Filthy Promises: Chapter 33
Filthy Promises (Akopov Bratva Book 1)
Itâs a Tuesday morning when I wake up feeling like death warmed over.
My head pounds. My throat feels like Iâve swallowed glass. Every muscle aches. But I drag myself to work anyway, because I canât afford to miss a day. Momâs medical bills donât pay themselves.
At least, thatâs what I tell myself. The truth is more pathetic: I canât bear to go a day without seeing Vince.
âYou look terrible,â Diane observes as I stumble to my desk.
âThanks,â I croak, wincing at how raw my throat feels. âJust allergies.â
She eyes me skeptically but doesnât push.
I make it through the morning on sheer stubbornness, choking down Dayquil and drowning myself in tea. But by lunchtime, the room is spinning.
Iâm fumbling with some papers when Vince emerges from his office. âThe Xiao proposal needs revisions beforeââ He stops mid-sentence, eyes narrowing as he takes me in. âYouâre sick.â
âIâm fine,â I insist, even as a violent shiver wracks my body.
He crosses to my desk in three long strides and presses the back of his hand to my forehead. âYouâre burning up. Why the hell are you at work?â
âI have deadlines.â I try to stand and immediately regret it as the room tilts alarmingly.
Vince catches me before I can fall, his arm strong around my waist. âThatâs it. Youâre going home.â
âI canât,â I protest weakly. âThe Hong Kong conference callâ ââ
âCan be rescheduled.â His voice leaves no room for argument. âDiane, clear my afternoon. Ms. St. Clair is ill, and Iâm taking her home.â
Diane raises an eyebrow but doesnât comment. Sheâs seen too much working for the Akopovs to be surprised by anything.
âHer home or yours?â she asks quietly.
âMine,â Vince replies without a morsel of shame. âShe needs proper care.â
I want to objectâto maintain some semblance of professional boundariesâbut Iâm too dizzy to form a coherent argument.
The next thing I know, Iâm being bundled into his car, his jacket wrapped around my shoulders as I shiver despite the heat blasting from the vents.
âYouâre an idiot,â he mutters, though thereâs no real anger in his voice. âWhy didnât you call in sick?â
âCanât miss work,â I mumble through chattering teeth. âNeed the⦠the⦠m-money.â
He simply scowls. âYouâre paid whether youâre in the office or not, Rowan. Thatâs how salaried positions work.â
I try to respond, but another wave of dizziness washes over me. I close my eyes against the nauseating motion of the car.
âJust rest,â Vince sighs, his hand settling on my knee. Not sexual for once. Just comforting. âWeâll be home soon.â
Home. As if his penthouse is my home, too.
The journey passes in a blur. Vince half-carries me from the car to the elevator, then through his penthouse to the guest bedroomânot his room, I note with a pang of something that feels dangerously like disappointment.
He helps me out of my work clothes and into one of his t-shirts, his touch clinical rather than seductive.
âInto bed,â he orders. âIâll get medicine.â
I obey, sinking into the soft mattress with a grateful sigh. My head is pounding, my body alternating between fire and ice.
And not in the fun way. This feels more like torture.
Vince returns with a glass of water, pills, and a cold compress. He sits on the edge of the bed, helping me sit up enough to swallow the medication.
âThank you,â I whisper, my voice a raspy mess.
âDonât talk.â He places the compress on my forehead. âJust sleep.â
I catch his wrist as he starts to rise. âStay? Just for a minute?â
I expect him to refuse. To cite work or meetings or any of the thousand things more important than watching me sleep.
Instead, he settles beside me, his back against the headboard. âJust until you fall asleep.â
I curl onto my side. My head comes to rest against his thigh. His hand hesitates, then settles on my hair, stroking gently.
âMy mother used to do this,â he murmurs softly, after what feels like a long silence. âWhen I was sick as a child. Before everything changed.â
My eyes flutter open, surprised by this rare glimpse into his past. âWhat changed?â
Heâs quiet for so long I think he wonât answer. When he does, his voice is distant, as if speaking from another time, another place.
âI was ten when my father first took me to a Bratva meeting. I thought it was just business. Men in suits talking numbers.â His fingers continue their gentle movement through my hair. âThen they brought in a man who had stolen from my father. Made me watch what happened to him.â
I swallow painfully. âWhat did they do?â
âNothing you need to hear about.â His voice hardens briefly, then softens again. âMy mother found out. She tried to take me away. To America, away from the Bratva. Away from my fatherâs world.â
âWhat happened?â
âMy father caught us at the airport.â His hand stills in my hair. âHe gave my mother a choice. Stay and accept our life, or leave without me.â
The implications hit me through my fever-haze. âShe chose to stay.â
âFor me,â he confirms. âShe gave up her freedom for me. And Iâve been paying for that sacrifice ever since.â
âBy becoming what your father wanted.â
He laughs bitterly. âNot just what he wanted. What he needed. His heir. His perfect soldier. The son who would never question, never resist, never fail.â
âBut you do question,â I whisper, fighting to stay awake despite the medicine pulling me under. âYou resist in your own way.â
His hand resumes its stroking. âNot enough. Never enough.â
âIs that why youâre going through with the arranged marriage? For her?â
âAmong other reasons.â Something in his voice shifts, closes off. âBut thatâs enough family history for one day. Sleep now.â
I want to ask more. Why stay in a life he resents?
But the pills are working, dragging me down into darkness. The last thing Iâm aware of is Vinceâs hand in my hair and the strange, tender quality of his voice as he says, âIâll be here when you wake up.â
I believe him.
And thatâs the most dangerous thing of all.
I drift in and out of consciousness as the fever burns through me.
Each time I surface, Vince is thereâoffering water, adjusting blankets, checking my temperature with a gentleness I didnât know he possessed.
âYou donât have to stay,â I mumble during one lucid moment. âIâm sure you have better things to do than play nurse.â
His mouth slants. âLike what?â
âI donât know. Running your empire. Intimidating business rivals. Counting your money Scrooge McDuck style.â
He actually laughs at thatâa real laugh, not his usual sardonic chuckle. âIâll have you know my money-counting pool is being cleaned this week.â
I smile weakly, then fall into a coughing fit that makes my ribs ache.
Vinceâs amusement vanishes instantly. He helps me sit up, holding a glass of water to my lips. âSmall sips.â
I obey, letting the cool liquid soothe my raw throat. âIâm sorry. For being such a burden.â
His eyes narrow. âIs that what you think you are? A burden?â
âWhat else would you call it? Youâre stuck here babysitting me instead of doing⦠whatever crime lords do on Wednesday afternoons.â
âIâm not stuck anywhere.â His voice takes on that hard edge Iâve come to recognize as genuine emotion breaking through his controlled facade. âIâm exactly where I want to be.â
Something shifts in my chest at his words. Something scary and warm that has nothing to do with my fever.
âWhy?â I ask before I can stop myself.
He looks away, jaw tightening. âYou need rest, not an interrogation.â
âVince.â I catch his hand, forcing him to look at me. âWhy are you taking care of me?â
For a moment, I think he wonât answer. Then: âBecause no one takes care of you, Rowan. Youâre always the one caring for othersâyour mother, your friends, even me in your own way. Someone should return the favor occasionally.â
His honesty steals my breath more effectively than the fever.
âOh,â is all I can manage.
His smile turns rueful. âDonât look so surprised. Iâm not completely heartless.â
âI never thought you were,â I whisper.
And itâs true. For all his danger, all his darkness, Iâve never believed Vince Akopov is without a heart.
Iâve just been terrified of what might happen if I found it.
No. I canât go down that road. Canât let myself think about hearts and feelings and anything beyond the physical connection we share. That way lies nothing but devastation.
âSleep,â he says, squeezing my hand once before releasing it. âDoctor will be here in a few hours to check on you.â
âDoctor? You called a doctor for the flu?â
âI called my doctor for you,â he corrects. âAnd we donât know itâs the flu.â
I sink back against the pillows, lacking the energy to argue. âThank you.â
He nods, then hesitates at the door. âNeed anything else before I make some calls?â
Just you, I think treacherously. I just need you.
âNo,â I say instead. âIâm fine.â
The doctor confirms itâs a nasty strain of flu, prescribes rest, fluids, and medication Iâm pretty sure isnât available to normal people without black market connections.
I sleep most of the day away, waking in the evening to find Vince sitting in a chair beside the bed, reading something on his tablet.
âYouâre still here,â I croak.
He looks up, setting the tablet aside. âWhere else would I be?â
âLiterally anywhere else? Running your criminal empire? Dating potential brides?â
A flicker of annoyance crosses his face. âI can run things from here. And Iâve postponed the next meeting with Anastasia.â
That gets my attention. âWhy?â
âBecause I have more important matters to attend to.â His eyes are unreadable in the dim light. âHow are you feeling?â
âLike Iâve been hit by a truck.â I push myself to sitting, wincing at the ache in my muscles. âBut better than this morning.â
âGood.â He rises, coming to sit on the edge of the bed. His hand presses against my forehead, cool and gentle. âFeverâs down.â
I lean into his touch without thinking. âWhy are you being so nice to me?â
âWould you prefer I treat you cruelly?â The corner of his mouth lifts. âI can arrange that, if it would make you more comfortable.â
âNo, itâs justâ¦â I struggle to find the words. âThis isnât⦠what we do.â
âAnd what is it we do, exactly?â
Heat that has nothing to do with fever creeps up my neck. âYou know what I mean.â
âSex,â he says bluntly. âWe fuck. We satisfy a mutual physical need.â
Put so crudely, it sounds sordid. Small. Less beautiful than what it feels like when heâs inside me, when heâs making me fall apart in his arms.
âYes,â I agree, though it feels like a lie.
âAnd you think thatâs all there is between us?â
My heart stutters. This is unprecedented territory. âIsnât it?â
âNo. Itâs not.â He doesnât elaborate, though. He just studies me for a long moment, his expression unreadable. âAre you hungry?â
The abrupt change of subject leaves me reeling. âA little.â
âGood. Iâll have something brought up.â He stands, moving toward the door. âAny requests?â
âSoup would be nice,â I say, still trying to process the conversation we almost had. The question he didnât answer.
âSoup it is.â
He pauses at the door, looking back at me with an expression I canât decipher.
For a moment, I think he might say something more.
Instead, he simply nods and leaves.