Rouge: Act 2 – Scene 8
Rouge: A Dark Billionaire Romance (Tattered Curtain Series)
Kian
Seeing Lacey freak out about the fact that weâre now married is both satisfying and disappointing at the same time. When I thought about breaking the news, I assumed I would only feel triumphant. But thereâs something in her expression right now thatâs making me second-guess everything.
âWelcome⦠home?â she asks, slowly shaking her head. âNo, Kian. No. This canât happen. I need to go home. Like home home. Not here. I need to sign that marriage license. You donât understandââ
âWhat do you mean you need to?â I ask, stepping forward. She stutters back at the same time and I stop in my tracks. âAre you afraid of me?â
âNo. Of course not. I just⦠you know, have to sign the license and I want to leave.â
I study her face, taking in her flushed cheeks and the way she keeps glancing down at my damp chest. A smile crests my lips. Sheâs not afraid of me. Sheâs afraid to get close to me. I want to call her out on it, but the second half of her answer irritates me more.
âVague answers arenât going to get us anywhere, Lacey.â
âOkay, then. How about heâs my fiancéââ
âNo⦠youâre married to me,â I say slowly. Her eyes keep flicking to my towel, so I rest my hand on the doorframe just above her head and wait with pleasure as her gorgeous blue eyes snap up to meet mine. âMonroe means nothing to you now.â
I didnât mean for that to come out as a growl, but the way she shivers at my tone makes me think it didnât scare her. Quite the opposite if her thighs squeezing together under that sinfully short dress is any indication.
But my wee tine doesnât want to admit defeat. Her willingness to fight for what she wants is so refreshingly âun-Garde.â She straightens her back and glares up at me defiantly. This close, I can see the light dusting of freckles that pepper her nose and the apples of her flushed cheeks. I get the nearly irresistible need to strip her down so I can kiss each and every one that covers her body.
âI am not married to you and Iâm not marrying you. According to the Garde, I canât get married until my birthdayââ
âWhich startedââ I look at my bare wrist as if Iâm wearing my watch. âNine hours ago.â
âHow do you know my birthday?â
âSimple. It was our wedding date.â
She narrows her eyes. âWell, this is against the Garde contract my father brokeredââ
âWe were the original contract that your father broke. Iâm doing him a favor by keeping him honest.â
âMy father is honest! Your family is the one that broke the contract, not mine.â
That stops me. I cock my head to the side, but before I can demand she explain, she shakes her head.
âLook, I have to go. Let me just leave, okay?â
She turns within the minuscule amount of space Iâve given her, and her strawberry-blonde hair wafts her sweet floral scent up to me.
She rattles the handle and growls when it doesnât budge. Her frustration is adorable.
âOpen⦠dammit!â
âIt wonât. Itâs magnetized closed. It only works with a specially made keyââ
âGive me the key thenââ
ââAnd a code.â If sheâs really fecking lucky, she might guess it. But that would mean sheâd know my obsession truly started the moment she was promised to be mine.
She sneers at me over her shoulder. âA key and a code? Little much, donât you think? What? Do you have enemies or something?â
âYeah, your family.â
She rolls her eyes. âIt was a rhetorical question. Weâre Garde. We all have enemies.â
Her matter-of-fact delivery shocks me. My frustration leaks out, thickening my accent. âAnd youâre just okay with that? You donât want to change it? Your fatherââ
âHow about you just do yourself a favor and never talk about my father again, got it?â
I chuckle. âOh, if you think this wee spicy attitude of yours will push me away, youâre dead wrong, tine.â
âGod, stop calling me that! Also, why did you hide your accent last night? Why were you at my familyâs business in the first place? That was supposed to be my night. Tolie and Roxyââ
Her eyes widen and the fight leaks out of her as she slouches with her back against the door.
âWere Tolie and Roxy in on it?â
Her defeated, monotone question almost makes me want to lie to her, but I wonât do her the disservice.
âTolieâs one of my men. Heâs on my familyâs side.â
âBut how? Why? I mean, he works for my fatherâs entertainment company. Does that mean nothing anymore? My momâs been taking over the businesses. How did my mother not know?â
âYour mother has done a great job after your father fecked everything up for your family. But she canât know everyoneâs alliances all the time.â
âAlliances? What alliances? Tolieâs not even Garde!â
âHeâs my friend. Outside the Garde, that comes first.â
âAnd inside the Garde?â Tears of anger well in her eyes. âWhat about Roxy?â
I drop my arm and back away a step. The move gives her space, but not so much that she can get around me. My fingers twitch to caress her cheek, but I resist the urge as I break down the role her friend played in all of this.
âRoxanaâs father is a McKennon man. Your father lost the Muñoz after his first arrest.â
âThat was⦠that was three years ago,â she whispers softly.
After a moment, she gives the information a slight nod. Her lower lip wobbles just once. But then she stiffens all over and her face completely blanks. Itâs incredible to watch her swallow back her emotions better than any poker player Iâve ever seen. Incredible and devastating. Just like at a card table, Iâve already learned my opponentâs wee tells, but right now, sheâs almost unreadable.
âDid she knowâ¦â She flings her arm out to the papers I set aside. âDid she know you were going to kidnap me and force me to marry you?â
âI didnât force you to do anything.â
âYou drugged me, Kian. I hardly remember the rest of the night after we slept together.â
âI think the combination with alcoholâwhich I didnât realize youâd had so much of until Roxana informed me afterwardâmight be whatâs affecting your memory the most. The drug I used is an under-the-radar concoction that is specifically created to only act as a mild sedative and a truth serum. At harmful doses, the sedative can be too much and cause death, butââ
âDeath?!â
ââbut at the dosage I gave you, all it did was keep you relaxed and truthful.â
âTruthful my ass. I wouldâve never married you last night if I wasnât under the influence of something. Now answer me. What did Roxy know?â
Feck, I love this fire in her, but sheâs raging with me right now and I wonât be able to reason with her soon if she keeps getting angrier. A few unbidden ideas come to mindâways I could calm her downâbut Iâll wait and try those if my words fail.
âAll Roxana knew was that I needed you at Rouge without bodyguards so I could meet you before you got married and it was too late. She didnât know the extent of my plan. Hell, I didnât even know which way things would go until we started dancing.â
âHow did you not know? Wasnât this all your idea?â
âThe job wasnât just my idea. But how I executed it was all me.â
âAnd why on earth would you go about it like that? You couldâve stolen me off the street if youâd wanted.â
âActuallyââ I cross my arms and lean against the wall. She follows the movement with a flush in her cheeks, tinting color to the blank mask sheâs trying so hard to wear. ââyouâre harder to get alone than you think. Before Vegas, your bodyguards were everywhere. Here, Monroeâs bodyguards have been your shadow. Rouge was the first place I could get you alone. My mother made sure I learned ballroom dancing and Iâm trained in mixed martial arts, so the simple routine Tolie choreographed for me wasnât hard to pick up. No one wouldâve ever expected a McKennon to be on that stage. What happened after we started dancing was⦠improvised.â
âWhat was supposed to happen, then?â Her brow furrows, but I can see the gears turning in her head. âYou were⦠you were supposed to kill me. Werenât you?â She huffs a laugh and shakes her head. âWow. You werenât kidding when you said things couldâve been worse.â
âI made some executive decisions to avoid it.â
âSo⦠it was either murder or marriage, huh? No in-between?â
âThere were a few options somewhere in the middle that I couldâve chosen from. But I picked my favorite.â
âHow does your dad feel about your decision? Iâm assuming the McKennon put out the hit.â
Sheâs so nonchalant about it she could be casually asking how my father feels about the weather. I didnât want to tell her this part of our twisted love story, but as the Keeperâs daughter, she was bound to figure it out.
âKilling the OâSheaâs only possible chance to produce a male heir wouldâve hurt the Keeper and the OâShea name the most.â
âSo itâs only natural that the order would be given from the head of the family that hates us the most.â
âNaturally.â I shrug. Iâm trying to match her complacency, but Iâm pissed. Thereâs so much about this organization that I want to change, but she seems to accept their faults as immovable truths.
âSo what about the priest and judge? Were they just up at that hour out of the goodness of their hearts?â
âThat, and theyâre McKennon men.â
âYou guys have just converted everyone, havenât you? And the witnesses? Are they McKennon men, too?â
I canât help my chuckle. âYouâd be surprised how many old women just hang out at midnight chapels so they can witness true love in the flesh.â
âTrue love?â
âThere are crazier love stories,â I tease, enjoying her scowl. I push off the wall to rest my forearm on the doorframe right beside her head again, caging her in. âYou know, the rest of our lives are going to be pretty entertaining if youâre this easy to wind up.â
The glint in her eyes tells me she lets herself imagine that life for a split second, but then she crosses her arms like a barrier against me and rolls her eyes instead.
âGreat, just great. Iâm not only allegedly married to a lunatic, heâs a romantic lunatic.â
âSettle down, tine. Itâs not that bad. We were supposed to get married anyway. Just switch the groom. Whatâs the harm?â
âWhatâs the harm?! Oh, right. You donât know because you know nothing about me. What everyone else sees isnât the real meââ
âI know. The woman you are when no one is watching is exactly why I chose marrying you instead of killing you.â
Her eyes flare with curiosity before narrowing again.
âWell, whatever you think you know, youâre wrong. Just like youâre wrong about whatever you think happened last night. Iâm marrying the Baron and heâs made it very clear that it has to happen today or not at all.â
âWhat a lucky woman you are that your fiancé could find time in his busy schedule to marry you. You know most people plan around a wedding, not vice versa. You should marry the man who makes every effort to be with you rather than treat you like an appointment.â
âLike trick me, kidnap me, and force me to marry him instead?â
âBetter to be obsessed over than ignored,â the admission that Iâm obsessed with her is a wee bit more than I wanted to confess, and itâs made worse by the possession dripping in my voice.
Her pretty pink lips part and frustration makes her breaths come in pants, nearly spilling her breasts from her corset. The view makes my cock ache. I finally give in and brush my fingers down her cheek as I murmur the question thatâs been on my mind since I heard her say, âI do.â She leans into my palm by a fraction, giving me hope.
âLast night, you said you could love a man like me. Whatâs stopping you now that you know who I am?â
Her voice is just a whisper when she answers me. âI also said I donât believe in love. Loving someone doesnât mean you should get married. In the Garde, marriages⦠theyâre just transactions.â
âGrand. Consider this one transaction in exchange for another.â
She groans. âGod, I wish it were that easy.â
âIt can be, if you let it.â
âGoing along with this will be dangerous.â
âIâll be able to keep you safe, Lacey.â
Worry pinches between her eyes as she shakes her head. âMy safety isnât the only thing that matters.â
âIt is to me.â
Thereâs a silence like I caught her by surprise. Her face softens as she steps into me and I think Iâve possibly changed her mind.
âThen let me go, Kian. Thatâs the only way to keep me safe in this situation.â
What the hell?
My jaw clenches and I drop my hand. Sheâs obviously trying to manipulate me by putting on this saccharine-sweet act, but why?
âLook, if youâre really concerned about what will happen if Monroe finds out, I can protect you.â
âProtect me? How?â She falls back and scoffs. âOther than the Muñozes, you have no support from the Garde. No inheritance. If you have nothing, you are nothing.â
Anger wells up in my chest. âSo youâve bought into the Gardeâs measure of worth, hmm? Thatâs disappointing. Maybe Iâll just say feck it all, then, and send Monroe our wedding videoââ
âNo, you canât!â She grabs my forearm and her nails dig into my skin. âKian, please, you canât tell him, at least not yet.â
That confirms it. She may have been furious with me before, but at my threat, Laceyâs wide eyes shine with tears, the rosy complexion in her cheeks has paled, and sheâs clinging to me like a lifeline. It makes me want to gather her up and tuck her back into our bed so I can utterly destroy anyone who has instilled even an ounce of this fear in her.
âLacey⦠I know thereâs more to this than youâre telling me, so Iâm going to ask again. Why do you have to sign that contract? Your fatherâs impending trial aside, heâs still the Keeper, and youâre the Gardeâs rare flower, effectively our princess. Make your own damn rules. Feck knows I did last night.â
I try to soften my frustrated delivery with a smirk, but she looks more defeated than before and slumps against the door. With my arms caging her in like this, the position makes me feel oppressive. I like to be in charge, but I donât have to swing my dick around to prove it.
Stepping back once more, I donât give a feck that she can see my towel tenting around my thickening cock. Even though my chest aches at seeing her distressed, I canât help the effect her body has on the rest of me.
Her pale cheeks pinken as her eyes dart down.
âJesus,â she mutters and her eyes snap back up to mine. âThe rules arenât for me to change, alright? Only a man on the outs with the Garde would think I have a say in anything. I have to marry the Baron and I donât want to start off by disappointing himââ
I snort. âHeâs a Garde nobody whoâs trying to achieve his political aspirations by marrying our societyâs highest-ranking daughterâwhoâs gorgeous, witty, and nearly two decades his junior, Iâll add. How the feck could he be disappointed? And why would you care? Do you love him or something?â
âOf course not. We canât stand each other. Iâve heard the stories. The Baron is a man who will discard me for a better model once heâs used me up, if not before that.â
The disgust on her face pleases me to no end, but her words make me furious. If she knows what Monroeâs capable of and how he treats women, why would she agree to marry him? Even now, after Iâve saved her from a life with him, sheâs still pushing back.
âThen is it a silly engagement ring that you want?â I ask, already knowing that canât be the reason, but hoping it riles her up enough to answer. âIf so, I can buy you another, easy.â
âSilly jewelry? Itâs a seven-million-dollar ring!â
âExactly. Did he really have to try that hard to get you to marry him? All I had to do was dance.â The smirk Iâve been trying to contain pushes its way back onto my face before I can quash it again.
She scoffs. âYou donât know what youâre talking about.â
âNo? Letâs recap, then, shall we?â I go through my assessment, ticking each point off with my fingers. âYou canât stand him. You donât want his money. You know heâs only using you. So what is it that Monroe has over you, then?â Fear flickers over her face again and I know Iâve hit the nail on the head. âWhat transaction can be so important that youâre willing to marry a man who would kill you just as soon as he would fuck you?â
âIsnât that the kind of man you are?â
I hold back a grimace and try to adopt a nonchalant expression.
âMaybe, but Iâve made my choice. Donât make me regret it.â If threatening her is the only way to get the truth, Iâll try anything right now.
Her scowl drops from her face and despite the fact that I intended to throw her off balance, her first hint of uncertainty toward me makes my heart seize.
âWell, at least you had a choice,â she finally grumbles.
Those few words nearly knock me off my feet. I try to recall the cards sheâs played so far during our argument and try to guess which ones she still holds close to her chest. I know the Garde can be overbearing with its women, but wouldnât she at least have a say in something as important as who she gets to marry? Or has she only been working with the hand sheâs been dealt?
âWhen your father discussed you marrying Monroe, what did you say?â
Her face screws up. âWhat do you mean?
âWhen your father asked you if you wanted to marry Monroe⦠what was your answer?â
She crosses her arms and avoids looking me in the eyes. âI was never asked, okay? I was told and that was that. There was never a discussion.â
Anger rises in my chest just as anxiety filters through my mind. âAnd what about me? Were you able to choose me?â
Her brow furrows. âWhat does that matter?â
âEverything you say matters. Tell me, Lacey.â Her breath hitches as I tip her chin up, forcing her to meet my eyes. âWere you able to choose me?â
âYes.â Her whispered answer warms the worry freezing my veins and air finally enters my lungs again. âMy dad told me you were a candidate. Then I got to meet your mother, who was⦠God, she was amazing. I loved meeting her. So with you, I was given a choice and I said yes. But with the Baron? I-I was told.â
Emotions swirl inside me and Iâm not sure which one to hang on to.
Iâve learned more about Lacey in the last fifteen minutes than a year of obsessing over her as my mark. I thought she played a part in choosing Monroe as her husband, but I was wrong. Sheâs always been under lock and key, and apparently, sheâs spent her whole life committing minor infractions almost like itâs a game, pulling at her leash until sheâs threatened with a cage.
Last night was her final act of rebellion before she was trapped forever, and I stole that from her. I donât want to trap her, but if Iâm going to keep her safe, I have to play the game sheâs been taught and call her bluffs to help us both win the hand.
âWhy were you supposed to marry Monroe and not me, then? What hold does he have over you? Tell me so I can help you.â
She shakes her head slowly. âItâs more than just a mere business deal. Heâs⦠heâs supposed to do something and I⦠I donât want to interfere.â
âStop being so vague and talk to me. Iâll keep your secrets, tine, I swear.â
She opens her mouth to answer, but it clamps closed, and that anger heats her eyes again. Something I said has set her off again, but Iâm not sure what.
âNo, you donât get to kidnap me, force me to marry you, and steal my secrets too. If you were looking for a pliant wife in me, you were sorely mistaken.â
âInteresting, so you were willing to be a pliant wife for Monroe, then? Because I can assure you, I was never looking for a cardboard cutout of a Garde wife. I donât want to tame you, I want to free you.â
The buzz of a mobile interrupts us. She digs into her pocket like the device will explode if she doesnât answer in time. When she reads the caller ID, she takes a deep breath of relief.
Who the feck is she that relieved to talk to? Is it the bastard her family chose over mine?
Before she answers, jealousy takes over, and I snatch the mobile from her grasp to answer it.
âKian, no!â She lunges from the door, but I grasp her neck with my free hand and squeeze. She immediately relaxes underneath my hold and doesnât try to fight me off. A small moan escapes her with a delicious gasp that vibrates underneath my palm.
Interesting.
My thumb releases from the side of her neck and I graze the smooth skin as I look at the caller ID.
Mom.
Well, thatâs anticlimactic.
âIâll let you answer this,â I loosen the rest of my fingers just enough for her to speak. âBut only to tell her that congratulations are in order.â
âKian, I canât do that. Iâm supposed to meet her at the courthouse.â
âWell, then, tell her youâre all out of fresh marriage licenses.â The corner of my mouth ticks upward as a grin tries to break free.
âIf I tell her Iâm married to anyone but the Baron, my entire family is ruined!â
I want to shout that her father already tried to ruin my family and weâve been clawing our way back up ever since. But tears brim her eyes, making them sparkle like gemstones and I canât bear to see my strong queen of diamonds cry, no matter the reason.
âIf marrying a McKennon is as ruinous as you believe, go ahead. Answer.â The caustic words hiss out of me as I hand her mobile back. âIâd love to see what lie you come up with to tell my new mother-in-law. Donât forget to set up a brunch date.â
I release her and step back to lean against the couch, propping my hands on its leather arm.
She eyes me warily with a hint of confusion. At what, I donât know, but I stop overanalyzing entirely when she answers and Moira OâShea shrieks like a banshee into the receiver.