I slam the door to the office so hard the walls rattle from the force before taking long strides back to the desk. That woman is fucking infuriating. She was when she was a teenager, and I donât know why Iâm surprised that sheâs even more so as an adult.
Doesnât she understand Iâm just trying to keep her safe? Doesnât she get that weâre at war and this very fucking suspicious box that was delivered with her name on it could very well be a trap? Dealing with her only reminds me why I stayed single all this time.
I should have moved on after I left. It would have been easier if I cut ties all together and moved on with my life rather than watching from afar, but Iâm nothing if not a glutton for punishment. And Iâve never wanted anyone other than Wynter. I tried. I fucked so many women I lost count, and none of them ever matched up to my dove. They couldnât hold my interest, and even during sex, I found myself imagining the woman I love beneath me.
âSo things are going well then?â Storm smirks.
I glare at him before doing the same to the box. âShut up.â
âYou would never have been interested in her if she werenât the way she is, and sheâs always been like this. Sheâs always thought she knows better. It comes with the territory, I guess. Growing up in the environment we did with two older brothers who were involved in the family business.â He shrugs.
âI just got her back,â I whisper. âI canât bear the idea of something happening to her, it makes me homicidal. When I saw her holding the box by the front doorâ¦â I trail off. God, the idea of what could have happened makes my heart beat so hard in my chest it hurts.
âI know. Believe me, man, I know. Every fucking day in the family is another day one of us could get taken out. The accident proves that.â He shakes his head, staring at the leather chair his father used to sit in every night with a glass of scotch and read.
He always said it was his way of unwinding and letting the horrors of the day go. I didnât understand that until I was older, until after I took my first life.
I scrub both hands over my face. Itâs like thereâs a live wire under my skin burning me from the inside out. âWhat do you think is in this thing?â I ask.
âHonestly, I have no fucking clue. Iâm guessing not a bomb. It would have blown up by now.â
I nod. âI agree.â
Storm picks up a letter opener from the desk and carefully slides the blade through the tape until the flaps give way beneath it. We both take a breath as he opens the box with the end of the letter opener, careful not to touch it just in case itâs laced in poison.
The things the box could contain are limitless. The family receives any number of threats per day, usually body parts or the like, but what Iâm staring at laying in the middle of the box takes long moments for me to put the pieces together.
âWhat the fuck is that?â Storm asks.
âItâs a dove,â I whisper. This threat isnât for Wynter alone. No, this is for both of us, and itâs not a stretch to assume it came from one of the Russos. If I had to guess, I would say Elijah, but it could have been any of them.
His eyes move from the dead bird in the bottom of the box to mine, and I know heâs thinking the same thing I am. I chose to leave Wynter to keep her safe. My family is dangerous, they have no boundaries, and nothing is off limits to them, but we made a decision to allow me back in her life, and the moment I did, she was in danger again, maybe even more so than when I left.
âDonât even think about it,â Storm says quickly.
âWhat?â
âLeaving. I see it in your eyes. You think sheâs safer if sheâs far away from you, and that may have been the case eight years ago, but not anymore. Weâre all in danger. Every person in this house has a target on their back, and if anything, Wynter is safer now because there is nothing you wouldnât do to protect her, including throw yourself in front of anything that could hurt her.â
âThey threatened her because of me,â I say quietly. âThis may be addressed to her, but itâs a threat to me. If I stay with her, theyâre going to hurt her.â
Storm groans. âThey threatened her before you came back.â
âThey what?â I growl.
âWhen Angelo was trying to get to Emerson, he said that if he couldnât get to her, he was going after Wynter and Snow. Itâs why we went into lockdown.â
âAnd youâre only telling me this now?â I shout. I should have known he wouldnât put the whole family into lockdown unless more than one of us was in danger, but fuck, he should have told me.
âAt the time, we thought it might be an empty threat because of where it came from.â
âThose passportsâ¦â
He nods. âYeah. I took a lot of what he said with a grain of salt, however, Iâm never willing to gamble with my familyâs lives, and I knew if he took one of them in place of Emerson that she would be beside herself and hand herself over.â
âWhich would turn Rayne into a complete psycho.â
Storm nods. âExactly. And we get threats every fucking day. I canât count the number of death threats I get, so it wasnât worth worrying you over. I was hoping the day you pulled your head out of your ass and came back wouldnât be under such dire circumstances, but not even I could have planned for the accident.â He sinks into the chair behind the desk and sighs. âDad would know what to do if he were here. Heâd be able to give us a rock to look under, but I feel like weâre just going around and around in circles.â
âHave you been sleeping?â I ask.
âNo. Not since the accident.â He sighs and looks back into the box at the dead dove. The symbol of my love for Wynter lays mutilated in the bottom, and neither of us can keep our eyes off it for long. âHow would they know you call her dove? Youâve always called her that, but I donât feel like itâs common knowledge. The two of you never even went public, so thereâs no way anyone could know.â
I shake my head. âI donât know. Iâve only ever called her that in this house, and even when Iâve spoken to my uncles, I never speak about her with them. I never wanted them to know how much she meant to me.â That was the worst part of having to leave her, because I had no idea how my family even knew I loved her.
âDo you think we have a rat?â Storm asks.
âI donât think we should rule it out.â I shrug. Weâve always bred loyalty. The Saint James family treats their men with respect. They are paid in accordance with what they do, and traditionally weâve never had an issue.
âHave a look into everyone that comes and goes in this house that isnât a member of this family. I want to know every person theyâve spoken to in the last six months right down to their mailman.â
I nod. âIâll get on it now.â
âAnd Everett?â
âYeah?â
âDonât leave her again. She wonât survive it.â
Those words ring through my head as I leave the room in search of my laptop, because the reality is, neither will I.