For Vicente Bernal, truth is all he’s known. The son of an infamous drug lord, Vicente was born to help run the family business, which means he’s been raised on a throne of sordid pasts and dirty laundry, violence and pride. But when Vicente stumbles across someone he’s not supposed to know about – a woman from his father’s checkered past – he sets out to California to find her behind his father’s back.
What Vicente doesn’t expect to find in San Francisco is Violet McQueen, the woman’s twenty-year old daughter. Beautiful and edgy with a vulnerability he can’t resist, Violet tempts Vicente from afar and though he promised himself he’d stay away from her, curiosity and lust are powerful forces. Besides, Vicente has always gotten everything he wants – why shouldn’t he have Violet too?
Soon his wants turn into an obsession, one that sweeps Violet into his games as they fall madly, deeply in love with each other, the type of first love that can drive a person mad.
But it’s a love with tragic consequences.
Both the truth – and the lies – not only threaten to tear them apart, but threaten their very lives.
Someone has to pay for the sins of the fathers.
And they’ll be paying the price with their souls.
NOTE: Black Hearts is book one of the Sins Duet, with the sequel, Dirty Souls, releasing in March 2017.
These books can be read as a standalone – though they are a spinoff of the Sins & Needles and Dirty Angels trilogies, Black Hearts & Dirty Souls are set 20 years in the future and follow new characters. You do NOT need to read TAT or DA to enjoy or understand this duet.
The
fog is continuing to roll in, bringing a briny mist that you can taste. Only
the tops of the bridge remain visible, the orange red seeming to glow against
grey skies, while shadows of the structure come and go as the fog moves in.
Violet
stares in quiet fascination, her dark eyes taking it in. I can see the fog
reflected in them, giving her an eerie quality. She appears to be listening but
whether it’s the fog horns, the chatter of the fishermen, the lapping waves, or
the dull roar of the bridge traffic, I don’t know. Could be something else entirely.
I
don’t want to break her concentration or bring her back from whatever world
she’s in. I just stand beside her and let her be. If anything, it says a lot
about her comfort level with me if she lets herself drift away.
After
a few minutes, she slowly turns to me and blinks. “How long did you say you
were going to be in San Francisco for?”
“I
don’t know,” I say carefully. “It depends if I find what I’m looking for.”
“And
what are you looking for?”
“A
reason to stay.” I hold her gaze with mine. The sea breeze picks up a few
strands of her hair, moving them across her face like a black veil. Without
thinking, I reach over and brush them away, tucking them behind her ear.
I
could kiss her. I should kiss her. The feel of her skin against my fingers ignites
a million torches inside.
Then
she looks away, uncomfortable, the silence between us changing.
I
steer the subject onto her. “You said your mother is a famous photographer.
Does she have a studio?”
She
lets out a soft sigh, her eyes back on the bridge. “Yeah. In the mission
district.”
“And
you don’t want the same for yourself?”
She
rubs her lips together in thought before looking down at her hands that hang
over the side of the railing. “As I said, I don’t know what I want. I’m not
sure I feel comfortable with the idea of having a studio. My mom does portraits
of people. That’s not what I like to shoot.”
“Not
a people person?”
A
wry smile cracks her lips. “No. Not really. It’s too…intimate. My mom is great
at it because people feel comfortable with her. She can…I don’t know,
manipulate their feelings.”
Interesting.
Very interesting.
People
like my father.
“So
they end up exposing pieces of themselves that they don’t see. I guess I have
the same intuition as her but the one on one is too much for me. I prefer to
work with nature. With this.” She gestures to the fog. “No one else really
understands how beautiful this is to me.”
I
look back at the fog, moving faster now. I wouldn’t call it beautiful. Moody.
Dark, maybe. If anything, her beauty stands out more because of the bleakness
around her.
“My
goal is to take photos that show how I see the world. All the beauty in it. The
world is such an ugly and beautiful place, horrible and hopeful. I want to show
the light in all the dark places.” She pauses and gives me a sheepish look.
“Sorry. I know that must have sounded hella pretentious.”
I
slowly shake my head because she sounds anything but that. She sounds real. She
sounds like something I want to shake loose from her, to let free and run wild.
“You’re
not pretentious,” I tell her, my voice low. “Not even close.”
“That’s
not what I hear.”
“What
do you hear?” I move in closer to her, the distance between us just a few
inches. She doesn’t back up. “What does the world tell you you are?”
I
watch her swallow, take a moment. “Oh, you know. I’m too self-absorbed.
Narcissistic. Pretentious. I live too much in my head, I’m too anti-social, too
distant. I feel too much, care too much. My mother has always chided me for
being too sensitive and then I was diagnosed with having hyper-sensitivity, so
it turns out she was right. I am too
sensitive. About everything. And there’s not a single thing I can do about it
except know that when I experience reality, it’s not what everyone else
experiences. For better or for worse.” She sighs. “Mainly for worse.”
I
feel like this is something she doesn’t unload on many people. My instincts
about her were right. She’s fragile but not weak, too much a part of the world
and too much removed from it. A contradiction.
“I’m
sorry,” she says, shooting me a glance. “I didn’t mean to blab away like that.
I know you probably think I’m crazy now. Hell, I think I’m crazy half the time.
I really wish I could just be like everyone else. To just…shut it all off.”
“You’re
not crazy,” I tell her. “I’m just understanding you better.”
Her
mouth quirks up into a dry smile. “I’m surprised you understand me at all.
We’ve only just met.”
“True,”
I tell her as I reach out and run my fingers along her jaw, tipping her chin
up. “But I’m sure you of all people would know that sometimes you can connect
with someone in ways you didn’t think you could. Or should.”
About Karina Halle
Hit her up on Instagram at @authorHalle, on Twitter at @MetalBlonde and on Facebook.
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