mouth, when I find him standing next to my dressing table, running his fingers over the jewelry and makeup products scattered by the mirror.
If I thought he was intimidating when sitting several rows away in the audience, he’s damn terrifying up close. I can almost feel the muzzle of his cold gun nestled against my forehead, ready to fire and tear me to pieces.
Without thinking twice, I turn to flee, my sweaty hands grabbing the doorknob.
“I wouldn’t recommend it,” he says casually. “That will make me use violence, and I would rather not bruise that fair skin, Lia.”
The sound of my name coming off his tongue sends new tendrils of fear through me. It’s like he’s making it his mission to up the intensity of such emotions in me.
My chin quivers as I release the doorknob and slowly spin around, my ballet shoes skittering against the floor. I know I should run, but at the same time, I’m well aware that his threats aren’t idle. He killed someone—or three—what’s one more addition to his list?
He’s still in front of my dressing table, but he’s stopped going through my things and is standing upright now, one hand in the pocket of his black pants and the other by his side. I almost forgot how tall and broad he is, how his physique can eat up all the atmosphere and any oxygen that comes with it.
The scariest thing about him isn’t his gun—that I’m sure is hidden somewhere. It’s the absolute calm etched in his handsome features when he’s about to use that gun. It’s his complete composure right now while I’m trembling like a leaf in a hurricane.
He is that hurricane, wrecking people’s lives without being affected in the least.
“How did you get in here?” I’m thankful my voice doesn’t betray my scattered emotions.
“I don’t think that’s the question you want to ask, Lia. Shouldn’t you be more worried about why I’m here?”
“Are you going to kill me?” I whisper, choking on the words.
“Why? Have you been talking?”
“No. I swear.”
“I’m aware you haven’t, or we wouldn’t be standing here.”
He knows I’ve kept my mouth shut, but he’s still using the intimidation factor to corner me. I’m so thankful that I didn’t decide to play detective. While those men’s deaths shouldn’t go unnoticed and I haven’t stopped having nightmares about them, I also don’t want to die. I still have so many things to do and I refuse to be an indispensable pawn in someone else’s chess game.
However, the fact that he’s here while knowing I didn’t talk means he’s not done with me.
Not even close.
And that realization, although I’ve been contemplating it all this time, snaps my spine into a painful line.
“Are you going to hurt me?” My voice is small, divulging my erratic heartbeat.
“Depends.”
“On what?”
“On your ability to follow orders.”
“W-what orders?”
“Have dinner with me, Lia.”
“What?” I mean to snap, but it comes out as a bewildered murmur. Did this killer/stranger/the one who threatened and continues to threaten my life just asked me to have dinner with him?
His face remains the same, caught in that eternal calm that only monks should be allowed to have. “Dinner, something where people eat and talk.”
“I know what dinner is. I just…I just don’t know why the hell you’re asking that of me.”
“I already answered that question. To talk.”
“About what?”
“You’ll know once we have dinner.”
“Can’t we talk here?”
“No.”
It’s a single word, but it’s so closed off that I know he’s done entertaining my questions.
Still, I have to ask this, “What if I don’t want to?”
“As I said, your safety depends on your ability to follow orders, Lia.”
I swallow at the subtle threat in his tone. His message is clear. If I don’t have dinner with him, he’ll act on that threat. Worse, he might even finish what he started a week ago.
“It would’ve been easier to take you to an unfinished construction site or ambush you in your apartment building, but I’m offering you dinner in a restaurant with people around. You’re smart enough to realize the difference, aren’t you?”
The difference between getting hurt and not. My ability to stay alive and the complete opposite.
While everything in me revolts against the idea of going anywhere with him, my survival instinct rushes forward.
Dinner is definitely much better than being killed in a parking garage and having all traces gone in the morning.
Besides, he awakened something inside me earlier by merely sitting in the audience. I chalked it up to coincidence, but now that he’s standing in