“All related to the cartels?”
“To live and die in Mexico,” he said, getting to his feet. “That is the way.”
“Violetta, Beatriz, and Maria…” I stated.
“They are the reasons why family gets you killed,” he finished, his voice hard. “As does love. And as does asking too many questions. Do you understand?”
I swallowed thickly but nodded.
“Good,” he said, flashing me an insincere grin. “Now, since this is your last day in our beautiful safe house, I figured I’d ask you what you wanted to do today.”
“Do today?” I repeated incredulously. “Are my choices eat food, get Tasered, or become a human carving board?”
“I was thinking maybe you wanted to do something else for a change.”
As strange as it was to think it, the idea of change scared me. Things were bad for me, but I always knew they could be worse. In fact, tomorrow they would most definitely be worse and I was in no hurry to experience that already.
The look in his eyes softened as he held out his hand for mine. “Come with me,” he said. “You have nothing to be afraid of.”
“Only you,” I pointed out.
“Only me.”
I wasn’t sure why that made me smile, but it did. I was starting to fear I was becoming as sick and twisted as he was. Then I realized that perhaps that was nothing to fear.
I put my hand out and he grasped it, his palm warm and soft, his fingers strong. He pulled me up to my feet, and I realized I was only wearing a long t-shirt and no underwear. I don’t know why I was suddenly self-conscious, considering the way I was yesterday, considering I’d had my ass in his face a few days ago, but I was.
“I need to get changed,” I said, looking away. He had brought me close to him and I could feel those eyes of his tracing my skin, from my toes to my lips.
“Do you want me to give you a minute?” he asked. “Because I’m afraid I’ve already seen everything. In every way possible.”
I ignored that and pulled away from him, reaching for a pair of shorts, the shorts I had been captured in. I slipped them on, revelling in their familiarity, then knotted the t-shirt above my waist. Like hell I was going to bother with a bra.
“Low maintenance,” Javier commented.
“It’s easy when you’re held hostage. I’m surprised I’m still brushing my teeth.”
“Well, you don’t want to turn into a savage.”
I gave him a funny look. It was times like this that I could almost pretend I wasn’t his captive at all, like my fate didn’t hang in the balance of tomorrow.
I put on a hard face. “So, where are you taking me? Aren’t you going to, well, look more appropriate?”
He shrugged. “We’re just going for a ride. Tomorrow is a day for suits. Today is a day to … relax.” I tapped my foot and he went on. “I’ve heard there’s a beautiful waterfall here at the end of the road. Apparently you can see the Pacific from the heights. I thought we could go there.”
I couldn’t figure out just how sincere he was. “You’re just going to take me on a car ride?”
“Don’t look so concerned,” he said. “You won’t be able to escape.”
I figured that much. He opened the door and we stepped out into the hall. Immediately, the repulsive pig that was Franco was at our side. Javier seemed on edge around him, his eyes burning into him like a warning, while Franco handed over a pair of handcuffs.
Franco then went down the stairs, and Javier slipped one cuff over my wrist and held on to the other one before taking me outside into the sunshine. There was a black SUV—the narcos’ car of choice—running in the driveway. Franco climbed into the driver’s seat and Javier put us both in the back, making sure the other end of the handcuff was fastened to the handle above the door. There would be no escaping from this vehicle, not unless I wanted to be dragged to my death.
We rode in silence for the first bit, the only sounds the crunch of rock beneath the wheels and my heart pounding loudly in my chest. It was jarring being out in the real world, so much so that I had a hard time taking it all in. It wasn’t until Javier put down my window and the fresh mountain air came pouring into my lungs, that I remembered I was alive, even if only a short time. Lush, tropical foliage covered the road on both sides, and birds squawked happily from the trees. It was beautiful outside, and I realized that this was indeed a gift for me.
Yet, I had to wonder who all of this was for. Me? Or for the tiny speck of a conscience I knew he had.
I shifted in my seat and studied him for a moment, sitting there still dressed down in his top and lounge pants, looking more like an ordinary—albeit handsome—man.
“Why are you doing this?” I asked.
He stared out the window for a moment, as if he didn’t hear me. “Because it is your last day here, your last day in my presence. I wanted to make it memorable.”
“My last day on earth,” I said grimly.
He gave me a lopsided smile. “Well, tomorrow you will either be gone…”
“Or I will be dead. It’s pretty much the same thing.”
He frowned. “I feel like Salvador knows how very precious you are. If I were him, I wouldn’t let you go.”
“But you’re not him.”
“No,” he said with finality. “I’m not.”
“So how are you going to kill me?”
His dark brows shot straight up. “Excuse me?” he asked incredulously.
“I said, how are you going to kill me? I know how most sicarios kill women. Through strangulation. Are you going to choke me?”
He rubbed at his chin, his eyes still bewildered. “Choking belongs in the bedroom, Luisa, and if you stayed around me long enough, you’d find that out for yourself.”
I shrugged and looked at the trees rushing past, the way the road climbed and climbed. The air was turning cooler by the moment, the land smelling sweet and earthy. I felt like every sense was turned on, heightened, perhaps because this really was the last day.
“Choking is a horrible way to kill someone,” Javier went on, his voice heavy. He placed his hand on mine, and I looked to him in surprise at the gesture. His expression was grave, his lips set in a hard line. “To feel someone’s life slip out of your hands is not enjoyable.”
“Is any killing enjoyable?” I asked coldly.
He raised his chin. “Yes. Some are.”
“So how are you going to kill me?”
His grip tightened on my hand. “Why are you talking about such things?”
“Because it is the truth. Is it Franco here?” I asked, jerking my chin to the monkey driving the SUV. “Will he do it? Lower me into boiling water until the little parts of me burn, until you cut those bits off, until I pass out and you revive me and you do it all over? Will you sprinkle me with acid? Gouge my eyes out, rape me with a burning hot tire iron and leave me in a room to die? Don’t think I haven’t learned a thing or two about being a narco-wife. I know how your business is conducted.” My voice had become higher at the end and I realized how heated I was getting. I needed to calm down.
I took a deep breath and looked away from his face, his face that was still searching mine, seemingly in disbelief.
After a few thick moments passed, the tension in the car mounting, he removed his hand from mine and said, “You will be shot in the head.”
A stone dropped into my stomach. The truth.
“I see,” I managed to say.
“It is fast and painless. You won’t feel a thing. Just hear a loud noise, perhaps some pressure. And then it will all be over.”
“Are you going to do it?”
“No,” Javier said. “That is not my job.”
“I would like you to,” I said, looking back at him. “I would like you to pull the trigger.”
He frowned, shaking his head slightly. “Why?”
“Because I am your responsibility. And you are the boss. Don’t become like Salvador, letting the people below you do your dirty work. Own up to the problems you created. Handle them yourself, like a man.” I leaned in closer, close enough that I could see my reflection in his eyes. “I am yours. Act like it.”