Devil Mine: Part 3 – Chapter 44
Devil Mine: A Dark Cartel Romance (London Underworld Book 1)
âItâs great to have you back in the office, Tess,â a colleague of mine named Chelsea says when we cross paths in the break room. âWe missed you around here.â
âItâs so good to be back!â I exclaim truthfully. âI missed you guys like crazy.â
She walks off with her coffee in one hand, waving with the other, leaving me to wait for my still brewing coffee. Iâm buzzing with excitement and hardly able to stand still.
My return to the office has gone even better than I could have imagined. Iâd ended up delaying it by another week, convinced by a very persuasive Thiago to extend our so-called honeymoon a few more days.
Although, the last week has felt much more like an actual honeymoon than the first two.
Ever since that night at the Telliersâ, weâve spent almost every moment together. He similarly didnât leave the house for work, taking the rare urgent meeting in his study and then coming to find me immediately after.
True to his word, heâs been absolutely insatiable. Every time I came out of the shower, he would inevitably rip the towel off me and fuck me on the bed. We also kept up our midnight ice cream ritual and he got his revenge for all my previous teasing by bending me over the kitchen island and sliding into my pussy while he fed me some rocky road. There was even one time where I was bent over helping Diana empty the dishwasher when he came up behind me and grabbed my hips. Poor Diana had less than five seconds to run out of there before my pants were off and he was burying himself inside me to the hilt.
I apologized to her the following day, taking the opportunity to also say sorry for previous bad behavior.
âAnd Iâm sorry for how I reacted when you mentioned Adriana a few weeks ago,â Iâd said.
âThatâs alright, señora.â
âNo, you see, I thought⦠Well, I didnât know. I thought she wasâ¦â
I hadnât been able to find the words to explain the story Iâd invented in my head, but Diana had understood. Her eyes widened comically.
âYou thought she was his lover?â
âYes.â
Her face had fallen into a kind smile. âAh, querida, then you reacted appropriately. Maybe you even underreacted. If I thought youâd brought up my husbandâs ex-lover to me, I would have scratched your eyes out.â
Iâd laughed and weâd hugged. Then Iâd had her tell me all about Adriana. The more I learned about her, the sadder I became that Iâd never gotten to meet my sister-in-law. She sounded fun and vibrant, the kind of person Dagny and I would have been instant friends with.
It only further strengthened my resolve to help Thiago find her killer. He told me he didnât have any other leads yet, and I believed him. But when heâd come out of his study after those urgent meetings over the past week, heâd looked stressed. Well, as stressed as he could look. His shoulders were tense, his face tight, his mind faraway.
When questioned, he wouldnât tell me what was going on. My fainting at the bomb shelter had hardened him against involving me in his affairs. I couldnât fault him for that decision, but I was determined to get him to confide in me what problems he was facing.
Even now, my skin still gets cold thinking about what Augusto Leone threatened me with. His face had been obscured by Thiagoâs body so his words alone had been spine-chilling enough to scare me to my bones. Over the past week, Iâd woken up on more than one occasion in the middle of the night, my heart racing in fear that someone was coming to take me. Each time, Iâd awoken held tightly in Thiagoâs arms, his bare chest enveloping me like a cocoon and immediately calming my anxiety.
Theyâre nightmares and not reality, and I know Iâll get over them soon. Still, being able to go back to work this morning has been a blessing. Now Iâve got something else to occupy my racing thoughts so Iâm not continually spiraling in a swell of anxiety.
âSo the rumors are true. You are back.â
A smile breaks out across my face before Iâve even turned around. I fling myself into the speakerâs arms, hugging him tightly even though I know heâll hate it.
âWiz,â I whisper affectionately. Pushing him away but holding onto his shoulders, I look up into his face. Heâs unchanged and familiar and Iâm so happy to see him. âWhat the hell are you doing up here?â
âI had to see for myself if the gossip was true.â
âI didnât know the gossip traveled all the way down to the second floor.â
âYouâd be surprised,â he replies in his usual even tone.
Grinning, I turn away and grab my coffee mug. He walks alongside me as we head towards my office.
âYou didnât have to come up yourself, I know you donât like to. I was going to come to see you later, itâs just been a crazy first day back as you can imagine.â
âI hacked your calendar and emails to make sure you were free before I came up, so I have no need for imagination.â
With a snort, I head into my office and settle behind my desk. He follows, dropping easily into the chair opposite me.
âWhy did you come back?â he asks.
âIt wasnât exactly of my own free will,â I explain.
âYour father forced you back?â
My father is apparently away on business, so I havenât had to see him. Itâs made the return to the office that much smoother.
âNo, I⦠I was never running from him, Wiz. I was running from someone else. He found me and brought me back. But Iâm not⦠I donât mind. I think Iâm making it work. Iâm happy to be back.â
I stumble on the words, lacking the appropriate self-awareness to correctly diagnose what Iâm feeling and how to communicate it back to my friend. It has been nice being back, something I never thought Iâd be caught dead saying a month ago. And the way the last week has gone has me feeling embers of the most dangerous emotion of all. Hope. Hope that maybe this could be a life I could make something of. Hope that one day my marriage with Thiago might even turn into something more than just a physical relationship.
âCan I assume that whoever âheâ is, heâs responsible for that massive ring on your finger?â
âYes.â I look down at the diamond, playing with it absentmindedly before flicking my gaze back up to Wizâs. âIâm married now.â
âIâm guessing you didnât escape the arranged marriage?â
âNope.â
âI donât like to hear that. Happily married at least?â
I blow out a breath, going for the easiest answer.
âSort of?â
He laughs, the first time Iâve ever heard him do so. âYouâre one of a kind, Tess. Whoever he is, I hope he knows that.â He stands, heading for the door. âLet me know if you ever need to run away again. Iâll do better next time.â
âWiz.â He pauses, turning back towards me. âYou gave me a taste of freedom when you helped me disappear, and I know you risked a lot to do it. I canât ever thank you enough for what you did for me, but I hope to try one day.â
He looks at me impassively, not doing well with processing the note of emotion in my tone. âYou were kind to me. You decided to be my friend.â He scratches his nose uncomfortably. âI donât have many of those but I think this is what youâre supposed to do for your friends, isnât it?â
He leaves without waiting for a reply and I know that heâs not likely to come back upstairs anytime soon. The next time I want to see him, Iâll go down to two and sit on my pink couch, talking his ear off while he types away studiously.
Exactly the way itâs always been.
â½â½â½
After finishing my last meeting of the day, I head back from the conference room to my office. I set my computer and files on my desk and take a moment to stretch my arms behind my back.
Itâs been a long day. Productive but also overwhelming, with every second I wasnât working spent reuniting with people I havenât seen in months.
Looking down at my watch, I see itâs three thirty. Maybe Iâll sneak out a little early and help the chef cook dinner. And by help I mean watch Mariela do all the work while I sit on the other side of the island and talk to her because Iâm hopeless at anything related to kitchen work. The feedback Iâve received when Iâve attempted to cook in the past has been far from complimentary, and Iâm woman enough to admit when I know Iâve been bested in an area. So I usually sit down with her instead, staying out of her way and chatting with her as she cooks.
Iâm surprised to find Iâm this excited by the prospect of an evening at the house. Itâs not home yet, but itâs somewhere Iâm feeling increasingly more comfortable with each passing day. I didnât think Iâd be attached to it this quickly, especially not enough to consider leaving work early when for years Iâve considered this office to be my surrogate home. But I find that I really like having something to look forward to that isnât work.
Iâm putting my computer away when my office door opens. I look up to find Franklin hovering by the entryway. My mood turns instantly sour. I havenât seen him all day and was hoping to leave without a run-in with him, putting off the inevitable awkward encounter until at least tomorrow. Heâs the one part of work I absolutely have not missed and being confronted with him as Iâm walking out is not how I planned on ending my first day back.
âItâs professional courtesy to knock before entering someoneâs office, Franklin.â
I donât spare him a glance and continue putting things away in my bag.
The click of the door closing resonates as ominously loud as a gunshot in my office. Iâm instantly tense, the hairs on the back of my neck raising. I straighten, abandoning the task at hand and staring at Franklin.
âYou run away for months and think you can just come waltzing back in like nothingâs changed?â he demands, voice cold and devoid of all emotion.
âOpen the door,â I ask calmly.
âBut things have changed.â
Thereâs a chill in the air, a sinister warning that tells me Iâm in trouble. Working to mask the tremble in my voice, I repeat. âOpen the door, Franklin.â
Ignoring my demand, he moves towards where Iâm standing. He puts himself between me and the door, cornering me. I try to hold my ground as long as I can, my hand clutching the back of my chair desperately, but thereâs a terrifying air of violence wafting off him that scares me.
âWhat are you doing?â I ask, hoping to keep this civil. When he rounds the desk towards me, I put my hand out. âStay over there. Franklin,â I warn. He keeps advancing. âIf you come any closer, Iâll scream.â
Iâm hoping this is all a misunderstanding. That heâs trying to intimidate me for whatever sick reason, but that this will be quickly over. That my words will make him back off. But when a cruel smile twists his lips, I realize Iâm very wrong.
âGo ahead and scream. I sent Crystal on an errand, thereâs nobody at her desk. Nobody to hear your screams except me. But believe me, Iâll enjoy them enough for the whole company.â
âWhat do you want, Franklin?â I ask, backing away with small, barely noticeable steps. âWhat are you after?â
My stomach falls when my back hits the farthest corner of my office, one shoulder coming against the wall of windows and the other against the bookshelf behind me.
Thereâs nowhere left to go.
âI want what was promised to me, what was supposed to be mine before you got yourself sold off to someone else and ran away,â he snaps, before correcting himself. âIâm taking it actually.â
He mentioned marriage during our dance at the gala but I didnât realize he said it because there was an actual deal being put in place between my father and him like he seems to be suggesting now. It doesnât matter. I would never have married him. Unlike Thiago, if heâd caught me I would have given my life trying to escape him again.
My hands go discreetly behind my back and start feeling along the bookshelf for anything I could use as a weapon.
âYouâre not taking anything from me,â I hiss.
Franklin stands less than ten feet from me with an awful rictus on his face, a sadistic predator taking pleasure in having trapped his vulnerable prey. It puts every encounter Iâve had with Thiago into perspective. While heâs more dangerous and definitely more violent, heâs never made me feel unsafe like this and heâs never threatened me with his size or physicality like Franklin is now.
âWatch me,â he sneers. âI think itâs about time your pussy got a good fucking from a real cock.â
My stomach twists in revolt at the thought and bile rises into my throat. I canât let this happen, I wonât survive that kind of victimization. Iâd rather he kill me.
My searching hands turn desperate, blindly scanning every inch of the shelf until my fingers brush against something made of glass. When they close around it, I realize itâs my Women in Business award I received last year. I won it based on the vote of hundreds of my peers for my contributions to the media profession and the broader industry at large. It was the proudest day of my life, my crowning achievement to date, one Iâd worked myself to the bone to get.
The irony in this award becoming my weapon of choice is not lost on me â no matter where we are, no matter how safe a woman feels, it only takes one man to rip that illusion away. This is a reminder of that. But today my tenacity and my obstinate refusal to bend the knee to my father might just save me.
âYou disgust me,â I declare. âAnd youâll never touch me.â
Then I hurl the award at him as hard as I can.
My aim is true and the triangular trophy hits him in the head as Iâd planned. Instead of knocking him out it only momentarily stuns him. I run past him but he recovers quickly. His arm stretches out and easily catches me around the waist, yanking me back against his torso. Dread leadens my stomach at my failed escape, at the prospect of what heâs going to do to me in retaliation.
âBitch.â
He slams me violently back against the windows. Stars explode behind my eyes at the force with which my head bounces off the glass.
Iâm dazed and more pliant because of it. He pins me by my wrists, his mouth opening to reveal sharp looking teeth and a monstrous smile. I turn my face to the side and whimper. His clammy, fetid breath hits my cheek and itâs all I can do not to pass out, but I wonât have a repeat of last week.
My thoughts fly to Thiago, wishing with all my heart that he could be here to protect me like he did with Leone. I donât question why heâs the one I think of, I just know itâs him I need.
âYou want to piss me off, little girl?â Franklin taunts disdainfully. âIâll rip through your pussy and make you bleed for that little stunt. Maybe thatâll teach you some obedience.â
âGet off me,â I cry, thrashing violently. âIâm married!â
Before this moment, I would have said I was strong. I go to the gym multiple times a week. I lift weights. My body is toned and in shape. So when I fight against Franklinâs hold, I expect to do some damage. To at least free one of my hands. But in a millisecond and with barely any effort whatsoever, he easily uses his own strength to overpower me and keep me prisoner. My wrists remain trapped above my head, my body prone and exposed to whatever horrors he wants to do to me. The stark realization of how much physically weaker I am than a man as out of shape as he is stops the blood cold in my veins. The abject terror I feel makes me want to freeze in place. I have to fight against my base instincts to try and survive.
âDonât remind me,â he snarls, slapping a hand over my mouth. âThatâs enough out of you.â
I scream and scream but his hand muffles every sound that rips from my throat. My thoughts go once again to Thiago and my heart splits in two. What will he say when he finds out what happened to me? Will he ever be able to touch me again or will he throw me out and divorce me for being damaged goods? The thought alone is painful enough to bring tears to my eyes.
When I feel Franklinâs fingers brush against my thigh beneath my skirt, my eyes bulge. I kick at him, thrashing furiously, but itâs in vain. His hand inches higher. His hard length presses into my stomach. I close my eyes even as I continue to try and scream, hoping that I can disassociate from my body and go to another reality.
Franklinâs face comes to within inches of mine. His putrid breath falls against my face. I press my cheek into the window to avoid it.
âFrom what Iâve heard of him, I donât think your husband will mind if I have a taste,â he croons.
âWrong. Her husband is going to fucking kill you for trying,â a terrifying voice announces, slicing through my nightmare with an arrow of hope. I turn my head to find Thiago standing in my doorway, the blackest look of fury Iâve ever seen blanketing his face. âTake your fucking hands off my wife,â he booms. âNow.â