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Chapter no 41 – Kai

King of Pride (Kings of Sin, 2)

Instead of going to another bar, Isabella and I walked the nearby Brooklyn Bridge. The chill of winter thinned its foot traffic considerably, but there were still a handful of couples, photographers, and tourists keeping us company as we strolled toward Manhattan.

The temperature hovered in the mid-thirties, so low our breaths formed small white puffs in the air. Nevertheless, warmth spread through my veins, insulating me from the cold.

Being near Isabella again was worth braving any brutal weather.

I would have to thank Clarissa later. Iโ€™d told her what happened with Isabella on our way to the bar, mainly because she was the only unbiased party I could talk to about the situation, and I didnโ€™t believe for a second that sheโ€™d left because she was sick.

Running into Isabella tonight was a stroke of luck, and I had no intention of wasting it.

โ€œSo when exactly is the new vote?โ€ Isabella asked with a sideways glance.

โ€œTomorrow.โ€ I shoved my hands deeper into my pockets to keep from touching her. Her cheeks were red and her hair was tangled from the wind. Her eyeliner had smudged somewhere between the bar and the bridge, lending her an adorably raccoon-esque appearance.

And she looked so damn beautiful it made my heart stop for a second, just long enough to confirm she owned every beat.

Isabella halted dead in her tracks. โ€œTomorrow? Tomorrow tomorrow?โ€

โ€œYes.โ€ A smile ghosted my mouth at her wide eyes. โ€œTomorrow tomorrow. As in Friday. D-day. Whatever you want to call it.โ€

The past two weeks had been a whirlwind. Russell was officially fired and under criminal investigation for his activities. A majority of the blackmailed board members had resigned, triggering an emergency shareholder meeting to elect their replacements. The Young Corporation and Black & Co. were embroiled in a nasty legal fight across half a dozen fronts. It was a mess, but the sooner we dealt with it, the sooner we could move on.

Chaos only made for good business when it involved other people, not our own.

โ€œWhat are you doing here? Shouldnโ€™t you be securing votes and doing otherโ€ฆpre-selection things?โ€ A blast of wind tossed Isabellaโ€™s question through the air.

โ€œThereโ€™s nothing else I can do at this point.โ€ I was remarkably calm about the vote this time around. It was down to the original candidates minus Russellโ€”Tobias (whoโ€™d reentered the race), Laura, Paxton, and myself. I was confident about my chances, but a quarter of the board members were new, and I didnโ€™t know which way they leaned.

However, Iโ€™d discovered over the past two weeks that losing the CEO position wasnโ€™t the worst thing that could happen to me.

Losing Isabella was, and that had already come to pass.

A familiar ache surged through my chest. It was torture being this close to her without touching her, but at least she was here, in the flesh, instead of haunting my thoughts.

โ€œWe can continue discussing the vote, but Iโ€™m guessing you didnโ€™t ask me here to talk about work,โ€ I said.

Her throat worked with a visible swallow.

Our last conversation swirled around us, carrying away our small talk and leaving fresh wounds and shattered hearts behind.

Weโ€™re not a good match.

It was fun while it lastedโ€ฆ Please just leave.

Even now, weeks later, the memory of her words punched me through the chest with unrestrained brutality.

โ€œI donโ€™t know why I asked you here.โ€ Isabellaโ€™s eyes dipped. โ€œBut Iโ€ฆ when I saw you, Iโ€ฆโ€

The ache expanded into my throat. โ€œI know,โ€ I said quietly. โ€œI miss you too, love.โ€

A tiny sob rent the air, and when she lifted her head, my heart cracked ever so slightly at tears staining her cheeks.

โ€œIโ€™m sorry,โ€ Isabella whispered. โ€œThat night, I didnโ€™t mean toโ€ฆIโ€”โ€ Her sentence cut off with another hiccupping sob.

The sound ripped through me like a bullet, and I wouldโ€™ve given up anythingโ€”my title, my company, my entire legacyโ€”if it meant I could soothe her hurt for just one minute.

โ€œShh. Itโ€™s okay.โ€ I gathered her in my arms while she buried her face in my chest, her shoulders shaking. Sheโ€™d always seemed larger than life, with her uninhibited laugh and vibrant personality, but she felt so small and vulnerable in that moment that a sharp pain twisted my gut.

I hoped to God no one ever found out about the power this woman had over me, or I would be done for.

The night I walked out of her apartment, Iโ€™d drowned my sorrows in scotch and cursed every single person who had a hand in us meeting. Parker at Valhalla for hiring her, Dante and Vivian for always forcing me into the same room as her, her damn parents for giving birth to her. If it werenโ€™t for them, I wouldnโ€™t have met Isabella, and I wouldnโ€™t have a hole the size of Jupiter in my chest.

Iโ€™d played, replayed, and dissected every second of our relationship until the memories bled out of me and I was empty. And when it was all goneโ€” the anger, the hurt, the painโ€”the only thing left was a dark, gaping numbness.

I didnโ€™t blame Isabella for what she did. Not anymore. The past month had taken a toll on both of us, and sheโ€™d been reeling from her visit home. The only thing I hated more than being apart from her was the knowledge of how poorly she viewed herself. She had no idea how incredible she was, and it killed me.

I tucked my head against the top of her head and tightened my hold around her when another icy gust slammed into us. The bridge had emptied; we were the only people brave or stupid enough to stay here while the temperatures dipped.

Surrounded by water, with the far-off lights of Manhattan on one side and Brooklyn on the other, the air silent save for Isabellaโ€™s soft sobs and the windโ€™s whistling howls, I had the eerie sense that we were the only people left in the world.

โ€œYou never asked me your question,โ€ I said when her cries died down to sniffles.

She lifted her head, her eyes swollen and her brow etched with confusion. โ€œWhat?โ€

โ€œFrom our balloon night in Bushwick.โ€ I rubbed a stray tear off her cheek with my thumb. โ€œYou never asked me your question.โ€

Isabella let out a half-laugh, half-sob. โ€œI canโ€™t believe you remember that.โ€

โ€œI remember everything when it comes to you.โ€

Her smile faded, disappearing into the billows of tension around us. Bone-deep cold stole through me, both from the weather and the agonizing anticipation of what she would say next.

โ€œBe honest,โ€ she said softly. โ€œDo you really see a future for us?โ€ I opened my mouth, but she shook her head.

โ€œDonโ€™t give me a packaged answer. I want you to think about it. Our families, our goals, our personalities. Theyโ€™re completely different. Itโ€™s easy to say we can overcome the differences now, when everything is new and exciting, but what happens five, ten years down the road? I donโ€™tโ€ฆโ€ Her breath trembled on an inhale. โ€œI never want us to resent each other.โ€

Her words pricked at my chest.

She wasnโ€™t wrong. We were opposites in almost every way, from our habits and hobbies to our temperaments and taste in books. There was a time not too long ago when her eccentricities had repelled me as much as theyโ€™d attracted me. She was everything I shouldnโ€™t want, but it didnโ€™t matter.

I wanted her anyway. So much so, I couldnโ€™t breathe.

But Isabella didnโ€™t want emotion right now. She wanted logic, a concrete reason for why we would work, so I took a page out of my old Oxford debate playbook and refuted her arguments one by one.

โ€œI understand what youโ€™re saying, but your premise is flawed,โ€ I said. โ€œOur families arenโ€™t that different. We have similar cultures, upbringings, and wealth.โ€ The Valencias werenโ€™t billionaires, but their hotels pulled in several hundred million dollars last year alone. They were more than

comfortable. โ€œPerhaps yours is less formal than mine, but that isnโ€™t a dealbreaker by any means.โ€

โ€œYour mom also hates me,โ€ Isabella pointed out. โ€œItโ€™s bound to cause more friction sooner or later.โ€

โ€œShe doesnโ€™t hate you. Her concerns have nothing to do with you as a person. She was simply worried about the effect our relationship would have on the CEO vote and my future.โ€ A wry smile twisted my mouth. โ€œThe vote isnโ€™t an issue anymore, and sheโ€™ll come around. Even if she doesnโ€™t, Iโ€™m an adult. I donโ€™t need my motherโ€™s approval to be with who I want.โ€ My voice softened. โ€œAnd I want you.โ€

Isabellaโ€™s eyes glistened with emotion. Moonlight kissed her cheekbones, tracing the delicate lines of her face and lips the way I so desperately craved to do with my mouth.

I almost laughed when the thought crossed my mind. I never imagined Iโ€™d be jealous of nature, but here we were.

โ€œThere are other women who would fit into your world better,โ€ she said. โ€œWomen without tattoos and purple hair andโ€ฆand pet snakes. Who never get caught talking about sex at the worst times.โ€

This time, I did laugh. Quietly, but it was there. Only Isabella could make me laugh in the middle of the most important conversation of my life. It was one of the many reasons why Iโ€™d brave the Brooklyn Bridge in the dead of winter for her.

A small smile touched her lips before it faded. โ€œIโ€™m never going to stop being me, Kai, and I donโ€™t want you to stop being you. So how can we be together when we belong to separate worlds?โ€

โ€œBy building one of our own,โ€ I said simply. โ€œThatโ€™s unreasonable.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t care. This isnโ€™t about reason. Itโ€™s about love, and thereโ€™s nothing reasonable about love.โ€

The wind whisked the words away as soon as they left my mouth, but their impact lingeredโ€”in the audible hitch of Isabellaโ€™s breath, in the cascade of nerves rattling through my body. They left me feeling exposed and vulnerable, like my skin was no longer a barrier between me and the outside world, but I forged on.

โ€œI love you, Isabella Valencia.โ€ Simple and raw, stripped of all pretense except for the naked truth that had been staring me in the face all this time.

โ€œEvery single part of you, from your laugh to your humor to the way you canโ€™t stop talking about condoms.โ€

One of those laughs I loved so much slipped out, thick with emotion.

A smile flashed across my face before I sobered again. โ€œYou think youโ€™re broken, but I wish you could see yourself the way I see you. Smart. Strong. Beautiful. Imperfect by your own standards but so wonderfully perfect for me.โ€

A fresh tear streaked down Isabellaโ€™s cheek. Unlike her earlier sobs, this one was silent, but it seared through me all the same.

Iโ€™d never fallen in love before her. Once I did, I did it the way I did everything else. Completely. Totally. Irrevocably.

โ€œIโ€™ve always prided myself on being the best. I had to be number one. I had to win. I collected prizes and awards because I saw them as a reflection of my self-worth, and I thought nothing tasted better than victory. Then I met you.โ€ I swallowed the emotion burning in my throat. โ€œAnd everything elseโ€ฆfaded. Weโ€™ve been through some dark times, but you were always the brightest part of my life. Even when we broke up. Even when I walked out. Just knowing you existed somewhere in this world was enough.โ€

Isabella pressed a fist to her mouth, her eyes glossy in the silver light.

โ€œI never really lived before you,โ€ I said. โ€œAnd I donโ€™t want to imagine living after you.โ€ I dropped my forehead to hers, my chest aching with need and want and a thousand other emotions only she could make me feel. โ€œStay with me, love. Please.โ€

A small sob bled through and soaked the night.

โ€œYou idiot,โ€ she said, her cheeks wet with tears. โ€œYou had me at

condoms.โ€

Relief had the weight sliding off my shoulders. My body sagged, and the hands strangling my lungs loosened enough for a laugh to break free.

โ€œIโ€™m not surprised,โ€ I murmured. โ€œYou do have a special fondness for condoms, especially of theโ€”โ€

โ€œKai.โ€

โ€œHmm?โ€

โ€œShut up and kiss me.โ€

Isabella.

Yes?

Shut up and let me kiss you.

So I did, deeply and tenderly, while the memories of us drifted back into my chest and settled where they belonged.

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