Painted Scars: Chapter 22
Painted Scars: An Opposites Attract Mafia Romance (Perfectly Imperfect Book 1)
One week later
My phone starts ringing on the nightstand, but I ignore it and put a pillow over my head. The ringing stops, just to start again a minute later. I groan, reach for the damn thing, and answer without looking whoâs calling.
âDid I wake you up, child?â
I sit up in the bed, instantly awake. âVarya?â
âI need to talk to you. Can I drop by?â
âSure, Iâll text you the address.â
âIâll be there in an hour then.â
âVarya, whatâs happening? Is . . . is he okay?â
âYes. For now, at least. Weâll talk when I get there.â
A bad feeling forms in my chest while I stare at my phone. Something is wrong, I know it. I rush into the bathroom to shower and change. Iâm collecting the brushes and discarded sketches that litter the floor in my living room when I hear the doorbell.
âWhat the fuck has he done now?â I ask the moment Varya comes inside.
âI like the hair, kukolka. Green looks good on you.â She kisses me and smiles, but it doesnât reach her eyes. âLetâs sit.â
I lead her into the kitchen, pour us two cups of coffee I made earlier, and sit down in the chair opposite Varya. She slides the cup toward herself and holds it in her hands, looking at the liquid inside. âCan you please come back?â
Her question stuns me, and for a second, I stare at her speechlessly. âIâm not coming back. We divorced three months ago; you know that.â
âRoman started a war with the Italians. He did it on purpose. They have been playing cat and mouse for months now, attacking each otherâs shipments, blowing up warehouses.â
âDear God. What the hell was he thinking?â
âHe wasnât. I think he wanted a distraction, and the Italians were a convenient choice.â
âA hell of a distraction. Has he gone mad?â
âMaybe.â She shrugs and takes a sip of her coffee. âI was there when he signed the divorce papers, you know. I think that up until that point he believed youâd come back eventually. But after signing those papers . . . he just snapped. Two weeks later he sent the guys to intercept one of the Italiansâ shipments. And he went with them.â
âHe did what?â
âHe said it was because he needed to keep an eye on Sergei, and I assumed it was a onetime thing. It wasnât.â
âI thought a pakhan is supposed to handle the organization, manage business deals or whatever, not play foot soldier.â
âHe doesnât seem to care, child. Do you know how big a deal it is in our world if a soldier manages to kill a pakhan? The one who does that becomes a hero among his peers. When itâs just the soldiers on the field, itâs business as usual, but with a pakhan there, he becomes the primary target.â
âVarya, I . . . I donât know what you expect me to do. Call him and ask him to stop acting like an idiot?â
âI need you to come back. With you there, he wonât be so reckless. He wouldnât want you to worry.â
âHeâs a grown man, Varya. He doesnât need me to act as his off switch.â
âRoman loves you, Nina. I donât think you know how much.â
âA man died because of me. I told Roman I canât live with that, and he killed him anyway. If he truly loved me, he would have never done that to me.â
âDo you know how Roman became a pakhan, child?â Varya asks, and I shake my head. âLet me tell you that story. It might help you understand things better.â
She looks down at her cup and starts stirring the liquid with a spoon.
âRomanâs mother married his father when she was only eighteen. Lev was twenty years older than her, and he was a really bad man, kukolka. I came into that house with Nastya. I had known her since she was a baby, and I hated seeing Lev mistreating her from the moment she arrived. He beat her, even while she was pregnant with Roman. When Roman was five, he started confronting his father on purpose so Lev would take out his anger on him instead of Nastya. It worked for a few months. Until it didnât. A few days before Romanâs sixth birthday, Lev hit Nastya so hard that she fell down the stairs. Roman watched.â
âHe killed her?â
âYes. Broken neck. I took over taking care of Roman then. Lev married again a few years later, but Marina managed to run away. Iâm not sure what happened with her, but we never heard anything about her afterward.â
âYou think he killed her, too?â
âProbably. When Roman grew up, I started working as a housekeeper and tried my best to keep myself as far away as possible from the pakhan. I handled the staff and didnât have any reason to cross Levâs path. Until he called for me one day. When I came into the library, he grabbed me around my neck and slammed me into the wall, choking me. He was mad because the maid didnât change the sheets that morning as he requested. When Roman came in, I was half passed out already. Roman killed him, and if he didnât, Lev would have choked me to death.â
I look up at Varya, who is looking pointedly at the hand I raised at some point and unconsciously placed on my neck.
âWe all have some kind of trigger, child. Roman saw that man as a threat to you, and he neutralized it. Iâm not saying he did the right thing. Iâm just trying to make you understand. He knows now that what he did hurt you, and believe me when I say heâd never do anything intentionally that may inflict you any kind of pain. Heâs madly in love with you, and I think when you left, it broke something in him. He doesnât care about anything anymore. I think heâs doing all those reckless things on purpose. He . . . he got shot last month.â
âWhat?â I whisper, and the tears I have been keeping at bay so far burst out.
âIn his upper arm. He was luckyâit just went through, nothing serious. This time. Please, at least talk to him. Heâs going to get himself killed, Nina. Itâs just a matter of time.â
âOh, Iâll talk to him.â I stand up from the table and hurry to grab my jacket and wallet, brushing my tears away with the sleeve of my shirt along the way. âIâll call us a taxi.â
âVova can take us. I think itâs his shift,â Varya says casually.
âHeâs somewhere in the neighborhood?â
âYou could say that. Heâs across the street.â
I raise my head to look at her, then go to the window and look outside. Like she said, there is a nondescript car sitting there. âHe put a tail on me?â
âHe put a security detail on you. They have been there for months.â
âIâm going to kill him.â
When we exit the building, I march right across the street toward the car and knock on the window. Vovaâs head snaps up, and he stares at me with wide eyes and quickly lowers the window.
âNina Petrova?â
I grind my teeth but donât correct him, only motion with my head to Varya who is approaching.
âWe need a ride.â
âOf course.â He unlocks the door, and we get in the back. âWhere do you need to go?â
âIâm paying Pakhan a visit,â I say and lean back into the seat.
It takes us close to an hour to reach the house. The moment the car stops in the driveway, I get out and rush up the stone steps toward the main door. The security guy, who is standing guard, looks at me with surprise, then nods and opens the door for me.
âWhere is he, Kolya?â
âI believe Pakhan is in his office,â he says.
I rush across the hall and turn left toward the west wing corridor leading to Romanâs office. The closer I get to his door, the more my bravado leaks out of me. By the time I reach the door, Iâm a bundle of nerves and anxiety. Iâm going to see him again after all this time, and I am both excited and scared. I want to go inside, but at the same time, I want to turn around and bolt. No going back nowâitâs too late.
Placing my hand on the handle, I take a deep breath, school my features into an expressionless mask, and enter without knocking.
Roman is sitting behind his desk, looking between papers in his hands and the laptop screen. I let the door behind me close, lean my back onto it, and watch him for a few seconds. God, Iâve missed him so much that just looking at him hurts.
âI hear you got yourself shot,â I say, and Iâm amazed how casual I manage to soundânot a tremor in my voice, but a hurricane rages inside.
Romanâs head snaps up, his gaze colliding with mine, and he stares me down with such force that if I didnât have the door behind me, I would have stumbled backward. So much is going on in his eyes, different emotions flashing and being replaced with others so quickly, I canât catch all of them. There is surprise, but itâs mixed with hurt and so much rage that I canât help but flinch.
âAnd that concerns you how, Nina?â Quiet, angry wordsâeach one piercing my already shredded heart. He hates me.
âI just wanted to make sure youâre okay.â
He leans back in his chair and crosses his arms in front of him. âWhy?â
Why? Such a simple question. And so many answers. Because I was afraid for him. Because I missed him and wanted to see him even if only for a minute. Because I love him. But instead of answering, I stand there and try to control my breathing because, suddenly, it feels like there is not enough air in the room.
Roman stands up, reaches for the cane leaning on the desk, and walks toward me. He is leaning on his cane quite heavily, but his steps are sure and rather quick. One tear escapes from the corner of my eye. He did it; I knew he would.
He comes to stand in front of me and raises his hand to place it on the door next to my head, caging me in. He lowers his head so that our faces are only inches apart.
âI asked you a question. I need an answer, malysh.â
The dam bursts upon me hearing his endearment, and the tears flow freely down my face. My lower lip starts quivering so I bite it and slowly raise my hands to his face. They are trembling. I hesitate for a second, then place my palms on his cheeks.
âYou. Left. Me,â he whispers, and then bangs the door with his palm. âYou fucking left me!â
âI know.â
Rage. So much rage in his eyes as he looks down at me, his jaw set in a hard line.
âIâm sorry for hurting you,â he whispers. âI wish I could turn back time and do things differently. I canât, and thatâs a fact. But I am not sorry for killing that bastard. Thatâs another fact for you. Iâll ask again. Why do you care if I was shot?â
I canât make myself look away from his eyes. Heâs not sorry for what he did. Can I live with that?
Roman clenches his jaw, reaches with his hand, and buries it in the hair at the back of my head. âAnswer me, damn it.â
âBecause I love you, Roman!â I press my palms onto his cheeks and shake his stubborn head. âI love you. I canât bear the thought of you getting hurt. You will end this fucking war you have started, you hear me? I donât care how you do it, but end it, or so help me God, Iâm going to kill you myself.â
He doesnât say anything for a few moments, staring into my eyes with his fingers clutching the back of my head.
âMarry me,â he says, âand Iâll stop the war.â
Ninaâs eyes go wide at my proposition. Sheâs probably wondering if Iâm serious, and you bet I am. No matter the means, Iâm getting her back.
âYou are blackmailing me into marrying you. Again.â
Itâs not a question, but I decide to clarify anyway. âYes, I am.â
Her eyes stare into mine, and I watch them closely. They are red at the edges, and the tears are still flowing. I donât think she even notices that sheâs still crying, and I yearn to brush them away with my hand. This will be the last time she cries because of me, I vow it to myself.
I need her to say yes. There is no way I can go through one more night without my wildcat curled into my side. She took my black heart with her that day she left, and if she says no, she can keep it. Iâm ruined for anyone else anyway.
âJesus, Roman,â she sighs and presses the heels of her palms over her eyes.
I stare at her hands, which are smeared with black paint, and a tiny flame of hope rises in my chest. âYou didnât take off the rings.â
âI couldnât.â She lowers her hands and sniffs.
Okay. We are getting somewhere. I reach for her hand and take off the rings from her finger. They come off too easily. She has lost weight. Iâm going to strangle her.
âGive those back!â she yelps and grabs for my hand, but I move it behind my back.
âI will. Just give me a few seconds,â I say, and gripping the cane, slowly start lowering my left knee toward the floor.
Nina stares at me, her eyes wide. She is crying again. âShit, baby. Donât do that.â
I ignore the screaming pain in my right leg and lower my left knee a bit more. Itâs not the exact pose I envisioned, but itâs the closest to getting on one knee I can manage. I raise the rings in front of her.
âWill you marry me, malysh?â
She whimpers and exhales, tears still streaming down her face, then grabs the front of my shirt and pulls me up. It takes me a few seconds to straighten, and when I do, she raises her hand between us.
âYou are not getting away with the cheap version this time, Roman.â She sniffs. âI want a dress, big and fluffy and sparkling. I want a ton of flowers, an orchestra playing fancy music, and of course ââ
I feel my lips curl up in a smile. I am so fucking in love with my crazy little wife.
âI love you,â I whisper, slide the rings onto her finger, then grab her face and kiss her.
I trace my palm down Ninaâs back, then lower it to squeeze her ass, and retrace the path up all the way to the back of her head where my fingers get stuck in tangled dark green strands. âWill this wash off?â
Nina lifts her head from my chest and looks at the strand of hair between my fingers. âNot a fan of green?â
âNot really. But if you like it, Iâm okay with it. Itâs awful, though.â
âItâll wash off in a week or so. I hate it too.â She shrugs and places her head down again, just over my heart. âHow will you stop the war with the Italians?â
âThe usual way. Someone is going to get married to a sweet and docile Italian girl.â
âHow romantic. And who will be the lucky groom?â
âI havenât decided yet. Probably Kostya.â
âIâm sure he will be thrilled.â She yawns and closes her eyes. âHowâs the physical therapy been going?â
âI finished it two weeks ago. Warren said we reached the maximum of what could be achieved, so there is no need for it anymore.â
âIâm glad. I know how much you hated those sessions. You are sexy with the cane, just like I predicted.â She smiles sleepily.
I lift a few tangled strands of hair from her face, then look to the side of the bed where my crutches are leaning on the wall. I donât think she noticed them when we came in, since we were preoccupied with removing our clothes on the way to the bed. She would find out in the morning anyway, but I prefer to tell her right away and be done with it.
âNina . . . I have to tell you something.â
âMhm . . . can it wait till the morning?â
âNo.â
Her head snaps up immediately, her eyes staring me down. âWhat did you do?â
âI didnât do anything. Itâs just something I need you to know.â
âOh, God . . .â She groans, âJust tell me what the fuck you did.â
My beautiful little flower is watching me, her eyes wide. I hate that I have to tell her. I hate it so much it makes me sick.
âIâm still using the crutches, Nina. My knee is still stiff in the mornings, and I canât walk without them for the first hour or so.â I grit my teeth and continue, âI sometimes need them in the evenings, too.â
She is just watching me, her eyes staring into mine. I need her to say something. Anything.
âAnd?â she asks finally.
âAnd what? Thatâs it,â I say.
Her eyes widen even more.
âHoly fuck, Roman, donât scare me like that.â She hits me on the chest with her palm. âI thought you were going to tell me something important, like how you offed Igor while I was away. Christ, baby.â
I stare at her. Not the reaction I expected. Disappointment, yes. Or at least some displeasure when she realized that sheâll end up tied to a disabled man for the rest of her life. Isnât that bloody important? Maybe she thinks itâs only temporary.
âNina, you donât understand. It wonât get any better than this for me. Iâm sorry, malysh.â
She leans forward until her forehead touches mine and places her palms on either side of my face. âYes, you already told me. I also saw your crutches and deduced as much myself, baby. And I couldnât care less.â She places a kiss on my lips. âSo, you didnât kill anyone while I was away?â
I decide to plead the Fifth, and wisely keep my mouth shut.
âRoman?â She narrows her eyes at me.
I sigh. âI offed Tanush, okay?â
âI knew it. I . . .â She shakes her head.
âHe was the one who set up the bomb with Leonid.â
Nina regards me, scrunches her nose, then nods. âHe deserved it.â She says and resumes her position on my chest. âJust please donât kill anyone else because of me.â
I listen until her breathing evens out. When Iâm sure sheâs sleeping soundly, I take her small hand from my chest and place a kiss on the tips of her fingers.
âI will be killing anyone who dares to hurt you,â I whisper. âI will just make sure you donât find out next time.â