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Kidnapped by the Billionaire(6)

By:Jackie Ashenden


It helped that the plan on how he could use Violet was coming together in his head.

He was still turning the details over, but he thought it might work. In  fact, it fucking better since he really had no other options, thanks to  Eva goddamn King, a really piss-poor decision, and lack of planning on  his part.

He'd never expected Rutherford to not protect her. He'd never expected her to pick up the gun and shoot Fitzgerald herself.

Bitch.

Let it go. You can't change it now and anyway, you have bigger fish to fry.

His anger coiled like a snake, shifting and turning.

Since losing Marie, he'd managed to divest himself of every single  emotion. Anything that could hurt, anything that could undermine, he'd  gotten rid of. Everything except anger. And that he'd kept sharp and  bright, and most of all cold. He'd had to. After all, revenge took its  time and hot rage burned itself out soon enough. Cold rage though, that  kept going, kept sustaining.

And he was going to need all of it if he wanted to go through with the  plan he was forming in his head right now. A plan that was bigger than  merely crushing Fitzgerald.         

     



 

A plan that took it right back to the source.

To Jericho.

Back out in the lounge, he found Violet frantically going through her  purse, bits of crap strewn all over the couch. As he approached her, she  had her hands in her lap and was bent over them, one hand twisted over,  something clutched in her fingers.

It took him a moment to realize she was trying to get the handcuffs open with a hairpin.

He stopped not far from the couch and folded his arms, watching her.  There was no way she was going to succeed, but a tiny part of him was  vaguely impressed with her tenacity. Especially since it was clear by  her movements that she'd never picked a lock in her entire life.

After a moment she stopped what she was doing and looked up. Color crept  into her pale cheeks. Then she tossed the hairpin away and leaned back  against the couch cushions, her expression changing from steely  determination to barely masked boredom.

Ah, that's the Violet he knew.

"It would never have worked," he said flatly. "You don't know what you're doing."

"Yeah, well, that's pretty fucking obvious." Her turquoise gaze met his,  then flickered away again. "So what am I supposed to do? Just sit here?  Wait until you deign to tell me what you're going to do with me?"

He ignored the questions, studying her instead. She was definitely  scared, he could see little flashes of it leaking out from underneath  the mask of sarcasm and anger she was desperately trying to hide behind.

Good. He was doing his job properly then.

"Yes. That's pretty much exactly what you're going to do." He turned  toward the kitchen area, sectioned off from the rest of the apartment by  a big white wall.

"Tell me why I'm here." Again the edge of desperation in her voice. "Tell me about Dad."

"All in good time." He had to get himself something to eat, something that would get rid of this fucking dizziness.

"No," Violet demanded. "Now."

He didn't know what it was in her voice that made him stop and turn around, but he did.

She was sitting bolt upright on the couch, the look on her face blazing.  Fear was there, yes, definitely, but a healthy measure of anger too.

Jesus, she had some nerve. Handcuffed and his prisoner, she was sitting  there demanding answers like she had a right to them. Like she wasn't  merely the spoiled daughter of a man the Mafia would have been proud to  call their own. A woman oblivious to the monster who'd given her life.

A poor little rich girl whose life had never been touched by darkness. An innocent.

The volcanic rage inside him flared.

Why should she remain untouched? What made her special? When her father  had been the one who'd destroyed Elijah's life. Who'd killed everything  that made him human, everything he'd loved.

Why should she be spared anything?

"Your father died a few hours ago," Elijah said coldly. "He was shot in the head."

Violet blinked. "But  …  but, I-"

"You don't understand, do you? You don't know what he was."

"What who was?" Her throat moved. "What are you talking about?"

There was no room for mercy in him anywhere. "Your father ran one of New  York's biggest crime rings. He had a string of drug dealers, ran  underground casinos, and had been making it big in sex trafficking too."

Her eyes went huge and black, her mouth falling open. "What?" she whispered faintly. "No, I don't believe it."

"Think about it, princess. Where do you think he got all his money  from?" Elijah smiled. "Why do you think he had someone like me guarding  him all the fucking time?"

She was starting to shake her head, all the fight draining from her eyes. "No  …  I don't  …  I mean, I can't … "

"Believe it. It's all true. All that happening right under your pretty  little nose. Your father was a murderer, princess. A rapist. A master  manipulator. He was the devil himself." Elijah paused, watching her  face, seeing the shock set in. Once he would have felt regret for  hurting her like this, for hurting anyone like this. But regret was  something he'd long ago ceased to feel.

"He had plans for you too, did you know that?" Elijah continued. "You  were never going to escape. He liked to use anyone and everyone for  power, no one was exempt."

She'd fallen silent, gone still, her only movement the rapid rise and fall of her chest as she breathed.

He wouldn't spare her. No one had spared Marie.

"Your father was going to use you, Violet. You were going to be the  bargaining chip he used in exchange for more territory, so he could  extend his human trafficking networks into Eastern Europe."         

     



 

She kept shaking her head as if that alone would deny the truth.

Elijah kept talking. "He was going to give you to the biggest crime lord  in Europe in return for his so-called ‘trading links,' and whether you  wanted it or not wouldn't have mattered in the slightest. Everyone was  fair game to him and that included his daughter."

She stared at him.

He stared back. If she wanted to know the truth, he'd give it to her. "I  was going to kill him, but Eva fucking King took that honor for  herself. So instead, I'm going to use you. You're my bait, Violet.  Jericho wants you, which makes you the perfect tool to flush him out."  He smiled again. "Because since your prick of a father is already dead,  I'm going to kill Jericho instead."



Violet sat on the couch as Elijah disappeared into the kitchen area, the  sounds of cupboards being opened and food being prepared drifting out.

She felt frozen. Like she'd been thrown outside into a snowbank naked.

Your father is dead. Your father was a murderer. Your father ran one of the biggest crime rings in New York. …

No. No. No. It couldn't be. That wasn't true.

Oh sure. Like you never thought that something about Dad was wrong. That  he was hiding something, concealing something. Something you could  never put a finger on and were too frightened to want to find out.

She swallowed, staring down at the handcuffs around her wrists, glittering among the silver already there.

It was too much, too big to get her head around.

Grief thickened in her throat, because whatever else was true about what  Elijah had said-if indeed any of it was true-her father had still been  her father. Sure, he'd been kind of distant and closed off, never  physical in the slightest, but he'd gone to all her school plays.  Encouraged her with her homework. Supported her academic achievements,  never pushed her to do more the way her precise and very particular  mother had.

It wasn't until she'd been around twelve, about a year after they'd lost  Theo, that she'd realized there was something about her dad that  disturbed her. He'd get a cold look in his eye. A look that made her  feel as if another man was looking out from behind those blue eyes she  knew so well.

It had frightened her. But she'd thought it was grief and so had pretended not to see it.

Apparently she'd been wrong. Perhaps it hadn't been grief at all. Perhaps it had been there all along.

Nausea churned in her gut. She stumbled to her feet and headed for the  bathroom, shouldering through the door and staggering over to the  toilet. Then she dropped to her knees on the white tiles and retched  into the bowl as her stomach heaved.

Afterward she sagged to the side, closing her eyes and leaning her head against the tiled wall, shudders shaking her.

Maybe it wasn't true. Maybe Elijah had lied to her about everything. But  then those marks on his face  …  He hadn't gotten those for the fun of  it, that was for sure. And why would he lie anyway? He had nothing to  gain from it, surely?

Tears slipped down her cheeks and she let them fall for a minute or two,  needing to get rid of the heavy stone of grief and pain in some way.

Better to concentrate on one thing at a time, such as the loss of a father.

Anything else would have to wait.