nothing, just a cheap knockoff. Iâll just . . . Iâll run back inside and get the cash,â she prevaricated, longing for the relative safety of her locked room.
âDonât worry about it,â Baden said, reaching into his pocket. He started to count off some crumpled, greasy-looking bills. âIâll get your fare. Iâm interested in seeing more of these
cheap knockoffs
.â
âNo, pleaseââ
âHey now,â he said, his teeth gleaming in the dim light, reminding her of dirty fangs. Sheâd discovered Baden was fond of what they called in the States
chew.
âI know youâre good for it. Youâll find a way to pay me back, right? I can think of a dozen or two things right off the top of my head,â he said, his downward gaze over her body feeling like heâd smeared greasy slime on her skin.
Her thoughts started to come a mile a minute.
âYes, of course. Thank you, Baden,â she said. When he looked away, she turned and ran.
She couldnât think of what else to do. At least Baden was in the middle of finding the bills for payment. It would give her a few seconds to try to race to her room and lock herself inâbetter than waiting until he was unoccupied, the cabdriver had gone, and they were alone on the dark, deserted street together.
âHey . . . hold up you littleââ
But Elise didnât pause. She reached the door to the stairwell, lunging to open it. Before she ducked into the musty interior, she glanced over her shoulder and yelped in alarm.
Big Baden was stalking rapidly toward her, just twenty feet away. He looked furious, not to mention determined.
She hurled herself up the stairs, cursing the fact that she hadnât yet removed her strappy high-heeled sandals. Through the pounding of her heart in her eardrums, she heard the metal door slam shut and the sound of Badenâs heavy boots hitting the first stairs.
âSlow down,
French girl
. Iâm thinking youâre keeping some secrets from your neighbors. Thatâs not too friendly, is it? Time you learned how to be a little nicer, seeing as youâre a stranger in this country,â he crooned, his quiet voice sending a shiver through her as it echoed in the empty, dark stairwell. Why had she ever exchanged a single word with him? She should have just avoided him, like any sane woman, instead of trying to charm away the threat of him. She heard his banging boots several steps behind her when she hit the landing and her heart jumped into her throat.
He was going to catch her.
Dear God
. Was this it? All those years sheâd partied indiscriminately with fools and drunks and remained unscathed. Was she to be raped or beaten
now
,
when
she was finally trying to take control of her life? No. The thought was unbearable. She reacted instinctively when Baden caught her arm, wrenching it behind her. She spun around like a whirlwind and whacked him hard at the side of his head with her fist.
â
Brûle en enfer
. Let go of me, you greasy bastard!â
Her unexpected move and fierceness temporarily set them both off balance. After a brief struggle, however, Baden steadied himself.
âYou little slut,â he hissed between ragged breaths. When she saw his face, terror tore through her like a tidal wave. Sheâd obviously hurt him, and he was as furious as a kicked junkyard dog.
âNoâ,â she protested when he grabbed her hair, but her voice was cut off when he jerked back her head, stretching her neck, making it so that she couldnât see the threat of him. Her breath caught in her lungs as she instinctively braced for pain.
A jolt went through her, but it wasnât from Badenâs fist. She staggered and tripped on the stairs, abruptly free of the restraint of Badenâs hold. She glanced around in confusion at the guttural
oomph
of someone taking a fist deep in the gut. It was followed by the