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Crescendo (Beautiful Monsters Book 1) by Lana Sky (26)

 

Like any good conundrum worth solving, my Lucifer apparently possesses two sides. One half is the beast I’d let crawl into my skin—a man who doesn’t seem to give a damn about anything or anyone. The other half is a figure, so similar in appearance that he could be his twin: a stranger who cared enough about the welfare of some random, waif of a woman that she had to beg him out of going to the police.

I’m just dirty, I’d lied. I haven’t showered yet; just a lazy girl lounging in. He didn’t believe me, of course. Regardless, he let me spin my tales and babble something about being “just about to take a shower,” as any non-captive would. Hell, I almost believed I’d convinced him.

Then he surprised me by crossing the center of Lucifer’s lair and perching his lanky frame on the very edge of that hated couch as if he had no clue that he’d just ventured into hell. “Go ahead,” he prompts while I try to approximate just where he sits. Where the tips of some of my nails were still embedded within the upholstery? Or where I’d smothered my moans into the padding? “Go ahead,” he repeats when I don’t react. “Change. I’ll wait.”

It’s an ironic dilemma: Lucifer’s angelic twin wanted me to implicate his darker half. Give him any reason at all to...

What? My mouth twists into a frown while I try to decipher the relationship between the two men. I need to see for myself that he isn’t...

“That’s not a good idea,” I say finally, forcing myself to meet his gaze.

The artist merely shrugs. “Afraid he’ll come back?”

I flinch, caught in my own web. Afraid of Lucifer? Not really. I was merely concerned by what might happen when the wolf returned to his lair to find another creature sniffing around the carcass he kept hidden in the back room. By opening the door, it felt like I’d unknowingly tipped over a domino chain miles long. Where would the final one land?

Only God knew that.

“Take a shower,” the artist says. His voice is softer. He’s looking at my legs, trying to avoid the bruises and marks that mar everything else. “Danny. It’s...it’s Danny, right?”

I force a nod, surprised that he remembered my name.

“Then, Danny, please. If you’re here of your own ‘free will’ and all, then take a shower. Change into the fresh clothes that I’m sure you have in a suitcase somewhere.” He raises a skeptical eyebrow. “Just, please. Prove to me that my brother isn’t a...freak.” The word is a fill-in for a darker insult that he can’t say. Monster.

I would hate to be the one to spoil that secret. Before I’m forced to, I register the rest of his words—brother—and I flinch again, seizing my lower lip between both rows of teeth. I bite down once, hard enough for the pain to flood my system and counter any emotion that could cross my expression and give me away. Lucifer has a brother—a man who likes to paint the Devil on the streets.

It’s almost too poetic.

“Okay...” I shake my head to clear it and head for the hallway—or at least I pretend to. I take the exaggerated route, skirting around the counter, and then I pretend to trip so that he doesn’t notice the knife I tuck into my hand.

The rest of Lucifer’s dwelling seems to repel my presence when its master isn’t there. I shiver when I make a detour into that lonely bedroom and approach the pile of things he keeps in the corner. It’s such a meager set of belongings. Plain. Simple. Durable. Vinny wouldn’t survive on such a lifestyle. Lucifer doesn’t require tailored suits, gold watches, and thousands of dollars to cut an intimidating presence, it seems.

All he needs are those eyes. I can almost feel them watching me now as I reach out and bat aside a pair of gray boxers to find three more plain tee shirts lurking underneath. I settle on a navy blue one—as feminine a color as I’m likely to find. After a moment’s hesitation, I grab the boxers too, hoping they might pass for shorts, if I can even get them to fit, that is.

I’m ice cold when I creep into the bathroom and run the shower at full blast. The pelting hot spray doesn’t do much to ease the ache in my limbs or quiet this insistent whisper in my head warning me to just take my chances and run. Damn Vinny. Damn Lucifer. At least I’d spend my last moments of freedom...away from some form of bloodshed.

I let the fantasies goad me into some semblance of peace. It’s only when I finally climb out of the tub and reach for one of the damp, used towels on the floor that I realize I’d never let go of the knife. It adds a mocking shimmer to my reflection when I finally gather the nerve to turn and face it.

Lucifer’s brother has been humoring me. There’s nothing remotely “fine” about the woman staring back at me with dry, soulless eyes. They’ve been sucked clean of all emotion—she’s a robot, merely going through the motions. I’m that pathetic automaton again, the one Vinny molded and corrupted me into being. Lynn. She traces her broken lips with a pink tongue, already anticipating the next beating.

No. I grit my teeth and shake my head. Then I use Lucifer’s toothbrush to chase every ounce of her away. Daniela returns when I blink, her exhausted expression a welcome sight. I scan the wet black hair clinging to her skull and warily drag my fingers through it. I manage to shift most of it over to my right shoulder, shielding as much of my damaged ear as I can. There’s no help for disguising the black bruise around my left eye, however. I try to counter it by making the rest of me seem as whole and as comfortable as possible.

It’s a laughable endeavor as I pull on Lucifer’s clothes. The shirt swallows me up like a child playing dress up in her father’s clothes, but I manage to roll the waistband of the boxers until they fit somewhat snugly. I’m clean at least.

When I finally tiptoe back into the hall—with my stolen knife hidden safely in one of the boxer’s pockets—I do my best to appear at ease. As if I’ve willingly encased myself within these four walls, though in a way I have. Squalor gleams like paradise when compared to Vinny’s luxurious prison. It’s easier than I would have thought to let my shoulders lose some of their tension. I don’t smile though—that would be a step too far, even for a delirious captive.

I try to seem neutral instead as if it’s completely natural for me to leave the shower dripping wet and wearing Lucifer’s clothes.

“You have a strange taste in wardrobe, Pyro,” the artist exclaims on a sharp exhale once he spots me near the mouth of the living room. “What happened to the cashmere sweaters and silk pants?”

I wince at the reminder of just how much control over my life—my identity—that Vinny had. “I don’t have any clothes,” I say, choosing not to waste energy on a lie. “He...” Lucifer has a real name, and I struggle to remember it. Something with a D. “D-Dan...Dante is helping me get back on my feet.”

“Bad breakup?” the man asks. I can’t tell if he’s humoring me or making a logical guess.

“The worst.” For a second, I let the full horror of Vinny’s memory wash over me. That fear seeps into my blood, pooling within every muscle. Nothing about my reaction is faked, and the man takes notice. He sits straighter, bracing both hands flat against his knees.

“How do you know him? Dante.”

I reach up and fiddle with a strand of my hair as a distraction while I try to come up with a plausible lie. There are none. In the end, I spit out the first scenario that comes to mind. “He...he found me crying. He bought me something to eat—” I nod to the corroborating empty cartons of takeout on the counter behind me. “He gave me a place to crash while...while I get back on my feet.” The appendages in question shuffle uneasily against the floor, and I have to dig my toes into the carpet before he notices.

“Hmph.” The man—I struggle to recall the name he gave me—Espi?—nods along with my tale. “So, he found you naked and drunk on the street corner and didn’t call the police or take you to a hospital?”

I frown. I don’t remember telling that part of the story.

“I saw him,” the man adds, “carrying you up the stairs drunk out of your mind. You only had on a pair of—”

“D-Do you want me to just say it?” I demand, injecting a false bit of shame into my voice. My heart races as I run out of options and just wing it. I’m drawing on a movie Vinny made me watch with him once. Pretty something. “My...my profession?”

His eyebrows shoot up into a fringe of black hair. “You mean...you’re a h...”

I say nothing, allowing him to draw the conclusion on his own. Prostitute. Call girl. Whore. How very fitting to describe it—in the end, that’s all I really ever was to Vinny. The explanation even ties in nicely with my bruised face and lack of proper clothing as well. “Dante’s helping me,” I say, and for a second I almost believe my own lie. “So, I’d really prefer if you didn’t call the police...”

The devil’s brother says nothing. He merely watches me, and I can’t decipher any conclusions he comes to when he finally stands.

“Wait here,” he says before turning to the door.

“But—”

“Don’t move,” he says without turning around. “I’ll be right back.”

He leaves the door open to the apartment, allowing me to see him dart across the hall and open one of the other doors that appears to branch off the hallway. It’s about two doors down from the “showroom,” and I can’t suppress a shudder while my mind conjures what other secrets he might pull from this new Pandora’s box.

A bag apparently. It’s small, made of plastic, and sports the name of a grocery store on the front.

“It’s not much,” the man tells me while letting the handle dangle from his hand. “Just a few things I could bother sparing, for now. I can bring more over later when I—”

“L-Later?” I reach out for the bag as if taking it might be enough to make him leave. “You can’t—”

“I have some...business to take care of now,” he says, with a wary glance over his shoulder. It’s the first sign of unease I’ve seen from him. Spraying graffiti in Vinny’s territory or even waltzing into Lucifer’s lair didn’t affect him as much. “But when I’m done, I’ll come see you again. Seeing as how you’re here of your own volition, Dante shouldn’t have a problem if you have visitors. Right?”

It’s like he’s daring me, to tell the truth, and for the life of me, I don’t know why I don’t. Lucifer’s nefarious intentions should be no concern of mine. The red-haired man doesn’t deserve any protection against a stranger who might not be able to stomach the idea of a tortured woman kept in the wings for his amusement.

I have every reason to come clean.

In the end, I wrap my fingers around the handles of the bag and carefully pull it toward me. It’s heavy. I hold open both ends to peek at what’s carefully packed inside it—what appear to be two sweatshirts, red and black, and a pair of jeans, which just may be small enough to fit around my waist at least. There’s also a pair of sandals and a canister of men’s deodorant, still partially wrapped in packaging that sports the words Two Pack!

Something foreign pools into my stomach. Gratitude? It’s been so long since I’ve felt it. While the items might not seem like much to anyone else, I suspect that they were what few things in the world he had but was still willing to part with.

His generosity leaves me feeling greedy.

“Thank you.”

He shrugs. “Don’t mention it—seriously. Don’t say anything to Dante.”

For the first time, I notice the hard way he pronounces the name. Crisp...almost the same way in which Vinny utters Daniela. Lucifer’s near-twin doesn’t share any love for him, it seems. He doesn’t want the wolf to know our secret.

But he doesn’t have to tell me twice. I aim to give the clothing back though—I have nowhere to hide it—but before I even move to offer it to him, he’s already heading down the hall, his backpack hiked over one shoulder. “See you around, Pyro Girl,” he calls back to me.

I don’t know how long I stand there, his bag in hand before I finally gather the nerve to creep back inside.