Dark Russian Angel: Chapter 27
Dark Russian Angel (A Vancouver Mafia Romance Book 1)
My eyes felt glued together. My entire body felt weak and cold. Groaning, I tried to sit up.
I felt a big hand push me back on the bed. âEasy.â
Viktor. I peeled open my eyes. He was sitting beside the bed.
âOlivia,â I rasped.
âI sent her upstairs to shower and take a nap. She hasnât left your side since you got here.â
âHow long have I been like this?â
âYouâve been out of it for two days. You ran a fever, but it broke this morning. Thatâs the only reason I convinced Olivia to go upstairs.â
I felt like an invalid as he pressed a plastic cup of water to my lips, but I drank it gratefully. Exhausted, I dropped my head back on the pillow. âWhat happened?â
âWhat didnât happen?â he said grimly. âDo you remember the fight?â
I frowned. âWe were catching up to our team when we got hit.â
âYou got hit. You took a metal fragment that tore up some blood vessel in your shoulder. Doc patched you up.â
I groaned, hating how weak I felt.
âOlivia assisted in surgery,â he continued. âHeld her own. Doctor said she had steady hands.â
âOlivia was in my surgery?â
âYup.â
I looked at my friend. âI asked you to get her out of here.â
âI tried to get her to leave, but she flat-out refused. Aside from hog-tying her ass all the way up north, there wasnât much I could do about it.â
I tried to think through the fog in my brain. âVlad?â
âHeâs gone missing. No one has seen him since that night. Heâs not answering his phone. And Amelia has checked out of the hotel and is in the wind.â
I worked to lift my head. âSheâs at risk here. Olivia needs to get out of here.â
Viktor looked grim. âI know. She knows that. But sheâs not leaving you behind. So until you can be moved, weâre stuck here.â
I wanted to get out of bed, find her, and put her in a vehicle, but I couldnât even lift my head off the pillow. âI want to talk to her. Now.â
Viktor stood up. âSheâs sleeping. You need to sleep. When she wakes up, Iâll send her down.â
I wanted to argue, but I couldnât seem to open my eyelids.
The next time I woke up, Olivia was sitting beside my bed. She wore a worried expression, but her tremulous smile was the most beautiful thing I had ever seen.
âOlivia,â I scratched out.
She stood up and leaned down to kiss me. âYouâre awake.â Her eyes were puffy and her nose was red.
âWere you crying?â
She shook her head, obviously lying. âNo.â
My only objective was to get her out of here. âI need you to go with Viktor. Listen to him.â
She shook her head and gave me another watery smile. âWeâre not leaving you.â
I felt sick that she was here, in danger, because of me. âThatâs not the deal we made.â
She reached out and pushed the hair off my forehead. âI didnât make that deal.â
I felt my entire world sinking. Everything I had done to keep her safe had been in vain. Now she was at risk while I lay here, unable to protect her. âI need you to do this for me.â
She shook her head, her eyes filling with tears. âNo. I canât leave you.â
Frustration washed over me. âOlivia, donât argue.â
A knock sounded at the door. Viktor stuck his head in. âPolice are at the gate.â
âRadio the gate. Tell them Iâm in the shower and Iâll be out in fifteen. Find me some clothes.â
Viktor paused, but he nodded and stepped out.
Olivia looked at me in horror. âYou canât get out of bed.â
In this world, you can never show weakness. If word got out to anyone that I wasnât taking calls from the police, everyone would assume I was wounded. Which would only weaken our front.
With monumental effort, I pushed myself into a seated position. âI need to take a shower. Go get the doctor.â
She looked like she wanted to argue, but I cut her off. âIâm not fucking around, Olivia. Go get him.â
She disappeared out the doors. Somehow, I managed to drag my ass to the shower. It took all my effort, but I got it done.
When I got back to the bed, a pile of fresh, folded clothes sat on top.
The doctor came in and spoke to me in Russian. âYouâre getting up. I donât advise it.â
âWhy am I so weak?â
He reached over and checked my pulse. âAside from the fact that you were shot and lost a lot of blood, your infection took a toll. Itâs going to be a while before you feel like yourself.â
âI need whatever shit you can give me that will give me enough energy to walk to the gate and deal with the cops.â
He nodded and opened a drawer. âIâll give you a shot to freeze your shoulder, so you donât feel anything.â
âAnything else?â
He pulled open another drawer and injected a huge needle in my arm. âYou will feel even worse in an hour, but until then, you wonât feel much at all.â
âThanks.â
Whatever he gave me steadied my hands and gave my legs juice. I got dressed and even brushed my teeth. I was a little pale and kind of sweaty, but nothing too crazy.
I walked out of the bathroom. Viktor stood there, eyeballing me. âYou look like complete shit.â
âCome on. In an hour, apparently, Iâm going to feel worse.â
We walked slowly to the gate. I worked to keep my breath steady. The same two detectives from before got out of their car when we approached.
âGentleman, sorry for the delay.â I tried to give them an easy smile.
One guy cleared his throat. âWe just have a few questions for you.â
âOf course.â
âDo you know someone by the name of Amelia Chernov?â
You have got to be kidding me.
âI do.â
âWhat is your relationship with her?â
âI no longer have a relationship with her. I used to be engaged to her. She recently came back into my life, but Iâve only seen her twice, and then only briefly.â
They exchanged looks.
âYouâre obviously here about her. Can you tell me what is going on?â
âHer parents have reported her missing. Her passport has you listed as her point of contact for her visit.â
âShe made it pretty clear she wanted to get back together with me. But at this point, itâs not an option for me.â
The one cop cleared his throat. âSeems like all the women who want to have a relationship with you go missing.â
Where was she? How was she involved in this shit show?
âThe fact that these women went missing is not coincidental, but it has nothing to do with them wanting to sleep with me.â
âMind if I ask what that reason is?â
âBunko. The guy you just released from prison on bail. Heâs behind all of this.â
âYou have any evidence for that?â
I smiled at him. âFinding evidence is your job.â
âWhat happened to your shoulder?â The other cop nodded in the direction of my wound. âYouâre not moving it.â
âThis is an old football injury. It flares up from time to time.â
âAmerican football?â
âNo, soccer.â
They obviously werenât buying my lies. âDid you hear about the gunfight on Highway 99?â
âI did. I heard about it on the news. Not many details.â
âThatâs all that you know about that?â
I worked to keep the pleasant smile on my face. âThatâs all.â
They exchanged looks. âWell, if you hear anything, give us a call.â
âWill do, gentlemen.â
Viktor and I stood and watched as they drove away.
âThoughts?â Viktor asked.
âYou and Olivia should have left two days ago.â
âI couldnât agree more.â
âWant to make a game plan?â
âIâm all ears.â
âThere will be another hit on us at some point. The fight is just getting started. So, our best option is defense. We need to make a show of force, and then hunker down.â
âYou still want to get her out of here?â
Yes. âWhat do you think the odds are that we will make it to trial in one piece?â
âSlim to none.â
âAgreed.â
Viktorâs phone rang. He listened and then hung up. âBastelli just called. They found Vlad in one of the clubs.â
âWhat do you mean, found him?â
âHe was at the back of one of his clubs, sitting at a table, drugged up on something. They said they revived him with a banana bag.â
âThat makes no sense. Why is he drugged up?â
Viktor shrugged. âNo clue. They want to know what they should do with him.â
âTell them weâre coming to pick him up.â I started walking back to the warehouse.
Viktor drove to Bastelliâs club while I worked hard to not puke. Every bump we hit made me feel more nauseous. Whatever the doctor had given me was wearing off.
A groan escaped me as he went over another bump.
He looked at me. âDoctor said you should be in bed.â
I looked out the window. âRight now, I need to show a strong front.â
He didnât argue, he knew I was right. He parked in front of the club. The four men we brought with us moved out to check the perimeter.
âDo you think this is a setup?â Viktor asked as he checked his gun.
I thought about that. I couldnât tell who was the enemy anymore. I didnât trust anyone. âI donât know. It might be, but I doubt Bastelli would try anything up-front. His attacks tend to be more sneaky.â
Viktor looked at me. âAll clear. Ready to go inside?â
We walked through the night air to move into the dark club. It felt like my legs weighed a thousand pounds. As we walked between the tables, I concentrated on getting to the back of the club. Every part of me ached with the effort.
Finally, we reached the back hallways. One of his men led us to Bastelliâs private office.
When we walked into the office, Bastelli was alone, sitting at his desk. He glanced up, his eyes narrowing on me. âYou look like shit.â
âWhereâs Vlad?â
âSleeping off some cocktail in the back office. Want my guys to grab him for you?â
âYeah, thanks.â
He picked up a radio and said something in Italian. And then looked at us. âYou want a drink?â
âNo, thanks.â
âQuite the fuck-up the other night, hey?â
I shook my head. âYou have no idea.â
His beady eyes darted over me. âHeard you were busted up pretty bad.â
âDo I look busted up?â
He looked between Viktor and myself. âNope.â
âI need a fucking nap. Thatâs what I need.â
He eyeballed me. âCarl wants to call another meeting.â
âHave him set it up.â
âHe said since the barge attack didnât happen, he wants to go on the offense again.â
More fights. I looked around his office, knowing that whatever happened, it would end badly. âSounds good.â
The radio crackled, and he picked it up, talking rapidly. He glanced up at us. âVladâs gone. They canât find him anywhere.â
âI thought you said he was cooked?â
âThe guy was fried. Completely incoherent. He shouldnât be conscious right now, much less walking.â
I kept my voice easy. âWell, if that fucker shows up, give me a call.â
He laughed. âYeah. Sorry to waste your time.â
Viktor and I walked through the club. I was sweating profusely by the time I got back to the truck.
Viktor started the truck. âWas Vlad even there?â
âI doubt it,â I mused.
âSo what was that about?â
This was how these men operated. Everyone was always looking for an angle to exploit. âI think this was just a test, so Bastelli and Carl could see how I was faring.â
Viktor shook his head. âWhat about Amelia, Vlad, and that detective? Where is everyone?â
I shook my head. âIf they were working with Bunko, we can probably assume they are dead.â
He shook his head. âWhy does it feel like weâre in so deep, we donât even know the way up?â
âBecause thatâs the truth.â
Back at the warehouse, I didnât return to the infirmary. If I did, Olivia wouldnât leave my side and then sheâd end up sleeping in a chair all night. If I was in our bed, she probably would be too, and no one looked like they needed sleep more than she did.
The doctor sent me upstairs with more pain meds and antibiotics. I dragged my sorry ass up two flights of stairs with her hovering.
Somehow, I made it to the loft. Somehow, I got my clothes off and crawled into the bed.
I was drifting in pain-med delirium when I felt her snuggle up beside me.
I woke up feeling halfway to human. I lifted my head. Beside me, Olivia was sitting, her knees up, reading.
âStill reading that textbook?â
She turned to me and smiled. âYouâre awake.â
âWhat time is it?â
âFour oâclock.â
I groaned as I sat up. âI need to talk to Viktor.â
âHeâs coming up at five. Heâs bringing dinner.â
I rubbed my hands over my face. âI need a shower.â
Her face brightened. âI can help you.â
Olivia got into the shower with me. She seemed so eager to help that I let her shampoo my hair and lather my body with soap. Sadly, my hot shower lacked hot sex, but it did revive me.
I got dressed and sprawled at the end of the bed. Our eyes met. The only thing I wanted was to get her to someplace safe. âTalk to me.â
âAbout what?â
âHow have you been doing?â
She looked down at her hands. âThat night you were shot, it was scary. I helped perform surgery on you.â
I traced my fingers on her calf. âI heard.â
âIâve gone to the gun range twice.â
That surprised me. âBy yourself?â
âViktor comes with me. He said Iâm the worst shot heâs ever seen.â
I worked not to laugh. âDonât listen to him.â
I could feel her emotions come off her in waves.
âI was so scared you wouldnât recover.â Her voice shook slightly.
âIâm almost back on my feet,â I lied. âI wish you would have listened to Viktor and gotten out of here while you could.â
It crushed me that she hadnât heeded my warnings. Now she was stuck here, and I had no idea how we would protect her. At some point, we would need to move her out of here. I needed to figure out a way to convince her to leave.
âDonât be mad.â
I moved up the bed to give her a lingering kiss, grateful that we had been given more time. âIâm not mad.â
She lifted her brown eyes to me. âThis world is a scary place, but you make it feel safe.â
âI make it more dangerous.â
She shrugged. âI donât see it like that.â
Viktor came upstairs with a box of pizza. For the first time in days, I felt hungry. I knew I would crash at some point, but right now, after food and sleep, I felt more like myself.
Viktor spoke to me in Russian. âThings have been too quiet lately.â
âWhat is the word on the street?â
He took a sip of his beer. âEveryone is on edge. No one is talking.â
It was the calm before the storm. Something was brewing, but it was hard to say which way things would go. I needed answers. I needed to know who had double-crossed me. I had my suspicions that Vlad was behind the barge mess, but without him around to question, those were only educated guesses.
âAny word on Vladâs whereabouts?â
He pushed his plate aside. âI got a tip that heâs holed up in some motel. I was going to go check it out after dinner.â
If we could get a hold of Vlad, we could get answers out of him and figure out what Bunko was planning next. It was imperative we find him.
âIâll come with you.â
He frowned. âYou need to sleep.â
I looked at Viktor. He looked as exhausted as I felt. I wasnât going to send him into any situation by himself. I needed to start pulling my weight. âIâm coming with you.â
I glanced over at Olivia, who was loading the dishwasher, looking cuter than Iâd ever seen her. âI need fifteen.â
He nodded. âSee you downstairs.â
After Viktor walked out, I carried my plate to the island. âThanks for cleaning up.â
Her smile was so sweet. âThere wasnât much to clean up.â
âI have to go out.â
She looked crestfallen. âRight now? Why?â
âWe are looking for Vlad.â I bent down to kiss her lips. âIâll be back soon.â I tried not to wince when I put on my gun holster.
She looked worried. âPlease be careful.â
I gave her a reassuring smile. âSecurity around here is really tight, but try not to leave the loft if you donât have to.â
âI wonât.â