features.
Now, though? He seems like some sort of a force. A current. A tyranny that’s about to sweep away everything in its path before changing lanes to something else.
Be my wife.
His words, though calmly spoken, explode in my head like the Fourth of July fireworks. They’re so loud that they drown my own thoughts in a web of nothingness. They’re trapped somewhere beyond reach, in that tiny black box that brings on a shiver whenever I think of it.
The most proper reaction to his ludicrous offer is to actually laugh. But I don’t have the sense of humor for that. And I suspect he wouldn’t take it well if I somehow burst out laughing in front of him.
He’s so serious, it’s etched in his features, his mannerisms, and even the way he speaks—as if he’s never smiled a day in his life.
Like the act of smiling would be offensive to him.
He and the men outside are not normal. I can see that without having to learn who they actually are. It can be tasted in the air. It instantly shifted after they came into the picture.
Dangerous people need to be dealt with using caution, not force, because the second option will only get me hurt.
“Be your wife?” I repeat, my tone low, but it projects the incredulity I feel.
The Russian stranger releases my hips and I scoot to the other side of the car, putting as much distance between us as possible.
The lack of his touch is like losing warmth in the middle of an icy storm. But I’d rather freeze than be burnt to death by him.
“Correct.” He interlocks his fingers in his lap. They’re long and manicured, and I can’t help but stare at the wedding ring on his left hand.
“You’re already married.”
His gaze slides to his ring as if he’s forgotten it’s been there all along. His thick black lashes frame his eyes while he takes a moment, studying it. His expression is weird. When someone thinks about their spouse, they would ordinarily either soften out of adoration or grow grim out of sadness or despair.
He’s doing neither.
His lips thin in a motion that suggests he wants to strangle the ring and the one who slid it on his finger.
Before I can read further into his reaction, his attention glides from his hand to me, and the emotions I thought I saw in his steel eyes vanish as if they never existed. “You’ll pretend to be my wife.”
“Pretend?” I don’t know why I keep asking these questions, entertaining him, but the situation is so surreal, it feels like I’ve been thrust into one of those Christmas tales.
“My wife passed away a few weeks ago, and there’s no one who can perform her duties anymore, so you will be her replacement.”
“Oh.” I don’t mean to say that out loud, but it escapes from me anyway.
I stare at him from a different perspective. At his straight, confident posture, at his choice of dark wardrobe, at his black hair and thick stubble, at the shadows caused by his cheekbones. And, finally, at the dimness in his gray eyes that appear to have been cut from New York’s gloomy sky.
Have I felt uncomfortable around him because of this negative energy he projects? Now that I’ve learned the reason behind that energy is the recent death of his wife, I don’t know how to feel.
Still, the unease is lurking under my skin like a clotted blood vessel, blocking the normal flow of oxygen to my heart.
His hands, although resting on his lap, feel like they’re pushing up against my soul, applying pressure and trying to burst through.
That’s…dangerous. Terrifying, actually.
I might have ended up on the streets, but my instincts are intact and they can at least recognize danger.
This man is the definition of it.
His good looks, strong physique, and effortless confidence don’t fool me. If anything, I view them as his tools of destruction.
“I’m sorry about your wife,” I say as calmly as possible. “But I can’t help.”
“I don’t need your insincere apologies. Just do as you are told.”
“Didn’t you hear what I said? I can’t be your wife.”
“Yes, you can. In fact, you’re the only one who’s able to fit that role.”
“The only one? Have you seen me?”
He taps his fingers against his thighs as his gaze slides from my face to my torso and down to my foot that’s missing a shoe. I’m the one who asked if he’s seen me, but now that I’m trapped under his scrutiny, the