A Sinful Encore Page 8
“Yes, let me go, Gio.”
My brother doesn’t look at Adam, Adrian, or me. He’s once again wholly focused on Kace. “You hurt her and I will kill you.”
“You wouldn’t even be around to know,” I snap. “I hate you right now, Gio. I really do.”
As if burned, Gio releases me and takes one step back, just enough to breathe, before he says, “We need to talk, Aria.”
Kace doesn’t release me. He’s still holding onto me, as if his life, and mine, depend on him keeping me close.
“We needed to talk before you ever went down this hellish path and took me and Kace with you.” My voice is lower now, my control finding its legs again. “No one knew Kace was a part of this, including him, until you made this happen. Now, Kace and I are hunted, maybe for the rest of our lives.”
“You really think this asshole didn’t know who you were when you met, Aria? He did. What did Angelena say to you?”
Kace’s hands settle on my shoulders. “Let’s take this upstairs.”
Gio’s stare lifts above my head to glare at Kace. “I bring up your deceit and suddenly you want to take this upstairs? If I go up, your goons stay down.”
Adrian says something in Spanish, and Gio’s gaze shifts to his. “You know Italian?”
“Spanish and Italian have more than a few shared words I’ve learned over the years. Especially the really offensive ones like that one. You called me a goon.” He gives Gio a wink. “Just returning the favor.”
Gio glares at him and then spears Kace with a stare. “Hiding behind your goons,” Gio says again to Kace. “What are you afraid of?”
“That you’ll hurt her more than you already have,” he says, and while I can feel the tension in his hands, in his energy, the words are cool and calm. He doesn’t take the bait Gio intends to set him off, a testament to just how affected Kace was by Alexander in California, how affected he still is by the past. “You come up. Adrian and Adam come, too. That’s non-negotiable.”
“You know what, Gio?” I say, drawing his peeved attention. “I trust them more than you right now. Stay or go. I don’t care anymore. I’m done worrying about you. It’s time I worry about me.”
With that, I rotate, and Kace drapes his arm around me, setting us in motion toward the front door.
And as if this day can’t get more complex, Alexander is standing at the door, watching us, smirking. His lips curve in a devious smile and he enters the building, leaving me with no doubt that somehow, some way, he intends to use what just happened against Kace. Worried, I glance up at Kace. “Ignore him,” he says.
“That never works.”
“This time it will,” he assures me.
“Because you’ve handled him?”
His lips curve almost brutally. “Exactly, baby.”
I want to ask more, but we’re at the door, and Steven steps in front of us. “A problem I can assist with?” he asks.
“Just my brother,” I say. “Sibling love. It’s brutal sometimes.”
His eyes light. “Don’t I know that well. My brother is the only man on earth I’d die for, but I’ve also come close to killing him a few times.”
“Gio Alard,” Kace says. “He’s allowed up. Once. Just once. Today.” He palms Steven what I think is a hundred-dollar bill. “Make sure everyone here knows, please.”
He gives a tiny nod. “Right away, Kace.” His gaze shifts to me. “Anything you need?”
“No, thank you.”
Kace guides me toward the sliding doors, and I fight the urge to look over my shoulder, hating how much I want Gio to follow us. Once we're in the elevator, Gio is nowhere to be found. “He’s not going to come up,” I say, my disappointment just plain cutting.
The elevator shuts and I shiver with the chill of my wet hair. Kace reacts, folding me close, his hand settling on my coat, just over my backside. My hands slide under his jacket, my palms absorbing taut warm muscle and I sink into him, welcoming his strength now. Envious of the place he is in life. He’s lived hell and found his way of coping.
Now it’s my turn.
He searches my face, his eyes probing, and if he were anyone else, I’d say he sees too much. But he’s Kace and with him there is nothing that is ever too much, but there’s also nothing that can be said in the elevator car with a camera. I lean into him, my forehead pressed to his chest, my mind racing. Why wouldn’t my father tell Angelena to give that journal to my mother? Was he having an affair? The idea cuts as much as the disappointment of Gio leaving. I thought my parents were happy. Suddenly everything that felt real might be a lie, and I don’t even know what to do with that.
The ride is eternal and somehow short. Kace and I enter the apartment and he helps me with my coat, shrugging out of his. “I’ll grab you a towel,” he says, walking a few steps to enter a hall bathroom I don’t think I’ve ever even been inside. He returns quickly and acting every bit my gentle hero, he dries my hair.
“Booze, coffee, or hot chocolate?”
“All three?” I ask.
His lips curve. “Booze, coffee, and hot chocolate, coming up.”
A short while later, the fireplace is aglow in the corner, and I’m standing in the living room at the window watching snow flutter past the window. I imagine every flake as a page in a story, and I can’t read any of them. “Hot chocolate to soothe the soul,” Kace says, stepping to my side with a steaming cup of hot chocolate in his hand. I accept it, and the heat of the mug is a welcome warmth against my palms when I remain cold inside. I walk to a chair and sit down.
“You heard what I said about Angelena?” I ask. “Her voice clicked in my mind right before Gio showed up.”
Kace perches on the coffee table directly across from me, our knees just barely touching, but I feel every touch we share in every part of me. That’s how connected we are, how hypersensitive to him I am, our connection bittersweet considering the obstacles before us.
“I did,” he says. “I called Blake when I was making the hot chocolate and let him know.”
“Gio told me she disappeared right after Dad, Kace. He told me Sofia was looking for her. And he told me this just yesterday, and yet, she called me today. She’s Sofia’s mother. It’s one big set-up.”
“Maybe. Are we sure Sofia wasn’t looking for her because she thought she had answers, like the journal?”
“I don’t know what to think. Why would my father have her protect it? Why not my mother? Or Gio?”
“Perhaps he felt your mother would protect you at all costs, including the family legacy.”
I take in his suggestion with a blink and a pinch of hope. “Maybe. But what does that say about their relationship?”
“Don’t start doubting what you know about your parents because of a phone call. You don’t know the agendas at play here, baby. And I was around your parents. They adored each other. They were in love.”
His cellphone rings and he shifts, removing it from his pocket to answer. “Yeah, Adrian? All right then,” he says. “That’s unexpected. Right. Thanks.” He disconnects. “Gio is on his way up.”
Emotions ping around inside me and I take a warm, sweet swig of much-needed chocolate. “I’m not sure what to think about that.”
“That makes two of us.”
He starts to get up and I catch his hand. “He’s going to keep insulting you.”
“I know.”
“And yet you invited him into your home.”
“Our home, baby. Our home. I love you, Aria, and he’s your brother. I’m not judging him just yet. I’d expect him to be protective. And we don’t know everything there is to know about Gio right now.”
My heart swells with love for this man. “I love you, too. And thank you.”
He leans in and kisses my cheek. “Thanks is never what I want from you. We’ve talked about this. Ask me what I want.”
“What do you want?”
“You. Just you. In an excessivel
y long and creative list of ways.”
The doorbell rings and he reaches for my cup, taking a long swig of chocolate as if it’s a replacement for the drink he really needs. He hands me my cup back. I set it on the ground by the chair and when he tries to get up, I catch his arm. “He tried to tear us down through me. He failed. I know my brother. Failure is not an option. He’s going to come at you hard, Kace.”
“If he wounds me you can make me feel better when he’s gone.”
“Kace, I’m serious.”
“You didn’t know my father, but I assure you, baby, there is nothing your brother can bring that he didn’t.”
“You’re human, Kace, and we’re still new.”
His fingers splay on my cheek, his thumb stroking my jawline. “You don’t know me, or us, as well as I want you to if you doubt how strong we are. But you will, baby. You will and soon. That’s a promise.” He leans in and kisses me and then stands up, heading toward the door.
Nervous, buzzing with adrenaline, I push to my feet and place the river at my back, steeling myself for what comes next.
CHAPTER TWELVE
Seconds tick by and Kace and Gio do not appear.
I pace back and forth and suddenly I question the idea of having Kace answer the door when Gio might confront him. I’m about to charge my way to the hall when the two of them appear and I swear they’re a sight—two men who could be enemies or friends, riding on the cusp of that discovery. Two men who are powerful, good looking, and confident in their own rights, and so very different on the surface. Gio is a wild card, all about risks and danger, impossible to predict. Kace is calculated, focused, structured. But what they don’t see and I do is they both had the courage to walk away from the family business. My brother never wanted to hold a violin. Kace’s father never wanted him to hold a violin. And they both know what they want, and go for it, at all costs. Kace stops on the opposite side of the couch, but Gio does not. He closes the space between me and him and as I turn to face him, Kace says, “I’ll be in the kitchen.”
“No,” I say, angling in his direction. “We need to talk, all three of us.”
“We need a word alone,” Gio counters. “And then I’ll talk to Kace.”
“I’ll grab us all a drink,” Kace offers, and he doesn’t wait for a reply. Class act that he is, he turns away and generously offers Gio his moment alone with me.
My attention is now on my brother, the person that I’ve leaned on and spent a lifetime trusting. He has always been my hero, my best friend, my only remaining family these last few years. Now, I am looking at him with accusation and distrust.
“Why’d do you come?” I demand.
“You’re my damn sister, Aria.”
“And you just remembered this?”
He scrubs the thick dark shadow on his jaw that’s threatening to become a beard. “I fucked up,” he says, his hands settling on his hips, under his thin North Face down jacket. “But I had a deep instinct that we were not going to survive much longer hiding in the shadows. You weren’t going to hear that from me and listen. I didn’t want a problem to come to us. I wanted to head it off. I was trying to shelter you.”
“You wanted out of the shadows, but you knew what you did, you forced me along for the ride. I was the inconvenient sister.”
“That’s not true.”
His reply is rapid, but it’s short and without conviction. “It is,” I say. “You just convinced yourself if I didn’t know what was going on that somehow it wouldn’t affect me at all.”
“I was only gone a month, Aria.”
“More than a month and living this double life a whole lot longer,” I say. “I know, Gio. I know a whole lot more than you think I know.” I don’t give him time to fight back. “Angelena sent me pages from Dad’s journal.”
He blinks, his brows dipping. “How the hell did she get Dad’s journal?”
“She was with him when ‘they’ whoever they are took him. Did Sofia tell you that, Gio?”
A muscle in his jaw tics, but he doesn’t cut his stare. “No. She said her mother disappeared a few weeks after Dad. That’s all.”
“You’re the one who told me that Sofia believes Kace has the formula but needs me to decode it. Well, guess what? That’s what Angelena said, too. Seems like they’ve been talking or perhaps reading the same journal?”
“What does the journal say?”
“I can’t read the pages she sent me. The text was too small. Walker’s enlarging it.”
“Walker,” he snaps. “Again with Walker. Even if they are good at their jobs, that doesn’t make them people to trust. In fact, it may well be the opposite. You trust too many people.”
“You trusted the wrong people, Gio, but I’m not and I know you’re doubting everyone over Sofia, but don’t doubt me. Trust me.”
His voice lowers. “Learn from my mistakes, Aria.”
I open my mouth and quickly snap it shut. I’m done beating up this topic for now. “You told me Angelena was missing.”
“That’s what they told me.”
“They? Sofia? Or the Blue Owls? Her father?”
“All of the above.”
“Is Angelena working with all of the above? She is Sofia’s—or rather, Sonia’s—mother.”
“Sofia was looking for her mother. She had pages and pages of investigative documents on her walls that were all about finding her mother. Documents that dated back years. If that was a lie, it was an elaborate one put together quickly when I showed up. How did Angelena find you?”
“Dad told her to give me the journal when I turned eighteen. She knew from the journal that Kace was a piece of the puzzle. She was watching him. That’s how she found me. I was with him.”
“Why the fuck would Dad tell her to give it to you at eighteen? Why not me or Mom, right when he disappeared? I don’t believe that shit. She’s lying to you.”
“Her disappearance near Dad’s is weird. You said that yourself. Maybe they were—”
“Don’t say it,” he snaps. “They were not together.”
“You said it, Gio. You put the idea in my head.”
“I was wrong. Mom and Dad were solid. I was older. I could see they were solid. We can’t trust anyone. We both forgot that.”
“I feel like this conversation is on repeat. We can trust Kace.”
He eyes the apartment and then gives me a once over. “Because he spoils you? Because you want security for the first time in your life? What do you think people do when they want something from you? They give you what you want and need.”
“I don’t need or want his money. You know that’s not who I am.”
“So he’s doing all of this because he loves you?”
My heart begins to race. “Stop now, Gio, before you go too far—again. I’m begging you.”
But he doesn’t stop. “Are you foolish enough to believe he didn’t know who you were when you hooked up?”
My defenses bristle. “Sofia’s note to you is how we came together. You know that.”
“Maybe he was in on it with her. She’s a lying, conniving bitch. I wouldn’t put it past her to ride another train when riding me didn’t work.”
“That didn’t happen,” I bite out.
He continues as if I didn’t even speak. “And come on, Aria. You think Dad gave him part of the formula and didn’t even tell him?”
“He was a kid just like us when Dad disappeared.”
“Old enough to release a best-selling fucking album and travel the world without his parents.”
“Dad didn’t tell him, Gio. He put it in the journal left for me.” My fists are now balled at my sides. “Kace isn’t even convinced he knows anything to help at all. The only reason he’s considered it is that Angelena sent me a coded message and he knew what it meant. It was something Dad said to him.”
His eyes narrow. “What? Tell me.”
I inhale sharply on what my gut is telling m
e before I say what I thought I’d never say to my brother. “I don’t know what team you’re playing on, Gio.” I fold my arms in front of me. “I’m not telling you.”
His eyes burn with anger, and he steps closer, his temper seething. “Are you really saying that to me right now?”
“It doesn’t matter anyway. We don’t have the formula. We don’t know what part I play in any of this. We only know Angelena, and apparently, Sofia as per you, thinks I do. You could torture us, Gio, and we couldn’t tell you. If this is all we know, we will never have the formula.”
“What if he and Sofia really are plotting together. What if, Aria?”
My defenses bristle, but I do not doubt Kace. “For the last time, because I’m done with this topic, Kace didn’t plot against me.”
“Because he loves you?”
“Yes. He does. And I love him. And you know what? He’s made what is his, mine. As far as I’m concerned, what is mine is his as well. If we find the formula, obviously Dad wanted him to be a part of where that takes our lives.”
He chokes out a laugh. “Seriously? Either you are far more naïve than I realized or you are a sellout.” He leans closer. “Maybe you like the money more than you thought you would.”
The air shifts and I can feel Kace even before I see him and reality hits me. Gio said that now because he knew Kace would hear. I glance toward the outer edge of the living room to find Kace standing there, two glasses in his hands. Slowly, precisely he rounds the couch and steps to my side, offering Gio a glass. The two men stare at each other, time standing still, the air crackling. Gio breaks the stare down and studies the amber liquid before he clinks the ice on the glass and downs it.
“Smooth,” he says. “A thousand-dollar whiskey? Or no, two thousand? You’re a very rich man. Rich men often want what they can’t have because they have every fucking thing else. So, what is it that you want? Obviously, that’s not my sister. She was easy.”