DOM: Chapter 16
DOM: Alliance Series Book Three
Val comes with me willingly.
She walks at my side, not flinching away from my hold on her arm. Not shoving me away when I put my hand on her back. Not protesting when I help her up into the vehicle. She doesnât so much as look at me when I reach across her to buckle her in.
She doesnât react to any of it.
But she never stops crying.
Silent tears continuously roll down her cheeks. And they make me feelâ¦
They make me feel.
Not trusting King not to shoot me in the back, I reach into the glove box and take out my pistol.
Valâs pretty brown eyes are staring right at it, but Iâm not sure she sees it. Not sure if she realizes now that this is my vehicle. Just like the one in Vegas. Just like the driver in Vegas. Just like the witnesses at our wedding.
Iâve been building this world out of smoke and mirrors. Carefully. Meticulously. All for this. For what just happened.
Because I had to.
Because I need this.
And I wonât apologize for it.
âValentine.â She flinches a little at my voice but doesnât reply.
Weâre two hours into the six-hour drive to Chicago, and she hasnât said a thing. She hasnât adjusted the air. Hasnât asked me to play music. Hasnât said anything.
I knew sheâd be upset.
I have enough sense to know that this was all going to blow up in my face, and I braced myself for it.
Figured sheâd yell and scream and probably try to hit me. Thought Iâd have to carry her out of Kingâs house, kicking and screaming, while fending her brother off as he tried to wrestle her back.
But none of that happened.
She just shut down. And King⦠Fucking King just let me take her.
The outcome is exactly what I needed, because I need Valentine in order to leverage Kingâs, and therefore Neroâs, cooperation.
But King just let me take her. He let me walk his sister out of the house.
Val was standing there, fucking crying, and he did nothing.
But I guess there isnât much he could do, because King knows Iâm right. He knows that he owes me one. Because when his wife ran away, straight into the path of a human trafficker, I stepped in and protected her.
Valâs body trembles with a shiver, so I adjust the temperature.
âDo you want your seat warmer on?â
She doesnât answer. Of course she doesnât.
Val trembles again, so I press the button to warm the leather seats anyway. She can turn it off if she wants.
Still no reaction.
I let out a sigh, then turn my own seat on low. Lounging in bed all day yesterday, followed by flying commercial today, is making my back tight.
The day we met, I joked with Val about not being that old. But Iâve lived hard. Iâve fought for my life more than once. Killed way more times than that. And taken more hits to my person than I could ever count. And today, my body is reminding me.
Movement in the passenger seat pulls my attention to Val.
Sheâs lifted her left hand from where itâs been frozen in her lap and is staring at her ring.
A twinge of something nips at the edge of my conscience.
But I wonât say Iâm sorry.
Because Iâm not. Iâm not sorry for what Iâve done.
It had to happen, and once Val understands why, sheâll forgive me.
I know her.
She might not believe that right now, but I do. And I know sheâll eventually understand.
Her breathing changes, and little puffs of breath fill the car.
âHey.â I glance over at her. âWhatâs wrong?â
Itâs a stupid question to ask right now, but seriously, I donât know whatâs going on with her.
Iâve never seen someone so catatonic, and now sheâs starting to breathe heavily.
I reach for her. âAngel.â
âDonât call me that!â Her sudden shout fills the vehicle.
Only through a lifetime of not showing weakness do I manage not to react to her outburst.
I slowly lower my hand to rest between us. âAlright.â
âThis is what Iâve always wanted.â Her voice drops to a whisper.
Keeping my eyes on the road, I sneak another glance, seeing sheâs still staring at the ring.
âI donât know how you knew.â She sounds⦠lost.
I press my lips together.
Val touches the diamond with the tip of her finger. âYou brought this with you, didnât you? To Vegas.â
I donât answer. Because we both know that answer is yes.
âYou offered me everything Iâve ever wanted,â she says quietly as she pulls the ring off her finger, holding it up to the afternoon sun. âBut you canât hold on to mirages.â
Before I can stop her, she lowers her window, and the wind rushes through the opening as she throws her ring out onto the freeway.
It disappears from view long before it hits the concrete below us, gone forever.
And when her window is back up and sheâs settled once more into her seat, I smile.