“I’m—”
She held up a hand. “Let’s not think about it. You’re strong enough to have a shower. That will make you feel ten times better.” She smiled gently. “After all, you do kind of smell like road-kill.”
My lips quirked for her benefit only, and I let her move the tray and quilt so I could stand on wobbly legs.
She helped me upright, giving me time to cough wetly as the last dregs of liquid in my lungs sloshed around.
“Every step takes you closer to being well again, Tess. And I’ll be by your side as long as you need me.”
I smiled and let her lead me onward.
Chapter 17
Whimper and moan while I sit on my throne, we can be monsters together so we’re never alone…
I could no longer look at inane objects without wanting to smash them to f**king pieces.
Everything pissed me off. My temper broiled constantly, and the helplessness I felt when it came to Tess crippled me.
She shut me out. She flatly refused to talk to me—to tell me what happened so I could help fight her nightmares for her. She looked at me as if I was a f**king stranger.
I meant every word. If she gave up, gave up on herself, on us, then I had nothing left. She might as well have died in f**king Rio. I could’ve gone rogue and killed everyone until someone put me out of my misery.
But that wasn’t the worst of it. The worst part was the nightmares and the skull-crushing pain of a migraine that refused to break. I lived on codeine and anti-inflammatories to try and function—to make sure I was there for Tess.
My one bodily weakness was determined to murder me all while Tess ripped out my aching heart.
No matter what I did, nothing worked. I slept beside her, nursed her. I died a little inside. The beast hated seeing her so meek and broken while the man learned a new compassion for caring. But day by day, hour by hour, the passion and need I felt for her turned from lover to brother. From consumed to confused.
I knew I could no longer hurt her and the sane part of me didn’t want to. But the part of me that knew Tess would never come back wanted to kill her faster. Just so the agony would be over with.
She looked at me with such emptiness it only made me sink further into hell. I’d never be able to touch her again. Never draw blood or show her how much I cared with the use of a whip or flogger. That was all gone and I mourned for it. The beast lamented that I would never again have Tess panting in pleasure-pain, completely at my mercy. But now I mourned a deeper feeling.
I’d wrapped her in cotton wool; I’d doted on her for over two weeks. I watched as her body responded to treatment, how the bruises faded, and her lungs stopped wheezing. I stopped going to work so I could be with her every hour. I gave up my entire life to make sure I was there for her, but she didn’t want me.
She didn’t want the man with the beast who wanted to make her scream.
She didn’t want the man who cared for her so sweetly and would never hurt her.
She doesn’t want me.
Any part of me.
Frederick took over the company, and I had nothing to do with my time but lurk in my home, being confronted with so many injured and broken women. The beast inside trembled and huddled into a ball. It hated everything. It begged me to leave. To run.
Franco found me making my way outside. “Sir, the doctor and his team have finished their daily rounds for the women. Do you need them for anything else before they leave?” He came closer, eyeing me.
Franco hadn’t left me alone since damn Frederick told him to watch out for my migraines. He ratted me out to my own staff to keep an eye on me. I tore into Frederick for overstepping the line, but he just hung up on me. Bastard.
Franco always looked at me with f**king respect; now it bordered on friendship and pity. Even after everything we’d done in the warehouse, he thought I was weak.
I f**king hated it. I hate everything. I hate everyone. Tess did this. Tess cut out my soul and left me with nothing.
“Tell him to go. I don’t need him.” If I died of a migraine so be it. Then at last I might find peace.
“Are you sure?”
I glowered. “Don’t, Franco. Don’t ever forget your place.”
He dropped his eyes, taking a step back. “Didn’t mean to piss you off.” He left without another word, and I ploughed through the house that was no longer a private sanctuary but a convalescent home for over twenty women whom we’d flown over from Rio. I slammed the front door behind me.
Five were due to leave today. And two left the moment they arrived. A few were sick and four suffered withdrawals like Tess, but none of them had been hurt as much as her. It made no sense to butcher items bound for sale. The only casualty had been found by one of the mercenaries: a blonde in a shallow grave with a gunshot to the head.
I had no purpose as I paced around the exterior of the large manor. I had no compass or direction anymore. I needed to go for a run, or beat the shit out of some gym equipment. But all I could think about was Tess.
I didn’t have the balls to go back to see her. I couldn’t stand looking into her empty soulless eyes. I couldn’t be told to leave again. I might strike her. I might hit her and then I’d be no better than the bastards who stole her.
Hit her. Whip her. Force her to face whatever it is she’s blocked.
But instead of pawing at me, encouraging me to race back to tie Tess up, the beast curled deeper into the corner, hanging its pitiful head. It wanted to bolt. To leave and never come back.
The urge to sprint filled my limbs and I took off. I wasn’t dressed for a run—in jeans and a black T-shirt—but I couldn’t stand the angst anymore.
I took off toward the manicured fields, running from thoughts of Tess.
I charged under ancient trees, sucking in lungfuls of air as I outran my demons. Outran the memories of her hallucinations and fretful mumbling. I tried to forget that she talked to Brax in her sleep, her parents, too.
My hands curled and I slammed them into a tree as I darted past. Bark lodged into my knuckles, but I didn’t care.
I didn’t care about anything but running.
*****
Two hours later, I could barely move and smashed the library door behind me. Throwing myself into a wingback, I tried to calm my breathing, wiping my sweaty face with the hem of my T-shirt.
I needed a shower, but I couldn’t face going upstairs to my room yet. The thought of seeing Tess hurt like a motherfucker.
Scowling at the library, I remembered why I’d avoided coming in here. Too many memories existed: Tess standing up to the police when she thought they’d come to arrest me; Tess coming back to offer her love.
And now that f**king love was fading. If not already disappeared.
I picked up a heavy candlestick from the side table, hurling it at the fireplace. It bent and smashed against the bricks. The violence awakened the need in me, and I wanted to wring somebody’s neck for stealing something so precious from me.
My jaw ground until my teeth almost turned to dust. I needed a fight. I needed to kill to purge myself of this...this…foreign emotion. This mind-twisting confusion.
Everything inside no longer made sense. When Tess woke up coughing and fighting her dreams, I called her my love. I called her the sweetest endearment I’d ever called anyone in my life, and she didn’t react.
I willingly opened my heart to her and finally f**king admitted that I no longer merely cared for her. I no longer even fell for her. I’d hit rock bottom and loved her with every inch of my f**king soul.
And nothing.
Her fragility and sickness activated another part of me. The part that stood up to be a protector and provider. My need to wipe her brow and hold her while she healed encouraged dormant sides of me to grow.
I felt myself distancing, retreating from a harsh lover who wanted to hurt, to something softer. A man who would lay down his body, who would flay himself alive if it meant Tess would heal. But those caring needs crippled the beast and I no longer saw Tess as a fighter.
By her own words she was forcing me away.
She looked at me with no emotion, not as her lover who’d drawn her blood and been so deep inside her, I bruised both of us. She looked at me as if she’d said goodbye already.
I stood up, unable to sit any longer. Grabbing a pair of bookends, I threw them against the desk. The loud bangs as they dented the wood encouraged me to reap more anarchy.
Turning myself over to the beast, I brought an apocalypse on the room.
I tore off bookshelves.
It’s over.
I shredded limited editions.
I’ve fallen in love only for it to end so fast.
I hurled figurines and kicked priceless artefacts.
She’ll never be my strong esclave again.
When the room was in complete disarray, I threw myself into the chair.
Sitting forward, I massaged my temples, trying to dislodge the migraine.
Tess shot into my mind. How her head threw back when I licked her p**sy. How she moaned when I f**ked her. How her skin flushed when I whipped her.
I waited for the beast to snarl and demand I do worse things. To go up there and become her entire world while I hurt her.
But my c*ck shrivelled and I skated away from such things. All I could see was a woman I would die for, a woman who paid for my sins with her agony, and all I wanted to do was wrap her in silk and finery and never go near her again.
*****
“Um, wow. I suppose I’ll need a bit of help cleaning tomorrow.”
My eyes snapped open, and the sharp swell of a headache welcomed me back to the world of unhappiness and horror.
Suzette moved through the dark room, stepping over rubble, dodging broken lamps.
“Are you okay, master? Can I get you anything?” She smoothed her pinafore, refusing to look at the mess around us. She probably thought I’d completely gone insane.
I sat straighter, dragging a hand over my face, trying to dispel the headache’s grip on me. My clothes were crusty from sweat; I felt ancient. “Is she okay?” My voice was a growl. I cleared my throat.
Suzette bit her lip before answering, “She’ll be fine. She just needs time.”
I tensed at her tone. She lied. “Qu’est ce qu’il y a, Suzette?” What is it?
Her eyes darted away before she inched closer. “She asked me if you’d let her use a laptop and internet.”
I exploded upright. “Does she still think I won’t let her talk to the outside world! She isn’t my f**king prisoner. Of course she can have a laptop.” I stalked toward my desk and grabbed the spare I always kept there.
If Tess showed an interest in something, perhaps she would find her way back. I couldn’t crush the hope building in me—even though I knew it would probably end up hurting me more.
“Here.” I shoved it toward Suzette.
She took it, but didn’t move. Finally, she glanced up and my heart swooped to my feet. “What else?”
“It’s not my place, but I don’t think you should let her have it.” She tried to give the laptop back, but I moved away. “I don’t think it’s going to help her recovery.”
“What do you mean it won’t help? I’ll do anything if it means she’ll find herself again.” I shivered, remembering the cold blankness in her eyes. “If it’s what she wants, give her the laptop, Suzette.”