Pretty When You Cry by Skye Warren
(Stripped #3)
Publication date: October 20th 2015
Genres: Adult, Romance
“Dark, perverse, and unbearably erotic, Pretty When You Cry is Skye Warren at her gritty best.”
~ Anna Zaires, USA Today bestselling author of Twist Me
A new dark romance novel from the New York Times bestselling author of Wanderlust and Prisoner…
~ Anna Zaires, USA Today bestselling author of Twist Me
A new dark romance novel from the New York Times bestselling author of Wanderlust and Prisoner…
I came from a place of dirt floors and holy scriptures. They told me the world outside was full of sin, and the first night I escape, I find out it’s true. Ivan saves me, but he does more than that. He takes me. He makes me his own girl.
My conditioning runs too deep. Ivan sees what I am.
That’s the thing about showing a mouse to a cat. He wants to play. And it’s terrifying, even for me. Because the only thing darker than my past is his.
So far, a city
looks exactly how I thought it would—gutted buildings and dark alleys.
A den of
wickedness.
This morning I
woke up on my floor mat in Harmony Hills. Sunlight streamed through the window
while dust rose up to meet it. The white walls somehow kept their color despite
rough dirt floors.
A desperate trek
through the woods and a series of bus rides later, I made it to a city. This city. Tanglewood. It could have
been anywhere. They’re all the same, all sinful, all scary—and the only thing
that makes this one special is that I ran out of money for bus tickets.
My shoes are
made of white canvas, already fraying and black from the grime of the streets.
I made these shoes by hand when I turned twelve, and the heel on the left side
has never fit quite right. But the bamboo soles lasted for years in the hills.
Now they’re cracking against concrete. I can feel every lump in the pavement,
every loose rock, every rounded hump as the sidewalk turns to cobblestone and
then back again.
That’s not the
worst part.
There’s someone
following me. Maybe more than one person. I try to listen for the footsteps,
but it’s hard to hear over the pounding in my ears, the thud of my heart
against my chest. Panic is a tangible force in my head, a gritty quicksand that
threatens to pull me down.
I could end up
on my knees before this night is over.
But I don’t
think I’ll be saying my evening prayers.
Men are standing
outside a gate that hangs open on its hinges. They fall silent as I walk close.
I tighten my arms where they are folded over my chest and look down. If I can’t see them, they can’t see me.
It wasn’t true when I was little, and it’s not true now.
One of them
steps in front of me.
My breath
catches, and I stop walking. My whole body is trembling by the time I meet his
eyes, bloodshot red in a shadowed face. “What’s your name?” he asks in a
gravelly voice.
I jerk my head. No.
“Now that’s not
very polite, is it?” Another one steps closer, and then I smell him. They
couldn’t have showered in the past day or even week.
Cleanliness is a
virtue.
Being quiet and
obedient and small is a virtue too. “I’m sorry. I just want to—”
I don’t know
what comes next. I want to run. I want to hide. I want to pretend the past
sixteen years as a disciple of the Harmony Hills never happened. None of that
is possible when I’m surrounded by men. I take a step back and bump into
another man. Hands close around my arms.
A sound escapes
me—fear and protest. It’s more than I would have done this morning, that sound.
I’m turned to
face the man behind me. He smiles a broken-toothed smile. “Doesn’t matter what
you want, darling.”
My mouth opens,
but I can’t scream. I can’t scream because I’ve been taught not to. Because I
know no one will come. Because the consequences of crying are worse than what
will happen next.
Then the man’s
eyes widen in something like fear. It’s a foreign expression on his face. It
doesn’t belong. I wouldn’t even believe it except he takes a step back.
My chest
squeezes tight. What’s behind me? Who
is behind me that could have inspired that kind of fear? The men surrounding me
are monsters, but they’re backing off now, stepping away, hands up in
surrender. No harm done, that’s what
they’re saying without words.
I whirl and
almost slip on a loose cobblestone.
The man standing
in front of me is completely still. That’s the first thing I notice about
him—before I see the fine cut of his black suit or the glint of a silver watch
under his cuff. Before I see the expression on his face, devoid of compassion
or emotion. Devoid of humanity.
“We didn’t know
she worked for you,” one of the men mumbles.
They’re still
backing up, forming a circle around us, growing wider. I’m in the middle. I’m
the drop, and the men around me form a ripple. Then they fade into the
blackness and are gone.
It’s just me and
the man in the suit.
He hasn’t
spoken. I’m not sure he’s going to. I half expect him to pull out a gun from
somewhere underneath that smooth black fabric and shoot me. That’s what happens
in the city, isn’t it? That’s what everyone told me about the outside world,
how dangerous it is. And even while some part of me had nodded along, had
believed them, another part of me had refused.
There had to be
beauty outside the white stucco walls. Beauty that wasn’t contained and
controlled. Beauty with color. Only apparently I was wrong. I haven’t seen
anything beautiful—except him.
He’s beautiful
in a strange and sinful way, one that makes me more afraid. Not colorful
exactly. His eyes are a gray color I’ve never seen before, both deep and opaque
at the same time. The building itself is beautiful too with its wrought iron
gate around a large courtyard. The fountain in the center is broken, but that
only adds to the mystique.
The marquee sign
reads Grand, a flash of neon pink
against the black night.
He steps closer,
the light from the sign illuminating his face, making him look even more
sinister. “What’s your name?”
I couldn’t
answer those other men, but I find something inside for him. I find truth. “I’m
not allowed to say my name to someone else.”
He studies me
for a long moment, taking in my tangled hair and my white dress. “Why not?”
Because God will punish me. “Because I’m running away.”
He nods like
this is what he expected. “Do you have money?”
I have twenty dollars left after bus fare. “Enough.”
His lips twist,
and I wonder if that’s what a smile looks like on him. It’s terrifying. “No,
you don’t,” he says. “The question is, what would you do to earn some?”
Anything.
My voice is just
a whisper. “I’m a good girl.”
He laughs, and I
see that I was wrong before. That wasn’t a smile. It was a taunt. A challenge.
This is a real smile, one with teeth. The sound rolls through me like a coming
storm, deep and foreboding.
“I know,” he
says gently. “What’s your name?”
“Candace.”
He studies me.
“Pretty name.”
His voice is
deep with promise and something else I can’t decipher. All I know is he isn’t
really talking about my name. And I know it isn’t really a compliment. “Thank
you.”
“Now come
inside, Candace.”
He turns and
walks away before I can answer. I can feel the night closing in on me, the
sharks in the water waiting to strike. It’s not really a choice. I think the
man knows that. He’s counting on it. Whatever is going to happen inside will be
bad, and the only thing worse is what would have happened outside.
I hurry to catch
up with him, almost running across the crumbled driveway, under the marquee
sign for the Grand, past the broken
fountain, desperate for the dubious safety of the man who could hold the
darkness at bay. It’s the same thing that kept me in Harmony Hills for so
long—fear and twisted gratitude.
Skye Warren is the New York Times and USA Today Bestselling author of dark romance. Her books are raw, sexual and perversely romantic.
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