Filthy Promises: Chapter 5
Filthy Promises (Akopov Bratva Book 1)
My fatherâs study always makes me feel like Iâm ten years old again.
I smell the cologne soaked into leather, the stench of cigars that lingers no matter how hard the maids scrub or how much disinfectant they lather across the marble floors.
This room has seen pain. Blood. Tears.
Far too much of it was mine.
But through that suffering, through those trials, I learned what it cost to build what my father built. And, harder yetâwhat it costs to keep it.
Because itâs one thing to raise an empire from the dirt.
Itâs another thing entirely to keep the grubby fingers of underworld parasites away from it.
Thatâs the task before me. Soonâvery fucking soonâmy father will step into a graceful retirement, and itâll become my duty to fend off the wolves at the gate.
That thought calms me. Those wolves donât know whatâs coming for them.
Theyâll all be skinned and made into throw rugs by the time Iâm done.
With a grin, I straighten my tie, shoot my cuffs, then pound my fist against the heavy wooden doors.
âEnter,â comes the gruff command.
I pry open the door and step inside.
Andrei Akopov sits behind his sprawling desk, silver hair slicked back, eyes sharp as ever. At sixty-two, he still has the imposing presence of the man who stowed away from St. Petersburg with nothing but lint in his pocket and insatiable hunger in his belly.
Iâve seen the sepia-toned picturesâhe was scrawny in those days, but even then, you could see how his frame would fill out once he sank his teeth into America.
And so it did. What began as a humble sewing factory became a textiles powerhouse. From there, he expanded into electronics, logistics, industrial supplies, this, that, the otherâ¦
Now, there is no limit to what Akopov Industries does. The sun does not set on our familyâs empire.
âVince,â he says, pointedly not standing. âYouâre late.â
I check my watch. âBy three minutes.â
âIn our business, three minutes can cost millions.â
I resist rolling my eyes, but only barely. This lecture hasnât changed in twenty years. âNoted, Father.â
âSit,â he orders.
I take my time doing so. First, I pour myself a drink from his bar in the corner before sauntering over to the blood-red leather couch and sinking onto it. I cross one leg over the other, sip the vodka, and then finally turn my eyes on him.
âWhat was so important that it couldnât wait until dinner?â
Father slides a folder across the desk. âI checked the quarterly reports myself. Impressive numbers.â
âI told you they would be.â
I donât touch the folder. I already know whatâs in it.
I also canât stop thinking about the last person I saw carrying those papers. Itâs been on an endless loop in my head.
Oh.
Oh.
Oh.
Like fucking clockwork. My dickâs been hard for two days straight. Vanessa would carve out a kidney if it meant giving me this kind of reaction.
But despite all her moans and mewls and expensive lingerie, all the hours sheâs spent trying to please me, she lacks something that the briefest glimpse of Rowan St. Clair showed.
Fuck if I know how or why.
âYes, yes. Youâve done well.â He waves his hand dismissively. âBut business is not why I called you here.â
Here it comes. I steel myself.
âI am concerned.â
My eyebrow drifts upward involuntarily. âAboutâ¦?â
âYou know about what. The same thing we discuss every month.â He leans forward. âYouâre thirty-one, Vince. When I was your age, I had you: a red-faced babe shitting your diapers.â
I keep my face neutral. Itâs not personal, what my father says to me. That doesnât mean it doesnât piss me the fuck off, though.
âTimes have changed,â I answer coolly.
âSome things never change.â He taps his fingers against the desk. âFamily, legacyâthis is still everything.â
Like the lecture about my punctualityâor lack thereofâthis is not a new line of thought from Andrei.
âIâm well aware of the importance you place on those things, Father.â
What I think but donât add is that I donât follow in those footsteps.
I donât need family. I donât give a fuck about legacy. Those are the trappings of dinosaurs like my father.
All I need is the crown. Iâll make my own way after that. I donât intend to rely on anyone but myself.
Father reaches for the crystal decanter on his desk, pouring himself a drink to match mine. He sips thoughtfully, then picks up an unlit cigar to roll between his fingers. He squints at it like there are some kinds of answers etched into the tobacco leaf.
âThe board meeting is next month,â he remarks.
I take a sip. âIâm prepared.â
âAre you? Because Mikhail Volkov thinks his son should take over as CEO when I retire. What do you have to say to that?â
The vodka burns my throat as I cough on it. âThat Volkov is an idiot.â
âMikhail is my oldest friend and business partner.â Fatherâs eyes narrow. âAnd his son is married with two children already. Stability. Continuity. These things matter to the board.â
âThe work should matter more. My work, to be specific.â
âItâs not enough.â He downs his drink in one swallow. âThe inheritance terms are clear. To receive your full allotment of shares and the CEO position, you must be married by your thirty-second birthday.â
And therein lies the rub.
The thing Iâve been avoiding, shoving out of sight, out of mind.
Because itâs fucking archaic. Because itâs fucking pointless. Because it shouldnât fucking matterâ¦
And yet it does.
I couldnât believe my eyes the first time he called me in here, almost a year ago. It smelled just like this, looked just like this. My father pushed a folder across his desk, and in it were the words Iâd been waiting almost a decade to see.
AKOPOV INDUSTRIES SUCCESSION PLAN
But as I read the fine print, my grin soured. Buried in the details were catches that had no place in my world.
Must be married by thirty-twoâ¦
Father wouldnât hear a single word of my arguments. I drew in a breath to tell him exactly what I thought of his terms, but he simply raised one of his grizzled hands and said, Donât bother. They will not change.
In the present, my jaw tightens the exact same way as it did a year ago. âThatâs still seven months away.â
âAnd in all the time youâve had to come up with a solution, youâve found no one worthy? Not one?â He scoffs, his bearded lip wrinkling. âYouâve always been too picky.â
âIâm selective,â I correct. âAs you taught me to be.â
Fatherâs expression softens, if only slightly. âSon, you still think I am doing this to punish you. Youâre wrong. Iâm doing this to help you.â
I say nothing.
Andrei leans back, lights his cigar, and takes a contemplative puff. âI spoke with Samuil Litvinov last week. His daughter just finished law school.â
I fight to keep my voice even, though all I want to do is roar in his face about how antiquated all this bullshit is. âYouâre suggesting I marry into the Litvinov family?â
Father shrugs. âSamuil helped me when we first came to America. Without him, there would be no Akopov Industries.â
âIâm aware of our history.â
âThen you should be aware of your duty, too.â His voice hardens as he leans forward, that familiar ice crackling in his eyes. âThe Litvinovs arenât the only option. The Grozas have a lovely daughter, too. Harvard-educated. Or the Kuznetsov girlâ ââ
âWhat part of âI donât need you to arrange my lifeâ is hard to understand, Father?â I interrupt.
He slams his hand on the desk and lurches upright. Even at sixty-two, heâs still a bear of a man. âThen arrange it yourself!â Jabbing the lit end of the cigar at me with two fingers, he warns, âBut understand this: Without a wife, you get nothing. Not CEO, not pakhan, not the controlling shares, nothing. Not so much as a bullet casing from my gun or the ashed end of my fucking cigar.â
The room falls silent.
Grimly, violently silent.
We stare at each other across the desk.
If he wonders why Iâm so stubborn, he needs only to look in the mirror. I am what he made me.
But I will become only what I choose for myself.
He doesnât get to choose anymore.
And yet⦠and yet⦠That calm voice of reason in the back of my head is crooning that there are alternative solutions.
Why batter down a castle wall when I could simply sneak in the back?
Why fight when I could simply win instead?
What if I give him what he wants? Let him pull the wool over his own eyes. Heâs headed for the pasture anywayâwhat difference does it make how he gets there?
Consider it a retirement gift. And if the idea I have in mind pans out⦠Well, itâd be a gift of sorts to myself as well.
âWhat if I already have something in the works?â I say carefully.
Fatherâs eyebrows rise. âYouâve waited this long to tell me?â
âItâs⦠early days.â
I down another sip of vodka as the plan takes shape. An hourglass shape, to be specific. A curvy, innocent, blushing, pencil-skirted shape that said Oh when I caught her standing in my doorway.
Father is still hesitant. âIs she Russian?â
âNo.â
âWealthy?â
âNo.â
His lips purse with disapproval. âFrom a good family, at least?â
I think of Rowanâs file. Her motherâs illness.
âSheâs strong,â I say instead. âResilient.â
Father strokes his beard, eyes narrowing in calculation. In the end, he simply sighs. âYou have seven months, Vince. I suggest you donât waste them. The terms wonât change.â
I nod and leave.
But as I emerge into the hall, I feel lighter than I did when I entered. What started as a gameâa passing interest in a wide-eyed lamb who wandered into the wrong room at the wrong timeâhas transformed into something entirely more strategic.
Rowan St. Clair, with her stack of medical bills and quiet desperation, might be exactly what I need.
I picture her entering my office again, this time with the proper invitation. Those doe eyes gazing up at me. Her soft mouth forming another Oh when I explain my proposition.
What would she say if I offered to clear her motherâs medical debt? To give her a life beyond this corporate purgatory?
What would she do for that kind of freedom?
For the first time in months, I find myself actually looking forward to tomorrow. To seeing the shock on her face when she hears what I have to say.
Because Rowan St. Clair isnât just next in line for a quick fuck on my desk.
Sheâs next in line to become my wife.