Dark Russian Angel: Chapter 21
Dark Russian Angel (A Vancouver Mafia Romance Book 1)
In the morning, I stood beside Viktor, who was cleaning his gun. His eye was black from last nightâs fight, and he was pissed.
We had tried to intercept a known associate of Bunkoâs with the goal of taking him alive to question him. Our element of surprise had failed to overwhelm, which had resulted in a knock-down, drag-out fist-and-knife fight behind some bar. There had been two of them and two of us, which should have made for a fair fight, but one of the guys was kicking our ass with his martial arts skills, and it almost took two of us to knock him down.
Things went from bad to worse when he threw a knife at me, which veered off to the side, missed me completely, and went through the chest of the guy we wanted to talk to.
Viktor had also been stabbed in the arm, a wound that had required stitches from the doctor. He hadnât been happy about it.
âLast night wasnât pretty,â I offered, sitting on a box beside him. âHow are you doing?â
âLast night should never have happened the way it did,â he snarled.
âWe should have brought more guys to the fight.â
âOur best lead also managed to die on us.â
âHe was a long shot, anyway.â
He gave me a grim look. âWhatever we think we should bring to the Bunko fight, we should probably double it. I donât have a good feeling about any of this.â
I hated that he was right. âAgreed.â
His phone rang. After his call, his expression was serious. âPolice are at the gate.â
âWhy?â
âThey want to talk to you.â
Viktor and I walked to the gate, where two cop cars waited with flashing lights. Without a search warrant, they didnât have grounds to come onto my property, but they didnât seem to care about that.
âWhat kind of stupid bullshit is this?â Viktor grumbled.
When I walked through the gate, a plainclothes detective got out of one of the cruisers.
âAndrusha Sokolov?â
âWhat can I help you with?â I watched as another detective approached from the driverâs side.
âWhat happened to your face?â
âA bar fight.â
The guy glanced at Viktor. âWas he in the same fight?â
âHeâs my wingman.â
He pressed his pockets as if he were looking for something. âWe were wondering if youâve talked to Detective Klaassen lately.â
âNo, not recently.â
He located his pad of paper. âCan you tell me the last time you talked to her?â
âI met her a couple of weeks ago in a diner, for a late-night coffee.â
âDo you remember the exact day?â
It was the night we dropped Sasha off at Micaâs place. âNo clue, sorry.â
The other cop stepped forward. âAnd what was the nature of your meal?â
I played dumb. âWhat do you mean?â
âWhat did you talk about?â
I shook my head. âNothing in particular.â
They exchanged looks. âWe find it interesting that a cop, lead on one of our biggest investigations, would have a late-night meeting with someone like you.â
âWas that a question?â
He snapped his notebook shut. âYou know what I mean.â
I shoved my hands into my pockets. âHow long has the detective been missing?â
âWe didnât say she was.â
âYou kind of did.â
âShe hasnât reported to work in four days. Sheâs not answering her cell, and her apartment is empty.â
âCleared out?â
He shook his head. âJust her wallet and phone gone. She left her cat.â
These two cops were in way over their heads. âShe never talked about her job or her life with me.â
One of the detectives stepped forward. âWere you sleeping with her?â
âShe made it clear that it was an option, but it wasnât a good career choice for either of us.â
âWhat does that mean?â
I shrugged. âYou know, a detective like her fucking someone like me.â
He scratched the back of his head. âThe further we dive into her life, the more disturbing it gets.â
I looked between these two men. I wanted to warn them. To tell them not to dig too deep because their questions would uncover nothing good. They seemed like good cops, decent men, but they werenât prepared for what they might find. Not if Bunko was involved.
âTake care, gentlemen.â
Five hours later, Viktor and I were doing a stakeout of our own barge. We wanted to see if Bunko was aware of this shipment. If he was, he would probably try to get a closer look.
Viktor stared down the scope of his sniper rifle. âSomeone is here to take a look.â
âWhere?â
âThird window on the right of that fishing vessel.â
I looked through my binoculars and saw the familiar flash of the scope of a rifle. âSomeone has come to check out the party.â
Viktor was grumpy. He always got bitchy before a fight. âCanât happen soon enough. Are we sure Bunko is going to hit the barge when we leave?â
âNope, but the fact that someone is staking out our barge is a good sign.â
âHow many men are Carl and Bastelli sending?â
âNot enough. And Iâm not sure how trained they are.â
âWell, our guys are ready for war.â
We studied each other, both of us thinking about the things that would be coming at us in the next few days.
âSo what do you think about the detective going missing?â
He put his eye back on his scope. âI think she got what was coming to her.â
âWhat do you mean?â
âShe was corrupt. Nothing good ever comes from those kinds of life decisions.â
I thought about that statement. âYou think maybe she realized she was in over her head, and she cut and ran?â
He looked back at me. âShe might have, but itâs doubtful.â
âWhy?â
âShe would have taken her cat.â
âYou think Bunko took her?â
He looked at me. âWhat do you think?â
I shook my head. âIâm not even sure why she went rogue. I couldnât tell if it was money or love.â
He snorted. âNo one does anything that stupid for love.â
âI think she tried to walk a thin line and got caught. And Bunkoâs long reach caught up to her.â
âYup. Sounds about right.â
Viktor sounded so toneless, it made me ask. âYou ever think about a different life?â
He looked down his gun scope and adjusted the dial by one point. âEvery single fucking day.â
âWhere would you go?â
He pulled his head back and looked at me. âYou asking me about my backup plan?â
âYou got one?â
âDonât you?â
I thought about the property I had just bought in southern Alberta. I trusted Viktor. âI have a backup plan. Not sure if I will ever make it there.â
âBackup plans are put in place to make us feel better. Iâve got a cabin up north. If push came to shove, Iâd just disappear into the bush.â
I wondered what kind of push or shove it would take to get Viktor to leave. âWhy donât you?â
He lifted his head to look at me. âProbably the same reason you donât.â
We all had our reasons for living in this world. Most of those reasons werenât good ones, and none of us liked to talk about them.
As I walked up to the loft, I realized that it was only eight oâclock. I had somehow managed to get home at a decent hour. I felt like time was so fleeting, and I seemed to waste most of it working.
Olivia was lying on the couch, watching a movie. Sasha lay on the floor near her. They both looked at me when I walked in.
I sat down on the couch. âWhat are you watching?â
âWar of the Worlds.â
I lifted her feet so they were on my lap. âAlien invasions?â
The movie no longer held her attention. She snuggled her legs on my lap and clung to my gaze. âHow was your day?â
âSurprisingly uneventful.â
âDid you eat?â
âI did.â
I studied her to see how she was holding up. Adding sex to the menu had complicated our situation exponentially. It didnât help that this situation was volatile at best, and I needed to be working around the clock, leaving her here alone for hours at a time.
Was she handling everything okay emotionally?
She gave me a shy smile. âWant to cuddle?â
âWell, who can resist that invitation?â I stood up and took off all my weapons before lying on the couch behind her. She tucked herself up under my chin and then turned to the TV to finish watching her movie.
I was not a cuddly kind of guy. I didnât usually spend time with women outside of the bedroom, but I couldnât get enough of Olivia. Naked, clothed, awake, asleep, I felt like nothing was enough. She made me want things I didnât think I could have. She tempted me with things I had no right to be tempted by.
I ducked my head over her neck and breathed in the scent of her hair. She smelled better than anything in the world.
Everything felt so precarious. Her safety. Bunko. Whom to trust. Whom to fight. No one seemed to know what was going on, but we could all feel the mounting pressure. The streets were savage right now, and we were all marching towards something bigger than most of us had ever seen. It would all come down to who was smarter, who had trusted the right people.
If I didnât come out of this fight alive, Olivia would be at mortal risk.
She looked over her shoulder at me. âYouâre tense.â
I nipped the corner of her lips with my mouth. âNo, Iâm not.â
She flipped over so she could study me, as if she were trying to read some secret on my face.
âWhat do you want to know?â I teased.
âYouâre just so hard to read sometimes.â
âIâm an open book.â
âYouâre elusive.â
Amelia used to call me that all the time.
âYour whole body tensed when I said that,â she added.
I rolled onto my back and took Olivia with me, so she ended up sprawled on my chest. âIâm waiting.â
âFor?â
âFor you to tell me one secret.â
She looked thoughtful. âWhatâs your family like?â
âThatâs a question.â
âAnswer it.â
I thought about the parents and the older sister I had left behind in Russia. My parents called me regularly to update me about the farm, how many sheep had been born, and the neighborâs new tractor. They had no idea what I did. It was another layer of shame in my life.
âThey are surprisingly normal. Tell me a secret.â
She sighed and laid her head on my chest. âYou know all my secrets.â
I put my hands on her narrow back. âI donât think I do.â
She lifted her head and gave me a cheeky smile. âI will tell you a secret if you tell me a secret.â
I felt my cock stir at the sight of that smile. I reached my mouth up to capture hers. And then my fucking phone rang.
The police were at the gate again.
I lifted her off me and gave her another hard kiss. âI have to go take care of something. And you owe me a secret.â
Her mouth followed mine as I ended the kiss. âCome back soon.â
Viktor and I stood at the gate in the dark. It was piss-pouring rain. The two detectives from earlier today stood at the gate, beneath black umbrellas.
âGentleman, twice in one day,â I said.
âWeâd like to take you down to the station for questioning.â
âFor what purpose?â
âJust some routine questions to clear something up.â
They put me in the back of their car but didnât cuff me. My three SUVs, including one driven by Viktor, followed close behind.
âNot sure what your friends think they are doing,â the driving cop complained.
I tried to keep the impatience out of my voice. âThey are keeping us safe.â
They looked at each other and started to laugh. âYeah, sure.â
âYou still have no idea what steaming pile of shit you just stepped into.â
âIs that a question?â one of the detectives retorted.
âJust an observation.â
They brought me down to the station, stuck me in one of their little rooms, and grilled me, focusing a lot of their questions on the missing Somalian gang.
âWhy are you asking me about them?â
âWeâre just covering our bases.â
âEverything I know about them is secondhand knowledge. Chatter on the street.â
âWhat exactly did you hear?â
âThat they all went missing without a trace.â
The two detectives exchanged looks.
I looked between them. âWhat did you find?â
âWe think this case might be tied to what Detective Klaassen was working on. Do you know anything about that?â
I worked to keep the frustration off my face. Of course, the missing Somalian gang was related to Bunkoâs invasion. The fact that it was taking these detectives this long to get the lay of the land showed me that the police would offer zero help with Bunko. Not that they had been helping that much before, but at least Detective Klaassen had fed me some useful information.
âDid you call me down here to be your sounding board as you work through your theories?â I scoffed.
âWe need to know what you know.â
If I told them anything, they would just get in the way. âIf something happens, Iâll call you.â
They left me in that room for hours, doing their stupid cop routine: trying to break me without letting me talk to anyone or take a piss, and then firing questions at me.
At seven in the morning, when they were starting to realize I would tell them nothing, they let me walk.
I got into the car next to Viktor.
He started it. âWell, that was a bullshit waste of time. Back to the warehouse?â
God, I wish. âI have one stop to make first.â
The runner came under the bridge fast, his legs pumping hard, showing strength and speed as he ran. He passed me, and then his footsteps slowed.
I stepped out of the shadows.
Mica was breathing hard. âI can always sense you lurking.â
I handed him a bottle of water, pretending my cloak-and-dagger routine was no big deal. âI thought you might be thirsty.â
He opened the bottle and chugged half of it. âWhatâs going on?â
Sometimes friends donât come home from gunfights. âBusiness is intense lately.â
He stared straight ahead as he sipped his water. Then he asked me a question he had never asked me before. âYou ever think about getting out?â
Every fucking day. âIâve thought about it. Itâs not as easy as it looks.â
âTell me about Olivia.â
His question made me realize why I had come down here to talk to him. He was the only one with whom I could be honest. âIâm screwing that one up.â
His eyes met mine. âShe seemed pretty invested when I talked with her.â
âI want whatâs best for her.â Unfortunately, thatâs not me.
He eyed me speculatively. âYouâre into her.â
I shrugged. âWhatever that means.â
He gave me a huge smile. âI never thought Iâd see the day when youâd be in knots over a woman.â
I thought about how fucking sweet and perfect she was. She was too good for me or this life. âItâs distracting as fuck.â
He grinned. âWomen have that effect.â
I felt a bit desperate. âHow can one person change everything?â
âThatâs usually a sign.â
âWhat kind of sign?â
âThat you should probably marry her.â
âThatâs such bullshit.â
He smiled harder. âFighting it only makes it worse.â
I punched him lightly in the arm. âWhy did I ever think talking to you would make me feel better?â
He put his arm around me. âBecause it did.â