Read Never Kiss a Bad Boy Online
Authors: Nora Flite
Hesitating, I folded my legs and sat heavily. I was itching all over, burnt and drained. It was like I hadn't slept for days.
Or perhaps, something in me was finally waking up.
I said, “For once, shake off your paranoia. Imagine a future where she lives. Where we get our freedom
and
Marina Fidel.”
The edges of his lips twitched. “I'm a practical man. It's hard to picture that.”
Leaning forward, I pushed my triumph like a knife into an open wound. I had to cut deeper, hamstring him while I had the upper hand. “I won. You said you'd give her a chance to prove she can be trusted.”
Still as a statue, Jacob considered me for a long while. The only motion was the occasional drop of blood from his nose. Shame over being the one who had injured him was settling in. I had to stay strong... I had to stand my ground.
Jacob had been the most important person in the world to me.
Until now, no one had dared to share that space.
“Yes. You won.” Groaning, he pinched the bridge of his nose and looked upwards. “I'll give her a chance. I promised you that much.”
My heart thrummed, a smile so gigantic it was embarrassing split over my face. I was lucky he wasn't watching anymore. “Thanks.”
“You know,” he said, his voice wistful. “Part of me really does want to trust her. What an experience that would be.”
A flutter of doubt poked at me. I thought about our fight, the angle he'd had me at, his experience with grappling. How he'd abruptly stopped choking me out.
Shaking my head, I studied him with suspicion. “You didn't
let
me win... did you?”
His smile was jagged. Peeking at me, he kept squeezing his nose to stem the flow of blood. “Grab a towel from my bag.”
His lack of an answer said volumes.
I yanked out a rag and soaked it in the small water fountain. Jacob taking the fall intentionally shouldn't have made a difference.
Except it does,
I thought silently, handing him the wet cloth.
Watching him clean his face, how quickly he returned to cool, composed Jacob, I stayed hooked on what this meant.
If he had let me win... then Jacob really did cling to the same hope that I did.
He wanted Marina to live.
If the both of us were on the same page, the outcome had a greater percentage of becoming true.
But even with our combined desire, Marina was still an anchor dragging us down in the river of death. If we worked together, could we pull all three of us to the other side?
Freedom.
It waited for us.
We just had to keep ourselves from drowning a little longer.
Jacob
––––––––
M
y face ached—and for a good reason. I was still amazed that Kite had gone as far as he had. I had to admire him.
In my bathroom mirror, I pressed the ice to my nose and chuckled. It didn't look that bad, it just
felt
awful. There was a constant thudding from the cartilage to my brain. The blood had stopped an hour ago, but I could still taste the copper on my tongue.
Leaning close to the mirror, I stared into my eyes, searched for whatever was making me behave like a mad man. It was pointless. I
knew
the reason.
It all came back to her.
Dammit,
I cursed myself. Lifting the ice away, I gingerly touched the side of my face; tender, enough that I winced.
Kite had a hard head, literally. I should have made him tap-out, I'd had the upper hand.
So why did I lose?
My eyes held the answer that time.
Out of disgust, I wrenched away, unable to face myself.
Marina is twisting me up inside.
The revelation was like a second collision. Scrubbing at my hair, making my scalp tingle, I threw the ice in the trash. This situation was going off the rails.
Kite wanted to fight for her, and I'd been roped into agreeing.
I was lying to myself, though, if I thought I wasn't relieved. Kite had forced my hand, freeing me from having to make the choice.
If Marina could prove she was trustworthy... maybe there was a way out of spilling her blood. It was hard to picture, harder to hope for.
After all, only one person existed that I trusted.
Kite was deeper than kin, we walked the Earth as corrupted souls, men who had been destined to suffer from the start. Nothing had ever gone right for us. Even the moment we'd made our bond had been a curse.
Once you killed, the river welcomed you.
I was so tired of swimming.
Leaving the bathroom, I poured myself a glass of water. It was clean and crisp; perfect. It cut down my throat, clearing my head. Facing the window over the city, I hooked my thumb in my belt and just watched.
The busy streets were so far away. I felt like I was separate from everything. I always had been, in my own way.
The day I'd rented this apartment, I'd stood right here and smiled at the ground below. I'd thought, at the time, “This is the beginning. This is what we've been struggling for.” Every hit we'd taken, ever kill, had made us more and more money.
Our lives had become stable.
Secure.
But money is so strange. When you don't have it, it's all you want. It seems like the one cure for all your problems.
But money couldn't fix the hole she'd made in me.
Shifting, I sipped my drink, letting my attention fall to my couch.
The place I'd claimed Marina last night.
Her red dress had shed like snake-skin, her body coiling and strangling me until I was dizzy.
I didn't remember moving, but I had. Standing by the furniture, I reached out, running my fingertips over the cushion. Marina had begged for me here. She'd melted in my grip until she was nothing but some unquenchable creature.
Her words burned into my brain. She'd pleaded with me to let her come. I'd tortured her because she tortured
me,
even when I slept.
I want to hear your pretty voice so I can remember these words forever
.
That had been what I'd claimed.
I'd meant it.
If she was going to be erased, and the most I could own was that moment, I'd take it and crush it to my heart.
I'm possessed,
I thought cynically. Reaching down, I adjusted my firming cock. I wanted to sink my teeth into her again.
Now that I'd gotten through her walls, seen what was beneath, my craving was worse.
Bending close to the smooth leather, I inhaled. It still smelled like her—that spicy, oddly autumn mix. I wasn't much of a praying man, but as I shook myself, tried to force the scent of her from my nose, I hoped with all my strength that Marina would do what we needed.
I wanted her to prove herself.
No... beyond that.
I
needed
her to.
It crossed my mind that she, herself, might not have faith in us. She'd told me flatly that she didn't trust me. Our plan would go forward regardless of how she felt. And, if it worked, we'd have an eternity to earn her trust.
This woman was a time bomb. Marina could explode and end us, or she'd be diffused.
Only she held the code to all of our futures.
Floorboards creaked; footsteps that announced the man behind me. “How is your nose?” Kite asked, betraying his guilt.
Facing him, I saw the stained clothing bundled in his arms. He'd been using my bedroom to change out of the gym clothes. “Considering how hard you hit me, it's fine.” I tapped my cheek. “Swollen, that's about it.”
He grimaced. “Fuck. I'm really sorry, man.”
Waving his apology away, I slid around him and into my kitchen. He followed close behind, shoulders scrunched up by his ears. “Just forget about it. Things got heated, we've moved on.” Pouring myself a drink of water, I sipped it, leaned back on the counter. “All that matters is that we cleared the air.”
His smile was hesitant. “Yeah. If you promise not to revenge-hit me at some random point when I least suspect it, then we're good.”
Chuckling, I offered him a glass; he motioned it away. “We're going to need to come up with a way to test her. You realize that, right?”
“Sure.” Shuffling side to side, Kite put the clothes on the counter. “Thing is, I don't... want to put her through anything just yet. This morning did a number on her, she was kind of sad when I left. Like she didn't want me to go.” Frowning, he glanced up at me. “We should wait a bit, that's all I'm saying.”
Picturing her face twisted with sadness had my stomach curling in on itself. Marina doing poorly was something I didn't want to dwell on. “We've been keeping her cooped up, haven't we?”
“We took her dancing last night.”
“Right. But that was... different.” Both of us smiled, recalling the events. I shook myself. “Anyway, how about this? Let's take her out and do something fun today.”
His eyebrows pressed together. “Like what?”
Setting my glass down, I cupped my chin thoughtfully. “I think I have the perfect idea.” It was the right combination of practical and exciting, something Kite and I hadn't done in awhile.
It'd also let her shake her muscles out. Considering how much better we felt after our spar, Marina could benefit from a similar situation.
All that lovely girl had to do was say yes.
So far, we were good at getting her to agree to our ideas.
Marina
––––––––
I
n the bathroom mirror, I ran my fingers over my neck. Both sides advertised the scars of my bad decisions.
One faded bruise from Kite.
One vibrant set of indents from Jacob.
Together, these killers had marked me. I belonged to them.
It was a bizarre notion. My head battled with my heart, making my thoughts struggle to come to life. What we'd done... it shouldn't have meant anything. It was just sex.
Scorching, wild, addicting sex.
Fuck.
Gripping the sink, I ran the water and splashed myself. I'd done this four times already. I'd been in the bathroom since Kite had gone to his bedroom, changed clothes, and slipped out the front door with a brisk goodbye.
His exit had done two things. One, it had allowed me to try and think about what we'd all done last night. And two...
It had made me painfully aware of his absence.
Right in my chest, a hollow ache had begun. Kite had sat with me before the sun had fully risen, listened to me spill my raw terror as my eyes dripped with tears. He'd comforted me in a way I didn't think was
possible.
And, if he was telling the truth, he'd promised more of that in the future.
The idea that he meant it, that he'd let me sleep near him, not caring about my night terrors or my stupid whimpers, it had me losing balance.
I walked on floating feet, numb in my body because my mind was using everything I had to make
sense
of this situation.
Kite was a murderer. His best friend was no different.
How had I let them break me down and slip inside of me?
Thinking of their hands, their steamy whispers, had me shivering. I didn't like the part of me they were building. It was soft, and fragile, and reckless. It made me want to seek them out. To feel their arms and never let go.
Smacking myself, I watched the red mark bloom.
If I'm not crazy already, I'm going to snap before this is over.
Over. What a thought.
We still hadn't found the man I was hunting. His photo was locked away in my purse, I wished capturing him was just as easy.
Again, I felt that flicker of doubt.
You're going to get hurt,
I told myself.
They're tricking you. Last night meant nothing. You were just a plaything for them.
But hadn't it been amazing?
“Stop,” I said to no one.
I
certainly wasn't listening, apparently. Glaring at my reflection, I wiped the water away and left the bathroom. Alone as I was, I found myself wandering aimlessly.
Kite had carved his name in my skull. My desire to be close to him took me to his empty room. Standing on the cusp, I peered inside. He'd left the lights on, the sign of a man who didn't care about an electricity bill.
His floor was still cluttered, but to my baffling relief, I didn't see those fucking black panties. I didn't ever ask who they'd belonged to. I never wanted to know.
You're being possessive of a man who's sharing you with his friend,
I scolded myself. The words did nothing. I'd already come to terms with the agreement.
Last night, beyond a flicker of competitiveness and greed, I hadn't sensed that either of them was frustrated with the situation. There'd been no obvious jealousy.
It was almost too good to be true.
Lord, I wanted it to be true.
Stepping around the bed, I smiled slyly. Bending down, settling on the springs, I pushed my cheek into the pillows. They smelled just like Kite; that heady, feral scent that left me tingling.
Rocking on the blankets, amused by my own actions, I stretched my arms out. I made a snow angel, then pretended to be a kitten high on catnip. I might as well have been an animal, the way I was behaving.
Breathing through my nose, I rolled on my belly and kicked a pillow off accidentally. Kite was messy, but I didn't want him to know I'd been doing this. I didn't need to give him more ammo to use against me, he turned me into butter easily enough.
Reaching down to grab the pillow, my eyes caught something near my cheek. Maybe I
was
perceptive—they certainly kept saying as much—or maybe it was luck. I didn't care to debate the why.
Under my nose, a secret had been revealed.
The crack that ran up the side of his bed frame was thin, but obvious if you were looking. I knew about hidden things, I'd adored treasure maps and puzzles as a kid.
Hide and seek, too,
I reminded myself bitterly.
Kneeling on the rug, I tugged at the wood with my nails. It took a few seconds, then the panel slid off. Crude, but effective. The insides made my heart pulse.
Closing my fingers on the Ruger, then the stacks of cash, I shook my head. If I was honest, I'd noticed he'd retrieved his gun from here several times, as well as the money for my rent.