Chapter 6
Sinful Blaze (Chekhov Bratva Book 1)
âHonestly, I donât know why I even bother these days.â
I stop myself from rolling my eyes. These days? Since when has she ever bothered at all?
Ophelia Hamish, lifelong silver spoon socialite, wife of the former president of Chekhov International, and mother to two beautiful daughters whoâd rather have nothing to do with her, dramatically sighs and sets her literal silver spoon on the even daintier matching saucer. âI mean, really. This whole thing is utterly ridiculous.â
âYouâre telling me.â I try to hide my mumble behind the tiny, gold-rimmed teacup filled with what I think might be chamomile.
But to my bad luck, she hears me.
âYou need to apologize.â
I damn near spray the tea all over my mother. âFucking excuse me?â
âDaphne Elizabeth! Please!â Mother glances around and shoots me her best scolding look. âI know itâs difficult for you to act like a lady, but I must insist you maintain some decorum. I wonât be publicly disgraced any more than you and your sister have already done.â
I wince. As much as I tell myself I donât care, that one kinda stings.
âIn any case,â she continues, âIâve had many talks with the Ewings and they assured me that the weddingâs still on. Granted that you can swallow your pride.â
Now, itâs my turn to shoot her a scathing glare.
Under absolutely no circumstances, at all, whatsoever, am I âapologizingâ to Sidney Conrad Ewing. For what? Not being sleazy enough? âYou do realize, Mother, that heâs the one who left me?â I keep my voice sugary-sweet just for her benefit. âHe canât keep it in his pants to save his life. Thatâs hardly something I need to apologize for.â
She scoffs. âWell, it wouldnât hurt you to put in a little more effort. Dress up a bit more. Wear those diamond earrings he gave you for your anniversary. Show him youâ ââ
âHow can I wear them when theyâre on his fiancéeâs ears?â I stab my salad viciously with my fork. âOr did you forget that, too?â
Mother rolls into another one of her prepared speeches about a womanâs duty to âkeep her man interestedâ and how Iâm disgracing the family by not throwing myself at his feet and begging me to take him back.
To be honest? I donât think he would.
Not now, anyway.
Things have changed.
I nudge the leather bag at my feet just to reassure myself itâs still there. In my worst nightmares, I drop the bag and whatâs inside goes skittering across the floor to land at the feet of the last person I want to know about my not-so-little secret.
Who that person is, Iâm still not sure.
Conrad?
Brittany?
Mother?
One face in particular suddenly comes to mind. Itâs the same face Iâve been dreaming about for four months, ever since that wild night at the gallery.
âWell, what do you think?â
I snap out of my daydream and blink at Mother. She stares at me expectantly, which means sheâs asked me a question I definitely donât have the answer to. âI, um⦠sure. Sounds good.â I take another bite of my tasteless salad just for the excuse to not be able to talk.
Mother rolls her eyes yet again. âPointless. Everything is pointless. You are no help, either! I ask you for one simple thing and itâs like you think I want you to pull your own teeth out.â
Doing favors for you tends to feel that way. âSorry, Mom. You got me thinking about Conrad and I kind of drifted off.â
I hate groveling to her. But I hate when she makes a sceneâand then passes the blame onto meâeven more.
So, when she sighs and her harsh expression softens, I canât help but to let out a sigh of relief myself.
One less disaster to navigate.
Hopefully.
Maybe.
My relief is short-lived because my phone starts vibrating on the table. Mother expects me to at least check it to see if itâs Conrad; right now is no exception. One super quick glance confirms itâthe devil himself is trying to call me for the umpteenth time today.
Just like heâs been calling me every day, practically nonstop, for nineteen weeks and counting.
Usually, his calls are paired with simultaneous texts from Brittany warning me to âstay away from her manâ and âstick to my laneâ and whatever else she can think of to stake her so-called territory.
At this rate, Iâm surprised she hasnât peed around his house.
Or maybe she has. I wouldnât put it past her.
âAre you going to answer him?â
Shit. She saw the screen.
I try not to make a face as I turn off the vibration and tuck the phone into my bag. âI donât want to be rude. Iâm having lunch with my mother, and he needs to respect that.â
This does help preen her feathers, so to speak. Mother sits up a bit straighter and offers me a peacekeeping smile. âWell, even so. His parents keep saying how despondent heâs been since the breakup. You could throw the poor man a bone.â
I just love how everyone has made Conradâs infidelity and selfishness my problem. Like Iâm the one who cheated on him with his longtime rival, threw him out on his ass, and then made him worship the ground I walk on for the sake of his job.
Oh, waitâthat was him who did all that to me.
And honestly, whenever I think about everything that happened afterwards, itâs still not even remotely close to my fault. Itâs not my fault I got swept off my feet by some hot Russian bajillionaire who looked like sin and tasted like chaos.
That was allâ¦Â ahemâ¦Â what was I saying?
Focus, Daph.
âHonestly, Mom, I donât think Conrad will want me back. At all. Ever.â
She frowns. Mostly because she hates being called âMom,â especially in public (because itâs so uncouth for our âsocial echelon,â or some bullshit like that). But also because she canât envision a world in which her carefully manipulated plans donât work in her favor.
Like Sidney Conrad Ewing wanting me for his bride.
âWhy not? You come from good breeding, high status, exceptional education. Sure, you had a little tiff. All lovers do. Heâ ââ
âIâm pregnant.â
Mother freezes mid-sip. I decide the radish on the edge of my plate is fascinating and opt to stare at that rather than see her veins literally ice over.
âWhat. Did. You. Just. Say?â
I clear my throat and try to delay with a sip of my own tea. Another cough. A silent prayer that the waitress walking by with a tray of crystal water glasses will dump them all over me.
Anything to distract Mother from her oncoming tirade.
âDaphne.â
âHm?â I ask innocently.
âWhat did you just say?â
I purse my lips. Nudge the bag at my feet once more. Debate on waving the wrapped pee stick in front of me like a fencing saber to fend off whatever is about to come next.
In the end, though, the damage is already done. âIâm pregnant.â
Mother stares at me. Then, without missing a beat, she returns to her meal. âWell, then thatâs that. Obviously, you have to go back to Conrad, andâ ââ
âItâs not his.â
If the first bombshell didnât do it, the second one sure does.
I think I seeâyup, there it is. The frigid fury sheâs spent decades honing into her most powerful weapon. The Ophelia Hamish Special. It starts in the stillness of her fingertips as they clutch the silverware and slowly spreads up her arms, to her chest, and then the rest of her body until her face becomes this frozen, unreadable mask.
Itâs honestly impressive.
At least, it would be, if it wasnât currently aimed at me.
âWho the hell else could it belong to?â
Her sugary-sweet voice is promise aplenty that hell itself is about to open wide and swallow me whole. Shit, sheâs about to drag me down there herself.
I donât know how to answer her. Not just for my own self-preservation, but, like⦠literally. I donât know how to tell her about the complete stranger who came to my rescue at the eleventh hour and not only pretended to be my date, but literally, literally burned millions of dollars on exacting vengeance for me.
And then taught me what full-bodied, screaming orgasms actually feel like.
He gave me his first name and his phone number. That should have been plenty for me to find him and just⦠follow up. See if thereâs something actually there, or if it was mutually a one-time thing.
Not that it canât be a one-time thing.
Just⦠the thought of returning to mediocre limp fish flopping between my legs is enough to make me cry.
I think Iâve stared at that open text conversation every morning, afternoon, and evening since we parted ways.
I wake up, wonder if todayâs the day I finally test the waters and send him a simple Hey, then remind myself the thousand reasons why thatâs a terrible idea.
At night, I wonder if his sheets are as cold and empty as mine. Maybe he could come over to my new apartment and help me christen my new bed⦠and bathroom⦠and couch⦠and kitchenâ¦
But men like him live entirely different existences from women like me. Heâs probably making a new woman scream his name every night. Several at once, even. I wouldnât be surprised if he has more of a harem situation than a little black book of conquests.
Now, Iâm carrying the third thing he gave me that night.
And the fact that Iâd sooner confess to my overbearing, hyper-controlling, narcissistic Medusa of a mother before I send the father of my unborn child a text should be evidence enough of how chickenshit I really, truly am.
âIâd rather not say.â
Motherâs brow pops back up. ââYouâd rather not sayâ? Or you donât actually know?â
I hate how the jab lands. It shouldnât affect me at all, but it does. âThe fuck is your problem?â I hiss.
âWatch your language, young lady!â She glances around the room for the hundredth time just to make sure no one she knows is eavesdropping. âFor your information, youâre my problem. You and your sister. I canâtâ¦â
Oh. Oh, dear Lord.
Sheâs crying.
Mother melts her icy facade enough to collapse back in her chair like someone just bitchslapped the anger out of her body. Now, all thatâs left is self-pity and a dramatic sense of injustice.
âI cannot believe how far our family has fallen!â Her voice pitches high but manages to stay quiet. âYour grandmother would roll in her grave if only she knew.â
Now is not the time to roll my eyes.
Now is not the time to roll my eyes.
Now is not the time to remind her that Grandma didnât give two shits about anyone or anything if it didnât involve Canasta.
I bite the inside of my cheek to suppress the smile I want so badly to show in fond memory of my grandmother. She really was a lovely woman. Kind, selfless, and a hell of a baker.
I have no idea how she managed to birth the witch now wailing across the table from me.
âI know I raised you girls better than this! Melanie, for damn sureâand how does she repay me for everything? Now, we canât even show our faces at the country club and that would be bad enough, but⦠Daphne? Are you listening to me?â
âYeah. Sorry.â
Not even a little bit.
Melanie, my younger sister, is the lucky one. Which is hilarious to say, because she was dragged through the mud, chewed up, spit out, then rolled into social sushi when word spread that she had a seriousâand seriously sexyâincome as a webcam girl during college.
Iâm not sure which was worse in my motherâs eyes: the fact that she wore skimpy lingerie for thousands of viewers to ogle, or that she made bank on said activity. Iâm pretty sure that, if she had just done a few things and only had a few followers, the whole thing would have been swept under the rug.
But Mel never did stuff halfway. She was raking it in, living well, living free.
Until some asshole decided to expose her. To our parents, no less.
Thatâs the most messed-up part of the whole situation. No one really knows why the guy went out of his way to utterly ruin my familyâs reputation. It didnât matter that Melanie never actually slept with anyone, or that sheâd left that hobby behind long before she wed, or that she was married now to a man who knew all along and didnât care.
What mattered were the words people threw at her.
Slut.
Skank.
Whore.
Unforgivable.
Unlovable.
Unworthy.
Disgusting. Disgusting. Disgusting.
It was my motherâs worst nightmare. My fatherâs, too. All this money and prestige, and yet Mr. and Mrs. Hamish couldnât afford to bring up perfectly chaste daughters to marry off into high society. And so the inevitable conclusionâ¦
There must be something wrong with them, too.
Whoever exposed Melanie did it for a reason. I still think it had less to do with my sister and more to do with my parents. Why waste time and energy on your enemies when a simple, fact-based rumor can destroy them while you sleep?
âSo I must ask you again, Daphne Elizabeth Haâ ââ
âCovington.â I narrow my eyes at her in low warning. âMy last name is Covington now.â
âDonât remind me. Your sisterâs idea, Iâm sure.â
Wrong again. Iâm the one who chose to give myself a new name. A fresh start.
Mother shifts in her seat, straightens, and does her best to regain control over this conversation thatâs gone wildly off the rails. âI must ask you,â she firmly repeats, âdo you, or do you not, know who the father is?â
I sigh. Might as well concede a little here. âI know who he is.â
âWhatâs his name?â
I just shake my head.
âDaphne! My God!â Mother sighs with exasperation and no small amount of frustration. âYou cannot sit here and tell me you plan on raising this child by yourself. Without any help, financial or otherwise, from the father. What will people think?â
âThat Iâm a strong, independent woman who doesnât need a man?â
She rolls her eyes. âPlease. Thatâs only what ugly, poor people think. Youâ ââ
âI cannot believe you just said that.â I pluck my napkin off my lap and plop it onto the table, because fuck propriety. âI need to use the restroom. Excuse me.â
âDaphââ
I avoid looking at her while I shove my seat back. I need a moment to collect myself before I lay into her and really cause a scene. But when I take another deep breath and flick my gaze up to try to soothe things with a small smile, I stop.
Mother is staring over my shoulder, wide-eyed and pale.
Like sheâs seeing a ghost sitting behind me.
âWhat is he doing here?â she hisses under her breath.
âWho?â I twist around to see for myself.
My stomach flips.
My lungs forget how to function.
âThe man who ruined us. Who ruined our lives. The man who exposed your sister.â