Fall of Snow: Chapter 58
Fall of Snow: A Dark Mafia Romance (Frost Industries Book 3)
The only time I can bring myself to work is when Snow sleeps.
Itâs been eight days since our wedding and three since she was allowed to come home, but I havenât spent more than a few minutes away from her. I canât. I came too close to losing her, and anytime sheâs out of my sight, panic claws up the back of my throat and holds on until I see her again.
Sheâs been withdrawn since I brought her home, not the same Snow I became obsessed with all those years ago, and I hate it. I miss her fire. I miss when she argued with me about everything. I miss her. But sheâs healing and I canât expect her to be jumping for joy after being shot. I have to be patient with her.
âStorm,â I answer my phone as I slip into the hallway but keep the door cracked open so Snow is still in my line of sight.
âHowâs Snow?â
âStill quiet. She sleeps most of the time, and when sheâs not sleeping, itâs almost like sheâs checked out. I donât know what to do for her,â I sigh. I never thought I would be talking to someone who is meant to be my mortal enemy about my relationship, but itâs funny how these things play out.
âItâs only been a week, Iâm sure sheâs just working through it all.â His words do nothing to comfort the ache in the pit of my stomach that maybe Iâve made a mistake. Iâm starting to think I never should have stolen her from her life, never should have taken her from her family and kept her. She wouldnât have been hurt if I had stayed in the shadows. Sheâd still be her lively self who Iâve obsessed over for the last decade.
âI know.â
âWeâve had another shipment go missing,â he sighs.
âWhat? How?â
âI have no fucking idea. We had so many men at the docks we were bordering on suspicious, but when they went to do the count, everything was missing.â
I lean on the wall opposite the bedroom door, my eyes brushing over my Snowflake as she sleeps. Watching her allows my mind to work better, as if when sheâs around, all the worry I feel and measures I have in place to protect her disappears, and my business mind starts firing. âTheyâre hitting it before it docks,â I say.
âWhat?â
âThey must be intercepting the ship somewhere. That scene was too clean the last time, and thereâs no way they got past your guys this time, so the only explanation is that they have to hit the ship during its journey, not after it docks.â
Silence greets me on the other end of the line and I pull the phone from my ear to check he hasnât hung up on me. âThose motherfuckers,â he growls. âWe have guards on the ship though, and cameras. Surely someone would have seen an entire shipment of guns get unloaded to another ship.â
I nod, thinking through how I would have approached this back when I would run jobs for my uncles. âThe cameras are easy, they would have hacked in and had a loop play over and over again so you wouldnât be suspicious.â
âBut the guards?â
âThat Iâm not too sure of.â Itâs been too long since Iâve had a complex problem to solve and too long since Iâve been out of these four walls, but I wonât leave Snow. I donât trust anyone who works for me, and I certainly donât trust anyone in Stormâs ranks. The only people I trust with her safety are me, and her brothers, and Iâm still not convinced they wonât try to take her back from me the first opportunity they get.
Storm sighs, the sound of ice on glass filling the line. âWynter wants to come see Snow,â he tells me.
I brush my eyes down my fragile Snowflake curled up in the middle of our bed and allow my head to fall back against the wall. âGive her a few more days. I donât think Wynter would intentionally upset her, but sheâs fragile right now.â I hoped that after her admission in the hospital, some of the guilt would disappear, but if anything, it gets worse with each day that passes. Sheâs convinced this is karma, that by taking birth control without my knowledge, she set a series of events in motion that led to her losing an ovary.
Nothing I say or do seems to ease her worries and seeing her in so much emotional turmoil makes my cold, dead heart ache.
âYou canât hide her away forever, Elijah. And you canât personally guard her for the rest of her life. At some point, youâre going to have to hand her safety over to someone else, at least for some of the time.â
âNo,â I growl. He may be right, but Iâm not ready to hear it yet. I need more time. More time to watch her, to bring her back to me, to prove to us both that I can keep her safe from any threat that comes at us.
A knock at the door draws my attention away from Snow, and I watch as Mrs. Chambers makes her way to the front door, wiping her hands on her apron. I watch as she looks through the peephole and pauses for a moment, a frown tugging at her brow before she unlocks the door and opens it.
David, the guy who distributes the drugs to the dealers, falls through the door. His face is bloody, so much so, I doubt he can see through the swelling and blood. His clothes are torn and soiled, and by the way he collapses in the entry, I can only imagine there are other injuries I canât see.
âElijah?â Storm says on the other end of the line.
âGet over here,â I snap and end the call. I chance one more look over my shoulder at my Snowflake sleeping before tearing my attention from her to the more pressing issue. The half dead man in my hallway.
Mrs. Chambers jumps into action, quickly making her way to the cabinet where we keep an emergency first aid kit for times just like these.
I stride toward the large man. Once I reach him, I kneel beside him and push him onto his back.
A strangled groan erupts from his chest, and his eyes squeeze together before he forces one open. The other is swollen shut and I doubt heâll be seeing out of it anytime in the next week. Iâve had my fair share of black eyes, and this one isnât going to heal quickly.
âWhat the fuck happened?â I ask as Mrs. Chambers presses cotton pads onto his wounds to soak up some of the blood.
âTheyâre coming,â he chokes, a bloody cough tearing from his throat, splatting red across the carpet.
âWho are?â
âTheyâre coming for her.â
âWho, David?â I snap, looking up at Mrs. Chambersâs worried eyes. She doesnât need to say anything for me to know heâs about to die, because Iâve seen death so many times, in so many different ways, that it will never come as a surprise to me again.
He tries to say something, but he dissolves into a coughing fit, more and more blood pouring from his mouth. His time is coming to an end. Any second now, heâs going to die, and not only will I have lost the only person who knows distribution like the back of his hand, Iâm no closer to figuring out who is coming for us.
When Davidâs body stops straining to cough and his head lulls to the side, thereâs a moment of eerie silence. Itâs been the same in every death Iâve experienced, as if time slows down ever so slightly and the outside world quietens for just a second as death takes his latest victim.
âHeâs dead,â Mrs. Chambers says quietly. She collects the cotton pads she was using and carefully pushes herself to her feet. For such an innocent-looking woman, she doesnât flinch at the sight of death, and for that I admire her. She could just as easily pass out, or start panicking, but instead she takes it in her stride and gets on with it.
Fifteen minutes later, a knock at the door drags my attention away from the dead body in my hallway. Mrs. Chambers cleaned him up as much as she could, and Iâve called the cleaner, but thereâs nothing else I can do but wait.
I reach for the knob and open the door to find Storm and Everett standing on my stoop. Their eyes both narrow on the dead man in the entry and collectively sigh.
âWhat the fuck happened?â Storm asks, closing the door and surveying the scene in front of him.
âI donât know,â I tell him honestly. âBut he said that someone is coming for Snow.â
âWho?â Everett kneels beside the body and carefully turns Davidâs head from side to side, like all the answers to our questions can be found on the body.
âHe didnât say. He died before he could give me anything more than, âtheyâre coming for her.ââ
Repeating the words leaves a sick feeling in my stomach, because the idea that anyone could be hunting Snow, that someone could try to take her away from me again⦠itâs unacceptable. I canât allow any more harm to come to her.
Storm nods, his eyes flicking to Everettâs and then back to me. âWhy donât you and Snow come to the estate for a few nights? Itâs safer there, more security, panic rooms. Iâm sure youâll feel better having her somewhere safe.â
âSheâs safe here,â I growl.
Everett sighs, pushing himself to his feet. âThat may be so, but your security relies on people. The estate doesnât. Not anymore. We donât know who we can trust right now, and I have to agree with Storm. You would both be safer there.â
I close my eyes as I breathe through the rising anger. As much as I want to be selfish, for once, I canât. This isnât like when I stole her away from her life and her family, or when I forced her to marry me, or when I refused to use birth control. All of those things made me a selfish bastard, but for once, I have to put someone elseâs needs ahead of my own.
âShe needs to go with you,â I murmur.
âYou can come too?â Stormâs eyes narrow. âI know weâve had our share of issues, but weâre family now. The estate is open to you if you need it.â
I shake my head. âNo, I have to stay here. If I go with you, it will look like weâre hiding behind the big gates. You need to take Snow and keep her safe until this is all over.â
âHow do you think sheâs going to feel about that?â Everett asks.
âI donât care. As long as sheâs safe, she can hate me all she wants.â