Filthy Promises: Chapter 50
Filthy Promises (Akopov Bratva Book 1)
Itâs amazing how quickly happiness becomes your new normal. Like youâve been there all along.
Three weeks of bliss with Vince, and suddenly, I canât remember what it felt like to be lonely.
To be afraid.
To wonder if the man I loved would ever truly love me back.
Weâve settled into a routine that feels both surreal and somehow perfectly right. Mornings at his penthouse, where the kitchen staff makes me whatever pregnancy-friendly breakfast I can keep down. Nights spent tangled in black silk sheets, his hands always finding their way to my stomach, his voice whispering plans for our future against my womb (and then doing other things with his mouth a little bit lower).
Even my mother is responding well to treatment. The âanonymous benefactorâ continues to fund everything she needs. When I told her about the engagement, she cried happy tears, then immediately started planning a wedding that would make even the Akopovs raise their eyebrows.
âNothing too extravagant,â Iâd told her, which made both her and Vince laugh like Iâd said something ridiculous.
But the best part? The best part is watching the man I love gradually shed the armor heâs worn his entire life.
Like right now.
The sound of the shower running fills the penthouse as Vince takes his predictably precise twelve-minute morning routine. Iâm still in bed, one hand resting on my barely-there bump, scrolling through baby name websites on my phone.
âNothing Russian,â Vince had insisted last night, surprising me. âNothing that ties the baby to the Bratva.â
âSo no little Vladimirs or Viktoriyas?â Iâd teased.
âNo.â His face had gone serious. âI want our child to have choices I never had.â
God, how is it possible to fall more in love every day?
I stretch, feeling deliciously lazy. The notification sound on Vinceâs laptop makes me glance over to his side of the bed. He left it open, something he never used to do around me. Another small gesture of trust that makes my heart swell.
The notification pings again. Probably work. Always work, even on Saturdays.
I hesitate for a moment, then reach over. If itâs important, I should let him know.
The screen springs to life, already open to a folder labeled with one simple word.
ROWAN
My fingers freeze over the keyboard.
Thatâs⦠weird.
I shouldnât look. I know I shouldnât.
But itâs my name. So surely Iâm entitled to a peekâ¦?
Curiosity wins. I click on the folder.
And my world implodes.
There are dozens of files. Hundreds of documents. Years of surveillance photos. Hospital records. School transcripts. Financial histories.
My hands start to shake as I open file after file, horror mounting with each click.
SUBJECT: ROWAN ST. CLAIR (BORN: ROWAN NIKOLAEVNA PETROVA)
Petrova?
Petrova?
That canât be right.
I click on a document titled âLineage Confirmation.â
DNA ANALYSIS CONFIRMS SUBJECT IS BIOLOGICAL DAUGHTER OF GRIGOR PETROV AND MARGARET ST. CLAIR. SUBJECT UNAWARE OF PATERNAL IDENTITY.
My heart is pounding so hard I can hardly breathe. This has to be a mistake. My father left when I was a little girl. He was just some deadbeat who couldnât handle my momâs illness.
⦠Wasnât he?
I keep reading, unable to stop myself, each document more devastating than the last.
SURVEILLANCE INITIATED: 2019 (SUBJECTâS INTERNSHIP APPLICATION TO AKOPOV INDUSTRIES)
Five years ago. Heâs been watching me for five years.
There are psychological profiles. Detailed reports on my routines, my vulnerabilities, my financial struggles.
Then I see a document that makes me physically ill.
ASSET: NATALIE WINTERS (FRIEND/CONFIDANTE)
PAYMENT HISTORY ATTACHED
PRIMARY TASK: MONITOR SUBJECTâS PERSONAL RELATIONSHIPS, REPORT ANY CONTACT WITH GRIGOR PETROV OR KNOWN ASSOCIATES
Natalie. My best friend. The person Iâve told everything to.
Every secret.
Every hope.
Every fear.
Sheâs been working for Vince all along.
I slam the laptop closed as the bathroom door opens. Vince emerges in a cloud of steam, towel wrapped around his waist, hair damp against his forehead.
âMorning, beautiful,â he says, smiling that rare, genuine smile that I thought was just for me. âSleep well?â
I stare at him, this stranger I thought I knew.
âWho am I?â My voice doesnât sound like my own.
His smile falters. âWhat?â
I point to the laptop. âWho am I, Vince? Or should I be asking, who do you think I am?â
All the color drains from his face. For once, Vincent Akopov looks genuinely caught off-guard.
âRowanââ
âDonât.â I stand, backing away from him. âDonât you dare âRowanâ me right now. Not until you explain why you have five years of surveillance on me. Not until you explain why your laptop thinks Iâm Grigor Petrovâs daughter.â
He doesnât deny it. Doesnât even look surprised by what Iâve found.
And thatâs when I know itâs all true.
âWere you ever going to tell me?â I whisper.
âYes.â He takes a step toward me. I take a step back. â⦠Eventually.â
âWhen? After we were married? After the baby was born? When you finally figured out how to use me in whatever sick game youâre playing with the Petrovs?â
âItâs not like that.â His voice takes on that edge of control I used to find so sexy. Now, it just sounds cruel. âLet me explain.â
âPlease do.â I wrap my arms protectively around myself. Around our baby. âExplain why youâve been stalking me since I applied for an internship. You paid my best friend to spy on me, Vince. It didnât occur to you to mention that, oh, by the way, you think Iâm the daughter of your familyâs biggest enemy!â
He moves to the bed, sitting on the edge, running a hand through his wet hair. âI donât think, Rowan. I know. The DNA doesnât lie.â
âAnd Iâm just supposed to believe that? My entire life is a lie, but I should believe you? The man whoâs clearly been manipulating me from the start?â
âI never manipulated you.â
I laugh, the sound sharp and painful on its way out of me. âRight. You just happened to hire the daughter of your enemy, sleep with her, get her pregnant, and propose marriage. Total coincidence.â
âIt wasnât like that.â For the first time, I hear frustration creeping into his voice. âYes, I knew who you were when you applied. And yes, I had you investigated. I had to know if you were a plant. If Grigor sent you to infiltrate Akopov Industries.â
âAnd did he? Because this is all news to me, Vince.â My voice breaks. âI thought my father was some nobody asshole who abandoned us. I thought⦠You know what? I donât even know what I thought anymore.â
I trail off. I donât know how to go on.
Vince looks pained. âWe keep tabs on all our enemies, Rowan. Especially the Petrovs.â He meets my eyes. âWhen your application crossed my deskâthe right age, the right backgroundâI had my people look into it. The DNA match was conclusive.â
âSo you knew from the beginning.â I try to ignore the tears welling in my eyes. âEvery moment between usâthe first time I walked in on you, the promotion, all of itâyou knew.â
He doesnât hesitate. âYes.â
âAnd what was the plan, exactly? Seduce me? Use me to get to Grigor somehow?â
âNo.â He stands again, suddenly agitated. âThere was no plan, not at first. Just surveillance. Standard procedure.â
âAnd Natalie? Was that standard procedure, too?â
He has the decency to look uncomfortable. âWe needed someone close to you. To monitor any potential contact with the Petrovs.â
âMy best friend,â I whisper, the betrayal cutting deeper than I thought possible. âThe person I told everything to. My pregnancy. My feelings for you. All of it.â
âShe was already on payroll before I even met you,â he admits. âIt was⦠precautionary.â
âPrecautionary.â I repeat the word like itâs poison. It might as well be, given what itâs doing to our relationship. âAnd what about us? What about everything thatâs happened between us? Was that precautionary, too?â
âNo.â He steps toward me again, and this time, Iâm too numb to back away. âWhat happened between us wasnât planned. It wasnât strategic. It was real.â
âHow can I possibly believe that?â My voice is barely audible now. âHow can I believe anything you say?â
âBecause I never lied about loving you.â His eyesâthose impossible blue eyes that once made my heart raceânow fill me with nothing but venom and doubt. âEverything else, yes. Your identity. The surveillance. But not how I feel.â
âAnd when exactly did the great Vincent Akopov develop feelings for his enemyâs daughter? When did I go from being a security risk to being the love of your life?â The bitterness in my voice surprises even me.
âI donât know.â He growls low in his throat with frustration. âIt wasnât a single moment. It was everything. You stood up to me. You refused to be intimidated. You looked at me like you saw past all the bullshit.â
âOr maybe thatâs just what you wanted to see,â I say quietly. âIn reality, it sounds like you saw an opportunity. The perfect revenge against Grigor Petrovâseduce his daughter, knock her up, bind her to you forever.â
âCan you really think that of me?â
âI donât know what the hell to think anymore, Vince.â I move toward the closet, tearing out clothes at random. âI donât know whatâs real and whatâs part of whatever game youâre playing. And you know what? Iâve decided I donât care to stick around and figure it out.â
âWhere are you going?â He watches me dress with growing alarm.
âAway from you, for starters.â I pull on jeans and a sweater, not giving a damn that they donât match.
âRowan, please.â He reaches for me, but I jerk away. âItâs not safe for you out there. Especially now that you know the truth.â
âWorried Iâll run to Daddy Petrov with Akopov secrets?â
âWorried Grigor will find out about you and the baby,â Vince corrects, his face grave. âIf he learns who you areâwhat you mean to meâheâll use you against both of us.â
âSo Iâm a liability to everyone.â I laugh mirthlessly. âThe Akopovs, the Petrovs⦠Does anyone in this fucked-up world see me as a person and not a chess piece?â
I grab my purse, shoving my phone and wallet inside.
âDonât go.â His voice drops, almost pleading. âLet me explain everything. All of it.â
âI think youâve explained quite enough.â My hand goes instinctively to my stomach, where our child grows, oblivious to the chaos surrounding it. âI need to see my mother. My real motherânot whatever spy or plant youâve arranged to pose as her.â
âMargaret is your real mother,â he says quietly. âThat part was never a lie. And she doesnât know Iâm aware of your identity. She doesnât know much herself.â
âHow generous of you to allow her that illusion.â I head for the door, then pause, a horrible thought occurring to me. âIs her treatment even real? Or was that just another way to control me?â
âThe cancer is real.â His face darkens. âI would never use that against you.â
âBut youâd use everything else,â I whisper. âGotcha.â
I open the door, unable to look at him any longer.
âRowan.â His voice follows me into the hallway. âPlease donât run from me. Not like this. Not now.â
I turn back one last time, taking in the sight of himâstill in his towel, hair damp, looking more vulnerable than Iâve ever seen him.
âYou know whatâs funny? I actually do believe you love me.â The tears finally break free, pouring down my cheeks in twin torrents. âBut I donât think you know how to love someone without controlling them.â
His face contorts with something like pain. âLet me fix this.â
âI donât think you can,â I say softly. âSome things, once broken, canât be put back together.â
I step into the elevator, pressing the button for the lobby before he can follow me.
As the doors slide closed, I catch one last glimpse of his faceâa man whoâs lost something he never expected to care about.
Then it disappears behind cold, impersonal chrome.
The elevator descends, and with each floor, the weight in my chest grows heavier. I trusted him. I gave him everythingâmy body, my heart, my future. I believed we were building something real, something that transcended the darkness of his world.
But it was all a lie. Or at least, it began as one.
Maybe he does love me now. Itâs not inconceivable that, somewhere along the way, his surveillance turned to fascination, and fascination to love.
But does that matter?
No. It doesnât.
You canât grow a garden if the soil is poison.