The man turned his attention to Bastien, taking the heat and the knife off me. “What’d you say, asshole?”
“I’m not the one threatening a girl with a knife, asshole.” He left the stool and stood upright, and he seemed to grow several inches taller from when he had walked inside. He brandished no weapon other than his words, but he was still armed to the teeth with invisible power. “Homines ex codice.”
My eyes flicked back and forth between them, having no idea what was transpiring.
The words were in Latin, but the meaning was unclear. I couldn’t tell if my assailant understood what that meant or if he was just as bewildered as I was.
There was a silent standoff between them, a tension that rose like flames from a newly lit bonfire. The bar was normally loud and boisterous with chatter and laughter, but now it’d gone deadly quiet—like a graveyard.
The asshole with the machete moved, slashing his weapon down like he would hack Bastien to pieces.
I screamed in terror and moved for one of the empty bottles behind the counter.
It happened so fast that I wasn’t sure exactly what transpired, but Bastien made the other man’s face bloody and wrested the machete free. He slammed the guy’s face down on the counter, not once but twice—and broke his nose. He pinned his head to the top of the counter and looked at me. “Your turn, sweetheart.”
I slammed the bottle down on his head, and it shattered into pieces.
“Nice swing.” Bastien let go, and the man dropped to the floor in a pile of broken glass and blood.
The other two rushed to the door to split when shit got real, but Bastien got there first and punched one so hard in the face he slammed into the wall and collapsed on the floor. He made a series of moves on the other guy, blocking the arm holding the machete before slamming his elbow straight into his head and knocking him out cold.
When he was done, a strained silence enveloped the bar, everyone still too afraid to move or speak.
Bastien walked across the hardwood floor and the broken glass, back to the counter where I stood. He pulled out his wallet and rifled through the euros that were stuffed into it, and as if nothing serious had just happened, he asked, “What do I owe you?”
The bar closed and the police came. They asked Bastien a couple of questions, but it seemed like they already knew him because they didn’t ask who he was. In fact, they treated him like a superior.
I stepped outside into the cold, the air wet from a drizzle that had just passed through. The pavement was wet from the recent rainfall, and a few people were on the street because no one ever slept in this city.
Bastien came outside a moment later and looked me over. “You alright?”
“A little frazzled, but I’m fine.”
He continued to stare me down with those piercing blue eyes. “It’s okay not to be fine.”
My eyes flicked away, touched by the softness he was showing when he had been so ruthless a moment ago. “I know it is.”
“Where’s your apartment?”
I normally wouldn’t give out my address to a stranger, but he somehow felt like anything but a stranger even though I only knew his first name. “Rue Coquilliere. By the Louvre.”
“I’ll walk you.”
“I’m okay—”
“Come on.” He took the lead, stepping into the empty street under the bright lampposts, moving past a building that had stood the test of time and survived the Second World War. “We have a conversation to finish.”
We walked down the wet pavement together, side by side, but nothing was really said. He seemed to be a long-term resident of the city because he knew exactly where he was going, knew exactly what street to take without looking at his phone for guidance.
“How long have you lived in Paris?”
“All my life. You?”
“Same.”
That was the extent of our conversation. We passed Loup on the corner and walked down the path where the restaurants were located beneath my apartment. There was a small road for cars, but only taxis pulled up to the area. Right now, it was deserted, all the restaurants closed except for Au Pied de Cochon.
He seemed to know it was one of the few restaurants open all hours of the day because he checked in with the host and asked for a table outside. The second we sat down, he lit up a cigar and blew the smoke into the air. We were the only ones outside because it was either too cold or too late.
He offered me a cigar.
“No thanks.” I reached into my purse and pulled out a pack of cigarettes. I lit up and felt the hit of nicotine the second the smoke hit my lungs.
He gave a subtle smile before he held his cigar between his fingertips. “You don’t strike me as a smoker.”
“I quit a couple years ago.”
“But carry a pack wherever you go.” He returned the cigar to his mouth and pulled in a puff before he let it out from his nostrils.
My eyes narrowed but in a playful way. “You are an asshole.”
His smirk widened.
“I started up again once I moved out.”
The playfulness evaporated, and he gave a slight nod in understanding.
“It’s always been my vice.”
“Everyone has their poison. No shame in that.”
“Yes, but I want to live to see middle age at least.”
He looked at the street as people passed, only a person every now and then, coming from the mall far down the way.
“You don’t worry about that?”
He let the smoke leave his mouth before he answered. “No.”
“Why?”
“I don’t expect to live long—nor do I desire it.” When he spotted the waitress in the window, he waved her over. “I’ll take a scotch on the rocks. And whatever she’s having.”
I ordered my drink, and she left.
The last thing he said hadn’t left my mind. “Why do you feel that way?”
He looked as he let the cigar rest between his fingertips, and the strength of his stare seemed to be his answer—or lack thereof.
I didn’t press the question again, remembering we’d met just a few hours ago and I wasn’t entitled to such personal information. “Are you a cop?”
A smile that lit up all his features hit his face, and when he chuckled, it came from deep in his chest. “No.”
“It seemed like they knew you.”
“Oh, they know me.”
“But you aren’t a cop.”
My nails continued to dig into his hips as I held on, his dick even fuller at this direct angle, filling me up completely. Watching him work and thrust to fuck me was enough to make me come, and I was already at the threshold.“Show me.” He squeezed my throat.My fingers went to my clit, and I started to play with myself, rubbing in a circular motion, applying the pressure that I liked. I tried to gasp, but he tightened his grip and my words disappeared into the void.Less than a minute later, I finished, bucking against my fingers, his big dick ballooning inside me even more as he watched me reach the clouds.He grabbed on to my hips and tugged me hard against him, giving me all his length as he came, as he released deep inside me and made one of his biggest deposits. He gave the sexiest moan when he finished, his eyes locked on me possessively. “Turn over.”Lost in the haze of the lingering climax, I didn’t understand what he said.“I said, turn over.” He pulled out and started to r
“Snitch,” he explained. “The guy has two teenage daughters too. How fucking sick is that?”“What did you do?”“He broke the law, so I had to execute him.”“Even though he has a family?”“I don’t give a shit if you have a family or not,” he snapped. “You want to deal in my city, then you follow the rules. That fucking simple.” He put out the cigar then grabbed the drink instead.“I didn’t mean to offend you.”“If you don’t want to offend me, then don’t judge me.” Now his eyes were ruthless, and for the first time, they were ruthless for me.“I wasn’t judging you,” I said calmly. “I’m sorry if I made it seem that way.”His eyes flicked away and he took a breath, an attempt to calm himself. “I have to maintain order. If I let a family man live, then I have to let another man live. Then I’ll lose respect and authority, then the Republic will fall, the old order will return, and Godric will rule this city. Trust me, no one wants that—even if you aren’t in the game.”I didn’t know what to s
I knew he wanted to know about my day but didn’t want to pry. “I submitted the paperwork—for the last time, I hope.”“It will be.”“I guess it feels different this time because I know it’ll go through.”“Isn’t that a good thing?”“I’m happy to be free of Adrien, but it’s the first time I’ve truly realized that I’m getting divorced. I’m going to court and everything. Going to take back my maiden name. I was so busy being angry that I forgot what would come afterward.”He watched me for a while, his arms still crossed over his chest. “You’re scared.”“I’m not scared. I just… It’s hard to start over.” I’d lost most of my friends. I loved his parents, but now they would never speak to me again, even though I was the victim in the marriage. I loved his entire family, felt like they were my family, and now I would never see them again. It fucking sucked.“It’s okay to be scared, sweetheart. You can’t be brave if you aren’t scared—and you are brave.”All the pain I felt was replaced by warmt
“You know I’m a man of my word. I would never bring violence into your home.”She broke eye contact and looked at the fireplace.“You’re the only person he respects. If you asked him to come under the banner of truce, we would abide by it.”She considered it for a long time, her eyes glued to the fireplace.I’d searched the streets for him. I’d tortured people for information, but they were a hell of a lot more afraid of him than me. Unless I found where he was and took him myself, I would never get what I wanted. My mother was the only connection I had to my brother.She finally turned back to me after careful consideration. “I’ll ask Godric to consider it—but that’s the most I can do.”Chapter 13FleurBastien didn’t text me.He said I would see him tomorrow, but tomorrow was today, and there was no sign of him. I didn’t text him because I didn’t want to smother him with my neediness. It was a casual relationship and he didn’t owe me anything, but his silence made me wonder if his f
“If you don’t, your family will find you here—a bullet through the head.”“You may take my life—but Godric will take my entire family. He’ll wipe out my bloodline. He’ll hunt down my brothers and sisters and their families…my cousins in Albania. He’ll execute my friends and their families and spit on them just for good measure. And only after that’s done…when I have nothing to live for…he’ll kill me.” He stared at the floor, at my bloody boots. “I can’t talk—and no one else will either.”The disappointment was like gasoline on my tongue, and the rage was a lit match. It was impossible to beat a man without ethics when I had to abide by my own. I chose to be the bigger man, but that made Godric the bigger opponent. There were lines I refused to cross, and Godric danced right over them. “As the first French Emperor of the Republic, I sentence you to death for violating Homines ex codice with the use of trafficked women as free and illegal labor.” I fired the gun, and he fell back, blood
“I don’t have his number, but I can get you to him.”“How?” I continued to hold the gun to his face.“I think I know where he lives.”“You think?”“He was having a party and wanted us to bring the girls…for entertainment.”I kept the gun trained on him, but for once, I was intrigued by this information. “Address?”“I don’t—don’t know the address, but—but I remember how to get there.” He could barely talk, afraid his brains were about to get blown across the floor. “It’s the 4th arrondissement. I can take you there now.”I finally lowered the gun and nodded to one of my guys to cut him free.When his wrists were unbound, he closed his eyes and released a heavy breath.“Change your pants,” I barked. “My car isn’t going to smell like piss.”We drove across town to the 4th arrondissement, the roads empty at this hour. My witness was in a different car, a gun held to his temple. With the window cracked, I smoked a cigar, passing the old buildings and seeing Notre-Dame come into view, the c