His To Claim - Flora Ferrari Page 0,1

that I sound good, not terrible, not embarrassing.

But self-esteem has never been my forte.

Perhaps it would be easier if I knew what I was being protected from, but Mom and Dad are always intent on keeping me ignorant where Dad’s business is concerned. It’s like they still think I’m a little kid, scared of the dark, scared of reality. The truth is I’d much rather know just what the heck’s going on than live in this in-between space, constantly wondering, constantly questioning.

“What the fuck?” the driver murmurs.

I flinch, my gaze snapping to him as shock recoils through me.

Dad’s men never swear in front of me.

The driver – a man everyone calls Snaps – is a short man with a flat face and a twice-broken nose. He glances at me in the rearview, frowning.

“Sorry, ma’am,” he says, as he brings the car to a slow stop.

The car in front of us has slowed, forcing the stop.

Snaps lowers his window and sticks his head out.

“What’s going on?” he calls.

“Body in the road,” another man calls back.

Ice water moves through my veins, making me cold and shivery as the words collide into me with their heavy impact.

Body in the road.

What does that mean, a human body, roadkill, what?

I lean forward to try and get a better look, but the car in front is obscuring my view of the country road.

To the left of us, trees try to creep onto the tarmac, the forest shadowy and dark within. I didn’t think about how creepily dark the underbrush was as we were driving up, but sitting here with that coldness shooting through me, it seems hyperreal.

“What sort of body?” I mutter, stunned at how calm my voice sounds.

“It’s fine,” Snaps says. “We’ll be moving in a minute.”

“That’s not what I asked,” I tell him firmly.

He sighs and glances at me briefly. “I don’t know, ma’am.”

“Could you check?”

He shakes his head. “Afraid I can’t leave you.”

“I’ll check then,” I say, as if all the puppeteering has suddenly and violently become too much, all the go there, go here, stay here, do nothing.

It just explodes inside of me and I reach for the door handle.

Snaps moves quickly, locking my door. I tug on the handle but there’s no give. I sit back, already letting out a sigh of defeat.

I’ve tried to outfox Dad’s men a few times, and it always ends this way, with a locked door and an implacable expression.

I know I’m not going to convince Snaps to open the door, so my only choice is to wait.

“Come on,” he murmurs under his breath.

He sticks his head out of the window again.

“Fellas, what the fuck is—Oh, shit.”

He quickly darts back into the car and puts it into reverse.

It takes me a second to realize what’s going on.

A gruff-looking man with a shock of tangled black hair – covered in blood as though to pretend he’s a corpse – is circling three of my father’s men.

He has the fourth man pressed close to him as a human shield, a gun aimed at his head.

My heart drums loudly in my chest.

My first instinct is to flee, but when I grab the handle, of course, it’s locked.

The car starts to back up—

Pop-pop-pop-pop.

Four gunshots ring out, surprisingly quiet. I scan the surrounding area – the otherwise quiet road, the rolling hills, the trees, and the darkness – and finally, I spot two men emerging from the forest and one man climbing out from behind a bush on the other side of the road.

“They’ve blown our fucking tires,” Snaps growls. “Jesus Christ.”

“What do we do?” I say shakily, struggling to hear Snaps or myself or even my thoughts over the incessant drumming of my heart.

Snaps glances at me in the rearview, his frowning wavering. His expression tells me everything I need to know. There’s nothing we can do, not when they already have one of our men hostage and three men are approaching, two of them pinning their sights on the car ahead and the last one – a grinning balding man wearing a dirty leather jacket and holding a gun with a silencer – stalks toward our car.

“Keep your hands where I can see them, pal,” he grins at Snaps, tapping the silencer of his gun against the glass, tap-tap-tap, like rain.

I almost laugh at the thought.

It’s raining gunmen.

I try to bring my thoughts into some sort of order, but they scatter and strangle me in panic.

All I can do is stare as the balding man turns his leer to