I canât breathe properly.
I canât even think properly.
Iâve been imagining this moment ever since I recognized those eyes. Chameleon, ocean eyes with rare heterochromia that Iâve never seen on anyone but him.
Thatâs what the black rings surrounding his blue eyes are called. Heterochromia. A perfect imperfection thatâs part of who he is.
It was the first thing that tugged on my attention. And while many would say my attention is easy to get, no one knows itâs impossible to keep.
Yes, I continue to treat people nicely, remember their names and ask about their last social media post, but itâs all part of a feigned behavior. Whatever drew me to them in the first place has long since shriveled and died.
Creighton is the exception to that phenomenon. My interest in him started like with anyone elseâmild, normal. Impersonal.
Little by little, itâs expanded into this boundless powerful interest thatâs swept through me from the inside out.
My attention to him hasnât waned. If anything, itâs grown more potent with every encounter, every stolen glance. Every touch.
Though theyâve never been sensual in nature.
As opposed to right now.
My hand tingles in Creightonâs, or more like my finger that I reached out. Thatâs all heâs holdingâor crushing in his palm. A mere finger.
He slides it away from his face and then drops it as if itâs an insignificant object. Beneath the apparent detachment, a much worse feeling lingers in his gazeâdisgust.
A familiar clamping clenches my chest, followed by a subtle ache behind my rib cage.
Oblivious to the tremble in the finger he just threw, Creighton springs up to a sitting position. I have to step back to keep from colliding with him.
My Tchaikovsky.
He really needs to stop moving so suddenly.
Or maybe Iâm the one who should move less jerkily.
Hugging my bag, I sit beside him and put on my best smile. âHi! I didnât see you at lunch, so I thought maybe youâd be hungry?â
He doesnât reply, but he doesnât need to. As much as Iâve tried to pull words out of him in the few weeks Iâve known him, Iâve come to the bitter realization that he just isnât the talkative type.
Worse, he takes the silent treatment game to the next level that makes you feel less than the dirt on his designer shoes.
For the record, my pride is wounded. Usually, Iâm able to befriend anyone. I tell them witty stories and smile and they fall for me, just like that.
The only exception is this six-foot-four wall of muscle.
But itâll be a cold day in hell before I give up.
So I dig into my bag and retrieve the purple containerânot the one I ate fromâand place it on his lap. âI made extra lunch, not salad; I know you donât like those. Jer was starving this morning, so I fixed him some shrimp and there were leftovers.â
Itâs actually the other way around, and my brother has the smallest portionâsorry, Jerâbut Creighton doesnât need to know that.
He stares at the container with that edge of his usual disapproval. Creighton has this permanent blank stare that makes it impossible to figure out what heâs feeling. Itâs worse than any mask and more effective than any camouflage.
And whenever he looks at something, you never know if heâs considering touching it or flat-out murdering it with his bare hands.
My gaze strays to those hands that are hanging nonchalantly on his knees. So the thing is, Creighton made me unlock a new fetishâhands.
Or maybe I had that before and it just became more prominent when he came into the picture.
He has these big hands, long fingers, and veins. Lots of veins snake over the backs of his hands with the promise of something sinister.
I quickly derail my attention from them or else there will be an embarrassing event where Iâll start drooling.
Creighton is still staring at the container, serious lines etched in his forehead, and I think heâll throw it away like he did my finger.
He doesnât.
But he doesnât open it either.
Just stares at it blankly. Then he grabs it, those veiny hands flexing on the lid, and starts to get up.
âYou couldâve told me you were paying me a visit last night and I wouldâve dressed up for the occasion. Unlessâ¦you wanted to see me half naked?â
He stops mid-rise, sits back down, and tilts his head in my direction. The blue of his eyes has subtly darkened and sharpened with a haunting edge.
Iâm not used to this type of expression from Creighton. Indifference is the most I get from him, but this?
Itâs like heâs picturing the best way to snap my neck.
Heat rises up my neck and to my ears, and I push down the tinge of fear thatâs gnawing on my insides.
I try to maintain my smile. âI know it was you. See, I might not have great attention to detail, but your eyes kind of gave you away. Donât worry, Jeremy is none the wiser. He did suspect that someone came into my room, but I was able to derail his attention andââ
One moment Iâm talking, the next a hand slams against my mouth.
Like last night.
He physically jerks me sideways so that my back hits the wooden pillar of the gazebo.
Only, this time, itâs his bare hand on my mouth and Iâm breathing straight through his fingers. Gone is the scent of soot and leather. Right now, he smells like clean clothes out of the dryer mixed with his natural spicy scent.
âWhat do you want?â
His question takes me off guard. Not just because he spoke in that gravelly, deep, and hot British accent, but also due to the fact that he thinks Iâm telling him all this because I want something.
âMmm,â I mumble against his hand.
âIâll only let you talk if you tell me what you want. If you chatter on, Iâm going to shut you up again.â
I nod once and he releases my mouth slowly. Though instead of stepping back, he remains so close, itâs hard to breathe properly.
Sometimes, I think he knows exactly what type of effect he has on peopleâand meâand still does this on purpose.
He still barges in uninvited with the sole intention of leaving a trail of devastation behind.
âWhy did you come to the Heathensâ mansion last night? Why did you burn the annex house? I didnât think you had a problem with the club or its members. Youâre not even part of the Elites, so it doesnât make sense that you would want to do that, right?â
He reaches his palm out again, but I put both my hands up. âOkay, okay. Thereâs no need to shut me up, but I canât tell you what I want unless you confess the reason.â
He stares at me. Blankly. His ânoâ is obvious.
I sigh. âThen I guess Iâll tell Jeremy about how you not only burned his property but also snuck into his sisterâs room.
. I canât guarantee he wonât be all savage.â
âIf you wanted to tell him, you wouldâve already.â The calm, rich timbre of his voice echoes around me like a song.
The one that haunts my waking and sleeping moments.
âI only wanted to give you a chance, and I did, but you chose not to take it. Thatâs just sad. One last chance to change your mind?â
âTell him.â
âYouâ¦youâre bluffing.â
âYou are.â
âW-what?â
âYou hate conflict so much that you hide from it like Little Miss Ostrich. Thatâs also why you didnât let that guard come in last night, then covered for me. Itâs completely out of character for you to personally create conflict, so yes, youâre bluffing, Annika.â
My lips fall open.
Oh. My. Tchaikovsky.
Please tell me Iâm not dreaming and that he actually said a whole paragraph. Oh, and he knows this much about me.
I didnât think he really knew anything about me, let alone my character.
Maybe I underestimated just how attuned to details he is.
âOkay, okay, you donât have to tell me the reason yet. Weâll get to that someday.â I link and unlink my fingers on my lap. âBut you asked me what I want, right?â
He raises his brows, and why the hell is such a simple gesture enough to trigger a flutter in my stomach?
As if thatâs not enough, a little part of me is whispering, whining, and absolutely grouching about where Iâm going with this.
But I canât just ignore the other part, the one thatâs yearning, living on borrowed air and needing to feel what itâs like to be alive.
To not just pretend Iâm living, popular, and loved, but to actually breathe life into my sheltered existence.
Still, my voice comes out small, unsure. âI want you to spend an hour with me every day. Alone.â
âDoing what?â
âI donât know, anything. Talking, just sitting here, reading, eating, maybe go shoppingâ¦â He scowls and I backtrack. âNo shopping, got it. We can watch a movie.â
âA movie lasts for more than an hour.â
âUh, okay. No movies either. But we can do everything else.â
âNo.â
My heart shrinks behind my rib cage, but I force a smile. âWhy not?â
âI will not date you.â
âIâ¦Iâm not asking you to date me.â
Okay, so maybe I was? But why the hell is he such a stone-cold asshole? Canât he hurt people more gently or something?
âAll the better then.â His face, expression, and tone are all caught in the freaking Arctic Ocean. âNo dating will happen.â
âHypothetically speaking, and only hypothetically, because this isnât a real situation, why do you not want to date me?â
He reaches a hand to my face again and I freeze as he lifts my chin with two fingers. A charge of electricity rushes through me like a slowly brewing storm.
Tension rises, clings to my skin, and rips through my bones. I shiver, but I still canât tear my gaze away from those ocean eyes.
Theyâre dark again, a manifestation of their ownerâs changing mood.
I donât know if the change is due to me or the fact that heâs touched me more in the span of twelve hours than he has in all the weeks Iâve known him.
But Iâm caught in his web.
Unable to move.
Absolutely trapped under the calloused touch of his lean fingers that dig into my sensitive skin with the lethality of a whip.
When he speaks, the low, deep words nearly paralyze me.
âHypothetically speaking, I have deviant tastes and violent tendencies for the opposite sex. Youâre so fucking breakable, Iâd crush you in no time.â
âHow are you, baby angel?â
I internally shake my head to focus on my motherâs radiating features.
Weâre FaceTiming like the coolest mother-daughter pair because thatâs a thing.
If Jeremy counts as Papaâs clone, Iâm Momâs successful attempt at a 2.0. Iâd like to point out that I would never be able to pull off her elegance, but we share the same petite features, the brown hairâthough mine is longerâand the round eye shape. Though mine have a lot of grayâlike Papaâs.
Hers are more haunting, as if theyâre harboring a tragic story. And I know they are. A long time ago, before I was born, Mom wasnât as happy as sheâs been during my life.
Another thing Mom will always beat me at is ballet. Lia Volkov was one of New York City Balletâs most renowned prima ballerinas. I spent my childhood watching her performancesâsecretly, because she wouldnât have liked itâand being spellbound. I wanted to be like her at any price, to fly into the sky and know exactly where to fall.
Am I at that point? Not really. Iâm at that crossroad where I have no clue whether I should focus on college or aim to be a professional ballerina instead. I fell in love with ballet at first sight at four years old, but I still find myself gravitating more toward academics. Since ballerinas have a short professional life, I donât want to be caught with nothing to do later on.
That is, if my future isnât already decided.
âOh, you know. Same old, same old.â I throw a hand in the general direction of my room in the Heathensâ mansion. âPlaying Jerâs prisoner for shits and giggles. Ivory tower and gilded cage are taking their turns with me.â
She does a horrible job of suppressing her smile.
âThis isnât funny.â
âI know, I know. You just look so adorable when you lash out all that sarcasm.â
âThanks, but I prefer beautiful instead of adorable. Considering my college status and my attempts to act older. And seriously, Mom, canât you talk to Jer so heâll give me some freedom? At this rate, Iâll die young and my ghost will start posting inspirational videos on TikTok.â
Laugh lines still linger on her face. âI did and his response was that heâs just looking out for you.â
âThatâs just an excuse to lock me up.â
âOne that your father wholeheartedly agrees with. You know he didnât want you out of his sight.â
âBecause Iâm a girl?â
Her eyes soften to the lightest blue. âBecause he has too many enemies and heâs worried about your security.â
My lip pushes forward, exaggeratingly pouty. âSo Iâm his weakness?â
âThe three of us are, but weâre his strength, too, Anni. You know that, right?â
âI do. But this still sucks.â
âI know. Iâm sorry.â
âDonât be. Itâs not your fault, and I get it. This is how itâs supposed to be. Iâm just being grouchy. Enough about me. How are things at home? Are you guys okay? Do you miss me?â
âLike crazy. Iâm currently convincing your father to find us a home on Brighton Island so we can live right beside you.â
âPlease donât. Papa will just bring an entire army along.â
âYou think?â
âDuh. Remember the last time we went to Russia for Christmas? I get chills thinking about all that security. And when I asked him, donât you think itâs too much? He was like .â I mimic Papaâs deadpan voice and Mom bursts out laughing. Even her laughter is as regal as she is.
âYouâre such a naughty hellion.â
âYou still love me.â
âOh, I do.â She sighs, then I sigh, too.
The thought thatâs been plaguing my every waking and sleeping moment pushes to the forefront and I pause, measuring my words.
âHey, Mom.â
âYes, baby angel?â
âIs Papa looking into possible suitors for me?â
A delicate frown appears between her brows. âWhat makes you think that?â
âIsnât that my destiny?â
âYouâre still young. Your father wonât marry you off when youâre just seventeen.â
âGoing on eighteen. And does it really matter if he does it now or a few years from now?â
âOh, Anni. Is that why you were hell-bent on going to college? Did you think you only had a few years before your freedom was confiscated?â
âIsnât that the case?â
âAdrian would never make you marry someone against your will. Do you have that little faith in your papa?â
âI have little faith in his world.
world. Women are just a flashy accessory and a currency for the highest bidder. Iâm aware that Iâm expected to strengthen the Bratvaâs alliances with anyone they deem worthy.â
âTheyâd have to kill me before Iâd let them use you as a pawn.â
âThanks, Mom. But I donât want to be the reason behind our familyâs misfortune. When the orders Papa to marry me off to one of the other leaderâs sons or into one of the crime organizations, the only thing he can do is agree.â
âHe wonât.â
âThen heâll just be labeled a traitor and be driven out.â
âAnniâ¦â
âItâs okay, Mom. I made peace with this fate a long time ago. Well, not really peace. Understanding, I guess.â
âNo, itâs not okay.â She inches closer to the phone, her expression serious. âYes, the world we live in is brutal, but that doesnât mean your papa and I wonât stand up for you. Besides, if you happen to fall in love, who would dare make you marry a stranger instead?â
My lips part.
How come Iâve never thought about this before? Well, I have, but I didnât think itâd make a difference.
That is, until Mom just confirmed it.
Papa wouldnât make me marry anyone against my will, but heâll be more convinced if I actually have a boyfriend.
Iâve never had one before. Sure, Iâve flirted and made as many friends as possible, but Iâve never made it official. That wouldâve meant putting the poor boy in direct conflict with Papa, Jeremy, and their equally ruthless guards.
Just thinking about the scowly face of Kolya, Papaâs senior guard, makes me shiver. Heâd rip the poor guy to pieces before he could even introduce himself to Papa.
But if it means Iâd get out of my predestined cruel fate, then maybe itâs worth a try.
âAnni? Are you still with me?â Momâs voice brings me out of my thoughts.
âUh, yeah. Whatâs up?â
âDonât tell your papa what you just told me or heâll be upset.â
âI will be upset about what?â
Momâs face brightens with a wide grin as he comes up behind her, leans down, and kisses the top of her head.
I want a man like Papa. Yeah. Heâs mean to everyone and you really donât want to meet him in a dark alleyâor even in broad daylightâbut heâs always treated Mom like a queen.
The mecca of his world.
The person who makes his darkness go away.
He strokes her cheek. âIâve been looking for you, Lenochka.â
âI was only gone for half an hour.â
âStill too much time.â
âUh, hello? Iâm right here, you guys. Thanks for noticing.â
Papa finally looks at the phone Mom is holding and smiles. Or as much as it could be called a smile for a badass mafia leader.
Donât care what anyone says. Those suckers in the New York Bratva would all be done for if it werenât for Papaâs strategic brain.
âAnoushka, isnât it late there?â
âNo, and youâre not dismissing me for alone time with Mom, Papa. Seriously, Iâm wounded.â
âYouâre being dramatic. Youâve been talking to her for half an hour.â
âBut, Papa!â
âNight, Anoushka. We love you.â
He takes the phone from Momâs hand and she laughs, then squeals as the line is cut off.
Now, I know what my parents are doing for the night.
I flop against my bed and stare at the glittering purple objects hanging from the ceiling.
My mind fills with all sorts of thoughts. The first is that I need to find a way out of my fate.
Okay, maybe thatâs not the first thing, because I havenât been able to stop thinking about Creightonâs words from yesterday.
I can still feel his deep voice against my ear and the furious shiver that overtook me right afterward.
That was definitely not what I expected someone like Creighton to say. He couldâve been lying, but he doesnât have a reason to.
Besides, heâs direct to a fault.
I was so stunned that I only snapped out of it after he took the lunch I made and strolled out of the gazebo.
In truth, Iâm still stunned.
That was obviously his warning to make me stay away, so why the hell am I even more intrigued with him now?
Just what does a twenty-year-old consider deviant and twisted?
I guess thereâs only one way to find out.