Filthy Promises: Chapter 23
Filthy Promises (Akopov Bratva Book 1)
Katerina Volkov is nothing like I expected.
Based on Irina Petrovâs ice-queen demeanor, I assumed all Russian mafia princesses would be cut from the same frigid cloth. But Katerina is warm, animated, with a laugh that actually sounds genuine.
Color me surprised.
She greets Vince with a kiss on both cheeks, then surprises me by extending the same courtesy.
âMs. St. Clair!â she crows happily. âA pleasure to meet Vinceâs right hand.â
I smile, instantly wrong-footed by her friendliness. âLikewise, Ms. Volkov.â
âPlease, call me Kat. Everyone does.â
Vince looks as surprised as I feel by her casual demeanor. Weâre seated at a prime table, Katerina and Vince facing each other, me at a slightly awkward third point in the triangle. Close enough to hear everything, not quite close enough to be fully part of the conversation.
Rowan the wallflower, as per usual.
âVince tells me youâre new to his team,â Katerina says to me as the waiter pours wine. âHow are you finding it?â
âItâs challenging,â I admit. âBut rewarding.â
âI imagine so.â She smiles knowingly. âVince has always been demanding.â
The way she says it implies history. I glance at Vince, who meets my gaze with unreadable eyes.
âYou two know each other well?â I ask, unable to help myself.
âSince childhood,â Katerina answers. âOur families have been⦠associated⦠for generations.â
âBusiness associates,â Vince clarifies, a warning note in his voice.
Katerina laughs. âIs that what weâre calling it now? How diplomatic of you, Vincent.â
The waiter returns to take our orders. While Vince and Katerina discuss the menu, I find myself studying her more closely. Sheâs beautiful in a natural wayâbright blond hair, striking bone structure, intelligent eyes.
But thereâs something else about her. A sadness that lingers behind her smile.
Vince orders for all of us, not bothering to ask what I want. The feminist in me loathes it. The cavewoman in me howls in delight.
As we wait for our first course, Katerina turns her attention back to me. âSo, Rowan, tell me about yourself. Where did you study?â
âOh, just upstate,â I reply, feeling suddenly inadequate next to her Harvard pedigree. âMarketing and Design.â
âImpressive!â Surprisingly, she sounds sincere. âCreativity combined with strategy. No wonder Vince snatched you up.â
Vince shifts in his seat, his hand going to his inside pocket as he adjusts his position.
My heart stops. The Polaroid. Is he going to find it now?
But his hand moves away without retrieving anything, and I exhale slowly.
âRowan has been an unexpected asset,â Vince says, his eyes locked on me. âFull of surprises.â
The double meaning isnât lost on me.
Or on Katerina, it seems.
âIâm sure she is,â Kat murmurs, her gaze shifting between us thoughtfully. âThe best ones always are.â
Our appetizers arriveâsteak for Vince, scallops for Katerina, calamari for me. I pick at my food, anxiety growing with each passing minute.
When will he find the photo? What will happen when he does?
Katerina and Vince fall into conversation about mutual acquaintances. I listen attentively, noting how much more comfortable Vince seems with her than he did with Irina.
They have chemistry, these two. Not romantic necessarily, but a natural rapport built on years of shared history. I feel a pang of something that might be jealousy, might be regret for what Iâve done.
âExcuse me,â Vince says after our main courses are cleared away. âI need to take this call.â
He pulls out his phone and steps away from the table, leaving me alone with Katerina.
She watches him walk away, then turns to me with a direct gaze. âSo. How long have you been in love with him?â
I choke on my wine. âExcuse me?â
âDonât bother denying it.â Her smile is sympathetic. âItâs written all over your face whenever you look at him.â
âIâI donâtââ I stammer, mortified.
âItâs okay.â She reaches across the table to pat my hand. âYour secret is safe with me.â
I take a deep breath. âWeâre just colleagues.â
âOf course.â She sits back, still smiling. âThough Iâm curious why he brought his âjust colleagueâ to whatâs supposed to be a date to determine his future wife.â When I donât answer, she continues, âUnless, of course, thereâs something else going on.â
âI donât know what you mean,â I lie.
âI think you do.â Katerina takes a sip of her wine. âVincentâs father is pushing him into a marriage of convenience. An alliance, not a love match. And Vincent is fighting it the only way he knows how.â
âBy bringing his assistant along?â
âBy showing his father heâs already made his choice.â
My heart hammers against my ribs. âYouâre mistaken.â
âAm I?â She glances toward where Vince stands, phone to his ear. âWatch what happens when he comes back. Watch how his eyes find you first, not me.â
I want to protest further, but Vince is already returning to the table.
And just as Katerina predicted, his eyes seek me out before settling on her.
âSorry about that,â he says, sliding back into his seat. âBusiness emergency.â
âItâs always business with you Akopovs,â Katerina teases. âSome things never change.â
As they resume their conversation, I notice Vince shifting in his seat again, his hand going once more to his inside pocket.
This time, his fingers make contact with something.
He pauses mid-sentence. A frown creases his brow. My pulse races as he pulls out the small envelope, glancing at it with confusion.
âWhatâs this?â he murmurs under his breath.
âSomething wrong?â Katerina asks.
âNo,â Vince says, quickly returning the envelope to his pocket without opening it. âJust a note I forgot about.â
But his eyes find mine across the table, questioning. Suspicious.
I smile innocently and take a sip of my wine, even as anxiety floods my system.
Oh, God⦠What have I done?
Katerina watches this exchange with knowing eyes. âPerhaps you should check that note,â she suggests. âIt might be important.â
âIt can wait,â Vince replies, but his hand stays near his pocket like he canât stand to be separated from it.
The tension at the table rises to unbearable levels. I canât believe what Iâve done. Canât believe I thought this was a good idea.
âI need to use the restroom,â I announce, desperate for a moment to collect myself.
âOf course,â Katerina says. âDown the hall to the left.â
I practically flee the table, feeling both their gazes on my back as I weave through the restaurant. In the restroom, I brace myself against the sink and stare at my reflection in the mirror.
âWhat the hell were you thinking?â I whisper to myself.
The woman in the mirrorâwith her blazing red dress and matching lipsâlooks like a stranger. A reckless, impulsive stranger who thought it would be fun to play with fire.
Oh, how wrong she was.
I splash some cold water on my wrists and neck, trying to calm down. I need to go back out there. I need to face whatever happens next.
When I return to the table, I find Vince alone, his expression thunderous.
âWhereâs Katerina?â I ask, sliding back into my seat.
âShe stepped outside to take a call.â His voice is dangerously quiet. âWhich gives us a moment to discuss this.â
He pulls out the envelope and places it on the table between us.
âCare to explain?â he asks.
âIt looks like an envelope to me,â I reply, aiming for nonchalance but missing by a mile.
âDonât play games, Rowan. Not about this.â
âIsnât that exactly what weâve been doing? Playing games?â I meet his gaze defiantly. âYou leave me notes about thinking of me when you come. You touch me under tables while on dates with other women. You tell me to wear certain colors, certain dresses, like Iâm your doll to dress up.â
âSo this is what? Revenge?â
âNo.â I swallow hard. âItâs me playing by your rules.â
He opens the envelope slowly, sliding the Polaroid just far enough out to see what it is, then quickly pushes it back in before anyone can see. His eyes darken to midnight as they lift to meet mine.
âWe will discuss this later,â he says, his voice tight with controlled fury.
Or is it desire?
âOf course, Mr. Akopov.â I smile sweetly. âWhatever you say.â
Katerina returns before he can respond, sliding gracefully back into her seat. âSorry about that. Family business.â She glances between us, sensing the charged atmosphere. âDid I miss anything interesting?â
âNot at all,â Vince says smoothly, though his eyes remain fixed on me. âWe were just discussing tomorrowâs schedule.â
âHow fascinating,â Katerina drawls, clearly not buying it. âWell, I hate to cut this short, but Iâm afraid I need to leave early. My uncle requires my presence at a family matter.â
I can tell from Vinceâs expression that he doesnât believe her excuse any more than he believes my innocent act.
âOf course,â he says, signaling for the check. âI understand completely.â
âIâm sure you do.â Katerina stands, gathering her purse. âIt was a pleasure meeting you, Rowan. I hope weâll see each other again sometime.â
âLikewise,â I respond automatically.
Vince rises to escort her out. Before they leave, Katerina leans in close to him, saying something I canât hear.
Whatever it is makes his jaw tighten.
As they walk away, I sit alone at the table, a storm of emotions raging inside me. Satisfaction that my plan workedâthe date is clearly over, cut short by whatever Katerina sensed between Vince and me.
Anxiety about what will happen when Vince returns.
And shame, creeping in around the edges, that I stooped to such petty tactics.
Iâm better than this.
Or at least, I thought I was.
Vince returns a few minutes later, his expression unreadable. âCarâs outside,â he says curtly. âLetâs go.â
I follow him silently, feeling smaller with each step. The vengeful satisfaction I felt earlier has curdled into shame. Iâm not this personâthis manipulative, jealous woman playing games with nude Polaroids.
Except apparently, I am.
In the car, Vince sits across from me. Neither of us speaks as we pull away from the curb, the tension between us thick enough to choke on.
Finally, unable to bear the silence any longer, I speak. âIâm sorry.â
âFor what, exactly?â His voice is cold. âFor slipping a nude photo into my pocket? For deliberately sabotaging my dinner? Or simply for getting caught doing it?â
âAll of it.â I stare down at my hands. âI donât know what I was thinking. It was childish. Petty.â
âYes.â He studies me for a long moment. âIt was also effective.â
I look up, surprised. âWhat?â
âKaterina told me sheâs withdrawing from consideration as my potential bride.â A small, rueful smile plays at his lips. âShe said, and I quote, âI wonât compete with the woman you actually want.ââ
My cheeks burn hot. âI didnât mean toâ ââ
âYes, you did.â He pulls out the envelope, turning it over in his hands. âThe question is, what do we do now?â
I have no answer for him. No clever retort. No strategy.
âI⦠I donât know.â
He smolders at me. âThen letâs see if we canât find some inspiration.â
My lungs fill with air so thick itâs like inhaling smoke. I canât breathe, canât think, canât do anything but watch as Vincent Akopovâcrime lord, future pakhan, and my personal sexual tormentorâslides the Polaroid from its envelope.
He examines my naked body. The seconds stretch between us, elastic and poisonous. My thighs are pressed together hard enough to crack bone.
Iâm a mess. Iâm an utter fucking mess.
âRowanâ¦â he growls finally, voice dropped to that register that turns my insides molten. My name alone is almost enough to make me combust. âDo you even understand what youâre doing?â
I canât speak. Can only shake my head.
âYou think this is about sex.â He leans forward, reducing the space between us to nothing. âItâs not.â
I swallow. âThen what is it about?â
âControl.â He reaches out, his fingertips grazing my knee where the slit in my dress reveals bare skin. âPower.â His hand slides higher, pushing the silk fabric with it. âOwnership.â
I should stop him. Actually, thatâs one of a million things I should do. Also on that list are âslap himâ and âscreamâ and âthrow myself out of the car if thatâs what it takes to get myself out of this disaster in the making.â
Instead, I part my thighs.
Just slightly.
Just enough.
âIf thatâs true,â I croak, amazed at how steady my voice sounds when Iâm disintegrating inside, âthen why are you the one who seems out of control right now?â
His jaw tightens, eyes narrowing to blue slits. âBecause youâre not supposed to exist.â
âWhat does that mean?â
âIt meansâ¦â He slides his hand higher, fingers dancing along my inner thigh. â⦠that you were supposed to be an easily dismissed diversion. Something simple to fill the time while I handled my fatherâs marriage demands.â
Heat blooms where he touches me.
âBut youâre not simple at all, are you, Rowan St. Clair?â His fingers reach the edge of my underwear, and he traces the seam with deliberate slowness. âYouâre a fucking complication.â
âI can stop,â I gasp, though we both know itâs a lie. âBeing a complication.â
âNo.â He presses against the thin fabric, finding the exact spot that makes me whimper. âI donât think you can.â
My head falls back against the seat as pleasure spirals through me. This is insanity. Weâre in the back of his car, driver separated only by a privacy partition that may or may not be soundproof.
âLook at me,â he commands.
I force my eyes open to find him watching me with an intensity that should terrify me. Maybe it does. Maybe terror and desire are just opposite sides of the same razor.
Maybe they both draw blood just the same.
âTell me to stop,â he says, fingers stroking faster now, âand I will.â
The words wonât come. Canât come. Because Iâve wanted thisâwanted himâfor five years. Because Iâm already soaking through the silk of my underwear. Because Iâm greedy and stupid and lost in the impossible reality of Vincent Akopov touching me like heâs starving for it.
âPlease,â I whisper instead.
His other hand slides around my neck, not squeezing, just holding. Possessing. âPlease what?â
âDonât stop.â
His smile is all predator. âGood girl.â
Then heâs pushing my underwear aside, sliding a finger into me, and Iâm not prepared for the shocking intimacy of it. My body clenches around him, desperate and hungry.
âFuck,â he growls. âYouâre tight.â
I bite my lip to keep from moaning as he adds a second finger, stretching me in the most delicious way. My hips rise to meet his hand, shameless in my need.
âThatâs it,â he murmurs, his own breath coming faster now. âTake what you want.â
Iâm so close already, embarrassingly close, whenâ â
Lights flash through the window. A horn blares. Vinceâs head snaps up, his body tensing.
âWhat theâ ââ
The impact comes before he can finish the thought.
Metal screams against metal as our car spins wildly. My body flies forward, then slams back. Glass shatters. Vinceâs arm shoots out protectively across my chest as weâre thrown sideways.
The world tilts.
Turns upside down.
Goes black.