
Dangerous Game- Love in the Strangest Place
Chapter 2
.Dean Wason
“You changed your hair.”
The words slid out of Dean before she could set his whiskey on the counter. He didn’t blink. Didn’t smile. Just let the truth sit there, between them, like a loaded gun.
Her fingers hesitated on the glass. For a split second, her mask slipped — not the flirty bartender, not the girl moving like she owned the air around her — but the one from the surveillance photos, guarded, calculating.
Then it was gone. “Must have me confused with someone else.”
Dean leaned on the polished wood, his gaze pinning her in place. “Doubtful.”
He drank slow, letting the burn roll down his throat while he studied her. The hair was a deep wine color now, framing sharp cheekbones and gold-flecked eyes that caught the club lights like molten metal. Her scent hit him — honey, caramel, warm skin — and his Alpha stirred hard, pressing against his jeans.
He’d told himself he wouldn’t come here for this. That he was only in Delights to bait Crayons Arthur out of hiding. But up close, Sama Arthur wasn’t just a mark’s daughter. She was temptation wrapped in stubbornness.
And she was afraid. He could smell it. See it in the flicker of her gaze toward the exit.
He wanted to chase that fear. Bite it. Taste it.
Instead, he slid his payment across the counter, fingers brushing hers longer than necessary. “Don’t stay up too late,” he murmured, voice low enough for only her to hear.
Her jaw tightened. “Enjoy your night, sir.”
Dean let the corner of his mouth curl — not enough to be called a smile — before walking away. But he didn’t leave. He lingered in the crowd, watching her work, watching her pretend she wasn’t scanning for him between orders.
When he finally slipped out the rear door, he already had her address in his phone. Alex Henry, the bubbly roommate, had been an open book on her smoke break. One glance at her license plate and a quick database pull had done the rest.
The drive was short. The apartment complex was tucked behind sagging trees and the carcass of an old gas station. Perfect for disappearing. Perfect for trapping someone.
The lock on her unit was laughable. He was inside within seconds, the quiet swallowing him whole.
Her scent was here too — sweeter without the alcohol and perfume of the bar. He followed it to the bedroom.
Warm light from string bulbs draped over the bed, movie posters peeling at the edges. A bookshelf crammed with paperbacks leaned against the wall. This wasn’t the sterile penthouse he’d once raided. This was… lived in.
For a moment, a pang hit him low in the chest. It almost felt like intruding. He shut the thought down.
He flipped her pillow. A small knife lay tucked beneath. Cute. The kind of thing that would buy her a second or two before he broke her wrist.
The nightstand drawers were a treasure trove — suppressants, scarves, a pink vibrator. His jeans tightened. He shoved the image away.
In the bottom drawer, a black case. A gun, small enough to hide in her palm. He liked that she was armed. Liked imagining her pointing it at him, hand shaking.
A pile of towels in the closet hid a duffel stuffed with cash. And under that, a crumpled piece of paper.
Dickson’s name. Dickson’s number. Six digits. The price for vanishing.
Smart girl. Slick. Competent. And doomed.
Dean put everything back exactly where it had been — except for one thing. He took the knife from under her pillow and replaced it with a neat stack of bills. One thousand dollars. His tip.
Let her wonder how it got there. Let her think about him when she found it.
He left as silently as he’d come.
---
Sama Arthur
When Sama unlocked her front door, the air felt heavier than it should.
“You are not going to believe this!” Alex’s voice shot from the couch, making Sama’s heart kick hard in her chest.
Alex sat cross-legged in pajamas, hair in a messy bun, grinning like she’d just been handed a diamond ring.
“What?” Sama asked, forcing her voice steady.
“That guy — the one in the suit with the whiskey? Dean Wason? He tipped you a thousand dollars.”
Sama froze halfway out of her heels. “What?”
“Left it for you special. I told him I’d give it to you when I got home.”
Her stomach turned. “You told him we live together?”
“Yeah, but not where,” Alex said quickly. “I wouldn’t give out our address, Sama. You know that.”
She did. Alex was kind, almost to a fault. She’d taken Sama in with no questions asked, found her a job, never pried into why Sama paid rent in cash. But kindness didn’t cancel out danger.
“Keep the money,” Sama said.
Alex’s eyes widened. “Are you insane? It’s a thousand dollars!”
“Then keep it. I don’t want it.”
Alex groaned, but Sama was already moving toward her bedroom.
The second she stepped inside, her skin prickled.
Nothing looked different. But something felt different.
Her gaze swept the bed, the shelves, the closet door ajar by an inch. Her pulse thudded in her ears. She yanked her pillow over — and froze.
The knife wasn’t there.
In its place sat a neat stack of cash.
The same amount Alex had just mentioned.
Her mouth went dry.
Someone had been here.
She tore through her nightstand drawers. Everything was there, untouched. Or maybe not untouched — maybe moved just enough that she’d never be able to prove it.
She checked the closet next. Towels, clothes, duffel bag. Everything seemed in order.
Her heartbeat wouldn’t slow.
She slammed the door shut and sat on the bed, staring at the money.
Dean Wason’s face filled her mind — the way he’d looked at her, as if he knew something she didn’t. His voice, low and certain. Don’t stay up too late.
A hot cramp curled in her lower belly. Heat. Of course. Perfect timing.
She clenched her jaw, breathing through it, but every inhale brought his scent back to her. Whiskey. Warm skin. Male.
Her thighs pressed together before she could stop herself. She hated the way her body betrayed her.
Focus. Count the money. Count her own stash. Remember the plan.
Four thousand dollars saved. A few more months and she could disappear for good. Maybe even take Alex with her.
She shoved the tip into the nightstand drawer without touching it again.
Back under the covers, she kept her hand curled around the hilt of her knife — a different one, hidden in the mattress seam.
She would not think about him.
She would not think about the way he’d said her name without saying it.
Sleep was starting to pull her under when something shifted outside her window. A shadow. Slow. Deliberate.
Her eyes snapped open.
The faintest trace of whiskey and caramel drifted through the cracked pane.
And then, in the dark, a voice — low, almost a whisper, but close enough to hear.
“Sweet dreams, Sama.”
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