Emma jerks to her feet, the color draining from her face. âBen, this is my boss, Ruslan Oryolov.â
I can smell his breath from here. He stinks of cheap booze and cigarette smoke. The moment Emma introduces me, his eyes bulge a little wider. The veins running through the whites of his eyeballs shine a sickly red.
âThe Ruslan Oryolov?â
I donât like the way he says that. I can practically see his irises turning into two massive dollar signs.
Emmaâs gaze keeps flicking from the drunkard to me. âBen, weâre in the middle of dinner.â
âThe hell is that supposed to mean?â he growls. âIâm not invited to dinner in my own fuckinâ apartment?â
Itâs the first time all night the girls have been silent. The bottom half of Reaganâs face has disappeared behind the table. All I can see are those big eyes glancing around fearfully. Caroline has moved a little closer to me and sheâs abandoned her plate of pasta to chew on her nails. Josh is the only one whoâs sitting up straighter since their so-called father entered the room. But I donât miss how his fists tighten around his fork and knife.
Emma is trying hard to contain the situation. âIf youâre hungry, Ben, I can get you a plate.â
How she manages not to kick this motherfucker out on his ass is a testament to her patience. Itâs probably also a testament to how much she loves these kids.
He pulls his lips back and displays a set of yellowing teeth. âI donât need a fuckinâ plate. I need that damned piece-of-shit car to work properly.â
Emmaâs eyebrows knit together. âWhat happened now?â
He grunts and moves to the fridge. âFucker died on me again.â
âBen!â she hisses, lowering her voice. âStop cursing in front of the kids. And take that car to the mechanic while youâre at it.â
âIâll talk the way I wanna fuckinâ talk.â He snatches a can of beer from the fridge. âIâm a grown fuckinâ man. As for the damn car, I donât have the fuckinâ money toââ
My chair scrapes loudly as I push back from the table and stand. Emma and Ben turn to me at the same time. My hands clench into fists, just like Joshâs, and for a moment, the desire to use them is tempting.
But Ben and Emma arenât the only ones who are watching me. Reagan, Caroline, and Josh are staring at me with wide eyes. And everyone is holding their breaths.
I look right at Ben, trusting that he can read the threat in my eyes even if I canât say what I want to say to him. âWhereâs the car?â
He blinks stupidly. âWhat?â
âThe car. You said it died on you. Where is it now?â
He clears his throat to hide a burp. âOh, right. Yeah. Itâs parked out on the curb.â
âThen letâs go take a look. Lead the way.â
Emmaâs jaw drops. âRuslan, you donât have to do that.â
âItâs not a problem. I used to work on cars for a living.â I throw Ben a murderous glance before I make my way into the living room. Emma says something to the kids in a gentle voice, but the actual words escape me. Iâm too busy imagining all the ways I could beat the shit out of her asshole of a brother-in-law.
Iâm almost at the door when Emma catches up with me. âRuslan!â Her hand floats over my arm, but she snatches it away before she actually touches me. âIâm so sorry about him. The carâs a piece of junk, though. It has been dying for a while. You donât need toââ
âIf I stay in this apartment with him for a second longer, I will punch the fucking stink right off him.â Her eyes widen for a moment, but then they soften. âLet me go down and look at the car. Okay?â
She nods reluctantly. âYouâve never actually worked on cars, have you?â
âWhy do you look like that strikes you as funny?â
She lets out a soft giggle and shrugs. âI just never pegged youâthe great Ruslan Oryolov, big bad Bane Corp. CEOâas a grease monkey. Did you also wear grease-stained jeans and muscle shirts? Did you have a mullet?â
I narrow my eyes. âWhat if I did?â
As her eyes run up and down my tailored pants and designer shirt, she bites her lip. I wonder if she knows sheâs doing it. If sheâs aware of how magnetic her attraction to me isâand vice versa. âIâm having a hard time imagining it. Do you have any pictures?â
âNone that youâre ever getting your hands on.â
She laughs. In my face. If we werenât in her shoebox of an apartment with her three little dependents and her one big inconvenience in the very next room, Iâd throw her over my knee and spank that juicy ass of hers until itâs raw.
âAnyway,â I say, clearing my throat and my head at the same time. âI know my way around an engine.â
âCan I come?â We both turn to find that Josh has managed to sneak into the living room without either one of us noticing.
I glance at Emma. She looks conflicted for a moment. Then her shoulders sag and she nods. âIf Ruslan says itâs okay.â
In answer, I hold the door open for him. âAfter you.â
Josh doesnât say a word as we walk downstairs. He doesnât say a word when I pop the hood and take a look at the smoking engine, either. He just stands off to the side and watches me work.
âShit,â I growl when Iâm done poking around.
âHow bad is it?â
I sit down on the edge of the curb just in front of the car. âIâm shocked itâs lasted this long with that amount of damage to the radiator.â Josh sits down next to me. âDoes your dad drive you around in this thing?â
Josh nods. âSometimes. And Auntie Em, too, if Dad doesnât already have the car.â
I shake my head. âFrom now on, none of you are getting in this car. Not until I fix it.â
âYouâre gonna fix it?â I grind my teeth and nod. Josh sidles closer to me. âBut Auntie Em has the new company car.â
âYes, but Iâm guessing your dad uses this one. Heâs probably going to keep using it until it combusts in the middle of the road.â Josh flinches at the image. âSo Iâm going to fix it up so that that doesnât happen.â
The guy may be an asshole. But heâs an asshole with three young kids. Three great kids. Despite his flaws, they donât deserve to lose their father after everything theyâve already been through. And as much as I would like Ben to disappear off the face of the earth, Iâm not gonna be responsible, directly or indirectly, for taking away the only parent that Josh, Reagan, and Caroline have left.
Joshâs gaze veers over to me. âYouâre a good guy, arenât you?â
Fuck me.
âNo oneâs ever accused me of that before.â
The kid actually cracks a smile. âI know youâre the one that paid for my basketball fees this season.â
Iâm not about to deny it. If the boy is smart enough to have figured it out, then he deserves the truth.
âThat doesnât make me a good guy.â
He frowns. âWhat does it make you, then?â
âIt makes me the kind of man who refuses to let the people in his life suffer.â
Joshâs gaze rises to the window of his apartment. I think I have a pretty good idea what heâs thinking. Compared to Ben, I probably look like a goddamn saint.
I canât help but laugh at the irony of that. The cold-hearted, violent, soulless pakhan of a deadly Bratva is more of a role model to this eight-year-old than his own drunkard father.
Who wouldâve thought Iâd be anyoneâs hero?
âRuslan, can I ask you something?â
The tremble in his voice should serve as a warning, but I ignore it and nod. âGo ahead.â
âWill you come to my basketball game next week? Itâs the first game of the season.â
I stare down at his earnest little face with warning bells tolling in the back of my head. I should grab his shoulders and shake some sense into him. Iâm not a hero, boy. I donât deserve your admiration or your awe. Donât make me into something Iâm not.
But instead of saying any of thatâinstead of turning him down like I shouldâI end up nodding. I end up telling him Iâll be happy to be there.
The craziest part isâ¦
I mean it.