Page 163 of 100 Days to Claim Me


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Huh.

I take another bite.

“Good?” he asks without turning around.

“Yeah. Actually.”

“Good.”

I watch him cook. Watch the way his shoulders flex when he moves. The focused look on his face. Like making eggs is a mission he’s executing with precision.

“You’re different in the mornings,” I say.

“How so?”

“Quieter. Focused. Less… murder-y.”

He huffs. Almost a laugh. “Murder-y.”

“It’s a technical term.”

“Is it?”

“Very scientific.”

He plates his own omelet—this one loaded with peppers and cheese because of course his stomach isn’t staging a rebellion—and sits beside me.

We eat in silence for a minute. Comfortable. Easy.

Then I say, “What else?”

“What else what?”

“What else do you do that I don’t know about?”

He considers this. Chews. Swallows. “I read.”

“Everyone reads.”

“Poetry.”

I almost drop my fork. “You readpoetry?”

“Sometimes.”

“What kind?”

“Russian. Pushkin. Akhmatova.”

I stare at him. “You’re kidding.”

“I’m not.”

“Anton Malikov, mafia enforcer, reads romantic Russian poetry.”

“It’s not all romantic.”

“But some of it is.”