Filthy Promises: Chapter 58
Filthy Promises (Akopov Bratva Book 1)
I never thought Iâd find peace in the simple act of reading aloud.
Yet here I am, seated beside Rowanâs bed, working my way through some romance novel she insisted would âexpand my emotional vocabulary.â
The protagonist is an insufferable idiot who canât see whatâs right in front of him, but Rowan laughs and swoons and awwws at all the right parts, so I keep reading for the sheer sake of seeing that joy on her face.
Her bed rest has transformed our relationship in ways I never anticipated. Almost six weeks of forced proximity, of quiet conversations and shared meals means almost six weeks of learning each other without the constant interference of the world outside.
Itâs starting to feel dangerously close to normal.
âYour voice gets deeper when you read dialogue,â she observes in the middle of me working my way through a passage that involves some surprisingly graphic foreplay. Sheâs propped against a mountain of pillows, but even still, I can see the crest of her belly tented beneath the bedsheets. âEspecially when itâs the dark, tortured, brooding hero.â
I squint at her. âAre you implying I identify with the emotionally constipated asshole in this story?â
âIf the custom Italian shoe fitsâ¦â
That smile. Thatâs the good shit. Itâs not the polite one she uses with the staff or the careful, painted one she wore in those first days after our reconciliation.
This is the real oneâthe one that actually reaches her eyes and carves that small dimple in her left cheek.
I thought I might never see it directed at me again.
âI think Iâve been sufficiently cultured for one day,â I declare, snapping the book shut and imprisoning the too-blind-to-know-whatâs-good-for-him hero to his own selfish fucking thoughts. âAny other demands, Mrs. Akopov?â
âHmm.â She pretends to consider it seriously. âI wouldnât say no to those cheese pastries Marta made yesterday.â
I check my watch. âItâs three in the morning.â
âAnd?â
âAnd Marta is asleep, like any sane person would be.â
Rowanâs lower lip juts out in an exaggerated pout. âBut your child demands cheese pastries.â
âSuddenly, itâs my child? Convenient.â
âWhen itâs demanding dairy products at ungodly hours? Definitely your child.â
I sigh, already rising from my chair. âIâll see what I can find.â
Her hand catches mine before I can leave. âI was kidding, Vince. Stay.â
The simple request freezes me in place. For weeks, weâve been navigating this new territoryâher in the bed, me in the nearby chair.
Close, but not too close.
Together, but still maintaining the boundaries she established.
But something has shifted tonight. I can feel it in the air between us. An easing of tension. An inhale, not a taut, held breath.
âAre you sure?â I ask.
She nods, scooting over to make room beside her. âTell me a story.â
âI just read you half a book.â
âNot from a book.â Her green eyes hold mine. âTell me something about you. Something I donât know yet.â
I settle carefully beside her on the bed, maintaining a respectful distance while still close enough to catch the scent of her shampooâa clean, floral aroma that reminds me of spring.
âWhat do you want to know?â I ask.
âSomething good. From before.â
âBefore what?â
âBefore everything got complicated.â She gestures vaguely. âBefore you became⦠you.â
I think back. Dusty memories rise up, each bloodier than the last. I donât want any of those.
âI used to build model ships,â I say finally.
Rowanâs eyebrows fly up to her hairline. âYouâre lying.â
âSwear. Started when I was eight. My grandfatherâmy motherâs fatherâgave me my first kit. A Spanish galleon with real canvas sails.â
She hides her mouth behind her hand as she titters with laughter. âIâm having trouble picturing a nerdy little Vincent with craft glue and tiny tweezers.â
âI was meticulous,â I admit. âSpent hours getting every detail right. My father thought it was a waste of time, of course, but my mother encouraged it.â
âWhat happened to them? The ships?â
âTheyâre in storage somewhere, probably gathering dust. I stopped after she died.â That old, familiar pang of guilt accompanies the memory. âDidnât see the point after that.â
Rowanâs hand finds mine on the bedspread. âIâm sorry, Vince.â She doesnât have to specify that weâre not talking about the ships anymore.
âIt was a long time ago.â
âThat doesnât make it hurt less.â
No, it doesnât. But Iâve spent most of my life ensuring that particular hurt stays buried deep where it canât weaken me. Until recently, when I thought I might lose Rowan the same way. Then I found that the pain hadnât gone away or softened. It was still there, waiting for its day in the sun.
âYour turn,â I say, shoving the spotlight away from myself. âTell me something I donât know about you.â
She thinks for a moment. âI wanted to be an astronaut when I was little.â
âSomehow, that doesnât surprise me.â
âWhy not?â
âYouâve always seemed a bit otherworldly to me.â
She laughs softly. âThatâs either very romantic or extremely offensive.â
âThe former,â I assure her. âDefinitely the former.â
Her thumb taps each of my knuckles in turn like piano keys. âWhen I was ten, I saved up my allowance for six months to buy a telescope. I used to spend hours on our apartment roof, watching the stars, making up my own names for the constellations.â
I try to picture itâa younger Rowan with the same determined eyes, staring up at the heavens, dreaming of escape. Of something bigger and grander than her too-small life.
âWhat happened?â I ask.
âMom got sick again. The telescope got pawned and the money went to medical bills.â She shrugs like it doesnât hurt her anymore, though I know better than that. âSpace had to wait.â
âI could buy you a telescope,â I offer. âThe best one they make.â
âOf course you could.â Her smile turns wistful. âBut it wouldnât be the same, would it?â
No, it wouldnât. Because itâs never been about the thing itself, but what it represented.
Dreams. Possibility. Hope.
All the things I never allowed myself to want, until her.
âIâll make you a deal,â I say, surprising myself. âWhen the baby comes, when youâre both healthy and strong, Iâll take you somewhere without light pollution. Somewhere you can really see the stars.â
Her eyes widen. âYouâd do that?â
âIâd do a lot more than that, if you asked.â
Another silence falls, but itâs not awkward. Just thoughtful.
âWe didnât know each other at all, did we?â she asks finally. âNot really. Even after everything.â
âWeâre learning now,â I reply. âThatâs what matters.â
âIs it enough, though? To build a life on?â
The question is an uncertain thing hovering between, weightier and thornier than anything should be at three in the morning.
But itâs the right question. The necessary one.
âI donât know,â I answer honestly. âBut I want it to be.â
âMe, too,â she whispers. âMe, too.â
We talk until dawn breaks, sharing pieces of ourselves that have nothing to do with the Akopovs or the Petrovs or any of the complications that brought us together. Just ordinary things. Childhood memories. Favorite foods. Books weâve read. Dreams weâve abandoned.
With each small revelation, I feel myself drawn closer to her, as if these shared confidences are forming a bridge between us, spanning the chasm I created with my lies.
âFavorite color?â she asks, her voice drowsy now as sleep begins to claim her.
âGreen,â I answer without hesitation. âThe exact shade of your eyes.â
She smiles, already half-asleep. âSmooth talker.â
âOnly with you.â I brush a strand of hair from her forehead. âSleep now. Iâll be here when you wake up.â
âPromise?â she murmurs.
âI swear.â