Dance of Deception: Chapter 40
Dance of Deception: A Dark Forced Marriage Mafia Romance
Carmine is still unconscious.
His head is slumped forward, his chest rising and falling in slow, heavy breaths. Even though the gash on his temple has stopped bleeding, the sight of him motionless, bound to a chair, sends a fresh wave of anguish curling through me.
But heâs alive. For now.
Vera finishes binding him tight before stepping back. âDonât waste your energy struggling, Lyra,â she mutters. âYouâre not getting out of this.â
I ignore her, my eyes flicking back to Carmine, his breath slow but steady. My voice is shaking. âLet him go.â
Vera barely looks at me. She adjusts the gun in her grip, her lips pressing together in thin, tight contempt.
âThis isnât about him.â I see a crack in her expression and press my advantage. âThis is between you and me, isnât it.â
She snaps, letting out a cold, hollow laugh. Itâs thin, strainedâdangerously close to unraveling. She starts pacing, the gun still clutched in her hand.
I inhale sharply. âWhat is this really about?â
Vera scoffs, shaking her head, her lips curling.
âYou have no idea what itâs like to be trapped.â
I flinch at the pure, unadulterated venom in her voice.
She inhales raggedly, her shoulders rising with the effort.
âI spent years under his thumb,â she mutters. âLetting that man dictate everything in my life. I couldnât breathe, couldnât thinkâevery move I made was about keeping him happy and satisfied, so I didnât get thrown in the fucking basement with the others.â
âSo to save yourself, you helped him,â I say icily. âYou helped him take those girls down here and rape them, and torture them, and kill themâ ââ
âAfter I had that monster cremated,â she spits, her voice dropping lower, turning to steel coated in acid, âI dumped his fucking ashes down a sewer.â
Vera shakes her head, scoffing.
âYou think I didnât do what I could? Didnât try to help you?â
I let out a sharp, bitter, incredulous laugh.
âWere you ever down here, Lyra?â she whispers.
My stomach turns.
âWere you ever in one of the cages playing fucking dress up with him?â she asks coldly. âBleeding and crying as he raped you raw with chains around your neck?â
My eyes squeeze shut, and I turn away as bile rises within me.
âNo,â Vera hisses. âYou werenât.â Her nostrils flare, her grip tightening on the gun. âI did what I had to do. What I had to do to survive.â
âIt was your job to protect me!!â I scream at her. âYouâre my MOTHER!â
âSheâs not.â
I gasp, whipping my head around.
Carmineâs voice is low and shaky, but his words cut through me like a blade.
Suddenly, I canât move. Canât even think.
His head is still tilted forward, blood trailing down his temple, but his eyes are locked steadily on mine.
âVera isnât your mother,â he rasps, not taking his eyes off me. âArkadi wasnât your father. And Alisonâ¦â He swallows. âShe wasnât your aunt.â
The room tilts.
My pulse skips a beat.
âAlison was your mother, Lyra.â
The words hit like a wrecking ball, crushing my ribs, punching through my lungs, cracking my spine.
Carmine keeps going as my stomach drops into freefall.
âHer name was Alison Vos.â His voice is relentless, cutting the last fragile threads of my sanity. âShe went missing twenty-three years ago, not far from hereâjust a few towns away, actually.â
I squeeze my eyes shut, my fingers curling into the ropes at my wrists.
No.
âIt was initially assumed that she fell into the Hudson while rock climbing,â Carmine murmurs. âButâ¦â He grits his teeth, raising his eyes to let his gaze sweep eloquently over the room.
I feel like Iâm drowning.
âNo,â I whisper. âThatâs notâ ââ
But I already know itâs true.
The necklace. The photo. Everything.
It all clicks into place, in the worst possible way.
Vera sinks into a chair suddenly, like her knees just gave out. She looks⦠haggard. Worn. Haunted.
âAlison was one of his first,â she says quietly. âAnd she was pregnant.â Veraâs voice is tired and monotone. She lifts her eyes, her lips tight. âYou were born here, Lyra,â she says quietly. âIn this very room.â
This time, thereâs no stopping it. I turn my head and throw up violently, all over the floor.
âYou have no idea what it was like,â Vera whispers as I dry heave, spitting bile onto the cement. Her voice is full of an emotion I canât quite placeâguilt, grief, or maybe something heavier than both.
âI was his, Lyra. He owned me. I never once had a choice.â She swallows, dragging a trembling hand through her hair. âYou think I wanted to watch? To know?â Her eyes flick to mine, and for the first time, I see a glimmer of humanity in them, however haunted and broken. âI knew what he was doing. I always knew.â
My throat closes.
âThen whyââ My voice splinters.
âHe had a way of making you believe he was the only thing keeping you safe.â Vera exhales sharply, her shoulders curling inward, shrinking in on herself. âEven when he was the one destroying you.â She shakes her head. âYou donât understand what it was like to be trapped in his world. To be in too deep to claw your way out. I shouldâve fought harder. Butâ ââ
Her voice cuts off, her jaw tightening. Then she takes a deep, shaky breath and lifts her chin. âShe had you right there, in that corner,â Vera murmurs, nodding toward the shadows in the back of the room. âShe lasted two weeks. Long enough to hold you. Long enough for a photo. And then⦠She died.â
I canât breathe.
âShe never got to leave this place,â Vera whispers, her voice distant, lost somewhere I canât reach. âBut I raised you like you were mine. I did my best.â
âYes, you raised her like a daughter. But you never tried to get her out,â Carmine snarls. âYou never tried to change her situation.â
Veraâs face twists, fury flashing in her eyes.
âI DID TRY!â she screams, her voice fracturing, breaking apart. âYou donât know what I went through! What I had to do to survive him!â
The last word rip out of her like a dying breath.
âI tried!â she chokes. âIâ ââ
The lights flicker. Then suddenly, the whole room is plunged into total darkness.
âFucking breakers,â Vera mutters bitterly. Her phone flashlight illuminates the floor and her own feet as she stands. She stomps across the room, the phone light swinging up to a circuit breaker box set into the concrete wall. She opens it, flips a heavy switch, and the lights flicker back on with a buzzing sound.
âShe did try to help you, Lyra.â
The voice is like a knife driving slowly into my throat. Like cold steel slicing over my skin, flaying me open as I drown in my own screams and blood.
That voice shouldnât exist outside of my nightmares. The man it belongs to is dead. Cremated. His ashes thrown down a sewer.
The whole world goes numb and cold as slowly, like in a dream or underwater, I start to swivel my head around.
âShe left the door open for you that day.â
Suddenly, Iâm looking the Devil himself in the eye.
His lips curl into a dark, predatory smile.
âGood to see you again, moya dorogaya dochâ,â my father growls quietly.