"The Mafia King’s Scarlet Trap" Chapter 15
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The steam was a ghost of the fever they had just survived, a thick, white shroud that clung to the marble walls of the private bathroom like a lingering memory.
Inside the glass-enclosed shower, Elena Hawthorne stood with her eyes closed, letting the scalding water beat against her shoulders.
She was trying to wash away the scent of antiseptic, the metallic tang of Victor's blood, and the terrifying, heavy weight of the confession he had whispered in his delirium.
She had the cipher. Seven, four, zero, delta, omega. It was the key to the Cassano digital vault, the final piece of the puzzle she had spent six years trying to solve.
She should be at her terminal now, executing the final phase of her revenge, dismantling the empire that had claimed her sister's life.
But her heart was a traitor.
She stepped out of the shower, the humid air heavy and suffocating. She didn't reach for a towel; she reached for the silk robe she had left on the heated rack.
It was the color of a bruised plum, the fabric cool and liquid against her damp, overheated skin.
As she tied the sash around her waist, she caught her reflection in the steamed-over mirror. Looked like a woman who had finally found a trap she couldn't outrun.
She opened the door to the bedroom, a wall of steam billowing out behind her like the wake of a phantom ship.
Victor was waiting.
He wasn't in the bed; he had moved to the velvet armchair positioned directly across from the bathroom door. He was shirtless, the heavy white bandages on his forearm a stark contrast to the bronzed, scarred expanse of his chest.
The fever had broken, leaving him lean and dangerous, his presence once again radiating the absolute, crushing sovereignty of a dominant overlord.
His storm-gray eyes were fixed on the doorway, dark and dilated, tracking her movement with the predatory stillness of a wolf that had cornered its favorite prize.
Elena froze, her bare feet sinking into the plush charcoal rug.
The spatial distance between them felt like a live wire, humming with a frequency that made the fine hairs on her arms stand up.
"You should have rest, Victor," she said, her voice a silken thread that barely carried across the room.
"I've spent enough time in the dark, Elena," he murmured, his deep baritone vibrating through the floorboards. "I find I prefer the view in the light."
He didn't look away. His gaze was a physical touch, traveling slowly from the damp strands of hair at her forehead, down the pale curve of her throat, to the single droplet of water that was currently tracking a slow, erratic path down the center of her chest, disappearing into the silk lapels of her robe.
Elena felt her heart rate spike, a frantic, rhythmic percussion.
Victor stood up, his movements slow and deliberate, the sheer physical gravity of his six-foot-two frame altering the energy of the room.
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He crossed the floor with the unhurried confidence of a man who had already won the war, stopping when he was a mere breath away from her.
The scent of him—cedarwood, expensive bourbon, and the faint, lingering heat of the fever—swallowed the smell of the jasmine soap.
"You saved my life," Victor whispered, his voice dropping into a dark, gravelly register that made her knees feel weak. "That creates a debt, Elena. I haven't decided how to pay back."
"I didn't do it for the reward," she countered, lifting her chin to meet his gaze, her emerald eyes flashing with a desperate, final spark of defiance.
"No," Victor agreed, his hand coming up to trace the line of her jaw, his thumb dragging across the fullness of her lower lip.
"You did it because you're as caught in this storm as I am. You can pretend you're a free little bird, but your heart is screaming a different story."
He leaned down, his lips ghosting over the damp skin of her neck, right where the water had just been.
Elena wanted to push him away; she wanted to pull him closer until their bones shattered.
Victor drove her backward with a sudden, forceful grace, his body a wall of heat and muscle that refused to be ignored.
Elena's back hit the carved mahogany bedpost, the impact sending a jolt through her spine that felt less like pain and more like an awakening.
Victor pinned her there, his hands coming up to slide inside the silk lapels of her robe.
He didn't pull the fabric away yet; he simply rested his palms against the inner lining, his knuckles stopping just millimeters short of her bare skin.
"Look at me," Victor commanded, his storm-gray eyes burning with an untamed, primitive dominance. "Forget the city. Forget the blood. Look at the man who would burn it all down just to see you like this."
He leaned in until their foreheads were pressed together, his breathing ragged and heavy.
Elena could feel the hard planes of his chest pressing against her breasts through the thin silk, the friction causing a sharp ache to bloom deep in her core.
"You're not going anywhere, Elena," he whispered against her lips, his hands flexing inside the robe, the movement drawing the silk tighter against her skin.
Elena looked up at him, her emerald eyes overflowing with a genuine, hot moisture she could no longer suppress.
"Victor," she breathed, her hand coming up to rest over his heart, which was thudding with a violent, rhythmic vow.
He didn't wait for her to finish. He pressed her harder against the wood. Lips crashed against hers with a desperate, wild hunger that tasted of iron and silk.
It wasn't a gentle kiss; it was a reclamation, a declaration of war on her remaining defenses.
Elena let out a soft, broken sound against his mouth, her hands tangling in his jet-black hair as she pulled him closer, her logical mind finally surrendering to the visceral heat of the moment.
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Victor's hands traveled further, the silk of her robe finally beginning to slide off her shoulders as he sought the warmth of the skin beneath.
The sash came undone with a single, sharp tug, and the fabric pooled at her feet like a dying flame.
He lifted her then, his uninjured arm providing a steady, powerful support as he moved her toward the center of the bed.
Elena felt the cool sheets beneath her for only a second before the heavy, possessive weight of Victor was over her again, his body a map of scars and muscle that she felt compelled to memorize.
"I know what you are," Victor murmured against the curve of her shoulder, his voice thick with a dark, terrifying clarity. "I know you're a trap, Elena. I know every step you take is designed to lead me to the edge of a cliff."
He pulled back just enough to look her in the eye, his thumb tracing the bridge of her nose.
"But I don't care about the fall."
Elena looked up at him, her fingers tracing the jagged scar on his ribs—the mark of his father's brutality.
In this moment, she wasn't the Shadow, and he wasn't the King. They were two broken instruments finding a lethal, perfect harmony in the dark.
"Then fall with me, Victor," she whispered, her voice a shattered vow.
Victor moved with a rough, urgent grace.
He dictated the rhythm of her breath, his touch a series of commands that her body obeyed with a frantic, uninhibited joy.
The countdown to the Cassano collapse was still ticking somewhere in the back of her mind, but as Victor buried his face in her neck, his pulse echoing the frantic beat of her own, the only truth left was the fire they had built together.
In the silence that followed, as they lay tangled in the silk and the shadows, Victor reached out and pulled her back against his chest, his arm a permanent, protective shackle.
"Mine," he whispered into the red strands of her hair.
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