Filthy Promises: Chapter 34
Filthy Promises (Akopov Bratva Book 1)
A few days later, with the flu in my rearview mirror, I go back to work. Iâve been at my desk for a grand total of two hours when the hospital calls.
âMs. St. Clair?â Dr. Patelâs voice is carefully neutral, but Iâve been around doctors long enough to recognize when theyâre padding bad news with professional detachment.
âWhat happened?â I grip the edge of my desk, suddenly dizzy despite being seated. âIs she okay?â
âYour mother has experienced what we call a cascade failure. Multiple systems showing stress simultaneously.â
The room seems to tilt. âEnglish, please, Dr. Patel.â
He sighs. âThe cancer has spread more aggressively than we anticipated. Her liver function is declining, and there are new masses in her lungs.â
âBut the treatment was working.â My voice cracks. âYou said the numbers were improving.â
âIt was. They were. But sometimes, cancer adapts.â
I close my eyes. Cancer adapts. Cancer evolves. Cancer finds a way. Iâve heard all the metaphors before, each one making this disease sound more like a supervillain than a collection of mutated cells.
âWhat are our options?â I ask, even though I already know the answer wonât be good.
âThereâs an experimental protocolâimmunotherapy combined with targeted radiation. Itâs showing promising results in cases like your motherâs.â
âHow promising?â
Dr. Patel pauses. âForty-three percent remission rate in the initial trials.â
Not great. Not terrible. Just the same coin flip weâve been gambling on for years now.
âAnd the cost?â I ask, bracing myself.
When he names the figure, I actually laugh. A short, bitter, bracing sound that has nothing whatsoever to do with humor.
âThatâs more than I make in a year,â I tell him. âEven with my promotion.â
âI understand this is difficult, Ms. St. Clair.â His voice softens. âBut without the treatment, your motherâs prognosis is⦠limited. Weeks, perhaps. A few months at most.â
The world narrows to a pinpoint. Weeks. Months. I knew this day would come eventually, but I thought we had more time. I thought the regular treatments were working. I thoughtâ â
âMs. St. Clair? Are you still there?â
âYes.â I force myself back to the present. âWhen does she need to start?â
âAs soon as possible. Ideally, within the next two weeks.â
âIâll figure something out.â The words come automatically, the same promise Iâve been making since I was eleven years old. Iâll figure something out, Mom. Iâll take care of everything.
After more details and a few unhelpful platitudes, I hang up. My hands are shaking so badly that I drop my phone twice before managing to set it on my desk.
Two weeks to come up with a small fortune.
Impossible.
Even if I emptied my savings, sold everything I own, and maxed out every credit card I could get my hands on, I wouldnât come close.
I could ask Vince for a loan. The thought bursts into my mind unwanted, unwelcome.
No. Absolutely not.
My relationshipâif you can call it that, which you shouldnâtâwith Vincent Akopov is already complicated enough without adding financial desperation to the mix.
Besides, what would I even say? Hey, remember all those times you fucked me silly? Could you maybe pay for my momâs experimental cancer treatment in return?
God, just thinking it makes me feel sick.
I stare at my phone after hanging up with Dr. Patel. I feel like Iâm watching someone elseâs life implode. That canât be my mother heâs talking about.
Except it is.
I need to get to the hospital. Now.
My hands move mechanically, shutting down my computer, gathering my purse. Iâm just going through the motions, operating on autopilot while my brain tries to process the impossible math problem Iâve been handed.
Experimental treatment plus Two weeks minus More money than Iâll ever see in my lifetime equalsâ¦?
Those are all words that make sense on their own, but when you string them together like that, itâs just nonsense syllables.
I rise from my chair, nearly knocking it over in my haste.
âMs. St. Clair?â Dianeâs voice cuts through my fog. âIs everything alright?â
I blink at her, struggling to form words. âI need toâ I have to go. Family emergency.â
Her perpetually frosty expression softens just a fraction. âIâll inform Mr. Akopov.â
âThank you,â I mumble, already moving toward the elevator.
The doors are sliding open when I hear his voice behind me.
âRowan.â
I freeze. Turn slowly.
Vince stands in the doorway of his office, brow furrowed. He must have overheard, or maybe Diane pressed some secret âthe assistant is having a mental breakdownâ button under her desk.
âI need to go,â I say, my voice sounding strange even to my own ears. âMy motherâ ââ
âWhat happened?â Heâs moving toward me now, that predatory grace never more apparent than when heâs crossing a room with purpose.
âI justâI need to go.â
He nods once, decisively. âTake my car.â
âWhat? No, I can justâ ââ
âRowan.â Itâs not my name; itâs a command. âThe car is waiting downstairs. Itâll be faster than the subway.â
Heâs right, of course. It would take me at least forty-five minutes by subway to reach the hospital. His car would get me there in fifteen.
I still hesitate. Taking his car seems like crossing yet another line in our already boundary-free relationship.
But Mom needs me.
âThank you,â I say, stepping into the elevator.
He follows me in.
âWhat are you doing?â I ask, suddenly worried heâs planning to come along. I canât handle Vince and my mother and this diagnosis all at once. Thereâs only so much a human heart can bear before it just gives up entirely.
âMaking sure you get to the car,â he says simply.
We ride down in silence. My mind races, trying to pull together a plan, a solution, anything that could possibly fix this situation. But thereâs nothing. Absolutely nothing I can do to conjure up the kind of money Mom needs.
The elevator reaches the lobby, and Vince places his hand on the small of my back, guiding me through the marble expanse toward the exit. His driver is already waiting at the curb, door held open.
âCall me when you know more,â Vince says, his voice low.
I nod, unable to trust my voice.
Then Iâm in the backseat of his obscenely luxurious car, surrounded by the scent of leather and his cologne, hurtling through Manhattan traffic toward the hospital.
The journey is a blur. I stare out the window but see nothing. The city could be on fire and I wouldnât notice. My mind is too busy spiraling, calculating, panicking.
I could sell my apartmentâif I owned it, which I donât, so thatâs useless. I could beg my absent father for moneyâexcept I havenât seen him since the day I was born and have no idea where he is. I could rob a bankâbut Iâm five-foot-four and couldnât intimidate a hamster, let alone a security guard.
Which leaves⦠what?
The car pulls up to the hospital entrance, and I mumble a thank you to the driver before stumbling out.
The automatic doors whoosh open, and Iâm hit with that familiar hospital stench. I donât think thereâs anything on this planet I hate more than the hell-brewed antiseptic they use in these places.
Momâs ward is on the fourth floor. I take the stairs instead of the elevator, needing the physical exertion to burn off some of my frantic energy.
By the time I reach her room, Iâve composed myself. Or at least Iâve forced my face into something that doesnât scream âyour daughter is falling apart.â
I knock softly on the door frame.
âThereâs my girl!â Momâs voice is weaker than the last time I visited, but her smile is as bright as ever. Sheâs propped up against pillows, a colorful scarf covering her hair loss. The TV is muted, some game show playing silently in the background.
âHey, Mom.â I cross the room and kiss her forehead, trying not to wince at how paper-thin and fragile her skin feels under my lips. âHow are you feeling today?â
âOh, you know. Like a million bucks. Just⦠after taxes.â She pats the bed beside her. âSit. Tell me what brings you here in the middle of a workday. Did you finally get fired for making eyes at that handsome boss of yours?â
âMom!â Even now, she can make me blush. If she only knew. âI just missed you, thatâs all.â
She narrows her eyes, studying my face with the precision of someone whoâs known me my entire life. âDr. Patel called you, didnât he?â
I look away. âMaybe.â
âAnd told you about the fancy new treatment.â
âMomââ
âAnd the ridiculous cost.â
I sigh, defeated. âYes.â
She takes my hand in hers. Her fingers are cold, the skin translucent, blue veins visible beneath the surface. âSweetheart, weâve had this conversation. Iâve made my peace withâ ââ
âDonât,â I interrupt, an edge of desperation in my voice. âPlease donât say youâre okay with dying when thereâs still a chance of beating this thing.â
âA very small chance,â she corrects gently. âAt a very big price.â
âIâll figure something out. I always do.â
âRowan Elizabeth.â She squeezes my hand with surprising strength. âLook at me.â
I do, though it takes every ounce of will I possess not to crumble.
âYou have been taking care of me since you were a child,â she says. âYou have put your life on hold, worked jobs you hated, sacrificed everything to keep me going. And I love you more than words can express for it.â
âMom, pleaseâ ââ
âBut I wonât let you destroy yourself for a treatment that might buy me a few extra months, at best.â
âForty-three percent remission rate,â I argue. âThatâs not nothing.â
âItâs also not a guarantee.â She gently touches my cheek. âAnd even if it worked, what then? More treatments? More debt? More of you putting your life on hold?â
I blink back tears. âYou are my life.â
âNo.â Her voice is firm. âIâm your mother. And itâs my job to take care of you, not the other way around. Iâve failed at that for too long.â
âYou havenât failed at anything,â I protest. âItâs not your fault you got sick.â
âMaybe not. But it would be my fault if I let you sacrifice your future for a past-due bill I canât pay.â
We sit in silence for a long moment, the only sound the soft beeping of her monitors and the muffled hospital announcements from the corridor.
âWhat if I can find a way?â I finally ask. âWhat if I can get the money without⦠without destroying myself?â
She eyes me suspiciously. âWhat kind of way?â
I think of Vince. He could write a check that would cover this treatment without even noticing the money was gone.
He took care of me when I was sick, didnât he?
Then I think of the complications, the implications, the strings that would inevitably come attached to that kind of help.
âJust⦠a way,â I say vaguely. âNothing illegal or dangerous.â
âOr demeaning?â she presses, seeing too much as always.
I force a smile. âWould I do anything demeaning?â
âFor me? In a heartbeat.â She sighs. âThatâs what worries me.â
I lean forward, resting my head on her shoulder the way I did as a child. She still smells like Mom beneath the hospital soap and medication. Thatâs enough to break my heart all over again.
âLet me try,â I whisper. âJust let me try to find a solution. And if I canâtâ ââ
âIf you canât, we accept reality,â she finishes for me. âPromise me, Rowan.â
âI promise.â
Itâs the first promise Iâve ever made to her that Iâm not sure I can keep.