“And I was about to take you. I was so rough I broke the damn mirror.” He stormed away.
She stood there, staring after him, aching.
He’s leaving.
“You broke the mirror, but you didn’t break me!” Skye called.
Trace stilled.
Okay. She sucked in a couple of deep breaths. “I’m not a mirror or a doll or anything—I’m a woman.”
Your woman.
“But you keep seeing me as a victim, and it has to stop.” The words were pulled from deep within her.
And they were true.
She was trying to heal.
He was still seeing her as the broken woman that he’d carried from the basement.
Shaking his head, Trace looked back at her. “That’s not true.”
Wasn’t it? “Then lose control with me. Stop holding it so tightly.” She stepped forward and the broken mirror crunched beneath her feet. Screw the mirror. “I don’t want the fancy tycoon. I don’t want the suave gentleman.” She’d seen him play those roles too easily. “I want the man beneath the mask you wear.”
A muscle flexed in Trace’s jaw. “Be careful what you wish for, baby.”
Another step. The mirror crunched again and—
He had her in his arms. “The mirror could cut through your shoes. You could get hurt.”
He was always protecting her.
Even from himself.
He put her down a few feet away. “I’ll send a crew over for repairs.”
She looked over at the mess. His blood had dripped onto some of the broken shards.
“Skye…”
She tilted her head back to study him.
“I know you’re not a fucking victim. I know…” He put his forehead to hers. “
That you’re mine.”
***
Alex Griffin eased into his car. His gaze locked on the old fire station just across the street. Skye’s studio.
Reese Stokes stood outside, a guard who was watching Alex with an avid stare.
There was no sign of Skye or Weston.
Alex’s fingers drummed on the steering wheel.
Trace Weston was a very dangerous man. He was also a man used to being in total control—both of himself and of those around him.
When Weston had said that he had an alibi, that he’d been with Skye, those words had rolled so easily from the man’s mouth. His expression had been set. Seemingly open.
But Skye…her eyes had widened. A small movement, but one that Alex had caught because he’d been watching her so closely.
When it came to lying, Skye wasn’t as good as her lover.
In Alex’s experience, there was only one reason a man lied about an alibi.
Because the man was guilty as sin.
His gut had told him that Trace Weston was a threat, right from the very first moment that they’d met.
But Weston had saved Skye so he’d thought…
Screw what I thought.
He was going to keep following this case. He’d see where the evidence took him. And if he found out that Trace Weston was responsible for Ben Sharpe’s death, he would take the man down.
He didn’t care how much money Weston had.
Justice came to everyone, and the guilty—they
paid.
Chapter Four
Trace stared down at the bandage on his right hand. Skye had insisted on bandaging him up. Hell, he guessed it was a good thing that he’d told his men to stock a first aid kit at the dance studio.
She’d carefully applied the bandages, her fingers so soft against his hand.
No one else had ever cared about him, not the way that Skye did. Hell, his mother had spent more time inside a bottle than out in the real world with him.
He’d bounced from foster home to foster home. He hadn’t felt any connection with anyone. He’d wondered if he
could
even connect.
Then he’d met her.
Trace stared at the stark white bandages. He’d lost control for a moment. Wanted her so badly…
He’d driven his hand right into the mirror.
Shattered it.
But I won’t shatter her.
“Ah…boss?”
Trace stood just outside of Skye’s studio. The sunlight glinted down on him, and Reese waited a few feet away, studying him with cautious eyes.
Trace strode toward the other man.