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4. Iron and Ink

last update publish date: 2026-03-25 21:20:46

Elena

The hum of the Lexus was the only thing grounding me as the suburban streetlights gave way to the jagged, neon-stained outskirts of the industrial district. My hands were still shaking, gripping the leather-wrapped steering wheel until my knuckles turned a ghostly white. Every mile I put between myself and that mahogany dining table felt like a layer of skin being peeled back…. painful, raw, and terrifyingly cold.

I didn't have a plan. I just had a destination. I pulled over onto a gravel shoulder, the gravel crunching beneath my tires like breaking bone, and pulled up G****e Maps. My thumb hovered over the search bar. I didn't want a lounge.

Bars near me.

A pin dropped three miles ahead. Iron & Ink.

The name sounded sharp. Dangerous too. But it didn’t matter in this moment, neither did I care.

I pulled back onto the road, the emerald silk of my dress shifting against my thighs. Marcus would have called this dress a 'cry for help.' Maya called it 'the weapon.'

The parking lot was a graveyard of chrome and heavy rubber. Rows of Harleys sat like slumbering beasts, their polished tanks catching the flickering red light of a buzzing neon sign.

I stepped out of the car, the humid night air clinging to my skin, and for a second, a voice in my head screamed at me to turn around.

I drowned the voice out with the slam of my car door.

The interior of Iron & Ink was a cavern of red shadows and the smell of stale beer, expensive tobacco, and something metallic—like hot engines.

It was loud. A low, bluesy rock track was vibrating through the floorboards, settling right in my marrow. I walked toward the bar, my heels clicking rhythmically, a stark contrast to the heavy boots and scuffed leather surrounding me.

I took a stool at the far end, tucked into a corner where the light was dimmest. The bartender was a mountain of a man with a grey-streaked beard and arms covered in intricate, faded blackwork. He looked at my silk dress, then at my face, and didn't say a word. He just waited.

"Vodka," I said, my voice sounding steadier than I felt. "Neat. Top shelf."

He grunted, poured the drink, and slid it toward me. I downed it in one go. The burn was a mercy. It scorched the memory of Greta’s condescension right out of my mind.

"Another," I said, leaning my elbows on the scarred wood.

"You're a long way from home, aren't you?” the bartender asked, his voice a low rumble.

"Something like that," I replied, watching the amber liquid swirl in the glass.

We chatted for a few minutes—meaningless, beautiful filler about the weather and the quality of the local whiskey. It was the first time in years a man had talked to me without trying to correct my posture or my tone. But halfway through our conversation, the bartender paused. He looked over my shoulder, then reached for a clean glass.

He poured a double shot of a dark, expensive-looking bourbon and set it down next to my vodka.

"I didn't order that," I said, frowning.

The bartender didn't answer. He just jerked his chin toward the very back of the room. "From the gentleman in the last booth."

I turned slowly.

He was sitting in the shadows, almost swallowed by the dark wood of the booth. He wasn't wearing a leather vest or club colors, just a simple black t-shirt that strained against shoulders so broad they seemed to anchor the entire room. Even from twenty feet away, the tension radiating off him was palpable. It wasn't the frantic, nervous energy Marcus carried. This was different.

His skin was a deep, rich bronze, and his arms were a canvas. Thick, black ink spilled out from under his sleeves, swirling down his forearms and disappearing under the silver watch on his wrist. I found myself tracing the lines with my eyes, wondering where the patterns led—if they climbed over his shoulders, if they mapped the terrain of his chest and his back.

He didn't wave. He didn't smile. He just lifted his own glass in a silent, slow-motion toast. His eyes were dark, hooded, and focused on me with an intensity that felt like a physical touch.

I turned back to the bar, my heart thundering. I should leave. I should go home, apologize to Marcus, and got to bed.

Instead, I picked up the bourbon and took a sip. It was smoky, expensive, and hit my bloodstream like a lightning strike.

I waited. I didn't look back, but I felt him. The air behind me seemed to grow denser, warmer. The scent of sandalwood and something sharply masculine began to override the smell of the bar. I didn't hear him move—he was too large to be that quiet, but suddenly, he was there.

He didn't sit on the stool next to me. He stood, looming just close enough that the heat from his body seeped into my silk-covered back.

"That’s a lot of drink for a woman who’s not from here," he said. His voice wasn't a baritone like Marcus’s. It was a low, gravelly rasp that felt like sandpaper on velvet.

I turned my stool to face him. Up close, he was devastating. His face was a series of hard angles and shadowed hollows. A small scar bisected his left eyebrow, and his eyes—a piercing, intelligent grey—were currently memorizing every inch of my

face.

"And how do you know I’m not from here?” I asked, tilting my head.

"I know things” He leaned one hand on the bar, pinning me into the corner. His forearm was inches from mine. The ink there was a series of geometric patterns, sharp and precise.

"I see," I whispered. The vodka and the bourbon were dancing in my head now, stripping away the filters. "I’m Elena."

He didn't offer his name in return. He just watched my mouth move as I spoke it. "Elena," he repeated. The way he said it made it sound like a secret.

"And you are?" I asked.

He leaned in closer, his breath warm against my ear. "Someone who thinks you should be dancing instead of talking to a bartender."

He didn't ask. He just reached out, his hand engulfing mine. His palm was calloused, his grip firm but not crushing. He led me toward the small, dark patch of floor that served as a dance floor.

The music had shifted to something slow, a heavy-bottomed blues track with a guitar that sounded like it was screaming in slow motion.

When he pulled me in, the breath left my lungs in a sharp hiss.

He didn't hold me with the 'respectful' distance Marcus insisted on. He pulled me flush against the hard, unforgiving planes of his body. My chest pressed into his, and I could feel the rhythmic thud of his heart—slow, steady, and terrifyingly calm.

“You’re so beautiful,” His hand didn't rest on my waist, it splayed across the small of my back, his fingers pressing into the silk, guiding me with a primal, effortless authority.

“Thank you,” I muttered lowly trying not to stutter at the unexpected compliment. I let my hands slide up his arms, feeling the ridge of muscle and the slight texture of the ink beneath the skin. My head fell back, and I looked up at him. The grey of his eyes was stormy now, dark with a hunger that made my stomach flip.

"You're shivering, Elena," he murmured, his voice vibrating through my own chest.

"It’s cold in here," I lied.

He let out a low, dark sound—almost a laugh. "No, it isn't."

We moved as one. There was no counting steps, no practiced ballroom grace. It was just a slow, grinding collision. I forgot about everything else.

In this man's arms, I didn't feel broken. I felt like alive… electric, his forehead resting against mine.

Our breaths hitched in the same rhythm. I could see the individual lashes of his eyes, the slight stubble on his jaw. The tension between us was so thick it felt like we were moving through honey.

"You have no idea what you're doing to me," he growled, his hand sliding lower, gripping my hip, pulling me even tighter against the hard ridge of his thigh.

"Tell me," I breathed.

He let out a jagged curse under his breath, his eyes dropping to my lips. His head tilted, his mouth hovering just a fraction of an inch from mine. I could feel the static electricity between us. I wanted it. I wanted him to touch my lips with his. I wanted a lot of things from him that I shouldn’t,

His eyes closed, his nose brushing against mine, his breathing coming in heavy, ragged bursts.

"Elena, I—"

CRASH.

The heavy front doors of the bar swung open, hitting the interior walls with a deafening bang. A group of five or six men burst in, shouting, laughing, and smelling of cold wind and adrenaline. They were rowdy, their voices cutting through the blues track like a chainsaw. One of them kicked a chair, and a girl in the group let out a piercing, drunken shriek of laughter.

The spell shattered.

The man pulled back instantly, his hands dropping from my body as his eyes snapped to the door. His entire posture changed in a heartbeat. As if instinctively, he stood in front of me.

His shoulders squared, and his hand moved instinctively toward his waistband before he caught himself.

I stood there, swaying slightly, the cold air rushing into the space where his heat had been. I felt exposed. Raw. The reality of the night came rushing back, and I suddenly felt the weight of the emerald dress.

I fumbled for my clutch on the nearby table, my fingers numb. I needed to leave. Now. Before I did something I couldn't undo.

"I have to go," I whispered.

He turned back to me, his grey eyes searching mine. The hunger was still there, but it was shadowed by something else—something guarded. "Elena, wait."

"No," I said, backing away. "I can't. I... I’m late."

He reached out, his fingers brushing my wrist.

“Will I see you again?" he said, his voice a low, rough anchor.

I didn't answer. I couldn't. I turned and ran toward the door, pushing past the rowdy newcomers. I burst out into the night air, the humidity hitting me like a physical wall. I made it to my car, my heart racing, my lungs burning as if I’d run a marathon.

I sat in the driver's seat, the silence of the car deafening. My hands were shaking so hard I could barely fit the key into the ignition.

I reached for my phone in the center console.

The screen was a graveyard of notifications.

12 Missed Calls: Marcus.

4 Text Messages: Marcus.

Where are you?

This is unacceptable.

Pick up the phone, Elena. Now.

I’m calling the police if you don't answer in five minutes.

I stared at the screen, the blue light washing out the emerald green of my dress. I looked in the rearview mirror. My lipstick was smudged. My hair was wild.

I thought about the man in the bar. I thought about the way he’d cursed under his breath right before he almost kissed me. I thought about the ink on his skin and the way he’d looked at me like I was the only thing in the world that mattered.

Then I looked at Marcus’s name on the screen.

The weight of the 'perfect' life settled back onto my chest, heavier than before. I started the engine, the roar of the car a lonely sound in the dark parking lot. As I backed out, I looked at the entrance of Iron & Ink one last time.

I loved my husband. I HAD to love him.

But as I drove back toward our house and the silent, rich and snobby neighborhood. I couldn’t stop thinking about the man from the bar.

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