Velvet Devil: A Russian Mafia Romance

I resist the urge to roll my eyes. It’s at least the dozenth time tonight he’s mentioned how “self-made” he is. Although I’m pretty sure he inherited the hardware store from his dad.

Before I can figure out how to wriggle my way out of this particular conversational impasse, Reggie looks up and snaps his fingers for the waiter. When no one notices him in the zero-point-two seconds he’s willing to wait, he raises his hand to his lip and whistles.

“Hey!” I hiss, mortified at his behavior. “You can’t whistle.”

He looks positively dumbfounded that I seem to have a problem with it. “Why?”

“It’s rude!”

“Rude?” Reggie repeats, as though I’m speaking a foreign language. “Nah, babe, it’s friendly. You just aren’t used to guys taking you to nice places like this.”

I slink down in my seat, cheeks flushing with embarrassment. Maybe if I scrunch my eyes closed really hard, I’ll turn invisible. Worth a shot, at least.

“You can clear our plates, hon,” Reggie orders the waiter when she comes to our tableside. “And get us the dessert menus.”

“Actually, that’s not necessary,” I say quickly, giving the waiter an apologetic smile. Please don’t hate me, I’m saying to her with my eyes. I want this to be over just as badly as you do. “Just the bill, please.”

“What?” Reggie asks. “C’mon, party’s just getting started!”

“I’m tired,” I explain with rapidly waning patience. “And I’m too stuffed to have dessert.”

He glances at his watch. “It’s only eleven,” he says. “Fine, forget the dessert menus then. Bring us another round of drinks.”

The waiter nods and makes her escape from the dreaded Reggie Zone before I can protest. I cringe at the prospect of spending another half an hour in this man’s company.

“Hey, I’m gonna go hit the can, okay?” He burps again. “Don’t think that steak sat right with me.”

I give him a wooden nod. The moment he clears the table, I sigh with relief and whip out my phone to dial Brianna’s number.

She answers immediately. “Hey, sis, how’s the date going?”

“I am going to kill you!”

“Woah there, hold your horses. What happened?”

“He’s dull and boring and boorish and I’m going to end it all with the butter knife if I have to spend another minute stuck here with him.”

Brianna giggles out loud. “You’re not using words like ‘boorish’ on him, are you?”

“We have nothing in common, Bree.”

“Opposites attract.”

“The physics of magnetism aside, I beg to disagree.”

Brianna groans. “You’re not even giving him a chance. When was the last time you were attracted to any man?”

The question feels unfair, especially given the very real and very visceral reaction I’d just had to the man in the booth. Not that I’m about to admit to Brianna that I was just eye-fucking some smug Wall Street douche in a pricey suit. She’d never let me hear the end of it.

“What is that supposed to mean?”

“It means that you treat men like an invasive species.”

“With good reason! Having a man in your life isn’t everything, you know.”

“Life is not Little Women, Cami,” says Brianna with a long-suffering sigh. “You don’t have to get all Jo March idealist on me. I’m not saying Reggie is your fairytale prince, but at least he’s… I dunno, call it ‘practice.’”

“I don’t want practice. Right now, all I want is a cab out of here.”

“Back to his place?” she teases.

I shudder. “Not a snowball’s chance in hell. Ah, shoot, he’s coming back. Gotta go. Love you, bye!”

I hear her saying something like, “Just smooch him and see if you like—” before I smash the “End Call” button and tuck my phone back under the table.

“Talking about me?” Reggie asks with a waggle of the eyebrows that I’m pretty sure is meant to be seductive.

As he sits back down, I try and look at him objectively without the prism of disinterest tainting my perception.

Maybe Bree is right and I’m being too harsh. He’s not a bad-looking guy. Sure, his three-day beard is more “gamer who forgot to shower” than it is “GQ cover model.”

And sure, he talks about himself a lot and starts way too many sentences with “In my industry…”

But he’s nice enough, I guess.

So why does a night spent with Reggie pale in comparison to a single glance from the man in the expensive suit?

One of them makes my skin crawl.

The other sets my skin on fire.

“In part,” I reply eventually. “Just wanted to let Brianna know I’d be home soon.”

His eyebrows rise. “Not too soon.”

“Beg your pardon?”

“The night’s not over. I have something else planned for us. My friend’s playing a gig at a bar down the street, so I told him we’d stop in.”

I swallow my annoyance. “You didn’t tell me, though.”

“I’m telling you now. It’ll be fun.”

I hate being cornered into things. “Reggie, tonight’s not good.”

“Do you have other plans?” he asks bluntly.

“Well, no.”

“Then I don’t see the problem.”

“Look, Reggie,” I say, starting to panic a little, “you’re a nice guy, and I really appreciate the invite to hang. But like I said, I’ve gotta get home, so I think I’m gonna just head—”

I’m standing as I say this, but before I can even get all the way upright, Reggie’s hand shoots out and snares my wrist, hard.

“Reggie, you’re hurting me.”

His face is purpling with anger. “Don’t be a bitch. I invited you out, and I’m a cool guy, so you really need to just stop being so difficult and come where I tell you to—”

This time, it’s Reggie’s voice that dies suddenly.

Because another hand has joined the fray.

A very big, very strong, very unfamiliar hand.

It latches onto Reggie’s wrist and peels his fingers off of me one by one with terrifying strength.

A voice accompanies it, deep and chilling.

“She told you no.”

I turn to see who spoke, freezing instantly. The handsome man from across the restaurant is no longer at his booth.

No, he’s standing right in front of my table, looking at me as though he knows me.

“Uh…” I sink into my seat.

His face is a dark, impassive mask. But those eyes are full of—well, something. Black ice? Raging fire? Midnight shadow? I’m being melodramatic, but he has the kind of stare that makes me feel a little untethered from reality.

My mouth is fumbling to form words, as if the English language is a brand-new thing for me. There’s a weird buzzing in my ears, too. Like the alarm system of my body is going off on DEFCON 1.

I was right about one thing: the man is tall. And he’s even hotter up close. His vivid blue eyes set a stark contrast to his dark, effortlessly tousled hair. That jawline could cut glass.

“I’m sorry, who are you?” Reggie interrupts.

The handsome stranger doesn’t take his eyes off mine for a single second. “Cami and I are childhood friends,” he explains. “We go a long way back.”

Reggie frowns suspiciously. “Seriously? You don’t look like you’re from the Midwest.”

Nicole Fox's books