Dark Russian Angel: Chapter 33
Dark Russian Angel (A Vancouver Mafia Romance Book 1)
I leaned against the wall of the small closed room, waiting for my lawyer. When he was finally ushered in, I asked, âHowâs Olivia?â
âThey released her after questioning.â
âWhat is she doing?â
He gave me a steady look. âWhat I advised her to do. Sheâs not speaking to the police, and sheâs withdrawn her statement against Bunko.â
I breathed a sigh of relief. Those had been my instructions. âThank you.â
âShe wants to see you.â
I shook my head. âAbsolutely not.â I couldnât stand for her to see me in here, locked like an animal in a cage. I didnât want her last memory of me to be of a man who was about to lose all his freedom.
He looked grim. âWhat do I tell her?â
âTell her itâs not possible to see me at this time.â
âThis situation is not good, Andrusha. Her testimony would actually help you.â
âLeave her alone,â I warned him.
âIâm doing what you asked.â
âWhat are they charging me with?â
âThey are charging you with Vladâs murder, and assault with a deadly weapon against Bunko.â
âWhere is that bastard?â
âThey have him in the infirmary of a high-security prison. Heâs telling everyone you lured him out there as a trap.â
I sat down on the chair. So this was it. Atonement day was here. âDid you give Viktor my message?â
âHe disappeared as soon as I told him, and then he showed up at my house at four this morning.â He reached into his briefcase and slid a large envelope across the table. âHe gave me this.â
After Olivia had left on the snowmobile, I had searched Bunkoâs person and found a memory stick. On a hunch, I hid it in the cabin, away from the police, and asked for Viktor to retrieve it for me. Judging by the sample financial sheets Viktor had printed off for me, it appeared the memory stick contained a wealth of information on Bunko and his illegal businesses. âThis is my bargaining chip.â
âViktor said that this is the tip of the iceberg.â
That news made me smile. âWhat now?â
He grimaced. âThe detective wants to speak to you before they officially charge you.â
I bet she does. âBring her in.â
He hesitated. âMy legal counsel is not to speak to law enforcement too freely.â
âConsider me advised.â
He got up and knocked on the door.
A few moments later, the detective walked in. She smiled as she took the chair across from me. âOrange looks good on you.â She looked at my lawyer. âI want to talk to him alone.â
My lawyer tried to protest, but I held up my hand. âItâs okay.â
He knew me well enough to know that I wouldnât change my mind. âRemember my advice.â
âHow the mighty have fallen,â she said once we were alone.
âI thought you were dirty.â
She shrugged. âThatâs what we wanted everyone to think.â
I raised my eyebrows. âYou were undercover?â
âI was until Bunko caught on. Then I had to disappear for a bit.â
I thought about how she had buried evidence, banned Olivia from talking to the prosecution, and handed her over to corrupt cops. The line between undercover cop and a dirty cop got blurred quick. I didnât care what they called itâin my mind, she was as dirty as they got.
I didnât blink. âWhat do you want?â
âWeâve got evidence that ties you to Vladâs murder, and we also have the assault charges against Bunko.â
I shrugged. âI thought you wanted Bunko off the street.â
Her smile was evil. âConsider this two for the price of one.â
âWhat do you want from me?â
She crossed her arms and looked thoughtful. âTell me what happened up at the cabin the day Bunko got shot.â
âHe introduced himself by trying to put an ax through my skull. We fought. I got a hold of the shotgun and managed to shoot him in the arm.â
She opened a file in front of her. âIt says one shotgun bullet shattered his right humerus and tore apart a major vein in his arm. According to the doctors, if someone hadnât used a tourniquet on his arm, he would have bled out in minutes.â
âWhat do you want me to tell you?â
âYour medical records indicate that you had a recent bullet injury to your arm which required extensiveââshe lifted up the file to read closerââvascular surgery.â She lifted her head. âFunny, but we checked with all hospitals and surgeons, and there is no record of you getting any kind of medical treatment in the last five years.â
I shrugged.
âWe did, however, find a Dr. Turgenev, who is on your payroll. You know, if we find out he is practicing medicine in Canada without a medical license, we can send him back to the motherland. Immigration doesnât look kindly on these sorts of things.â
I crossed my arms. âWhy donât you cut to the chase and tell me what you really want?â
She leaned forward. âWe have enough evidence to put you away for twenty years or more. I can advise the department to reduce your sentence to fifteen years if you help me get your little girlfriend to testify against Bunko.â
âSheâs not cooperating?â I asked, knowing full well she wasnât.
The detective looked at her fingernails. âWe are thinking of charging her with obstruction of justice.â
I narrowed my eyes on her face. âI want you to drop the murder charge, leave Oliva alone, and give my employees immunity from any criminal culpability in my business.â
She laughed. âOkay. Iâll bite. You obviously think you have something that would be of value to me.â
I pushed the envelope towards her. I leaned back and enjoyed watching her face as she looked over the sheets.
âWhere did you get this?â she demanded, instantly recognizing the value of the information.
I shrugged. âI have enough evidence to put Bunko and his entire crew away for decades, but unfortunately for you, this isnât two for the price of one. You have to decide if you want me or Bunko behind bars. If you donât give me what I want, that disk, and all the information on Bunko, will disappear.â
She pushed herself to stand up and picked up the file. âHang tight.â
It took her and her superiors exactly five minutes before she returned to the room with my lawyer in tow. âIf the disk proves to be as useful as you suggest, we can give immunity to Olivia and your men, but we canât let you walk out of here.â
I never thought they would. âThe charge for Vladâs murder is bogus.â
âWe will drop all charges of murder.â
âWhat will you charge me with?â
She licked her bottom lip. âRacketeering.â
âHow much time?â
âWeâll recommend three years, but youâll probably serve fifteen months.â
âAnd Bunko?â
âIf we get our hands on those files, heâs looking at multiple charges that will keep him in prison indefinitely.â
âYou will leave Olivia alone?â
She raised her hand. âScoutâs honor.â
We stared at each other. âWhat arenât you telling me?â
She actually looked contrite. âUnder Section 16 of the Public Works and Government Service Act, we will perform a financial investigation of all property and assets in connection with your designated criminal offenses of racketeering.â
I crossed my arms. âYouâre bankrupting me.â
âAll cash, equities, real estate, and property that prove to be related to your racketeering will be taken over by the government.â She looked between us. âWhatever we find, we take.â
I looked at my lawyer. He leaned close to me and whispered in my ear, âTake the fucking deal.â
Three months later, I sat in the common area for prison visitors and watched as Victor wove his way around the bolted-down tables and chairs towards me. It was the first time I had seen him since he left the cabin.
He sat down across from me, looking me over in my white T-shirt and blue prison pants. âYouâre jacking up.â
I shrugged. âNot much to do in here except work out.â
âYou doing okay?â
I shrugged. My reputation had both prisoners and guards treating me with respect, even reverence. âItâs fine.â
He cleared his throat. âThe men couldnât believe you took the fall for them. If you want to know, they were upset when they found out.â
âPolice wanted me. They didnât want anyone else.â
He looked around the room. âWell, you now have thirty brothers who will do anything for you for until the end of time.â He cleared his throat. âMyself included.â
I wanted to ask about Olivia so badly that I ached. âYou retrieved the memory stick. That gave me the leverage to get everyone off and reduce my sentence.â I met his eyes. âIâm sorry I exposed your cabin to the world.â
He shrugged. âNot a big deal. Thanks to you, I no longer need a backup plan.â
I couldnât take it. I needed to ask about Olivia, the woman who haunted my dreams and filled my every thought. âHow is she?â
âSheâs pissed you wonât see her.â
I worked to keep my expression blank. I didnât want her anywhere near this place. I didnât want to show her that I was exactly who her mom thought I was. âThis isnât a place for her. What else?â
He crossed his arms. âShe knows we are keeping light surveillance on her and keeping her safe.â
âAnd?â
His eyes met mine. âSheâs doing well. Sheâs working at a dance studio in Kitsilano. The owner seems to be a savvy businesswoman.â
This was what I had wanted for her.
âShe is living in a small apartment. Security is good. She keeps to herself and is taking more business classes.â
I couldnât even look at Viktor. That she was free of it all and living the life she had been born to live made all of this worth it.
Viktorâs voice was low. âShe calls me once a week, every week. Always the same questions about you. She wants to know if youâre okay and if she can talk to you, or if she can write or send you a message.â
My guilty eyes met his. âItâs not fair to put you in the middle of this.â
He leaned forward. âI tell her the same thing: that Iâm not in contact with you, and no one knows where you are serving your sentence.â
I looked down and rubbed my thumb over the scratch that someone had gouged in the table. What had her mom said to her that day in her trailer? Prison isnât sexy. She got that right.
Viktor spoke again. âI get it, and I donât mind, but I needed to tell you that your girl is persistent. She hasnât given up on you. I thought youâd want to know that.â
I crossed my arms on the table and looked at all the men sitting around, trying to spend quality time with their kids. In a fucking prison visitor room. âMy goal was to set her free of all of this shit.â
Viktor cleared his throat. âYou want me to stop answering her calls?â
It gave me comfort to know that someone like Viktor was watching over Olivia for me. That she called him each week meant she trusted him. And I couldnât ask for a better man to have her back. âNo. Just donât let her near me.â
âMica sent me a message to give to you. Amelia has been in contact with him. She was reaching out to make you a business offer.â
I made a sound that was almost like amusement except I wasnât amused. âWhat offer would that be?â
âShe said sheâd come by on Wednesday morning at ten, and she would like you and your legal team present.â
This threw me. âYou have any clue what this is about?â
He shrugged. âWe did some digging. Came up with nothing.â
What the hell. It wasnât like I had anything better to do with my time. âSure. Iâll meet with her.â
âWant me to call your lawyer and have him show up?â
âThatâd be appreciated.â
He leaned forward. âYouâve got a lot of men who want to remain in your employment.â
I studied him. âIs this your version of a pep talk?â
He grinned one of those huge grins that I rarely saw. âIs it working?â
âYeah, it was life changing.â
He shook his head, the smile still on his face. âYou want us to bust you out of here?â
He would, too. âThanks for asking, but Iâm good.â
The buzzer sounded, and we both stood up. How could I even start to thank my friend for taking care of Olivia? âI owe you.â
He shook his head. âThatâs how everyone feels. We owe you. No one will forget what youâve done.â
On Wednesday morning, Amelia sat waiting, wrapped in a fur coat. She and her three lawyers watched as I was escorted in.
Amelia spoke. âWhat are your plans for when you get out of here?â
âWhy?â
She lifted a hand, and a lawyer placed a folder in it. Without looking at it, she handed it to me. âThat is my business proposal.â
I opened the folder and scanned the documents before handing them to my lawyer. âYou want me to start a security firm?â
She lifted her chin. âI recently bought a company, and I work with a lot of extremely wealthy clients.â
I shrugged. âStill not following.â
âThey come to me for certain, shall I say, peculiar interests and adventures. My company coordinates these events with extreme discretion.â
I narrowed my eyes. âWhat kind of events?â
âOne man wanted to propose to his girlfriend at the top of a glacier. In Finland. We made that happen. A woman wants to surprise her husband with a snorkeling holiday on a yacht in a remote part of the world. That kind of thing.â
âOkay.â
âWeâve gone through four international security teams. All of them are more trouble than they are worth. They cause more issues with my clients than they solve.â
I leaned forward on the table. âWhat do you want, Amelia?â
She motioned for her lawyers to leave. With one look from me, my lawyer followed them out. She folded her hands on the table. âI have a new boyfriend. Heâs a Zurich businessman, and his wife just passed away.â
I waited.
She gave a little indifferent shrug. âHeâs still old enough to be my father, but this time Iâm not with him for the money. I have enough of my own. I guess I like old men after all.â
âWhy are you coming to me?â
She gave me a smile. âBecause everyone feels safe in your presence.â I couldnât hold back my snort at that admission. âAnd my clients pay a lot of money to feel safe. Besides, it would help my business tremendously.â
âHave you looked around? Iâm the one in handcuffs.â
âI thought Iâd give you the heads-up, so you can start putting things into place for when you get out.â
âWhy are you doing this?â
âWilfred suggested that I might stop feeling guilty about you if I helped you.â
âWhoâs Wilfred?â
âMy boyfriend.â
âWhat do you feel guilty about?â
Her eyes widened. âFor leaving you at the altar. For marrying someone else.â
Oh, that. Those days were a lifetime ago. I had much bigger regrets now. âDonât feel guilty about that. I was a dick about stuff before, but in the big picture, it doesnât matter, right?â
She narrowed her eyes. âWhatâs changed?â
I lifted one hand. âLook around. I have lots of time to lie around and think about all my life choices. When push comes to shove, you canât change the past. You can just make better choices in the future.â
She stared at me with wide eyes. âYou know, I think Wilfred would really like you. Would you ever care to meet him for drinks?â
I ignored her invitation. I was months away from meeting anyone for drinks. âI donât want you to feel like you owe me anything. Weâre even. The score is even. We can both walk away, guilt-free, from our youth.â
âYouâd be helping me.â She stood up. âRead over the proposal and get back to me.â
I shrugged. This plan is insane. âAmelia.â
She paused and looked over her shoulder.
I cleared my throat and spoke the truth. âIâm glad to hear about you and Wilfred. You deserve to be happy.â
She gave me a pointed look. âBasic client protection starts at fifty thousand a week, but you could probably charge more if you provided the extra touches like I do.â
Well, shit. âIâll take a look.â