My Dark Desire: Chapter 69
My Dark Desire: An Enemies-to-Lovers Romance (Dark Prince Road)
Iâd developed a sixth sense after the car accident.
The ability to recognize catastrophe before it hit.
I sensed it with Farrowâs family confrontation. And I sensed it now, driving her home as she gazed out the windshield, lost in her own thoughts.
The stench of goodbye hung in the air like cheap perfume. According to the terms of our agreement, this was over. Done and finished.
I could touch human flesh.
Farrow sorted out her family issues.
The lawyers would wrap the rest up in a neat bow.
And still, neither of us dared to broach the subject.
Fuck it.
I swerved, pulling over just before we hit Dark Prince Road. She didnât react, still studying the tree line in silence.
âFarrow.â
Still nothing.
I unbuckled my seatbelt, hopped out of the car, and rounded to her side, swinging open the door. She stared at my shoulder, not really focused on anything, giving me my second heart attack of the night.
The first happened at the sight of Andras manhandling her. If Ollie and Rom hadnât pulled me off him, Iâd be in a cell right now, and heâd be in a morgue.
Finally, finally, she peered up at me as I gathered her into my arms and moved us both to the spacious trunk, flipping the rear seat down until it turned into a flat cabin.
âWhatâs going on in that head of yours, Octi?â
âNothing good.â
âImpossible.â I set her down, switching on the overhead light. âWhere does it hurt?â
âEverywhere.
â
Hovered over her, I thumbed her shoulder, ever so slightly, right where I saw Andras grip her. âHere?â
A tiny, reluctant tear leaked out, trudging down her cheek. She didnât sob. Didnât make a sound. Just nodded.
I leaned in, kissing the exact spot. She shut her eyes as I rolled my tongue over it, wiping away any trace of that bastard.
I traced the nape of her neck, where it slammed against the wall. âAnd here?â
âMy elbow, too.â
She stared at the roof as I washed away Andrasâ touch from her neck, her hip, her back, the crook of her elbow.
All the while, she didnât say another word.
âBeautiful.â When I finished, I pulled back and simply stared at her as she sprawled across the trunk, her wild sunshine hair splayed in every direction. âSo fucking beautiful.â
Farrowâs fingers marked a path on the nylon lining. âWhat do you think about Monowi?â
âNever heard of it.â
âItâs in Nebraska.â
âSounds about right.â
âPopulation of one.â
âWhere are you going with this?â
Please, donât say Monowi.
âJust thinking of Monowi.â
I wanted to laugh. Maybe even scream. Definitely go for round two versus Andras.
Farrow and I had so much to talk about, and weâd settled on Monowi.
She still never told me whatever she needed to about Eileen. I still hadnât asked about our future.
Except, instinctâalong with the remaining cells in my brain that hadnât been fried by Andras-induced rageâtold me the conversation would go differently this time than if weâd had it on the plane before completing our arrangement.
Farrow rested a hand on her ribs. âI couldnât have beaten Andras and Vera without you.â
I plopped down on my ass and stretched my legs out as much as I could, setting Farrowâs thighs on them. âYou wouldâve.â
âNo, I wouldnât have. Vera pointed it out. At the time, I told her I could fight my own wars. But I was wrong.
â
âYou were right. Youâve been a fighter all your life.â
âMaybe. But I also relied on my dad without realizing it.â Her eyes found mine. âHe cashed out his savings to fund my fencing career. A fencing career that no longer exists.â
âPublic opinion shifted to your side. Your academy friends spoke to the media about the circumstances. Once news breaks about Vera and Andras, no way will anyone hold you accountable for throwing an unimportant match.â
âThey should, though. I was wrong for it.â
âIf you want to quit, quit. Sometimes quitting is braver than persisting.â I tipped her chin up, forcing her to look at me. âBut if youâre quitting because youâre afraid of what others think, thatâs bullshit, and youâre stronger than that, Farrow Ballantine.â
âIâm not quitting. Well, I donât know yet.â She sighed, pulling at the fuzzy nylon threads on the trunk flooring. âI guess my point is, I thought I was independent, living on my own, fighting Vera my own way. In reality, I had Dadâs helpâmore than I thought I didâand yours.â
Ask me for help, Farrow.
Youâre not alone.
Iâm your one-man army.
Before I could reply, she sat up, dusting off her hands. âCan we head home?â
I studied her face, unable to get a read of her and hating it. âOf course.â
âI think itâs time to finish our Go game.â