The Villain Page 34
My wife hopped from Hunter’s desk, sticking the red lollipop back into her mouth.
“All right, hubs. Make it quick.”
I led her to my office, then continued into the private en suite, where the walls weren’t glass, and no one could see us.
I closed the door behind us, then fixed her with a look.
“What are you doing here?”
“Having lunch with friends.” She popped the sucker out of her mouth. The scent of watermelon filled the air, making my dick stir. “Having a good day, hubs?”
“Not particularly.”
“Yeah, I saw in the local news about the demonstration.” She scrunched her little nose, which I sincerely hoped my future kids were going to inherit. “That billboard up there isn’t your best angle, either.”
I stared at her, not sure why I called her in here. I had nothing to say to her. Yet the need to monopolize her time burned in me. I was the one who deserved her attention.
I got her out of trouble.
I paid for her newly indulgent lifestyle.
I was the one she should be spending time with.
You don’t want any of these things, you moron.
“What you’re doing in the Arctic is…” She put a hand to her chest.
“Terrible?” I finished for her with a smirk.
“Monstrous.”
“Cry me a river.”
“You’ll probably find a way to pollute it, too.”
“A bit of loyalty wouldn’t kill you, Flower Girl. I’m your husband. Although that’s not saying much, considering you divorced the previous one without his consent.” I leaned over the granite wall, crossing my legs at the ankles.
Her eyes widened.
“Are you kidding me? You’re comparing my divorcing my runaway husband to what you’re doing?” The same blaze of fire I saw when we negotiated our terms returned to her eyes, making my semi a full-blown erection. “You’re ruining our planet for financial gain. The Earth is not your wasteland. Not to mention, you’re driving entire animal groups into extinction. The polar bears and the penguins come to mind.”
“I’m sorry you feel that way,” I said robotically. A well-rehearsed reply to the same thing I’d heard over and over again.
“No, you’re not.”
“You’re right. I’m not sorry at all. You can’t run your car on adorable.”
“But I can run it on batteries, thanks to Elon Musk,” she dished back, her tone sweet.
“I know women are fond of battery-operated devices, but they’re never as good as the real thing.”
She choked on her lollipop. I wondered if she had an oral fixation. First the cigar, and now this. It was hard to concentrate when her pink lips were always wrapped around something. Especially when it wasn’t my cock.
I could have told her the truth. That the Arctic wasn’t a long-term plan. That I had a greener environmental plan to put my hands on natural gas. A futuristic, twenty-second century invention that was in the works. But I didn’t much mind to be known as the man who was responsible for ruining the world.
“Why are you really here, Persephone?” I pushed off the wall, advancing in her direction, not stopping until we were flush against one another. While emotions were a liability, getting my wife pregnant was a calling.
The faster we could get it done, the sooner we could cease communication.
Her delicate throat bobbed with a swallow. She was plastered to the wall, cornered like an animal. She licked her lips, her blue eyes dropping to my mouth.
“Lunch.” She stuck to her version. “Why else would I be here?”
I put my arm over her head, crowding her, meeting her eyes. I had a few good inches on her, even with her new heels.
“I think you’re here because you owe me something.”
“I’m giving you everything I signed on for. I live in the apartment you’ve designated for me. I’m available to you. I don’t remember you picking up the phone and asking to consummate our marriage.” She arched an eyebrow.
She had delicate eyebrows. Another thing I wouldn’t mind my children getting from her.
In fact, I’d be glad if they took everything from her.
Everything but that bleeding heart.
And that showed you exactly how highly I thought of myself.
“I don’t beg,” I drawled.
“No one asked you to. But if you want to get into my bed, you’ll need to make the required arrangements. It’s not too much to ask.”
She made sense, and that worried me because usually, I was the pragmatic person in the conversation. Any conversation.
“You’re here now,” I noted.
I wasn’t in the mood for sex, but I supposed I had to get it over with at some point.
She beamed around the lollipop, her lips swollen and achingly kissable. “We’re not having sex in your bathroom. I have more self-respect than that.”
“Are you sure?” I asked, half-sardonic, half-hopeful. “So far, you’ve acted like a glorified mail-order bride. Bending over the vanity would be well within your typical behavior.”
She laughed.
She actually laughed.
Flipping her hair to one shoulder, my wife spun on her heel.
“Goodbye, hubs.”
She strutted her way to the door, all fire, sugar, and temptation. She knew exactly what she was doing, and she did it well. No part of her was meek and naïve now.
Not accustomed to having women leave before verbally excusing them, I watched with fascination mixed with annoyance. I’d never had to figure out how to keep someone close. Usually, my status, power, and fat wallet did it for me.
Watching her leave made me feel as though I’d been robbed of something.
“Persephone,” I barked.
She stopped.
“Turn around.”
“No.”
“Don’t make me teach you a lesson.”
“Why?” she asked brightly. “I’m a good student. Although I think I’m the one who is giving you a valuable class today. If you want me to stay, you’re going to have to ask nicely and not order me around.”
My instincts urged me to disregard her. Put her in her place. But that would be acting out of emotions, and I didn’t do those. Normal Cillian—sane Cillian—would humor her to get what he wanted and then discard her.
Quarreling with her wasn’t going to bring me a step closer to triumph. Or to having an heir.
Swallowing down a juicy curse I couldn’t believe I thought about, let alone could utter, I took a breath.
“Please turn around.”
She did, slowly. And for the first time, I realized how awful it felt to be at someone else’s mercy. The humbleness in my situation made me borderline nauseous.
Knock her up and get rid of her. You’ll be the last one to laugh when she is changing diapers and raising your future heirs while you’re deep inside a French socialite.
“Would you like to have dinner with me?” I spat out.
“Yes.” Her smile was warm like the sun, full of promise. “Tonight okay?”
“Tonight’s fine.”
“Why don’t I cook for us?”
Because it will probably taste horrible.
But these were thoughts I needed to filter at least until my objective was achieved. Not being unbearable was a learning curve.