They’re lined up in their cots like dolls with dead eyes. Most won’t look at me. One smiles. She won’t last long.
“She’s eager,” I nod toward the smiling one.
Reese doesn’t respond.
I watch him. Carefully.
“How’s Harmony been?” I ask.
He doesn’t flinch. “Same as usual.”
“Quiet?”
“Focused.”
I smirk.
“She still cries at night.”
He glances at me, finally, and there’s a flicker there. Quick. Sharp. I file it away.
“You ever think about her?” I press, tone light.
Hestiffens.
“Think about who?”
I give him a look.
He sighs through his nose. “You know I don’t think about what’s yours.”
Interesting phrasing.
I hum as I drift past the captives, studying their limbs, their lashes, their reactions. A few flinch. One doesn’t.
“Pick one,” I say, turning back to him. “For tonight.”
He blinks.
“No, thank you.”
I tilt my head. “You sure? She’s clean. Pretty. That one even looks like Harmony a little.”
His jaw ticks.
Got you.
“I said no.”
“Not even a taste?”
He turns his back on me, walking toward the exit.
Now I’m fucking certain.
I follow him, steps slow and deliberate.
“You’re a strange man, Reese,” I say as we walk. “Most of my men jump at the chance. But not you.”