Dark Savior: A Dark Bad Boy Romance (23 page)

BOOK: Dark Savior: A Dark Bad Boy Romance
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“I had a deal,” I hear myself say. “With my best friend. She’s going to clean the apartment for the next two months.”

He raises one eyebrow in question.

“Is that so,” he says, and for the first time, he doesn’t sound annoyed or angry at me. There is even a little smirk on his handsome face. “Why will she do that?”

“Because I did something she never sees me doing,” I say, surprised at my own wit.

“And that is?” He wants to know, leaning forward with an expectant expression.

“Well, she… I mean… the deal was for me to…,” I stutter. Great, that short moment of witty sass was short lived. I should have known.

I close my eyes as I continue to speak. “She told me that the next time I see a guy I like, I’ll have to approach him and say hi.”

Oh my God, now that I hear it out loud, that sounds so incredibly stupid. He must think I’m an idiot! A twelve year old idiot at that. I sound so immature.

Indeed, I hear him laughing and abruptly open my eyes.

“A guy you like, huh,” he say, shaking his head with a grin on his face that makes him look so much younger.

He looks at me, still smiling. His entire demeanor is so different, so relaxed compared to just a few minutes before.

“That’s very flattering,” he says. “So, you’d say, I’m a ‘guy you like?’”

I blush. “Um, yeah.”

Way to regain that lost dignity.

“Well, congratulations on winning your little bet with your friend,” he adds. “But I’m curious: what’s supposed to happen next? Your deal was just about saying hello, wasn’t it?”

I nod. “Yeah, we kept it kind of vague.”

“So, if you’d walk back to her right now, without having so much as a real conversation with me or getting my phone number—you’d still win the deal?”

“I guess so,” I say, discouraged.

“Is that why you tried to storm off right after falling into me?”

I hesitate for a moment, unsure where this conversation is leading. Is he flirting with me or trying to get rid of me?

“You didn’t exactly give me the ‘I want to speak to you’ vibe,” I try to explain. “And I don’t feel like I gave a pretty good first impression.”

“Well,” he says with a husky voice. “I think we should just start over then.”

I look up at him quizzically.

“I’m Joe Mars,” he says, extending his hand for me to shake it. “Most people call me Mars.”

“The God of War,” I say as I shake his hand. His grip is a lot softer this time than it was when we first shook hands.

“I’m Nike Halsted,” I say. “And most people call me… Nike.”

“The Goddess of Victory,” he says, smirking at me.

“It’s very nice to meet you.”

 

CHAPTER NINE

Mars

 

She has no clue, absolutely no clue. What I thought to be an elaborate play to confuse me, make feel out of harm’s way while her friend was calling the police, turns out to be nothing but ignorance from her side.

She has no idea who I am. I’m just a guy she likes. All she wants is to flirt with me.

Silly little girl.

What a delicious coincidence. This cute little lamb has no idea who she is trying to banter with.

At least that is what she—quite convincingly—makes me believe right now. I am still not a hundred percent sure. It may be an occupational disease, but trust is a physical impossibility for me. I don’t trust a person’s words or acts, but listen to my instincts, and my instincts are telling me that she is as clueless as she behaves.

I have been keeping one eye on her friend while talking to Nike, to make sure that she is not going anywhere or reaching for her phone. She didn’t. For the most part, she just stared over to us while absentmindedly talking to another man who appeared next to her just after the lion-haired girl came over to me. She tried to be unobtrusive, but things like that don’t go past me. I know when I am being watched. I have to know these things.

When I started to believe that this girl, Nike, had other reasons to come up to me rather than threatening to report me to the police, a plan started forming in my head. A continuation of that twisted idea I had when I first spotted her tonight.

I could fuck her. She wants me; she would be up for it. The way she is standing in front of me, her hands shaking and her dark eyes wide with desire and fear—I can tell.

After all, I’m a guy she likes. She is attracted to me.

It’s almost too easy.

She is so delicate, so beautifully unaware. Her innocence is driving me mad with lust. It has been far too long since I wanted a woman as much as I want her right now. The fact that she is my only living witness only increases the appeal she has for me. She may look and act innocent as fuck, but there is a certain danger to her.

So fucking delicious. 

If it were up to me, I’d grab her by that mass of hair, tilt her head back and get a taste of those sweet, pouty lips. She is wearing lipstick that is too dark for her complexion, and I’m pretty sure that today is the first time she’s ever worn it. It looks misplaced on her. I would love to see it violently smeared across her pale face.

She is talking to me, nervously blabbering cute little nonsense, but I am hardly listening, nodding and smiling at the right places.

In my mind, I am going through all kinds of scenarios that would make it possible for me to have her tonight.

Have her and eliminate her.

While her attraction to me is making it easy to get her close to me and take her away to a secluded place, I cannot risk anyone seeing us leave together.

If I were to go through with this, she would be dead by tomorrow, freshly fucked and my face the last one she saw before closing her eyes forever. It would be ideal.

Ideal, if the circumstances were any different. Already, too many people have seen us talking. And even if it weren’t for them, her friend knows that she has been talking to me. Everyone here knows my name, thanks to that damn laudatory speech.

I’m screwed.

I notice that her voice has risen at the end of her last sentence, suggesting that she has asked me a question. The way she is looking up at me now underlines that assumption.

“Come again?” I say, trying not to sound too much out of it.

“Another drink?” She repeats her question. “I’m going to get myself a mimosa—do you want another, too?”

I shake my head. “No mimosa for me.”

She furls her eyebrows in question, casting a quick glance at the almost empty glass in my hands.

“Are you sure,” she says.

“I am,” I reply. “But let me get you one.”

She makes a move to object, but before she can, I turn around and head for the bar. I’m not going to send a girl off to get her own drink, what kind of move would that be. Killer or not—I know what is to be expected of a gentleman.

I fetch a mimosa for her and a glass of water for myself.

“Already had enough for tonight,” I excuse myself as I come back to her and hand her the mimosa. It’s always better to say that I’ve had my share instead of telling people that I don’t drink. Non-drinkers are suspicious.

She casts me a look of insecurity when she takes the glass out of my hand, but doesn’t say anything about it. We clink glasses, despite me just having a plain water.

I’m not sure what to do. She has me trapped. I thought there was no way that I would find the girl who witnessed my last kill, and now she is standing right in front of me, awkwardly attempting to flirt with me—and looking awfully enticing while she does. The longer she is within my close proximity, the more I want her. Already, I have to restrain myself from pulling her in close, claiming her with a kiss that would make her shiver and blush even more.

I found my last and only living witness, she is right within reach, it would be so easy to eliminate her.

At the same time, it wouldn’t.

What a fucking dilemma.

Usually, I am not one to postpone decisions, but with this one, I just might have to. I cannot decide on the spot what to do with her. But I know I want to have a taste of her. It’s a dangerous game, but one that I’m willing to play. If she hasn’t recognized me now, there is a good chance she never will, even though I cannot be a hundred percent sure of it.

Either way, there is something oddly appealing about her. I can tell from the way she stands and moves, that she is a shy and insecure person in general. There is something vulnerable about her, mixed with a cold and barely visible strength. She is not weak, but she is also not bubbling with energy and life like her friend.

She is the kind of girl who sits alone on a rooftop in the middle of the night, in a dark and dingy neighborhood.

“So, you said you’re with Linwood publishing,” I say.

It is more of a statement than a question, but she quickly nods.

“Yes,” she says. “I’m an editor.”

“Editor,” I repeat. “What does that entail?”

“I polish stories,” she says. There is clear hint of pride in her voice. It’s cute. I bet she has prepared that answer for a long time.

She beams up at me, and it’s the first time that I see her smiling. It pierces through my leathery walls of protection like a hot dagger. I don’t let it show, but her smile causes my chest to tighten up. Suddenly, my ribcage appears too small for the wild heart inside.

“I make sure a story—or a book—is the best it can be, before it is presented to the audience,” she adds, finishing her elaboration with a sip of her mimosa.

“But you don’t create stories yourself,” I try to mock her, mainly to get that disarming smile off of her face. “You just do the finishing touches on someone else’s creative work.”

She is startled for a second. The smile does disappear, but just for a moment before she tilts her head and looks at me with a smile unlike the one before. There is a condescending note to it.

I fucking hate it.

“I believe in labor division,” she explains. “There are certain things that I am better at than other people—and vice versa. I’m not a storyteller, but I can make them shine in a way the author couldn’t.”

Her self-confidence surprises me. Here I was, thinking she was a vulnerable lamb, easily weakened by a little mockery, and she just uses it as an opportunity to brag.

I give her an appreciative nod.

“Smart,” I comment. “And very pragmatic.”

“Is that a good thing or a bad thing?” she asks.

Her question surprises me, and so does the way she is looking at me now. She is tilting her head back to the side again, looking up at me with those big, dark eyes.

Her gaze is so intense, so aware. How can she not see who I am? Maybe she is playing tricks on me after all.

No matter what, I have to be careful with her. I know I cannot let her get away just like that, but getting her too close to me poses a danger in itself.

“A very good thing for the most part,” I say without making it sound like too much of a compliment.

A shy smile scurries across her face. She looks up at me with trembling lips, again sipping on her drink. She is close to finishing another glass, and must be a good drinker compared to me. Her cheeks are flushed and so is the pale skin on her delicate cleavage. Soon, she will start to stumble like a newborn deer, if she doesn’t watch it. I need to decide what drink to offer her next after this one is gone—water or coffee to clear her head or another alcoholic drink?

If I fuck her tonight, I don’t want her too drunk. Necrophilia is just not my thing.

Then again, it all depends on what I’ll try to get from her tonight. Children and drunks are the most honest, they say. A wasted girl might talk and reveal whatever she might be hiding from me.

But why would she get drunk and go home with me if she knew who I am?

My inability to decide drives me wild with rage. She has told me her name and her workplace, so it shouldn’t be too hard to find her again, even if I don’t claim her tonight, either to try to get her to talk or to fuck her.

She looks up to me and her lips part slightly as if she is about to speak. There seems to be a question lingering on her tongue that she doesn’t yet dare to ask.

“Are you okay?” I want to know, hoping that this little nudge might make it easier for her to speak.

She nods and swallows hard.

“Yes, um, I was just wondering…,” she stutters, furling her eyebrows as if she was mad at herself. “What exactly is it that you do?”

“I’m a stockbroker,” I give my well practiced reply. “I research the financial market and help others to get the best return on their money. Like I have.”

“How did you get there?” she asks, gazing up at me like a curious child.

An unpleasant question, one that I am prepared for but still hope that not many people pose it.

The truth?

I made a lot of money killing for the mob, for years, and instead of blowing my income away on drugs and women, like many others in my profession have, I was smart about it. I saved as much as I could and educated myself. It’s easy to gain the information necessary to succeed in the stock market—you just have to know how to use it accordingly.

Killing and saving up allowed me to start out with a big amount of seed money.

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