core. Our clothes separate us, but it’s like we’re flesh to flesh.
Pulse to pulse.
Body to body.
“Sebastian…stop…”
“You know that word doesn’t stop me.”
“We’re not kids anymore. This isn’t a game.”
“Maybe it is. Maybe we should pick up where we left off.”
His lips brush against the shell of my ear and I shudder both at their heat and at how he rubs his thigh against my pussy.
Stop is on the tip of my tongue, but it doesn’t come out.
And knowing Sebastian, it probably wouldn’t work, as he said. It doesn’t matter that the ring of another man is on my finger or that he saw me with said man not too long ago. He’ll see whatever he wants to see and ignore the rest.
That part has never changed about him.
He glides the tip of his tongue from the shell of my ear to my cheek. I shudder, my hand flying to his side, to stop him, to push him away, but I don’t.
My fingers remain there, frozen, unable to move as his hot wet mouth trails a path to where his hand is grabbing my throat.
“Fuck. You still taste the same.”
And you still feel the same.
But I don’t say that aloud as I let myself drown in the moment. I’ve been on guard for so many years that I’ve forgotten what it means to let go.
To feel.
To just be alive.
And right now, I’m that and more. I’m bubbling with life and I can feel it pouring in and out of me.
“This is wrong,” I murmur.
“So?” He speaks against my chin, his skin setting mine on fire.
“We shouldn’t do this…”
“And yet we are.”
“I…I’m married.”
“That means fuck all to me.”
“We’re over.”
“I never agreed to that.”
I place both palms on his chest and push back as hard as I can, breathing harshly. His lips leave my face, but his steel hold remains around my neck.
“We’ve been over for seven years, Sebastian.”
“To you, obviously, since you got married.”
“You said it yourself. Married. You don’t have the right to touch a married woman this way.”
“Says who?”
“Common decency.”
“I don’t have that.”
I see it then. The apathy in his mesmerizing eyes. At first, I thought it was his way of expressing the coldness he felt toward me, but maybe that’s what he’s become now.
An apathetic person with not a sliver of warmth inside him.
Maybe common decency isn’t the only thing he doesn’t have anymore. Maybe he’s lost other parts of him, too.
Maybe he’s corrupted beyond repair.
What happened to you? I want to ask, but I’m too afraid of the answer.
“Then you should at least have a sense of self-preservation and do as I say.”
“You mean, staying away from your husband?”
“Yes.”
“What do I get in return?”
“Your safety!”
“Pass.”
“What do you mean by pass?”
“You need to give me something.”
“Something like…what?” I sound spooked, even to my own ears.
“Agree first.”
“Not until I know the catch.”
“Your loss.” He releases me and steps back.
A gust of cold air covers my skin and it takes all my will to remain planted in place and not seek some sort of friction.
“The door is right behind you, Mrs. Mori.”
I want to go back a few seconds in time and shove that name back down his throat so he can’t say it again.
Or maybe I could go back seven years and prevent all the hell that broke loose.
Or maybe if I hadn’t been born as Abe Hitori’s daughter, I wouldn’t be standing here in the first place.
But all those options are impossible, so all I can do is focus on the now.
My shoulders straighten. “What do you want?”
“You’re not ready for what I want.”
“Tell me and I’ll decide.”
“Give me your new phone number.”
“Why?”
“I’ll text you a location. If you’re ready to find out what I really want, be there. If you’re not, I’ll move on.”
I’m still shaking from my meeting with Sebastian.
It got so bad that I had to spend a few minutes in the bathroom so I could sober up and get my shit together.
Then I drove to my father’s house, which is located in a well-secured neighborhood in Brooklyn. Thankfully, it’s far enough from our house that I don’t feel like Akira’s breathing down my neck.
I made it clear to Akira that I wouldn’t be moving around with his men following me and he surprisingly complied. I thought I’d have to fight to the death so he’d remove the bodyguards.
But then again, he’s a practical person and doesn’t mind losing a battle or two in order to win the war.
The security in my father’s house, however, is