Filthy Promises: Chapter 37
Filthy Promises (Akopov Bratva Book 1)
Fatherâs study.
I loathe this fucking room.
I remember being ten years old, standing on this exact same stretch of Persian carpet, blood trickling from my split lip after some schoolyard punk called me a âRussian piece of shit.â
Iâd put the kid in the hospital. In return, the principal had called my parents. Father made me stand here for an hour while he explained in excruciating detail how Iâd failedânot because Iâd hurt the kid, but because Iâd been sloppy enough to get caught.
Twenty-one years later, and the feeling is exactly the same. Like Iâm a child awaiting sentencing.
Except Iâm not a child anymore. Iâm Vincent fucking Akopov. Future pakhan. Future CEO. The man who will someday own this room, this house, this empire.
If I can just get through this conversation first.
âYouâre distracted,â my father accuses, pouring himself a drink from the crystal decanter on his desk. âCareless. Your mind is elsewhere.â
He doesnât offer me a drink of my own. Thatâs deliberate. Everything with Andrei Akopov is deliberate.
âMy mind is exactly where it needs to be,â I reply, keeping my voice level. âOn business.â
He barks out a laugh, harsh and without humor. âBusiness? Is that what you call fucking your secretary now?â
âMy personal life is none of your concern.â
My fatherâs eyes narrow. His silver hair catches the light from his desk lamp, making him look like some ancient war god seated in judgment. âIt becomes my concern when it interferes with what matters. The family. The future.â
I say nothing. Iâve learned over the years that my fatherâs speeches have their own rhythm, their own inevitable progression.
Interrupting only makes them longer.
âYou think I donât know whatâs happening?â He slams his tumbler down, liquid sloshing over the rim. âThat girl has you so twisted up you can barely function. Skipping meetings. Canceling appointments. And thisâ¦â He tosses a folder onto his desk, flipping it open to reveal hospital records. âWhat the fuck is this?â
I feel my jaw tighten but force my expression to remain neutral. âYou had me followed.â
âOf course I had you followed!â he roars, standing now. âYouâre my son. My heir. Everything Iâve built for thirty years depends on your judgment. And lately, your judgment has been shit.â
âMargaret St. Clairâs treatment is a personal matter,â I say.
âNothing is personal when youâre an Akopov,â my father spits. âYou paid for that womanâs treatmentâmillions of dollarsâwithout consulting me, without considering how it might look if anyone discovered the connection.â
âNo one will discover it.â
âYou donât know that. You canât know that. All it takes is one loose-lipped doctor, one grateful nurse, one nosy reporter. Then what? Headlines about how the heir to Akopov Industries has a thing for his secretaryâs mother? Questions about why? Attention we donât need?â
I take a deep breath, willing myself to remain calm. This isnât about the money. My father couldnât care less about the cost. This is about control.
It always has been.
âThe doctor understands discretion,â I say. âThe hospital administration does, too. The money was moved through our charitable foundation. Clean. Untraceable.â
My father stares at me, silent and calculating. Then, in a move thatâs somehow more terrifying than his rage, he sits back down and laughs.
âYou really care for this girl, donât you?â he asks, his voice suddenly soft. âYou think youâre in love.â
The word hits me like a bucket of ice water. Love. Such a small word for such a devastating concept.
âThis isnât about love,â I snap. âThis is about practicality. Rowan is a valuable employee. Her work suffers when sheâs distracted by her motherâs illness. I took steps to resolve the distraction.â
âBullshit.â My father leans forward. âIâve watched you, Vincent. Iâve seen.â
I say nothing. What can I say? Heâs right. Of course heâs right. Rowan has become something more than just a convenient fuck, more than just a pretty distraction from my obligations.
Sheâs become⦠more.
âDo you know what happens to men in our position who allow themselves to be weakened by sentiment?â my father continues. âThey lose everything. Respect goes first. Power comes soon after. And what becomes of a man with no respect and no power?â He snaps his fingers. âDead.â
He stands again, circling the desk until heâs standing directly in front of me. Even at sixty-two, Andrei Akopov is a bear of a man. Six-foot-four of solid muscle and ruthless determination.
âThat girl,â he says, jabbing a finger toward the door as if Rowan is standing just on the other side, âis a liability. She knows too much. She makes you vulnerable in ways you canât even comprehend yet.â
âSheâs loyal,â I counter, the words escaping before I can stop them.
âLoyal?â He scoffs. âTo what? To whom? Sheâs not Bratva. She has no blood ties to our world. Her loyalty extends exactly as far as her paycheck and your cock. Neither goes as far as you think they do.â
Anger flares hot and bright in my chest. âYou donât know her.â
âI know enough.â He steps closer, his voice dropping dangerously. âI know she walked in on you fucking another woman and didnât run to HR. I know she witnessed you kill a man and didnât go to the police. I know sheâs been letting you bend her over every surface in your office without demanding a ring or a promise. What more do I need to know, hm?â
Each word drives into me like a knife. Not because theyâre untrue, but because hearing them spoken aloud by my father makes them sound so much worse than they are.
Thatâs not what Rowan is to me. Not anymore.
âAnd what would you prefer?â I fire back. âThat I marry some ice-cold Russian princess whoâll fuck my lieutenants behind my back and plot to take over the moment I let my guard down?â
My father laughs, genuine amusement breaking through his anger. âAt least that Iâd understand! At least that would be expected, manageable. Instead, youâve lost your mind over some virgin from marketing with sad eyes and medical bills.â He shakes his head. âI taught you better than this, Vincent.â
âMaybe thatâs the problem.â The words come out harsher than I intend. âIâm tired of everything you taught me.â
His hand moves faster than I can track, the slap connecting with my cheek before I can even flinch. I taste blood where my teeth cut into my cheek. The familiar copper taste of childhood lessons.
âYou disrespectful little shit,â my father hisses. âEverything you have, everything you are, comes from what I taught you. You think youâd survive a day without the Bratvaâs protection?â
I say nothing, though every muscle in my body screams to hit back.
But thatâs not how this game is played.
Thatâs not how I win.
âIâve given you enough rope to hang yourself,â he continues. âNo more. You have one month, Vincent. One month to choose a suitable bride from the candidates Iâve selected. Before then, you will end whatever this is with your assistant.â
âAnd if I donât?â I ask, though I already know the answer.
âThen you get nothing.â
I straighten my back, smoothing down my tie. The taste of blood lingers on my tongue, but I donât give him the satisfaction of wiping it away.
âI understand.â
My father nods once, dismissing me. But as I turn to leave, he calls out one final warning.
âAnd Vincent? That girl of yours? Sheâs become a problem. If you donât handle it⦠I will.â