I frown. Thatâs the second time heâs said that word. âWhy do you say that I was a ghost, Jer?â
âBecause you were,â he says nonchalantly, his feet swinging back and forth. âI went to see you.â
âYou came to see me?â
âUh-huh.â He points to his right. âOver there.â
My eyes follow the direction of his thumb. Itâs a small white building, separate from the house. It doesnât appear as well-kept as the main mansion. Cracks cover the exterior and vines of ivy grow on its walls, covering most of them.
The place instantly gives me a horrible feeling, like a bitter aftertaste mixed with vomit.
I realize this is the guest house Adrian told me to stay away from, and I have every intention to. But Jeremyâs words about meâthe real Liaâbeing a ghost throw me for a loop. What could be in there for a child to think of it as âghostlyâ?
Iâm about to ask Yan, but my gaze shifts to the left and I freeze. In the main house, Adrian stares at me through a floor-to-ceiling window. Heâs behind a desk in what I assume is his office. Three monitors sit in front of him, but his attention is entirely on me as he taps his index finger on the wood surface.
Heâs watching me so intently, it feels like heâs standing right over my head and sucking at my soul. I try to break eye contact, but the sheer intensity of his ashen gray eyes takes me hostage.
Adrian is merely observing me, but it strikes deeper, like a demand, a callâfor what, I donât know.
I scream with my eyes, pursing my lips, but his focus doesnât shift.
Iâm the first to avert my gaze, because looking into his eyes is still uncomfortable. It still resembles being choked by invisible hands. The act isnât real, but itâs as palpable as the burn in my lungs and the contractions in my stomach.
Thatâs one step further than when I first met him. Back then, it was only a sense of uneasiness. Now, I can decipher the reason behind that feelingâitâs the terrifying awakening of a side of me I hate so much. Every time I see his eyes, all I can think about is how much depravity hides behind that calm. And how much I crave it, like nothing ever before.
After losing my mother and daughter, I thought I was done with this life. I was done wanting things.
Adrian has proved me wrong.
The man is married, or a widower, and I shamelessly came on his fingers.
I internally shake my head. Itâs not like I came to him or I can walk away from this. Heâs the one at fault for replacing his wife so soon.
I continue playing with Jeremy, trying to ignore the way Adrianâs gaze digs into me like heâs peeling off my damn skin, layer by each agonizing layer. I only release a breath when Kolya joins him and his attention is momentarily distracted from me.
Jeremy and I have lunch together and I ask Yan to come with us. After living on the streets for so long, Iâve learned to share my meals, especially with people I feel at ease with. I wish Larry was around, and since I have no way to reach him, I somehow pretend that Yan is his replacement.
The guard shakes his head while Ogla fixes me with one of her judgmental stares for even suggesting it.
Adrian is still cooped up in his office and doesnât join us for lunch. Something that I want to ignore, but think about during the entire meal.
After I put Jeremy down for his nap, a sense of emptiness echoes in my chest.
Thus far, the little angel has been keeping me busy, but now that heâs sleeping, nothing is able to.
Emptiness is bad as fuck in my case. If I donât occupy my mind, itâll occupy me, and thatâs the last thing I want in light of the damn nightmares I donât usually have.
I try searching for alcohol in the kitchen and come up empty-handed again. On my way out, Ogla startles me by appearing out of nowhere, standing in her rigid posture. The woman is everywhere, I swear.
I place a hand to my chest. âYou scared me.â
âHave you learned anything about the Bratva?â
âYes, Iâve made some progress.â While I was reading a story to Jeremy.
âWhat type of progress?â
âI know that the âs name is Sergei Sorlov.â
âItâs Sokolov.â
âSame thing.â
âIt is not the same thing,â she scolds with stiff seriousness. âIf you say the âs last name wrong, Mr. Volkov will pay the price.â
âIsnât Adrian high-ranked?â
âThat doesnât make him bulletproof. If anything, heâs more scrutinized than anyone else and his punishment would be the most brutal possible to set an example out of. So for everything thatâs holy, stop playing around and take this seriously.â
I hate that sheâs making me feel like a petulant child, but at the same time, I can see the sincerity in her eyes. Her loyalty to Adrian is her incentive and no matter how much I hate the man, if something happens to him, Jeremy will be fatherless and this entire household will probably fall apart.
Thatâs not what I want.
An idea pops into my head. Since my role is fairly important for Adrian, I can use that to my advantage.
âI understand, Ogla.â I smoothen my tone. âIs Adrian coming out for a break anytime soon?â
âNo.â
âDoesnât he have to go to work or something?â
She narrows her eyes. âIf youâd gotten past that first page in the document, you wouldâve seen for yourself.â
And with that, she turns and leaves, her heels clicking down the hall. I donât want to call someone a bitch, but Ogla is heading in that direction with flying colors.
After I get the iPad, I wander around until I find Adrianâs office. Since itâs on the ground floor and Iâve seen it from the garden, it doesnât take me long to figure out where itâs located.
The door is closed and Ogla said Iâm not to disturb him when heâs working, so I pace in front of it, then soon give up and choose to occupy my time until he comes out. Itâs not like Iâm dying for another confrontation with the devil.
Thereâs a small lounge area across from his office. I lie on my back on the sofa and kick my shoes away, sighing with contentment. One of my legs dangles from the armrest and I use my arm as a pillow as I read from the iPad.
Sure enough, as Ogla said, Adrianâs duties are outlined on the second page of the document. His job consists of finding the right people to bribe for the brotherhood. His critical intelligence allows Sergei Sokolovâs Bratva to be ahead of all other criminal organizations. Since he performs more of a background role, Adrian usually works from home and rarely appears in public.
Criminal.
Not that I expected anything different. After all, he did frame me for murder ever so easily.
I scowl at his picture at the top of the page. Heâs standing at some grand opening, wearing a tux and holding oversized scissors to cut a red ribbon. The asshole is too good-looking for his own good. He could be a bit shorter or have a beer belly. Hell, he could at least not be tatted. But no, he has to tick the boxes on all accounts.
The picture is mainly focused on him, but on his right, thereâs a blonde woman wearing a sharp pantsuit and a firm smile. Sheâs stunningâso stunning that a weird feeling nudges in my gut at seeing her beside him.
I flip the pages to see if I can find her in the document. I donât have to search for long. Thereâs a picture of her in a wedding dress, and an even stranger sense of relief hits me.
Rai Sokolov is the âs grandniece and some hotshot in the brotherhoodâs company, V Corp. As I study her, a nagging sensation different from the one from earlier takes hold of me.
I feel like I know her, but from where? Was she perhaps in one of the charities from whom Larry and I were given food?
The door of the office opens and I stare ahead to be greeted by a frowning Kolya. Adrian follows soon after and stops short beside his guard, his eyes darkening so fast that Iâm left breathless.
I stare down at myself in case one of my shirtâs buttons is undone or something.
âGet up,â Adrian orders.
âWhy? Iâm reading the document you gave me. If I donât read it, Iâm in trouble, and if I do, Iâm also in trouble? Make up your mind.â
Adrian reaches me in two steps and grabs me by the arm, causing the iPad to fall onto the sofa. I squeal as he pulls me to my feet and undoes the knot of my shirt so that it blandly covers my ass.
Iâm staring, speechless, when Kolya gives a curt nod and stalks down the hall.
âDonât dress like this again.â Adrianâs voice is laced with a threat.
âI donât like the wardrobe. Itâs boring.â
He bunches my shirt in his fingers and pulls me against his chest. My hands land on his wall of muscles as my wide eyes clash with his cold ones. âI couldnât care less about it being boring. You do not dress that way in front of my men, and you sure as fuck donât lie down like you were just now. Is that clear?â
âI donât see what the big deal is.â
âThe big deal is that no one looks at you the way I do. No one gets a glimpse at whatâs mine.â
There it is. The sense of ownership. The subtle obsession that he doesnât show openly but can be felt, nonetheless.
âIâm not your thing, Adrian.â
âIs that a no, Lia?â His voice lowers and when I remain silent, he continues, âDid I or did I not say that youâre to do as I tell you? Or is your ass in the mood for another whipping?â
I glare at him, then quickly soften my expression because what I have in mind is more important.
Sucking in a breath, I smooth an invisible wrinkle on his shirt, something for which he narrows his eyes, probably questioning my motives.
I really need to do this right. If I raise his alerts, heâll never grant me my wish.
âFine,â I tell him. âIâll do whatever you say.â
â
?â he drawls out the word, blatantly stating he doesnât believe me.
âReally. I donât want to be punished again.â
âYou donât want to be punished,â he repeats, which Iâm starting to think is his way of reading between the lines of my words.
âI donât.â
âWe will see.â
âIfâ¦â I swallow. âIf Iâm good, shouldnât I be rewarded?â
âRewarded.
So thatâs what you want. How do you wish to be , Lia?â
âItâs simple, really. For everything youâre pleased with, I get something in return.â
âYouâre already getting a roof over your head, free meals, and immunity from prison. You think you can ask for other things?â
âThat was the original agreement. You didnât mention punishment back then, and yet you included them. I accepted them, so now, you should accept my suggestion.â
âDid you, though?â
âDid I what?â
âAccept your punishments.â His eyes are imploring mine so thoroughly that the feeling of being suffocated returns with a vengeance.
âWould it make a difference if I have?â
âNot really, no, but Iâd like to know.â
âIf it doesnât make a difference, why would it matter if you know?â
âIâll be able to assert whether I should break you in further, Lenochka.â His voice darkens with hidden intent. âSo tell me, do I need to up my methods? Or have you smartened up to quit the habit of questioning me?â
I want to dig my nails into his chest, rip the surface open, and peer into his ribcage to see if he actually has a black heart. The more I talk to him, the surer I am that he feels no emotions. That heâs a devil with psychopathic tendencies only meant to wreak havoc on everything that stands in his path.
While I hate bowing down to him this easily, I have a purpose, and antagonizing him is the surest way to prevent me from reaching my goal.
What I show on the outside doesnât matter anyway. On the inside, I completely abhor him, and thatâs enough for my self-worth.
âI am getting used to the punishments. Itâs only fair that rewards are included, too.â
âI donât care about being fair.â
âAdrian, please.â Iâm begging but saying it in an exasperated tone. âI promise not to ask for anything extravagant.â
âStill no.â
âOkay, letâs do it this way.â
âThatâs one for the day.â
âWhat? Why?â
âWhat did I say about the word okay?â
âOkâI mean, fine.
How about if I only ask for one reward a day?â
He shakes his head.
âOnce every other day?â
âNo.â
âTwice a week?â
âOnce a week and Iâll judge whether or not itâs reasonable.â
I squeal. âYes!â
In my delight that I won one against the devil himself, I catch myself on the verge of hugging him before I remember who he is.
No matter what he grants me, I will not be grateful. I will humanize him.
Adrian stares down at me with what resembles approval, and I try not to get caught up in it.
Keyword being Adrianâs attention is like a powerful magnet I canât escape from. A black hole that swallows everything in its surroundings.
But the truth remainsâheâs only seeing Lia in me.
And Iâm far from being her or her ghost. Iâm a shell who needs to go back to her numb state before I become a danger to his and his sonâs life.