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Chapter no 35 – Xavier

King of Sloth (Kings of Sin, 4)

Iย didnโ€™t confess to Sloane. Not yet.

I wasnโ€™t sure she reciprocated my feelings to that degree, and I needed

to figure out a way to tell her without potentially scaring her off.

I did, however, stay with her Monday night through Tuesday morning, when she left for work and I called Vukโ€™s office back, apologized, and confirmed a walkthrough of the vault later in the month. I spent the rest of the day dealing with club obligations.

On Wednesday, I took care of more unofficial business.

The Arthur Vanderbilt Tennis Club was one of the oldest private tennis clubs on the East Coast. A favorite haunt of the polo-wearing, polo-playing crowd, it charged an obscene amount of money for annual access and was famous for the time visiting tennis superstar Richard McEntire attacked a ball boy with his tennis racket and knocked several of his teeth out. I hadnโ€™t known it was possible to knock someoneโ€™s teeth out with a racket, but apparently it was, because McEntire and the club settled the case for a cool two million dollars.

As a Castillo, I was granted automatic admission, so on Wednesday afternoon, at the tail end of lunch hour, when old-money bankers flocked to the indoor courts for a workout and boysโ€™ talk, I strode through the halls toward the menโ€™s locker room.

A cacophony of noise greeted me when I stepped inside. Steam thickened the air, partially obscuring the mahogany panels and crowd of finance bros as they prepared to return to work. Nevertheless, it didnโ€™t take me long to find who I was looking for. Bentley Harris II held court in the coveted center aisle. He was busy laughing and joking with several guys who looked like carbon copies of him: clean-cut, clean-shaven, and half- dressed in business formal.

He had his back to me, so he didnโ€™t notice my approach. โ€œOur new receptionist is hot, but sheโ€™s blond,โ€ he said. โ€œI get enough of that at home. Georgiaโ€™s been a real bitch lately. She came home Monday all pissed about somethingโ€”what?โ€

One of his friends had noticed me and nudged his arm. Bentley turned, his expression souring when he saw me. โ€œHarris.โ€ I donned an affable tone, the type Iโ€™d use to greet an old classmate or a friendly acquaintance.

โ€œCastillo,โ€ he said stiffly. โ€œI didnโ€™t realize you were a member of the club.โ€

โ€œThey offered me a courtesy membership when I first moved to New York,โ€ I said lazily, my smile hiding the flicker of rage in my gut. โ€œOf course, I donโ€™t use it often. Why come here when I could go to Valhalla?โ€

A wave of embarrassed discontent rippled through the air, subtle but distinctive.

I barely used my Valhalla membership either, but everyone knew the tennis club was a consolation prize for people who couldnโ€™t get a Valhalla inviteโ€”like Bentley and company, for example.

Bentleyโ€™s jaw ticked. His eyes darted to his friends before he forced a laugh. โ€œHow lucky of us to see you here then,โ€ he mocked. โ€œAre you slumming it, or did Valhalla finally kick you out after they realized your spot could go to someone more worthwhile?โ€

โ€œYou mean like you? Sadly, their rosterโ€™s still full,โ€ I drawled. โ€œAs for slumming, youโ€™re right. I came by to see you.โ€

The noise from the rest of the locker room dwindled as everyone tried, and failed, to pretend they werenโ€™t eavesdropping. Brewing aggression crackled like static before a storm, and the steadyย drip, drip, dripย of water from the showers sounded unnaturally loud in the tension-laced air.

Bentley took a step toward me, his face all smiles but his eyes hot and bright with humiliated anger. โ€œIf you want to see me, make an appointment,โ€ he said with a misplaced sense of bravado. He thought he was safe here, surrounded by his friends and the reek of privilege. โ€œI donโ€™t talk to jobless losers.โ€

My rage from Monday night reignitedโ€”not at his jab toward me but at the vision of him speaking to Sloane with that same snide condescension.

โ€œThatโ€™s where youโ€™re wrong,โ€ I said, still with my affable tone. โ€œIโ€™m not here to talk.โ€

Then I drew back my arm and slammed my fist into his face.

There was a satisfying crunch of bone, followed by a howl of pain. Blood fountained from his nose as he staggered backward and the brewing storm broke, loosening a frenzy of shouts and jeers as the other locker room occupants shoved one another for the best view of the fight.

None of them intervened, but the ruckus fueled the anger burning swift and hot through me.

I wasnโ€™t a violent person. I rarely had to resort to physical brawls to solve a problem, and in Bentleyโ€™s case, I didnโ€™tย haveย to; I wanted to.

He recovered enough to rush at me, fists clenched, but I was ready for him.

With a swift side step, I dodged his wild swing and took the opportunity to deliver a powerful punch to his midsection.

He doubled over from the impact and clutched his stomach, gasping for breath. I didnโ€™t give him a chance to catch it before I hauled him up by his collar and slammed him against a nearby locker.

โ€œThat was your first and final warning,โ€ I said, my words quiet enough to reach only his ears. โ€œTouch, talk, or evenย thinkย about Sloane again, and Iโ€™ll make what Richard McEntire did to that ball boy with his tennis racket look like a walk in the fucking park. That includes any indirect contact. If you make her life difficult inย anyย way, youโ€™ll be blacklisted from New York society so fast, itโ€™ll make your head spin.โ€

โ€œYou donโ€™t have the power,โ€ Bentley sneered, but a glint of fear swam beneath his murky eyes. For someone like him, getting blacklisted was even worse than getting beat up.

โ€œNo?โ€ I said softly. โ€œTry me.โ€

I didnโ€™t abuse my familyโ€™s wealth or last name often, but I was still a Castillo. Even with my inheritance tied up and my reputation as a hedonist, I could crush Bentley Harris II like a fucking bug.

He knew it as well as I did, which was why he didnโ€™t say a word when I dropped him on the ground like a sack of potatoes.

โ€œPass the message along to your wife,โ€ I said, my face hardening. โ€œThe same goes for her.โ€

I wouldnโ€™t touch Georgia. Sloaneโ€™s relationship with her sister was her domain, but that didnโ€™t mean I had to stand by and watch while Georgia tried to tear down the woman I loved.

Loved.

It was a strange concept, and not one Iโ€™d had experience with in the past. But now that Iโ€™d identified it, I couldnโ€™t believe it had taken me so long to recognize it.

The way my mind mapped every detail about Sloane, both consciously and unconsciously, like I would drown if I didnโ€™t inhale enough of her. The comfort I had in sharing my secrets with her, and the spike in my pulse whenever she was near. The warmth; the jealousy; the fierce, overwhelming protectiveness.

Iย lovedย her, totally and completely, and Iโ€™d be damned if I let anyone hurt her.

Bentley mustโ€™ve heard the vicious resolve edging my voice because he didnโ€™t attempt to save face in front of his peers. The othersโ€™ shouts had died down to grumbles of disappointment at how quickly the fight had ended, but I hadnโ€™t expected it to drag on.

At the end of the day, people like Bentley Harris were cowards. Cowards never lasted long in the face of those willing to call their bluff and I knew, with bone-deep certainty, that he and Georgia would never bother Sloane again.

I stepped over Bentleyโ€™s sprawled legs and walked out, leaving him bleeding and humiliated on the floor.

I didnโ€™t bother acknowledging the other club members or taking advantage of the empty courts on my way out.

My business here was done.

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