This story had legs, picking up speed as we spoke. Blasted on every news outlet. Trending on all social media platforms.
No shot in hell Andras hadnât seen this. Unless heâd taken a lengthy vacation on Mars.
Octi shook her head, turning to face me. Full-blown tears coated her cheeks now .
Sheer fury simmered at my heels, heating me from head to toe. âFarrow, stop crying,â I bit out.
The command smeared the walls like sticky tar.
I wasnât used to this. Toâ¦Â feeling.
And with Farrow, I felt.
All the damn time.
How terribly inconvenient. I loathed it.
To my horror, Faeâs sobs grew louder.
Her wails clawed at my chest, ripping the flesh to shreds.
âYou donât understand.â She fell to her knees, tilting her head down so I couldnât see her face. âMy entire life, I didnât have much to my name. Not a family. Not a home. I had one thingâa dream. A destination. An Olympic piste.â
Her body vibrated with her sobs. âI pledged my whole being to that moment. I dreamed about it every night. Wished for it every morning. Read all the books, studied all the techniquesâ¦â She wrapped her arms around her knees, burying her face into them. âWithout this goal, I donât know who I am anymore.â
I strode to her, sinking to the rug as well, holding her shoulders. It didnât even register that I touched her with ease now. That I let her lay on my lapânot to help me, but to help her.
And I wanted to touch her again. Often.
âListen to me, Farrow.â I nudged her chin up with my fingertip. âFencing is only one of many layers in you. Youâre not reduced to a single dream. Youâre a fighter. A businesswoman. A daughter. A moralist.â
Her eyes clung to me, shiny with tears like two polished sapphires.
I rolled my eyes. âA somewhat decent Go player.â
She snorted, a tiny grin playing with her lips now.
âFencing never defined you, Octi.â I brushed away her tears with my thumb. âIt gave you a home when you needed one.â
But you donât anymore.
You have mine.
Jesus. Where had that come from?
I drowned that thought as fast as it came, gripping Farrowâs shoulders. âYouâre not a helpless child anymore. Youâre capable. Competent. Infuriatingly smart. Soon, youâll destroy Vera. And she knows it. Ratting you out to the press? Itâs a show of weakness. She blinked first, Octi.â
Farrow fell to her back, grabbing her stomach. I frowned, wondering what about my words she found funny.
Something strange happened.
A wisp of air from the vent tickled my ear, sending a chill down my neck.
It feltâ¦Â cold?
I hadnât felt cold in years.
I hadnât felt much of anything in years. Thisâtasting the cold while Farrow raced through every emotion under the sunâfelt like the highlight of my existence.
Farrow began hiccuping, managing to stop for a second to say, âWho would have thought you would be the one to deliver a pep talk?â She clutched her sweatshirt, her shoulders shaking. âSeriously, Iâve been waiting for Ari to wake up for hours.â
I flattened my lips, unamused.
Still, she couldnât stop laughing.
I ambled to the door, taking my sweet time, giving her the opportunity to stop me.
She did.
âWait.â More giggles. âHas anyone ever told you that you can be a real gentleman when you want to be?â
âGod, no.â I spun, raising a brow at her. âAnd donât tell the others. This wonât be a reoccurrence.â
âZach?â
âYes, Octi?â
âTell me something interesting about the octopus.â
I didnât have to think hard. Iâd stored these fun facts in my brain especially for her, because I knew she liked them.
âOctopuses are such intelligent, cerebrally superior creatures that, when devoid of mental stimulation, they become so distressed, they resort to autophagy and eat their own appendages.â
She blinked, staring at me with her head cocked. âIâll ask againâcouldnât I be a kitten?â
âNo.â
âWhy?â
âBecause you are spectacular, intelligent, and different. Not a cliché.â
She tucked her lower lip in her mouth, delicious pink creeping up her cheeks. Her breaths came out heavier.
We were treading deep into something that would end in utter destruction.
âZach?â she asked again.
âYes, Octi?â I replied again.
âWhat happens next?â
âFor my next actâ¦â I grabbed her hand and helped her up. âIâm going to burn down the world for you.â