Page 3 of Crimson Sin

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I nod stiffly, flustered and wanting nothing more than to sink into the floor and vanish. But as Adam leads the way toward the dining room, I glance back. The stranger is still there. Watching. Not smiling, just watching. And for a moment, I forget how to breathe.

2

DANIIL

She walks away with the man she was supposed to meet, shoulders squared, eyes still wide with embarrassment. But she glances back. Just once. That single moment of hesitation is all I need. It tells me she's thinking about me. About what just happened. About the fact that, for a moment, she gave her heart to a stranger with cold eyes and a colder name. And now, I find I'm not ready to let her walk out of my night so easily.

She drank the wrong wine. It wasn't hers, but she lifted the glass with such conviction that I didn't correct her. I watched the moment it dawned on her when the real owner of the wine returned, asking the bartender about her missing drink, and Naomi froze mid-sip. Her embarrassment was palpable. Delicious, even. She muttered an apology, flustered and rambling, and I remained silent.

I lingered in the silence, sipping my whiskey, watching Naomi's cheeks bloom with color, and witnessing her stumble over her words in that endearing way. I realized that her embarrassment was authentic and unguarded. And in my world, where everyemotion is curated or weaponized, it felt as rare and delicate as a centuries-old relic no one dares to touch.

Eventually, her real date arrived. He’s an underwhelming man with nervous energy and a scarf too expensive for his personality. I watched them exchange greetings, watched her tuck her folder under her arm like another chance slipping away. The man's handshake was weak, his smile forced. He kept glancing at his phone, already distracted before their evening had even begun. Pathetic.

I finished the last of my drink as they moved toward the hostess stand. The crystal tumbler hit the marble bar with a soft clink, and I left a hundred-dollar bill without waiting for change. Money is simply another tool, and tonight, I intend to use every tool at my disposal.

Before they can be seated, I step in. I approach the man while Naomi is distracted by the hostess, who is explaining the evening's specials with theatrical enthusiasm. The man looks up when I clear my throat, and I can see that familiar confusion that crosses civilian faces when they encounter someone like me. It’s the way I carry myself, the expensive cut of my clothes, and my quiet authority that unnerves them. People sense danger even when they can't name it.

“Your date,” I begin, my voice low enough that only he can hear. “I have a proposition.”

His eyebrows lift in surprise. “I'm sorry, who are you?”

“Someone who values discretion.” I reach into my jacket and retrieve a roll of cash. Five thousand dollars, rubber-banded and folded. Enough to make a man reconsider his evening plans. “Consider this compensation for your time.”

He stares at the money, then at me, then back at the money. I watch his moral compass spin wildly before settling on greed. It always does.

“You want me to leave?” he questions.

“I want you to make a choice. Take the money and walk away or stay and discover why that would be unwise.”

The threat is implicit but unmistakable. He takes the money.

“She's a nice girl,” he mumbles, as if that absolves him of abandoning her.

“She deserves better than nice,” I mutter.

He looks surprised, then intrigued, then indifferent. Naomi didn’t even notice our exchange. She is too busy glancing back over her shoulder, searching the room like she isn’t ready to let go of the conversation we started. Her eyes sweep the bar area, and I feel that familiar surge of satisfaction when her gaze lingers on my empty spot at the bar.

The man leaves without protest, muttering something about a family emergency to the hostess. I catch up to Naomi before she reaches the table, smoothly stepping into her path.

“He was compensated,” I explain when she stares at me, confused.

Her eyes snap to mine. “You paid him off?”

“I don't like competition.”

Heat climbs her neck, painting her skin in a soft flush of red. She should walk away. Any woman with sense would. But she hesitates, and I can see the conflict playing out acrossher expressive face. Shock, indignation, curiosity, and possibly relief.

Then, almost defiantly, she turns on her heel and walks with me back to the bar. She sets her folder down again, lips parted, curiosity stirring to life like a spark catching dry kindling.

“You're either very confident or completely insane,” she declares, gracefully settling onto the barstool.

“Both have served me well.”

She’s small, petite really, next to my 6’3” frame, but there’s a quiet steel beneath her warmth that I recognize. Her auburn hair is pinned back in a way that’s polished without being harsh. Gold-rimmed glasses sit neatly on her nose, giving her a look that’s scholarly and approachable. The navy-blue dress she wears flatters her without effort. She looks like a grad student who took a wrong turn and wandered into the lion’s den, unaware she’s the only one here without claws. And yet, she doesn’t retreat.

I spend my entire adult life reading people. It's a survival skill in my world, the difference between life and death. I can spot a liar from across a crowded room, identify a threat before it materializes, and recognize opportunity in the smallest gesture. But Naomi Carter is something new. She's transparent without being naive, strong without being hard, and intelligent without being calculating.

“Fine,” she declares, settling more comfortably in her seat. “One drink. But I'm not sharing.”