CHAPTER 32 THE CORONATION OF ASHES POV THAYER
The mirror does not reflect a man. It reflects a brutal, heavily textured map of extreme violence and absolute survival.
I stand shirtless in the center of the sprawling, sun-drenched master bathroom of our secondary Bahamian sanctuary.
The original Caribbean cage was reduced to a smoking crater to eradicate the federal task force, but my paranoia has always demanded contingencies.
I had this identical twin estate built in the Exumas four years ago, waiting for the day the world burned.
I stare at the physical toll the last three months have extracted from my flesh.
I trace the edge of the burn scar with my right thumb. The skin is tight, hypersensitive, and entirely numb in certain patches.
I do not hate the scars. I view them with a dark, profound sense of primal satisfaction.
They are not marks of defeat. They are the currency I paid to buy my wife's freedom.
They are the absolute, undeniable physical proof that the Don of the Thorne Syndicate bled out on a concrete floor, burned in his own fire, and survived a federal black site solely to keep his prize.
I turn away from the glass, grabbing a heavy, dark linen towel from the marble vanity to wipe the remnants of shaving cream from my jaw.
I walk out of the bathroom, the warm, salt-heavy Caribbean breeze instantly washing over my bare chest. The massive glass walls of the villa are pushed entirely open to the sea.
The oppressive, blinding panic of the Midwestern winter is a distant, entirely irrelevant nightmare.
Here, the world is reduced to the vibrant, crushing blue of the ocean, the blinding white sand, and the absolute isolation of our unmapped coordinate.
I cross the polished white stone of the living room, my footsteps entirely silent.
I find her on the massive teakwood terrace overlooking the private cove.
Sybil is sitting on a low-profile outdoor sofa, completely bathed in the golden, heavy heat of the morning sun.
She is wearing a sheer, white silk slip dress that clings desperately to the subtle, flawless curves of her body.
The delicate straps rest dangerously low on her shoulders, exposing the pale expanse of her chest and the fading, dark bruises I left on her collarbones three nights ago.
Her dark, heavy hair is pulled up into a messy knot, a few stray waves completely plastered to the back of her neck by the tropical humidity.
She is entirely captivated by the heavy, encrypted titanium laptop resting on her bare thighs.
I stop in the shadows of the doorway, simply watching her.
My heart executes a slow, heavy, violently possessive thud against my ruined ribs. The cognitive dissonance of looking at her still completely paralyzes me.
Six weeks ago, I was chained to a steel bed in a subterranean federal medical facility in Miami, entirely prepared to rot in Florence ADX so she could disappear into the wind. I was half-dead, completely consumed by the heavy narcotic fog of antibiotics and pain management.
And then, she walked through the heavy steel doors.
Dante gave me the full report while I was recovering on the island.
He detailed every single second of her absolute, terrifying ascension.
He told me how she walked into the front lobby of the FBI black site without a single flinch.
How she slid the Black Book across Director Campbell’s desk and completely dismantled his entire career, his freedom, and his family with a voice as cold and dead as a glacier.
He told me how she stood in the parking lot, looked her own biological brother in the eye, and raised a suppressed Glock to his chest.
“She didn't shake, Boss,” Dante had whispered, a profound, terrified awe bleeding into his voice. “She threatened to destroy him. She protected you. She is the Donna.”
The mere memory of Dante’s words sends a catastrophic, heavy surge of dark blood straight to my groin.
I created a monster. I took a fragile, terrified girl who was sold to pay a gambling debt, I shattered her entirely, and I forged her back together using the darkest, most violent fragments of my own soul.
She is no longer a captive. She is my absolute equal.
She is the architect of our new reality.
I step out of the shadows and onto the sun-baked wood of the terrace.
Sybil doesn't jump. She doesn't gasp. Her peripheral vision registers my massive approach, but she simply finishes typing a complex string of commands into the encrypted banking software before looking up.
Her midnight-blue eyes catch the sunlight, glittering with a sharp, lethal intelligence that completely takes my breath away.
"The Cayman accounts are fully scrubbed and decentralized," she states, her voice a smooth, calm velvet that completely contradicts the magnitude of the international financial crimes she just committed.
"I rerouted the remaining liquid assets from the Chicago fronts through the Swiss shells.
If the Feds are still trying to follow the money, they are currently chasing a ghost protocol that leads directly to a dead server in Moscow. "
I stop at the edge of the sofa. I look down at the screen, at the billions of dollars she is effortlessly manipulating with her small, delicate fingers.
"You are a terrifying creature, Sybil," I murmur, my voice dropping into a dark, guttural vibration that instantly makes the tiny hairs on her arms stand straight up.
A slow, profoundly wicked smile curves her lips. The bruised, swollen flush of her mouth is a glaring visual reminder of how much time we spend tangled in the white linens of the master bed.
"I had an excellent teacher," she replies softly, reaching up to close the laptop with a definitive, satisfying click. She sets the heavy machine on the teakwood coffee table.
I do not sit beside her. I step directly between her parted knees.
She tilts her head back, looking entirely up the massive, scarred expanse of my torso. Her eyes trace the heavy white burn scars on my ribs and the jagged line on my shoulder, but there is no pity in her gaze. There is only an absolute, unadulterated reverence.
She reaches out, her cool fingertips lightly grazing the edge of the ruined skin on my abdomen. The physical contact sends a violent electrical shock straight up my spine.
"Does it still hurt?" she asks, her voice dropping into a soft, intimate whisper meant entirely for the space between us.
"No," I answer, my right hand coming up to cup the side of her jaw. My thumb aggressively sweeps across her lower lip, parting it slightly. "The only thing that hurts is the sheer fucking distance between us when you are sitting over here playing accountant."
Her breath hitches, her pupils instantly dilating, swallowing the blue until her eyes are entirely black.
The immediate, biological response of her body to my dominance is a psychological narcotic.
Even as a queen who controls billions, she completely, entirely surrenders the second my hand touches her skin.
"I was securing our future," she murmurs, leaning heavily into my palm.
"Our future is secure," I growl, my fingers sliding to the back of her neck, tangling deeply into the messy knot of her dark hair.
I pull the hair tie loose, letting the heavy, thick waves completely cascade down her bare shoulders.
"The world is dead to us. There is no one left to fight, Sybil. There is only this."
I haul her upward.
She gasps, her hands instantly flying to my shoulders to steady herself as I lift her completely off the sofa.
I do not carry her. I drag her body entirely flush against mine, her bare toes barely touching the warm wood of the terrace.
The thin, sheer white silk of her slip dress does absolutely nothing to mask the immense, burning heat of her skin.
I crush my mouth down onto hers.
There is no frantic desperation in this kiss.
We are not bleeding out in a motel. We are not hiding from federal drones.
This is a kiss of absolute, tyrannical ownership.
It is slow, deep, and entirely devouring.
I part her lips with my tongue, completely invading her mouth, claiming the soft, sweet heat with a slow, agonizing thoroughness that forces a breathless moan from her throat.
She wraps her arms securely around my neck, entirely anchoring herself to my massive frame. Her fingers trace the thick muscles of my uninjured back, her chest heaving violently against mine.
I break the kiss, tearing my mouth away just far enough to drag a ragged breath into my lungs.
I look down at her. Her face is flushed, entirely intoxicated by the heavy, suffocating atmosphere of our isolation.
"Walk," I command, entirely releasing her waist, but keeping my hand firmly wrapped around the back of her neck.
I guide her backward. She doesn't hesitate. She walks backward across the terrace, stepping blindly over the threshold and back into the cool, air-conditioned shade of the living room, her eyes completely locked onto mine. I match her steps, entirely stalking her across the white stone floor.
I back her entirely against the heavy, cool glass of the interior hallway wall.
The impact makes her gasp, her spine pressing flat against the smooth surface.
I step completely into her space, caging her entirely with my large, scarred body.
I plant my left hand on the glass beside her head, the healed shoulder easily supporting my weight, while my right hand drops to the delicate hem of her white silk dress.
"You walked into a federal black site for me," I murmur, my face hovering mere millimeters from hers. The memory is a dark, heavy inferno in my chest.
"I would walk into hell for you," she breathes, her chest rising and falling in rapid, frantic staccatos.
"You did," I correct her, my fingers gripping the silk fabric. "You looked your brother in the eye, and you chose the monster."