The man squeezes my upper arm as he lets out a low whistle. This close, I canât miss the sound, or when he chuckles to himself as he says, âI fucking love it when the face looks as good as the ass. This must be my lucky night.â
I have no idea who he is. At least a head taller than me, with short black hair, a narrow face, dark eyes lit up with lust, and a crooked smile, heâs definitely not Link. Heâs not as broad in the shoulder, or as muscular as Link is, though heâs a lot bigger than I am.
No wonder I canât break free from his grip.
âLet go of me,â I tell him, twisting my arm beneath his fingers.
âNo way, sweetheart. I paid for a room upstairs, and youâre just the girl Iâm taking with me.â
What?
Oh my God. Oh my God. This creep thinks that I⦠he thinks that I work here, like some of the other girls in this place.
Suddenly, Heidiâs not-so-veiled comments about teachers not making enough money seems a whole lot clearer. I thought she meant that she was selling out, waitressing for a little extra cash. But that⦠thatâs now what she meant, was it?
The women here just donât sell liquor here. They sell themselves, and this guy thinks that Iâm for sale.
Iâm not going to judge them for what they do to survive. Iâm not going to judge the women at Linkâs club if they sleep with these assholes because they want the money. But thatâs not my thing. Linkâs different, because heâs Link, but Iâm not going to let anyone else think that they can touch me like this.
Iâm screwed, though. Glancing around, I see that Heidi is gone. She disappeared into the crowd, and I donât see anyone else that I recognize. Considering what kind of place this is, I doubt anyone even realizes that Iâm two seconds away from freaking out.
I donât know what else to do. I think about screaming, but the music is loud, and I donât want to draw attention to myself if I donât have to. Linkâs obviously not here yet, and I donât want to cause him any more trouble than I already have.
This guy can be reasoned with, right? Heâs not just going to pick a girl off of the dance floor and drag her upstairs without her going along with it⦠right?
âI think you got the wrong idea. I donât work here.â
For a split second, I think it works. He lets go of my bicepâbut before I can move away from him, he grabs my wrist instead. Flipping my arm over, he smirks triumphantly when he sees that my forearm is bare. He switches wrists, doing the same to the other.
âYou donât have Devilâs mark on you. In here, that means youâre up for grabs, baby, and you shouldâve known that before you walked through the doors.â
I definitely didnât.
âBesides, everyone has their price.â He tightens his hold on my right wrist, starting to drag me away from the center of the dance floor. âLetâs see how good you are, and we can talk about yours.â
No!
âYou canât do this,â I gasp out. âIâm married. Look. Iâm married and my husbandââ
Throwing up my left hand, I go to show him my ring, my stomach twisting when I see that the oversized wedding band that Link slipped on my hand is missing.
The man smirks over his shoulder at me as I stare in horror at my naked ring finger. âNice try, sweetheart. Even if you were married, that doesnât mean shit here. Half the guys banging the whores upstairs go home to their wives when theyâre done.â
Iâm barely listening to the sleaze in his tone. Iâm too busy trying to figure out when and where the ring must have slipped off my finger. I had it this morning. I remember shoving it down to the webbing of my hand after I brushed my hair, and I swear I had it on when I talking to Heidiâ
âCome on. Timeâs ticking, and I plan on getting my moneyâs worth toâ whoa.â
It all happens so fast. One second, he was pulling me toward the stairs that would lead to the second floor of Linkâs club. The next? Someone has grabbed him by the collar, so strong that they manage to rip his hand away from my wrist.
He yelps, and I spin around, trying to see who my savior is.
Chest heaving, eyes wild and fierce, his big hand firm on the collar of the other guyâs shirt, is Link.
In the middle of the Devilâs Playground, he looks bigger. Stronger. Darker.
Murderous.
For the first time since I called Link for help, Iâm meeting Devilâand Iâm frozen in place as he glares as the man in his grasp.
âDevil,â he gasps.
âWhat the fuck do you think youâre doing? Laying hands on my wife⦠do you want me to fucking kill you? Because I think Iâm going â
âShe wasnât marked,â the man starts to explain, voice frantic and high as he realizes that, when I said I was married, this is my husband. âI thought she was fair game.â
âYeah?â Link twists his fist in the guyâs shirt, lifting him a good two inches off the ground. âYou thought wrong.â
As my hands fly to my mouth, covering it as I watch in horror, Link takes a swing. The guy canât avoid the punch, and his head snaps over his shoulder as Linkâs fist connects with his face.
Blood sprays everywhere, but if I thought Link got his point across with one hit, I was wrong.
Iâve seen him fight before. It was how he made money for us when I was still scrimping and saving and trying to put myself through college, and I couldnât accept money from him without being there, supporting him during his back alley fights, mopping him up when he was on the losing end of a brawl.
He was alway a hard hit. He didnât often lose, and even when he did, the other guy looked nearly as bad as he did.
Tonight? It is no contest. Link isnât fighting for the pot. Heâs whaling on the other guy for honor or some shit like that, and all I can do is whimper into my palm as he hits him again and again until heâs hanging limply in his hold.
Heâs not dead. Thatâs the only thing I can think of as Link drops him to the dance floor. The guy groans as he hits the ground, immediately trying to crawl away.
No one helps him. Whether itâs because they donât want to get involved, or they know that Link is the Devil of Springfield and this is his place, I donât know. But not one even offers to help the guy, and Link adds insult to injury by booting him one last time, getting him away from us.
And then he turns on me.
âCome here.â He holds out his hand. âAva, now.â
I inch over to him, watching his hand move because itâs better than staring into the face of the brawler that just beat the shit out of a guy for touching me.
Itâs dotted with blood. At first, I think itâs the guy on the floorâs blood, until Link gets antsy, flexing his fingers, gesturing for me to go to him and I see that his knuckles are split from the force of his hits. Some of the blood is his, and I donât know how I feel about that.
I do, however, go to put my hand in his.
I wasnât thinking. Still shocked by the brutality Link just showed off, I definitely wasnât thinking as I offer him my left hand.
Link snatches it, spreading my fingers apart so that itâs obvious heâs focusing on the fourth one.
His head snaps up, eyes locking on mine. âWhere is it, Ava?â
He looks so angry, the words catch in my throat.
Thrusting my hand down, breaking the connection, Link looms in front of me. âYouâre my wife. Youâre mine. That ring proves it, and you took it off?â
âIt fell off,â I begin at last, trying to defend myself.
Link isnât having it. âYou took it off, then you let some random fucker touch you.â
Let him? âI was trying to get awayââ
âYou shouldnât have been here in the first place. You donât belong here, Ava,â he tells me. No shit. His dark eyes are blazing at me, jaw clenched as he spits out, âIf I wanted a whore for a wife, I wouldâve married any of the waitresses Royce tried to hook me up with.â
I go up on my tiptoes, going nose to nose with Link. âMaybe you should have.â
He purses his lips. From the fury inherent in every line of his face, I know heâs dying to continue our argument, and the old Link would have.
But this isnât the old Link I used to know. It isnât my Link.
This is the Devil of Springfield, and when his voice goes icy cold, sending shivers up and down my spine, I remember that as he says, âWeâll discuss this later, pet.â
I open my mouth. Link shakes out his hand, turning away from me. âChance.â
A guy materializes from out of the crowd. Heâs a tall dark-haired guy in his late twenties, give or take thanks to his baby face, and hero worship in his big brown eyes as he steps in front of Link.
âYes, boss?â
âBring my wife back to the penthouse.â He pauses for a moment, and though I canât see his face, I can only imagine the expression on it. âAnd donât let her leave again.â
âLinkââ
Without turning around, he walks away from me.
I almost follow him. The last time I let him go like that, that was the end of us. I donât know what kind of âusâ we have now, but he seems determined to keep meâ
âCome with me, Mrs. Crewes,â Chance says. âIâll get you back to the bossâs house.â
âas a prisoner, just like I thought.