I twisted from him, then grabbed my robe, donning it on my way out of the bathroom. I was heading for my closet when he took my hands and gently urged me toward the bed. As he drew back the cover for me, my shoulders slumped with exhaustion.
Maybe I should take a breather for a minute or two. I didn’t remember eating today, and all the emotions I’d experienced over the last several hours had drained me.
What he’d done to me had drained me.
Yet when I acquiesced and climbed into the bed, I felt like a failure, crying even harder.
He drew his pants back on—to be less threatening to me?—then paced at the foot of the bed. “I don’t know what to do with this.” Back and forth, he paced. “I have no idea what to do, Natalie. I need you to help me figure this out.”
He moved to sit next to me, but my watery glare stopped him. He backed up to sit on the end of the bed. “Talk to me.”
“That’s all we ever do. I talk to you. I’m laid bare. You go unscathed, sharing nothing of yourself. Do you know how messed up it is that I didn’t know you have a living family?”
“I should have told you. I see that now.”
“Too little, too late. You expect us to be in this relationship, but we’re not—”
“Yes, we are.”
“Then you don’t know the meaning of the word. If we’d started as a normal couple—regular girl meets regular guy—maybe things could have been different. We would have gotten to know each other, revealing details of our lives on an equal playing field. But it wasn’t like that. You knew everything about me, and I knew nothing about you. Nothing except lies. Our dynamic was ruined from day one.”
His breaths shallowed. “You’re talking like this is done, over beyond salvaging.”
I sobbed, “Because—it—is!”
He swiped his palm over his haggard face. I’d never seen him so shaken. Not even when Paxán died in front of us. “I . . . don’t accept that.”
“I thought that if I gave you my trust, you’d return it. But you won’t. You never will.”
“What if I did? Could I fix this?”
“No. Because if this is what I have to go through to get a crumb of information out of you, I’ll pass. It’s too exhausting! Besides, you warned me of this. You told me point-blank that I expected too much from you. You told me earlier today that trust might never come for us, and that you couldn’t give me things I needed. I’m such an idiot. I know better than this. I know that when a man tells you he’s no good for you, then you listen to him.”
Stupid, Nat, falling in love with an emotionally unavailable man.
When my tears quickened, Sevastyan looked like I’d slapped him. Which just made me madder. There were emotions inside of him—he wasn’t deadened—he’d just decided to keep them from me at all costs.
“If it’s my fate to chase you, then I will. I will do anything to keep you.” He put his head in his hands and rocked back and forward. “After you ran . . . imagining my existence without you . . . I realize . . .”
“What?”
He raised his head to me. “Concerns beyond you no longer matter. You’re at the center of my life”—he frowned—“no, you are my life.”
“Then why don’t you treat me like it? I didn’t even know your real name!” In a cutting tone, I said, “Isn’t that something a fiancée should know?”
“Aleksandr was my grandfather’s name. I cast off my first name when young. Maksim calls me Roman to goad me.”
“Why did you tell him we were engaged?”
“Already there is troubling interest in you as an heiress. You’ll be safer if it gets out that you’re marrying a man who can protect you.”
So Sevastyan was just putting up a front to keep me safe, to fulfill his promise to Paxán—
“And . . . I expected to wed you.” He admitted, “I want to.”
An answering want bubbled up inside me! Then I remembered all the reasons it would never work. “Earlier, you ordered me from the room like a dog—in front of your brother.”
“You’re not to be around him, Natalie. He’s dangerous.”