Twisted (Never After #4)
Emily McIntire
For the people pleasers. Sometimes, it’s okay to be a little selfish.
“It is amazing what women in love will do.”
ANONYMOUS, THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
Author’s Note
Twisted is a dark contemporary slow-burn romance. It is a fractured fairy tale, not fantasy or a literal retelling.
The main character is a villain. If you’re looking for a safe read, you will not find it in these pages.
Twisted contains mature and graphic content that is not suitable for all audiences. Reader discretion is advised. I highly prefer for you to go in blind, but if you would like a detailed trigger warning list, you can find it on EmilyMcIntire.com
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Prologue
JULIAN
My mother used to have me pick my own switches. I’d traipse through the small, wooded area at the back of our house and find the smallest branch I could: one that was thick enough to replace the belt but wouldn’t hurt quite as bad.
Then she’d whip me until I bled.
“It will only hurt for a little, piccolo,” she’d always murmur.
Afterward, she’d apologize and take me for gelato.
Dark chocolate raspberry. Her favorite.
Sometimes, I deserved the whippings. I was a boy who rebelled at the idea of following in my father’s footsteps, taking over the dry-cleaning business started from the ground up by my grandparents when they immigrated from Calabria, Italy. Other times, you had to look deeper for the cause.
Any time my father would come home, after being ridiculed and talked down to by the customers he cleaned stains for, he’d beat my mother black and blue. Our walls were thin, and I’d lie awake to the sounds of a broken woman’s whimpers and an angry man’s curses. I’d always know that not long after, she’d come into my room, her midnight-black hair so similar to mine, pulled back as tight as her smile while she passed along the torture.
My family has always been predictable that way— taking power from those too weak to keep it.
Maybe that was why I started sneaking away and watching the hapkido classes that took place at the end of our block. I’d see them train and wonder what it would feel like to be so powerful. To have such control over your opponent that you had no fear of being hurt.
I’d imagine learning how to use the short stick or the staff and beating the hell out of my piece-of- shit father, making sure he could never touch my mother again.
If she found some peace, maybe I could as well.
It will only hurt for a little.
I snap out of the memory, allowing it to fade into the recesses of my mind where I keep it locked up tight and straighten from where I’m leaning against the wall in the dimly lit hidden room of my house. The plastic tarp that I hung earlier from the ceiling covers the floor, creating a cocoon around the man currently bound to the chair in the middle of the space.
His breathing is heavy, the sound accompanied only by the hissing of Isabella, my twenty-three- foot python, as she slithers her way around his feet and up his legs. The second she hits his calves, he jerks, his once perfectly pressed suit soaked through with perspiration.
“Careful,” I tsk. “She likes when you put up a fight. It excites her.”
I rub my palm over my jaw, the three-day stubble rough beneath the pads of my fingers, and then I sigh, reaching into my pocket and gripping my custom-made compact metal staff.
Pulling it out, I press a button on the side, and it elongates until it’s full size, the silver ends shimmering against the black metal. I twirl it in my hand as I step toward him.
“Pl-please,” he begs.
A chuckle escapes my chest as Isabella continues to curl her way around his body.
“Your manners are impeccable, Samuel. I suppose that’s expected of the son of a wealthy businessman,” I drawl. “But I don’t have any use for them.” My footsteps halt when I stop in front of him, my muscles tight with anticipation. “Do you know why you’re here?”
His brows furrow, small beads of sweat trickling down the sides of his ashen face. “I’m just here for the girl,” he rasps, his bottom lip trembling. “They told me to come. I— ”
“The girl and everything that comes with her are mine,” I say, my eyes flaring.
I bring the staff upward in my grasp, spinning it around sharply, reveling in the fear percolating through his dark eyes.
“Don’t worry.” I grin. “This will only hurt for a little.”
Chapter 1
Yasmin
“He doesn’t look sick.”
The words slice through my clothes and prick against my chest. If I weren’t brought up to remain politically shrewd and cordial, I’d snap and say something out of turn like…
“Read the room, Debbie. You sound like a clown.”
Instead, I chew the inside of my cheek and pick up my water, allowing the weight of the crystal in my palm and the cool bite of liquid against my lip to keep me quiet.
Besides, I’m confident that Debbie, the young, shiny wife of New York’s governor, didn’t mean for me to hear what she said. Or maybe she did. Rude of her, considering we’re at my house, but I guess we can’t all have manners.