Blood of My Monster: Chapter 24
Blood of My Monster: A Dark Mafia Romance (Monster Trilogy Book 1)
Mikeâs little face slowly materializes in front of me. Young, sweet, and full of tears.
âMishka, whatâs wrong?â I ask, my voice breaking.
âHelp me, Sasha,â he whispers. âHelp usâ¦â
I reach out a hand. âSlow down. Breathe. Can you tell me whatâs wrong?â
The moment I touch him, he falls to the ground, and blood explodes from his eyes, ears, nose, and mouth.
The gruesome scene from four years ago slowly comes into focus. Mikeâs body lies in the middle of all the others.
Blood pools beneath them, and the corpses become identifiable one by one. My father, my mother, my cousins, my uncle, and even my brother.
Anton lies on his side, bleeding from all his orifices like Mike. Uncle Albert walks in the middle of all the blood, expression downward and tears streaming down his cheeks.
I call his name, but no words come out. Not even a sound or a cry.
His eyes meet mine, blood tears soaking them. âAre you happy, Sasha?â
I shake my head over and over. We canât be happy. Iâm not allowed to be happy when everyone is buried six feet under.
And then my uncle falls down, joining everyone else on the ground, bleeding from all their orifices.
The blood pool gets deeper and colder, but I run in their direction.
I lose my footing and fall straight into the pool. âNooo.â
White light blinds out all the red, and I startle into a sitting position. Thatâs when I realize Iâm in a bed.
For a second, just a fraction of time, I think Iâm back at home. I only had a nightmare, and Mama just woke me up because Iâm going to be late for school.
But this is not home. And the nightmare wasnât completely inaccurate.
âItâs ten in the morning.â
My head whips in the direction of the feminine voice. Anna. Sheâs the one who pulled the blinds, revealing the huge tree near the balcony, and is staring at me with those judgmental eyes that have never trusted me.
Her gaze bounces between me and the bedâKirillâs bed.
Shit.
Memories from the sauna slowly come to focus, and heat rises to my cheeks and ears.
Holy hell.
What on earth have I done?
I stop myself from thinking about that, or more accurately, Annaâs unwavering attention forces me to.
Sheâs watching me as if Iâm the greatest threat to this family or something.
Iâm thankful Kirill actually dressed me in a shirt and sweatpants. But thereâs one tiny fact that I canât change.
Me in Kirillâs bed.
What must she think of me?
âUh, Iâ¦â I scramble from the bed, wincing at the ache between my legs, but I wrap the blanket around me. Iâm not naked, but I donât have my chest bandages on either.
Anna stands in place like a dictatorial headmaster whoâs a fan of dishing out punishments.
âI wasnât feeling well, so Boss mustâveâ¦uh, carried me here.â I sound like a fucking idiot.
The small womanâs expression doesnât change. Whether in affirmation or the opposite. Sheâs like a statue whose sole purpose is to judge me.
âIâ¦Iâm going to take a shower.â
âEat first.â She motions at a tray thatâs overloaded with food. âKirill told me to prepare him breakfast, and only after I brought it here did he mention that I have to make sure you eat.â
Oh.
That must be why it looks like one of those luxurious breakfasts. Kirill mustâve known that she wouldnât have put any effort into the meal if it was for me, so he tricked her into thinking it was for him.
Honestly, manipulative should be that manâs middle name.
âThanks,â I say.
She doesnât reply, but nods instead.
âDo you know where Boss is?â I ask in my most amicable tone.
âYou should be the one to know that, considering youâre the bodyguard.â
Ouch. Okay.
I sit on the couch and sigh. âLook, Anna. I donât know why you hate meâ¦â
âI donât hate you. I just donât trust you,â she says simply. âKirill is the only person whoâs able to lead this family, and to do that, he needs competent people by his side. Not people he has to save each and every time something happens.â
Ouch again.
I canât even say anything in reply, because sheâs right. Iâm supposed to be saving Kirillâs life, not the other way around.
âIâll tell him you ate your breakfast,â she says, then leaves the room.
I take a bite of toast and drink some orange juice, then wince when I shift in place. My pussy feels sore and achy, but for some reason, Iâm desperate for more of the torture Kirill inflicted last night.
Once again, my cheeks heat.
I canât believe I fainted.
But then again, it was too hot in that sauna. Add his touch, and it was impossible to keep up.
It also doesnât help that I was overwhelmed with all the cryptic emotions that were going through me at the time. Even now, I canât put a name to them.
Except that Iâ¦probably enjoyed it more than I should have.
Maybe thatâs why I had that nightmare. Uncle Albert asked me if I was happy with the new life and setting I chose for myself.
It was also the second time Mike asked me for help, and I havenât been there to answer his plea.
My phone vibrates on the nightstand, and I manage to swallow the contents of my mouth before I stand, stumble on the blanket, then release it and go to check the text.
Something knots in my stomach when I donât find Kirillâs name on the screen.
Viktor: Youâre on the night shift at the club tonight. You have no orders until then.
I type.
Aleksander: Am I not needed at Bossâs side now?
I couldâve asked the man himself, but Iâm too embarrassed to talk to him after what happened last night. Especially since he didnât contact me first.
Viktor: No.
Aleksander: Do you know where he is?
Viktor: Nowhere you should concern yourself with.
I resist the urge to roll my eyes. Leave it to Viktor to be the most unhelpful person ever.
So I text my friend.
Aleksander: Morning, Maks!
The reply is immediate.
Maksim: Morning, Sash. Iâve been waiting for you to come back to the annex, but then I recalled you were on night duty. Was everything all right yesterday?
Aleksander: Yeah, why wouldnât it be?
Maksim: Boss looked kind of angry or annoyed. I couldnât tell for sure, and since he doesnât look like that most of the time, I was worried something had happened.
Aleksander: Nothing happened. Just the usual, I guess.
Iâm such an excellent liar in texts. Which canât be said about real-life interactions, because I was so close to telling Anna everything if she so much as pressed me earlier.
Maksim: Thank God. Itâs never good to be on Bossâs radar.
Tell me about it.
Aleksander: I know, right? Speaking of Boss, do you know where he is?
Maksim: He headed out with Viktor and Yuri last night and still hasnât come back.
I grow taller, my breath catching.
They canât be in danger, or else Viktor wouldâve said something or called for backup. But for some reason, I still donât feel good about this whole thing.
After mulling over the information, I walk into Kirillâs closet in search of something I can use as temporary chest bandages.
My jaw nearly hits the ground when I find my clothes in the cornerâall my suits, shirts, and sweatpants. Not only that, but underneath them, thereâs a duffel bag with my bandages inside them.
Why did he bring them here�
Not coming up with a logical answer, I wrap a bandage around my chest and get into a suit.
Since this is the perfect chance to try and find something in Kirillâs belongings, I do the most logical thing for someone in my positionâgo through his closet. Ninety percent of his tailored suits are black, but they have different cuts.
The remaining ten percent are either navy blue or dark gray, but Iâve rarely seen him wear those.
He has drawers upon drawers of luxurious and special edition watches. Ten of the same set of black-framed glasses. Some sunglasses that he almost never wears. Italian shoes and leather belts, but thatâs about it.
There are no personal items or anything that helps with my search.
Iâm about to put a bag back on the top drawer, when a picture falls. I grab the frame and pause.
Thereâs no picture inside, justâ¦a handkerchief with his first name embroidered in the corner.
My fingers tighten around the frame, and an alien feeling drops to the base of my stomach. Kirill is anything but a sentimental person. Heâs methodical, practical, and manipulative to a fault.
Actually, he uses peopleâs emotions against them, so the fact that he kept a handkerchief, framed it even, goes against everything I know of him. This was obviously done by a girl. But who? An ex-lover?
âSasha! Are you in here?â
Karinaâs sudden voice nearly causes me to drop the handkerchief. I hastily put the frame back exactly where I found it and step out of the closet.
Karina stands in the middle of the room, wearing an ample tulle dress, its black color contrasting against her skin.
Her face has some makeup on it, and sheâs let her shiny blonde hair fall to the middle of her back. Sheâs crossing her arms and tapping her Louboutin heels on the floor. âWhere were you? I was calling you for the past ten minutes.â
âOh, sorry.â I grab my phone from the nightstand. âI left it here.â
âWhatever. Letâs go.â
âGo where?â
âTo have breakfast in my room, of course.â
âI already had breakfast.â
âThen you can just accompany me. Whatâs so hard about that?â
âIâd love to, but I have work to do.â Or, more accurately, I have to try to find Kirill. While we do stay overnight at the club sometimes, Iâm usually there, so I know heâs safe.
Now, Iâm not sure. Even with Viktor and Yuri by his side.
Is it weird that Iâm starting to genuinely care about his safety? But Iâm only doing this because I canât get information if heâs dead, considering heâs the only one who has access to what his father left behind.
â¦Right?
âLiar, liar. I know you have the day off and donât have to work until this evening.â
âWellâ¦â
âNope, not hearing it. Youâre coming with me.â
She all but drags me and tells me to carry the breakfast tray, too, because itâs apparently better than the one she got.
Her room is dark and gloomy, as usual. She has the candles lit and some dim lights on, though.
âItâs breakfast, Miss. We should maybe have it on the balcony.â
âI told you not to call me Miss. My name is Karina.â She blushes. âOr Kara if you want. And nope, thereâs no way in hell weâre going outside.â
âThe balcony is still attached to your room. Itâs not exactly outside.â
âStill no. Nope. Iâm not hearing you.â
âI wonât force you, but you look so beautiful today, and I thought the sunshine would make you look even better.â
âIâ¦â She purses her lips and studies her perfectly manicured nails that she does herself, as she told me. âOkay, I guess. Just fifteen minutes, though!â
For a sheltered princess, she really is adorable. And Kirill is right, sheâs neither violent nor messy. Sheâs just scared of the world and prefers her little cocoon.
I pull back the curtains before she changes her mind, and she physically winces at the light. I clean the chairs and the outside table and then place the tray on top of it.
Karina remains in the shadows of her room until I gently pull her out. She holds on to my hand with her sweaty ones and watches her surroundings like a trapped animal.
âThe food is so good. Anna is definitely talented.â I bite with passion into the toast, trying to make her forget about where we are.
Her leg bounces on the floor, but when I offer her a cup of coffee with cream and sugar like she prefers it, Karina accepts it, her stance relaxing.
âAre the fifteen minutes over?â
âItâs only been three minutes, Missâ¦I mean, Karina.â
Her expression lights up, and she smiles. âYou should totally become my guard, but that stingy Kirill was like, no,â she mimics his dispassionate tone.
âYou asked him to make me your guard?â
âHe didnât even let me finish asking and flat out refused.â
I didnât know that.
âBut you donât need a bodyguard, since, well, youâre always in your room.â
She purses her lips. âOf course I do. I can, like, try on clothes I order online, and you tell me what you think. I can do your nails and weâll have meals together like this.â
Thatâs not really a bodyguardâs job, but I donât tell her that.
Karina traces the rim of her cup and sighs. âWe never had meals as a family, you know.â
âWhy not?â
âMama and Papa didnât like each other, and they made it their mission that the three of us would be filled with hate, too.â She gulps a mouthful of coffee. âThey made us compete against each other all the time.â
I lean over in my seat. âCompete how?â
âKirill and Konstantin were at it way before I came along. At first, it was childish things like racing and grades, but then it was martial arts, shooting lessons, and how to perform under pressure.â
âPerform under pressure?â
The coffee cup shakes in her hand, some droplets falling all over the table. âStupid psychological tests about mental endurance.â
âYouâ¦did that?â
âI had no choice! It was mandatory because Papa was an asshole.â Her eyes shine with tears. âI was thirteen, Konstantin was nineteen, and Kirill was twenty-one. We were dropped off on an isolated island and had to survive using whatever means necessary. I was glued to Kirillâs side, but I was taken by some scary masked men. Kirill came to save me, but there were too many of them. He was pushed down, beaten, burned, electrocuted, and I had to watch all the torture in real time. I was crying and screaming so loud, I fainted. Konstantin was the only one who passed that test since he found a boat and escaped. Kirill and I failed because we were supposed to be detached and act like Konstantin did. I never left my room after that. Whenever Mama or Papa forced me out, I would vomit, have a seizure, or faint, so they gave up and thought it was better to hide me from the world. A few years later, Kirill left me, too, and went to Russia.â
Howâ¦monstrous can a person be to do this to his own children? Karina isnât this way because sheâs mentally unwell. It was caused by trauma. Thatâs why sheâs scared of being outside and is physically unable to handle the exterior world.
If thatâs the most traumatic thing that happened to Karina, I wonder how many times Kirill was tested by his father to turn out the way he is.
If he was beaten, burned, and electrocuted at twenty-one, what else did his father do to him prior to that?
âIâm so sorry, Karina.â
She shakes her head and wipes the tears that have escaped from her eyes. âI already lost my parents a long time ago, but I thought I at least had Kirill. But he also left.â
âIs that why you tried to kill him the day he came back?â
She sniffles and glares in the distance. âI will still kill him.â
I smile. She absolutely doesnât mean that. In fact, I think a part of her is scared heâll leave again.
âIf I kill him, you can be my guard!â She claps her hands as if sheâs come up with the most genius plan.
âIâll be your guard without that.â
âReally?â
âYeah, but as I said, you have to go out first.â
âNo, thanks.â
âWe can just start with the balcony like this.â
âJust the balcony?â she asks with innocent eyes.
âJust the balcony is fine.â
âI donât hate the balcony.â
âIâm glad you donât.â
âThanks, Sasha.â She smiles.
âFor what?â
âIf you hadnât come, I wouldnât have known the balcony isnât so bad.â
âAnytime.â
She slathers some jam on a piece of toast and offers it to me. âI canât believe that Anna. She made Kirillâs plate so much better than mine. Sheâs always had favoritism issues.â
âShe seems like she loves him, though.â
âThat she does.â She stares off in the distance. âYou know, she lost her son who was around the same age as Kirill due to drowning. Her life kinda went off the rails after that, and she was about to jump off a bridge. Viktor said he and Kirill were passing by when they saw her. Kirill caught her at the last second and told her if she had no use for her life, he could give her purpose. That was when he was, like, fifteen. He brought her back here, and neither Papa nor Mama liked her. Mama said he was picking up homeless people off the streets. But do you know how he forced them to accept her? He asked Papa for his prize after finishing one of his missions, and his prize was having and keeping Anna.â
Karina smiles broadly, looking awfully proud of a brother she often threatens to kill. I canât help but mirror her smile. No wonder Anna is overprotective of Kirill. She mustâve raised him as her own son ever since he brought her here.
âWeâre gonna have to steal Kirillâs breakfast every day!â she announces with determination. When she raises her cup of coffee, I clink mine against it.
Even though I want to go find Kirill, I take my time with the breakfast. Karina and I stay on the balcony for over an hour, and not once does she mention the fifteen-minute limit.