Filthy Promises: Chapter 48
Filthy Promises (Akopov Bratva Book 1)
Iâve felt rage before. It comes in many different flavors.
Ice-cold rage makes you methodical.
White-hot rage makes you reckless.
Then thereâs the dark, churning rage that sits in your gut for years, waiting, watching, wondering.
But this? This is something else entirely.
Seeing my fatherâs hand wrapped around Rowanâs throat ignites something brutal in me. It makes every other emotion Iâve ever felt seem shallow by comparison.
âGet your fucking hands off her,â I snarl again, already crossing the room in three long strides.
Andrei releases Rowan immediately, turning to face me with infuriating composure. Like he was just shaking her hand instead of choking the life out of her.
Rowan gasps for air and stumbles backward until she hits the wall. One hand protectively cradles her throat. The other goes to her stomachâto our child.
That small gesture nearly breaks me.
âVincent,â my father says calmly. âThis is a surprise.â
âIs it?â I step between him and Rowan, creating a physical barrier with my body. âBecause Iâm finding your presence here very fucking predictable.â
His eyes narrow at my tone. âWatch yourself, boy.â
âI told you she was off-limits. I made myself abundantly fucking clear.â
âAnd I made myself clear about what needs to happen.â He doesnât back downâhe never does. âThe girl needs to understand her position.â
âHer position,â I repeat, my voice dangerously quiet, âis carrying my child. The mother of my heir. And you just put your hands on her throat.â
I glance back at Rowan, whoâs watching this exchange with wide eyes, still breathing too fast, her face pale with shock. The red marks on her neck from my fatherâs fingers are already darkening into bruises.
My rage goes from black to incandescent.
âArkady,â I call out, not taking my eyes off my father.
My lieutenant appears in the doorway, hand resting casually on the gun at his hip. âBoss?â
âTake Ms. St. Clair into the bedroom. Make sure sheâs alright.â
Rowan shakes her head. âI donât needâ ââ
âNow.â
Something in my voice must convince her, because she allows Arkady to guide her from the room, though she glances back at me with an expression I canât quite read.
When theyâre gone, I turn back to my father.
âYou threatened her,â I say without preamble. âAfter I explicitly told you she was under my protection.â
âProtection.â He scoffs. âIs that what weâre calling it now? What happened to the son I raised?â
âThat son is standing right in front of you.â I step closer. âBut heâs finally seeing you clearly.â
My father studies me. âAnd what exactly do you see, Vincent?â
âA man so obsessed with legacy that heâd threaten a pregnant woman. My pregnant woman.â My voice doesnât waver. âA father who taught me that family is everything, then put his hands on the mother of my child.â
âFamily is everything,â he insists. âAkopov bloodâ ââ
âSheâs carrying Akopov blood, you obstinate motherfucker!â I roar in his face. âShe is my family now.â
He stares at me like Iâve grown a third arm. âYou canât be serious. This girl has twisted you completely. Made you soft.â
âNo.â I shake my head. âSheâs made me see what youâve been doing all along. Controlling. Manipulating. Using âfamilyâ as an excuse for your own agenda.â
My fatherâs face goes gray. âEverything Iâve done has been for the Bratva.â
âBullshit. Itâs been for your ego. Your insatiable need to control everything and everyone around you.â I laugh bitterly. âIncluding me.â
âI made you what you are,â he growls. âEverything you haveâ ââ
âYes, yes, for fuckâs sake. Youâve made sure I know exactly who owns it,â I finish for him. âThe apartment. The company. The respect. None of itâs really mine, is it? Itâs all just on loan, contingent on my obedience.â
He doesnât deny that thatâs how he feels. At least he grants me that much honesty.
âWhat did you offer her?â I ask, already knowing the answer. âMoney? Security? The same things youâve used to control me my entire life?â
âI offered her what any sensible woman in her position would want,â he says coldly. âShe refused. Tore up my check like the foolish girl she is.â
A fierce, unexpected pride surges through me. âThatâs because sheâs not for sale. Neither am I. Not anymore.â
My father rises up tall. He thinks he scares me the same way he always has. He doesnât realize that, now that Iâm this close, I can see all the cracks in him. The wrinkles, the gray hairs, the liver spots. All the signs that prove he is far closer to the grave than heâd like to believe.
If he touches Rowan again, heâll be even closer than that.
âThink very carefully about what youâre doing, Vincent. About what youâre throwing away.â
âI know exactly what Iâm doing.â I meet his gaze steadily. âIâm choosing her. Iâm choosing our child.â
No one speaks.
Then my father laughsâa cold, harsh crackle.
âYou think you can walk away from it all?â He shakes his head. âYouâre more naïve than I thought.â
âI never said anything about walking away.â I straighten to my full height, looking down at the man whoâs loomed over me my entire life. âI still want all of the things I am entitled to. But I will get them on my terms, not yours.â
âYou donât get to dictate terms,â he snaps.
âI do now.â I hedge closer, dropping my voice, and Andrei has no choice but to shuffle backwards. âBecause I know things, Father. Iâve been paying attention all these years. Learning. Watching. Building my own connections, my own loyalties.â I smile, and itâs not a nice expression, not by any stretch of the imagination. âThe Bratva council might be interested to hear some of what I know.â
âYou wouldnât dare.â But thereâs a flicker of uncertainty in his eyes now.
âTry me.â I hold his gaze. âTest me on this, and youâll find out exactly how much of your son I really am.â
We stand there, two immovable forces locked in silent combat.
For the first time in my life, I see something like doubt cross my fatherâs face.
âWhat do you want?â he finally asks.
âFirst, you will apologize to Ms. St. Clair for putting your hands on her. Then you will leave and never contact her directly again.â My voice is ice. âSecond, the inheritance clause standsâbut the timeline is mine to determine, not yours.â
âAnd third?â
âThird, you will support whatever decision I make regarding my child and its mother. Publicly and privately.â I cross my arms. âThose are my terms.â
My father studies me for a long moment, weighing his options. âAnd if I refuse?â
âThen itâs war,â I say simply. âBetween us. Between the old Bratva and the new. And I promise you, Fatherâyou wonât win that fight.â
Another long silence stretches between us.
Then, to my surprise, he nods once. A soldierâs acknowledgment.
âYouâve made your point.â He straightens his jacket. âIâll speak to the girl.â
âHer name is Rowan,â I correct sharply. âAnd youâll keep your distance while you apologize.â
He nods again, his expression unreadable.
I move to the bedroom door, knocking once before opening it. Rowan sits on the edge of the bed, Arkady hovering protectively nearby. Her eyes meet mine, wary but steady.
âMy father has something to say to you,â I tell her. âIf youâre willing to hear it.â
She hesitates, then nods slowly.
I hold out my hand to her without thinking. After a pause that feels like eternity, she takes it, allowing me to help her up. Her fingers are cold in mine, but they donât tremble.
Together, we return to the living room where my father waits.
âMs. St. Clair,â he begins, stiff as a fucking gravestone. âI behaved⦠rashly. You have my apology.â
Itâs probably the most genuine apology Andrei Akopov has ever given, which isnât saying much.
But itâs something.
Rowan says nothing, just watches him with those perceptive green eyes that seem to see through all our Akopov bullshit.
âI think itâs time for you to leave,â I tell my father.
âThis isnât over,â he says quietly.
âIt is for tonight.â
He nods once more, then turns and walks out the door. I donât watch him go. My attention is already back on Rowan, on the marks my fatherâs fingers left on her throat.
âAre you alright?â I ask.
She twists away from me. âIâve been better.â
âI didnât know he was coming here. Arkady called meâ ââ
âIt doesnât matter.â She wraps her arms around herself. âI want both of you to leave, too.â
âRowanââ
âI mean it, Vince.â Her voice is tired but determined. âI need space toâ I just need quiet for once in my fucking life, okay? Itâs just been so loud and so crowded and so unbelievably, insanely relentless since I fell into your world, and I justâ I justâ I just need it to be quiet for a little while.â
I could give her what she wants. Fuck, maybe I ought to.
But Iâve spent a lifetime doing the things I ought to.
Iâm pretty fucking sick of it.
So noâno matter what she says, I wonât go. I refuse to leave. Not this time. Not ever again.
âNo.â
âWhat do you mean, ânoâ?â she asks, her voice vibrating with indignation. âThis is my apartment.â
Something cracks open inside meâall the things Iâve been too fucking afraid to say. Too programmed by my father to confess.
âIâm not leaving, Rowan. Iâm not giving you an ultimatum, either. Iâm giving you the truth.â
Before I can second-guess myself, I drop to one knee in front of her.
Her eyes widen into huge emeralds. âWhat are you doing?â she whispers.
âWhat I should have done from the beginning.â I take her hand in mine.
My fingers shake. Vincent fucking Akopovâheir to the Bratva throneâtrembling like a goddamn schoolboy.
âMarry me. Not for the baby and not for my inheritance. But for thisâwhatever this violent, all-consuming thing is between us.â
Her lips part. Her pulse hammers beneath my fingertips.
âI think it might be love,â I whisper hoarsely. âAnd if youâll let meâif youâll accept meâIâll spend a lifetime proving it to you.â
Her lips part. Iâve never begged for anything in my life.
But Iâd beg for her.
âI donât have a ring. I donât have pretty words. But I have this.â I press her hand to my chest where my heart hammers wildly, proof that I mean what I say. âItâs yours if you want it.â