Dance of Deception #3
The second guy—the one with authority in his voice, the one who's driving the conversation—lets out a dark chuckle. “People rarely actually respond to a Black Court summons.”
I shrink further against the wall.
“They respond in behavior, at least,” the first guy mutters. “Mushkin hasn’t hired more security, fled, moved money. None of it. His schedule is still clear for the night of the trial, though.”
“You know how it is,” the second guy says, his voice smoother now. “Sometimes they’re so confident that they show up willingly.”
The first guy laughs, low and dark. “And if not…” He pauses, amusement dripping from his voice. “Then we get the fun of hunting them down before we even get to the chase.”
A slow shiver slides down my spine.
“Reach out to The Wolf and The Stag,” the second man orders. “Let them know the status on Mushkin. The Black Court will meet as planned.”
The Wolf? The Stag?
The Black Court ?
Nothing about this conversation makes sense.
The sound of footsteps grows louder. They’re splitting up. I panic, pressing myself deeper into the shadows, willing my body to melt into the cold brick.
Then I flinch, freezing in place as a figure rounds the corner and suddenly looms over me.
Tall. Menacing. Powerful.
Suddenly, I’m looking straight into the cold, piercing blue eyes of Carmine Barone.
My stomach drops.
I’ve seen him before—either dropping off or picking up Bianca, or sometimes at performances or some of those charity events. But this is different.
Up close, he’s even more intense than he is at a distance.
This near, he radiates raw power—and something darker, coiled beneath the surface, waiting to strike like a lethal, venomous snake.
He’s wearing a dark suit and an open pea-coat, molded to his broad shoulders and powerful arms like a suit of armor.
It’s like black lightning striking from the shadows. Before I can even blink, his hand is suddenly on my throat, his fingers wrapping around it and settling against my jugular. It’s not a choke—just a warning. A display of his strength. His power.
His control.
My breath catches.
“I—I didn’t hear anything,” I whisper, the words tumbling out too fast, too desperate.
His grip tightens slightly but he says nothing for a moment, those cold blue eyes piercing into me like knives, as if he’s flaying open my very soul to peer inside and feast on what he finds.
His thumb traces over my pulse. “No one asked you about anything you may or may not have heard.”
A tremor ripples through my body, my eyes widening even further.
“Who are you?” he finally murmurs darkly, his voice low, focused, and almost sensual in the way it teases over my skin.
My heart thunders in my chest and my throat works against his hand.
“N-nobody,” I whisper again. “I’m nobody.”
Carmine’s lips curl, something between a smirk and a snarl.
“Nobody…” he muses.
His grip lingers, his fingers still firm around my throat, pressing just enough that I can feel the subtle pressure against my pulse. A test. A game.
A reminder that he could crush me if he wanted to.
His thumb moves slightly, stroking the base of my throat like he’s considering something. My skin burns where he touches me, body locked in place, muscles coiled tight. I don’t flinch. I don’t dare.
His head tilts, studying me like I’m something strange and unexpected.
“What did you hear?” His voice is a low rasp.
I shake my head as much as his grip allows. “Nothing,” I breathe.
Carmine hums, unconvinced. “Nothing?”
I gulp. “I-I was just leaving the theater. I didn’t—I wasn’t paying attention.”
His grip tightens for a second, just enough to make my pulse spike against his hand before he eases up again. “Funny,” he murmurs. “People who’ve heard nothing don’t usually look this scared.”
I open my mouth, then close it again, forcing my breathing to stay even. He’s testing me, waiting to see if I’ll break.
I can’t do that.
Men like him eat weakness for breakfast.
My fingers clench into fists at my sides. “You… You startled me, is all.”
“If this is startled , I’d love to see what it looks like when you’re truly scared.”
He says it like a desire. Like he’s already thinking about getting off to the idea of my fear.
Carmine watches me for a beat longer. Then, finally, he lets go. I suck in a breath, my skin prickling where his hand was on my throat, the ghost of his touch lingering like a brand.
He takes a slow step back, his sharp blue gaze never leaving mine.
“Well, Miss Nobody who heard nothing,” he murmurs, his lips curling into an amused and cruel almost-smile. “Let’s hope it stays that way.”
And then, just as quickly as he appeared, he’s gone, and the alley is silent once more.
The air feels heavy, charged, like the ghost of him is still standing there, watching me.
I don’t move. I don’t breathe.
Then my legs finally unlock and I’m able to stumble forward, pulse still hammering, his words pressing heavily on my spine and dragging over my skin like hot knives.