Oaths and Omissions (Monsters & Muses #3)(80)
This certainly doesn’t feel fake anymore.
Jonas chuckles, fingering the edge of the belt. “Don’t thank me for being selfish. I just want to see what they look like on before I shred them off of you.”
“Wouldn’t it be easier if I started out naked?”
“Easier, but not better.” He reaches into his jacket pocket, pulling out a little pink envelope and handing it to me. “Besides, you can’t go to this naked. I’d have to murder anyone who looked your way, and they frown on that at these events.”
My face flushes, his possessiveness such a contrast to Preston, who wanted to share and parade me around any chance he got. Unwrapping the envelope, I turn over the card inside and read the black cursive lettering at the top.
“A gala?”
“Political fundraiser. My brother’s a big donor to Aplana’s Art Society, and every once in a while they throw parties in his honor. Personally, I don’t get it, but he got us invited, and it’d probably be good publicity for us, right?”
My stomach twists, because I’ve been to these parties before. Daddy will most likely be in attendance, especially if it means scoping out potential political candidates. He likes to schmooze early so they’re easier to get in his pocket.
“Okay.”
Jonas hesitates, and it looks like he wants to say more, but his gaze drifts to the alarm clock on the end table, and he exhales. “Okay. Now, I’d better get a move on before Mileena wakes and tries to rope me into another round of confession.”
“Are you really just going to avoid her?”
“Seems that way, doesn’t it?” Chewing his bottom lip, he reaches out, swiping his thumb over one of my nipples. “I’d much rather spend my time devouring you. Already, she’s proving to be a bloody nuisance.”
“Some nuisances go away if you ask them nicely.”
He smirks. “You didn’t.”
“Yeah, well.” I flop back on the bed, yanking the covers back to my chin. “You kept accosting me. What was I supposed to do?”
His deep, rich chuckle is the last thing I hear before I drift back to sleep. My body isn’t used to the amount of physical exertion it’s been undergoing lately, so I spend another few hours in bed before pulling on a pair of black jeans and one of Jonas’s T-shirts, tying it at the side to make it fit properly.
When I get downstairs, Jonas’s mom—Mileena?—sits at the kitchen island, gnawing on the corner of a granola bar as she reads the newspaper. She perks up when she hears footsteps, her face brightening as she turns.
I’m struck by how little she looks like her son. Her hair is black and her eyes are a deep brown, while her skin is deeply tanned and unmarred by age. In fact, she hardly looks old enough to have a thirty-three-year-old child.
Coming to a stop at the bottom of the stairs, I cross my arms and glare. Her features slacken when she sees me, disappointment evident in her frown lines.
“Jonas has never had an overnight guest before,” she comments, going back to her paper.
Walking over to the counter, I glance at the bowl of snack food I keep there, tempted to alleviate the nerves fluttering around in my stomach. Instead, I turn to the fridge and grab a bottled water, taking a long sip, keeping my eyes on her.
“Sounds like he’s never really had a mom before either, and yet here we are.” She snickers to herself, and the sound irritates me. “Don’t make me regret not stabbing you last night.”
“Honestly? Kind of wish you had.” She leans her elbows on the counter with a sigh. “Clearly, my son is perfectly fine without me. He’s got every right to be upset, too. I was a terrible mother and leaving only solidified that fact.”
The water bottle crackles as I squeeze it in my palm. “I don’t know if I’d say he’s fine.”
“Apparently, he goes around telling people I’m dead. I think it’s safe to say he’s not terribly torn up about it.”
I study her as she stares at her fingers, twisting a gold ring on her right hand. It’s not possible to remain impartial after hearing the thick emotion in Jonas’s voice last night, and seeing how her arrival fucked with him, but I try to anyway.
“How did you get in yesterday?”
Tucking a piece of hair behind her ear, she shrugs. “I have a key.”
“But the alarm didn’t even go off. We never got a notification that anyone had opened the door.”
“You have an alarm system?” Glancing around, she frowns, her brows knitting together. “Here?”
“Yes. There’s a fingerprint scanner at the front door and everything.”
Her eyes shift to the foyer, as if she expects to see cameras, then she looks over her shoulder at the bars on the windows. “Well, that sort of explains the bars. Though I don’t understand why they’re inside.”
“To keep me from escaping.” Mileena’s brown eyes widen, and I force a laugh, realizing too late what I’ve said. “Ah, no, sorry. That was a joke.”
Silence ebbs between us, heavy and pointed as several seconds tick by. I try to place her somewhere—not because she looks familiar, but because the shadowy figure that I know has been lurking around the house could have been her size and shape.
Could also have been someone different, but I never got a good enough look at them. Still, what are the odds we’d have two trespassers?