“You don’t need to torture someone who loves their mother,” she continued, quieter. “You just need to mention her name and promise to care for her. Then remind them what happens if they disobey. You don’t run when he’ll slit your family’s throat for it.”
“Christ,” he whispered.
“I never told him about Emma or my mother. But I think he knew someone existed. He’s good at finding weaknesses.” She looked at him now. “Lonely girls will let a man fuck them. But desperate ones don’t ever say no when he hurts them.”
The question burned on his tongue before he could stop it. “How old were you?”
The cabin creaked around them. Seconds stretched by.
“Sixteen,” she finally said.
Something cold and heavy settled in the pit of Callahan’s stomach. His fingers twitched with the sudden, savage urge to wrap around Favreau’s neck. He wanted the bastard’s blood. Wanted to watch the life drain from his eyes. He’d make damn sure Favreau never touched Isabel again.
Callahan took a long drag from his cigarette, forcing the rage down.
“Go on, little thief.”
“By the time I was eighteen, I was valuable enough that he kept me close. Being useful had advantages. The more he trusted me, the more freedom he gave me.” Her lips curved into something too bitter to be a smile. “He’d let me travel alone for heists sometimes. Only when necessary, and always with his loyal men, but it was enough. I just needed him to believe I’d always come back.”
“Hong Kong,” he prompted. “You were fleeing?”
“Trying to.” She tapped the cuffs against the bedframe in agitation. “I planned it for months. Made him think it was his idea to send me to Hong Kong. By the time I killed the men he sent to watch me, I’d be gone. I had papers arranged. Money hidden. But I needed more for passage and bribes.” She exhaled slowly. “And then you walked in. Exactly where I didn’t need you to be.”
The gambling hall’s smoky interior flashed in his memory – the scent of opium, the drunken laughter, and Isabel across the room, her face a careful mask that didn’t quite hide her desperation.
“And fucked your exit strategy,” he finished for her.
“Yes.”
“You looked half-dead when I saw you there,” he said, voice low. “Like you hadn’t slept in months.”
A sharp, humourless laugh escaped her. “Sleep isn’t something you get much of in Favreau’s bed. And after all that careful planning, you blundered in. I had to improvise.”
“Improvise? Or simply choose a more attractive mark?”
Her eyes slid over him, taking her time. “You have your uses,” she said finally. “But when you spotted me in Hong Kong, I ran out of options. Favreau would destroy anything in his path to get me back. Not just because I’m good at what I do. Because I’m his.” She blinked hard. “Do you want to know the worst part? The part that makes me hate myself?”
Lantern light caught on the shine of her hair, the curve of her throat. He couldn’t speak. Could barely breathe.
He held himself still.
“Sometimes I miss him,” she confessed. “His attention. His approval. I’d have crawled through glass and debased myself at his feet for a single scrap of regard. And whenever he graced me with it, I was pitifully, revoltinglygrateful.”
Callahan inhaled deeply, holding his breath until his chest burned, then slowly letting it out. Trying to control the rage building inside him.
When he looked up, Isabel was watching him. Waiting. Like she was ready for his judgment, his disgust. As if any decent man could look at her and feel anything but fury at the one who’d put that desolation in her voice.
She’d been so young – just like him.
He cleared his throat. “When I was a lad, I belonged to a bloke named Whelan,” he said roughly. “Ran a pick-pocketing ring in the East End. Whelan taught us how to steal from the rich, but that wasn’t enough for him. Men with money would come around and pay to use us however they wanted.” He swallowed hard and gestured at his face. “Pretty boys fetch a price, and I’m more than aware of my appearance. So, believe me, I know what it is to trade your dignity and your body for scraps. You carry no guilt in this. None. Favreau saw a girl he could break, so he twisted you into something he could use.”
Isabel was quiet. All that bravado and confidence was gone, replaced by the same vulnerability he saw when she woke from her nightmare.
She looked away first. “Do you plan to leave these cuffs on all night?”
He knew that voice – the one that said she’d retreated somewhere he couldn’t follow. Behind walls he’d never be allowed past again tonight.
“No.” He reached for the key. The lock clicked, and he eased the manacles from her wrists. “Your bandages need changing,” he said softly. “May I?”