The Fidelity World: Invictus (Kindle Worlds Novella)

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The Fidelity World: Invictus (Kindle Worlds Novella) Page 5

by Kylie Hillman


  “Are you sure?” Lydia cocks an eyebrow and stares at me. She’s suspicious of my easy acquiescence. “Ida seems to think she still has the option to back out.”

  “Leave it with me, I’ll bring her around. You trust me, don’t you?”

  My father’s paramour nods her head with obvious reluctance. She refuses to meet my eyes and changes the subject. “Would you like me to call the hostess? Our meals would have been ready half an hour ago.”

  “No,” I state, icily. “My appetite has suddenly left me.”

  Pushing to my feet, I lean close to Lydia. She instantly recoils when she sees the menace in my expression. Narrowing my eyes, I let my gaze bore into hers with hot intensity. I feel like a bit of a dick, but I refuse to let her nervousness deter me from making myself clear. This is too important.

  “I hope we understand each other, Lydia. You scratch my back and I’ll scratch yours. The meddling that you’ve been doing on my father’s behalf comes to an end today. I do not want Ida caught up in my family’s poison so I’m counting on you to keep your knowledge to yourself. From now on, when we see each other, I am Felix King. If you let my identity become known before I’m ready to reveal myself, I will tell my father of Thomas’s existence. Accidentally, of course.”

  The colour drains from her face, and I watch her throat work while she tries to swallow.

  “Of course, Felix. You have my word.”

  Satisfied that she’s got the message, I lean down and kiss her cheek. “I appreciate your cooperation. Those of us with too much to lose should really learn how to work together.”

  Lydia tries to smile at me, but she doesn’t quite manage it. Her fear for her son sets my conscience off, so I make quick of exiting the room before I lose the ground I’ve made by apologising.

  Unlike my father, I have a low tolerance for acting like a bastard and I’ve reached my threshold for the day.

  SEVEN

  Ida

  “Marta!” I shout as I slam our front door shut behind me. Tossing my handbag and coat on the arm chair, I kick off my heels and head for the kitchen. By the time, Marta joins me, I’ve already taken a bottle of wine from the fridge and gotten two wine glasses down from the cabinet.

  “What’s wrong,” she questions. She tilts her head in the direction of our balcony. “On second thought, let’s sit outside and you can tell me all about it.”

  Once we’re set up on our sun lounges, with the bottle of wine on the little, glass table between and a glass of wine in our hands, I find myself speechless. Unable to determine where I should begin, I take a huge sip, then lean my head back against the soft, canvas cushion of my seat. Looking at the dark, night-time sky, I let out a huge sigh.

  “Alrighty, spill lady,” Marta demands. “You were excited when you left for this dinner. Who’s ruined your vibe already?”

  “Felix King.”

  Marta drains her glass before she pours herself another. “Yeah, you’re going to have to expand your answer. I have no idea who he is.”

  “Perfection is what he is,” I say with another sigh. “Tall, dark, handsome, foreign perfection.”

  “I’m not detecting a problem, yet,” Marta quips. “Seems to me like you should still be at dinner, not sitting here sighing like you have the weight of the world on your shoulders while you drink all my wine.”

  Holding my glass out to her, I make a toast when she clinks her glass against mine. “To a weightless world.”

  Marta starts laughing. “You’re an idiot. Just tell me what’s happening.”

  “It’s complicated and I don’t know how to explain it to you. I mean, you know how tight Infidelity’s rules are?” I ask.

  She nods. “Well, der. I’m your sponsor.”

  “Well, since it concerns Infidelity, I can’t really give you details.”

  “Then give me the hypothetical version. It’s not rocket science, lady.”

  Being on the receiving end of Marta’s snark is making me feel better already. The way I felt at the restaurant is finally fading into the background, and I’m starting to feel like an idiot for the way I behaved.

  Sucking in a deep breath, I start from the beginning—from the call I received to meet my new Infidelity client at the restaurant tonight. It takes me a few minutes to get to the part that I’m most embarrassed about. So far, Marta has been silent, although the judgment on her face has been getting harder to ignore.

  “So, I watched him sign the contract,” I say, quickly. “And I was ready to sign as well, until it hit me that if I do, I’m basically signing away any chance that we had. The connection we felt this morning was real, adding money into the equation makes it a transaction and turns our relationship into a commodity. I didn’t think I could do that, so I told him that I was sorry and I walked out.”

  “You just left him alone at the restaurant?” Marta asks.

  “No, Lydia was still there with him,” I reply. “She yelled something after me, but I was trying not to cry so I didn’t answer her.”

  “Argh, Ida. You’re a such a princess. Why are you making this a thing?” She shakes her head at me. “Sign the damn contract and spend a glorious year with this gorgeous man you’re attracted to. Seriously, woman. Let him give you all the O’s, let him pay you all the money, and when the year is over, blow him a kiss and get on with your real life.”

  “But—”

  “There’s no but in this situation. This Felix guy has made his position clear. He’s in the country for a year and requires a classy companion during that time. Whatever you think you felt this morning when he helped you with your ankle doesn’t exist. Love at first sight, soul mate connection, and all that other shit. That’s the type of fairy tale bullshit that poisons women’s minds and makes them throw away perfectly good opportunities to better their lives. Felix is not a Prince. He’s not here to rescue you from your crappy life. He’s a man, who is living in a foreign country for a year and wants to spend that time with a beautiful woman on his arm. That’s reality. That is what’s real. Take it and make it your bitch… and earn some damn money while you’re doing it.”

  When she lays it out in plain terms, I feel even stupider. Marta’s right. My dream is to make it on my own terms. I want to support myself with my writing, not throw away the opportunity of a lifetime over some idea that I had an instant connection with a stranger.

  “I feel stupid.”

  Marta slaps me lightly on the arm, then takes my empty glass from me and refills it. After she’s passed it to me, she rubs my hand and gives me her version of sympathy. “You’re not stupid. You’re just blindly believing the lie that the world peddles to us women as truth. Once you realise that we’re on our own and our life is only ever going to be as good as we make it, you’ll be fine.”

  “Is that what you’re doing?” I ask. Marta’s family is rich as hell and more than happy to provide her with everything she could ask for. I always thought that Gabriel was her sugar daddy who provided the social legitimacy that she craves, but I never realised that her contract with him was her sole means of supporting herself. “Living on your own terms?”

  “To a degree,” Marta answers. She lifts her right shoulder in a half-shrug. “My dad has certain expectations for me which I’m not willing to go along with. It’s easier to live an honest life with Gabriel than it is to play the games my father expects. With Gabriel, it’s clear what the payment is for. With my family, everything comes with strings and hidden agendas. Don’t get me wrong, I love my family, it’s just easier to fund my own life.”

  It might sound like Marta is talking in vague absurdities. She isn’t. What she’s explaining is what life is like in a family like ours. Being wealthy comes with unsavoury expectations that people without money would never understand. Being forced to marry into a particular circle to secure deals and alliances can seem strange to outsiders, yet rich families don’t think that it’s too much to ask of their offspring. Being seen in the media with a certain person, leaking in
formation that ruins your competition, or sanctioning the illegal proclivities of your allies is normal in my world.

  It’s also the reason I fled from Georgia the first opportunity I got.

  “That’s enough of the dark stuff,” Marta declares. “Let’s head inside and watch Wonder Woman again. I have a burning need to see a hot woman kicking ass tonight.”

  *

  Throwing off my bed covers, I curse Marta under my breath when the banging and clanging that woke me up continues.

  “I. Hate. Goddamn. Noisy. Disrespectful. Assholes. Who. Never. Sleep. In.”

  I take the time to enunciate each word with precision. That’s how annoyed I am. It took me ages to get to sleep last night, my mind was racing as I thought about ways to fix what I broke with Felix. In the end, my plan was simple. Today, I planned to sleep in for the first time in forever, and then call the Infidelity offices to schedule another meeting to sign the contract. Hopefully, the offer was still on the table because once I’d signed, I was going to try to track down Felix and apologise. Not too profusely since I was determined to ascribe to Marta’s philosophy regarding relationships. That was—after I’d killed her for waking me up.

  “What the hell!” I shout, slamming my bedroom door closed behind me. “Why are you playing folk music at stupid o’clock? Some of us were hoping to have a sleep-in for the first time in ages… we can’t all live in leisure permanently.”

  My dressing gown is flowing behind me as I try to jam my arms inside it. I get my right arm all the way in before I realise that I have the damn thing inside out. It’s an over-reaction—even while I’m in the middle of my tantrum, I know it’s ridiculous—but my temper has snapped.

  I rip my arm out of my dressing gown and throw it on the floor. The material has barely touched the shiny, palazzo-inspired tiles before I’ve stomped over to it and snatched it back up. I swing around in a circle, attempting to shove my arms back in place, only to end up with it knotted around me and covering my face.

  That’s all it takes for me to lose it again.

  “What the fuck is wrong with this thing?” My question is wholly rhetorical, but I just know that Marta is going to be a smartass about it. I’m surprised that she’s been so quiet during my meltdown, usually she relishes the opportunity to take free pot shots.

  “Here, let me help.” A husky, cultured voice scares the living shit out of me. I’d expected Marta’s snark to answer me, not someone who sounds like sex on legs to come to my assistance.

  The soft fabric is unravelled from my body and Felix comes into view. I knew from the second I heard the strange voice that it was him, but I’d been hoping to live in denial for as long as I could. No such luck when he’s standing right before me with a teasing smirk on his handsome face.

  “Rough morning?” he quips.

  Swallowing hard, I use my thumbs to wipe down my face. The surreptitious attempt to rid myself of any traces of sleep fails epically when Marta decides that now is the time to speak up.

  “Jeez, Ida, you’re a mess. Didn’t you get any sleep last night?”

  Her question sounds caring, except I know different. She’s trying to goad me in front of Felix so I’ll turn red. Determined not to take her bait, I take my dressing gown from Felix’s grip with as much finesse as I can, then turn to head back to my bedroom to compose myself.

  Unfortunately, the universe is against me. As I take a step away from Felix and Marta, my foot clips something that’s sitting in the middle of the floor. My arms windmill wildly as I try to keep my balance. It doesn’t work. My feet slip out from underneath me and I end up face down on the hard floor, my stomach crushing whatever the hell I fell over, with my nightgown flicked up over my back… and my bare ass exposed.

  It’s pointed right at Felix. Like, right at him. I’m so close that if he stooped down just a little he could pat it for me.

  Red-faced, I scramble to my feet. Looking down to check that I haven’t broken whatever tripped me, I find the culprit is one I should have expected—and avoided at all costs.

  Marta’s bloody Gucci handbag stares back at me. The soft, camel leather shines innocuously in the morning light, its presence seemingly innocent, rather than showcasing its evil nature as the catalyst for everything that I’ve endured over the past twenty-four hours.

  EIGHT

  Felix

  Ida pulls down her nightdress, aims a swift kick at the handbag she tripped over, then marches toward her bedroom. The door slams shut and with it my hopes of impressing her. Images of her delectable, round ass keep invading my mind’s eye. With each recount comes a vision of me following her into her bedroom and sinking my teeth into her backside. I need a distraction, so I look to her friend for help, but find she is too far gone to be of any assistance.

  Marta is laughing so hard that she sounds like she’s choking, and when I try to speak to her anyway, she waves me away. The smoke alarm in the kitchen starts beeping. I rush into the room to find the hollandaise sauce I was making to go over the poached eggs and smoked salmon I was cooking Ida for breakfast is burning. Lifting the frypan off the stovetop, I shove it in the sink and turn the tap on. The cold water hitting the hot pan creates even more smoke which I try to wave away with a tea towel.

  So much for surprising her with breakfast.

  “Hey,” Ida comes into the kitchen and sits on one of the stools at the counter. “I’m sorry about all that. Mornings aren’t my forte.”

  With a smile on my face, I check her out. Her dressing gown is on properly and her face is shiny like she’s just washed it. If I didn’t think it would scare her off, I take her in my arms and kiss the life out of her for facing me without makeup. No other woman I know would be brave enough to do that.

  “I’m guessing that dressing gowns and handbags are on your list of nemesis, as well?” I tease. If she’s willing to play it off with humour, then I’m happy to take her lead.

  Ida laughs, then uses the footstep on her stool to give her the height she needs to lean over the counter and snare a piece of the salmon from a plate. The sauce is ruined so I decide to cut my loses and go with what I have. Adding some cutlery to the plate, I slide it closer to her.

  “I was planning on making hollandaise sauce, but I burnt it while I was distracted.” I scoop up a forkful of eggs and chew on them.

  Ida swallows her mouthful, then speaks. “My ass wasn’t that bad, was it? I mean, as distractions go.”

  The egg goes down the wrong way. I try to cough it up, unsuccessfully. A hacking sound fills the kitchen as I start to choke. Ida rushes around the counter until she’s standing behind me and starts pounding me between the shoulder blades. It doesn’t really help, although I do manage to swallow my food properly and regain my breath.

  “You can stop now,” I tell Ida when I can speak again. She’s still behind me, diligently pounding my back. “I’m okay.”

  She pulls her hand away like I’m on fire and she’s just been burnt. I feel the loss of her like a missing limb, so I turn to face her, determined to not let her get away like I did last night. The previous evening, I was off my game. I feared my father’s reach. I was worried that she’d be scared off if she knew the truth. I’d let everything get the better of me and that had culminated in me letting Ida leave the restaurant without a fight.

  This morning, I’m equipped with a plan. And it revolves around making Ida as comfortable with me as I can.

  Starting now.

  “Can I kiss you?” I wrap my arms around Ida’s body and link my fingers at her back. My hold is loose, but deliberately so. She needs to come to me willingly.

  Ida trails her fingers up my cotton-covered chest, then along the sides of my bare neck. The tender touch leaves goose bumps in its wake, the hair on the back of my neck standing to attention when she holds me tight and lowers my mouth to hers.

  Our tongues tangle in a duelling dance. Ida tugs me closer until I’m forced to hold her just as tight, pressing our lower bodies closer togethe
r. I can feel the shape of her through the thin satin of her dressing gown. Her body heat burns against me and it takes every ounce of restraint I possess not to lift her onto the counter, pull her nightgown out of the way, and thrust into the main source of her heat.

  “Felix,” Ida whispers against my lips. She’s almost glowing from our kiss. It sets my heart racing in my chest. If this is what I can do to her with a kiss, I can’t wait to see her face after we make love.

  “We need to talk,” Ida tries to get my attention once more.

  I’m too lost in my thoughts of branding her with my cock, so her plea doesn’t register straightaway.

  “Felix,” she says my name again, louder this time.

  “Ida,” I reply, pulling my mouth from hers. “Ida. Ida. Ida.”

  The passion that lit up her face is slowly fading, and I can see reality setting in. “What are we going to do about the contract? I couldn’t bring myself to sign it last night. It was stupid, but Marta made me see sense and I’m willing to sign anything you need now. I want to spend this year with you, in any way I can.”

  “As far as I’m concerned, the contract no longer exists. My time in this country is yours, for however long you’ll have me.”

  The smile she gives me could light up an entire suburb. It makes my stomach turn in knots and sets off a maelstrom of fluttering in my chest. I’m a goner for this woman—three encounters and two kisses later and I’m trying to work out how to fit her into my normal life.

  I don’t know if a year is going to be enough.

  “I’m glad I don’t have to sign the contract,” Ida says, with utmost seriousness. I feel my heart fall into my shoes at her next statement. “Don’t get me wrong, I would have signed it, but it made me feel like I was cheapening what I felt yesterday.”

  Contentment radiates from her. She wraps her arms around my neck and lays her head on my shoulder. With her face buried in the crook of my neck, Ida’s hot breath tickles when she drives the final nail into my coffin. “Now, we can see where this goes with honesty and pure intentions as a solid base to grow from instead of cold, hard cash. No contract in the world can replace this feeling.”

 

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