Ruthless Creatures: Chapter 37
Ruthless Creatures (Queens & Monsters Book 1)
At least once in every manâs life, he faces a reckoning.
My father told me that. He knew a lot about reckonings. About calculating gains and losses. About saying goodbyes. He left everything he had in Russia to make a new life in a new land. To have better opportunities for his children than he had for himself.
He paid with his life for that risk, but I doubt he wouldâve regretted it. He was stronger than I am. He never regretted anything.
But me, now, standing hereâ¦I regret it all.
If only Iâd told her from the start, I wouldnât have to bear that look on her face now.
I wouldnât have to witness Natalieâs love for me going up in flames.
She sits perfectly still. Her back is straight. Her face is pale. Her hands are spread open on her thighs. Around her throat, the necklace I bought her glitters like ice.
In a small voice, she says, âDamon?â
Itâs an invitation to continue. Or maybe itâs a plea to stop. I canât tell.
The only thing I know for sure is that if a person could die from a look, Iâd be a dead man.
âHe was our accountant.â
Her nostrils flare. Something dark gathers behind her eyes. âYou knew him?â
âYes.â
I canât take the look on her face, so I turn away, dragging a hand through my hair.
âMax trusted him implicitly. He was brilliant with numbers. Saved the organization a lot of money. Made us a lot, too. The stock market, offshore accounts, international real estateâ¦Damon was a genius. So smart that nobody ever noticed heâd been skimming. That heâd set up hundreds of shell accounts to funnel money into. That heâd been planning his way out for years before he finally fled.â
The clock ticking on the wall seems unnaturally loud. When Nat stays silent, I turn back to her.
Sheâs a statue.
Cold. Lifeless. Blank. One of those marble sculptures that decorate a tomb.
To deal with the agony clawing its way up my throat, I keep talking.
âHe made a deal with the feds. Gave them evidence in return for immunity. Testified against Max at his trial. Provided a huge amount of data, records, ledgers, files. Max was convicted and sentenced to life. Damon went into witness protection. The government gave him a new name. A new identity. A new life. They relocated him here.â
I draw a breath. âAnd then he met you.â
Motionless, Natalie stares at me. When she speaks, she sounds like sheâs been drugged.
âI donât believe you. David didnât have a penny to his name. This is lies.â
I pull my cell phone from my pocket, pull up the picture app, swipe through until I find what Iâm looking for. Then I hand her the phone.
She takes it from me silently. She stares at the picture on the screen. Her throat works, but she doesnât make a sound.
âSwipe left. Thereâs more.â
Her finger moves across the screen. She pauses, then swipes again. She keeps going for several moments, her face growing more and more pale until itâs white.
She stops swiping and says, âWho are these people with him?â
When she turns the phone to face me, I brace myself. Then I look her in the eye.
âHis wife and kids.â
Her lips part. The clock ticks. My heart bangs inside my chest like a drum.
âHisâ¦wife.â
âHe was married when he went into WITSEC. Claudia still lives in the same house. Has no idea what happened to him. He left everything behind, including her.â
Her voice raw, Nat says, âAnd his children.â
âYes.â
âHe was married with children when we were together.â
âYes.â
âHe embezzled money from the mafia, turned stateâs evidence, put Max in jail, abandoned his familyâ¦then came here with a new identity andâ¦andâ¦â
âMet you. Proposed.â
Gripping the phone, she lowers it to her lap and closes her eyes. Then she sits there, not moving or saying anything, pale as a ghost and just as lifeless, except for the vein throbbing wildly in the side of her neck.
Iâd slit my wrists and bleed out on my knees in front of her if I thought it would make her pain go away, but I know it wonât.
The only thing I can do is keep telling her the truth.
âWe didnât know where heâd gone until last year. Then we made a contact inside the bureau. Someone willing to trade information for cash. He let us know where theyâd relocated Damon, gave us his new name, everything. But by then, Damon had already moved on.â
âIâm guessing that moving on happened just over five years ago, right?â Her laugh is small and bitter. âRight. The day before our wedding. Oh god.â
I donât know what to say, except, âIâm sorry.â
She opens her eyes and stares at me with this hard, hateful look. Itâs so vicious, I almost take a step back.
She says, âAnd you knew. All along, you knew all of this.â
âNatalieââ
âDonât speak. You donât get to speak to me anymore.â
âPlease. Let me explain.â
Shakily, she stands. She holds the phone out in her trembling hand. âTake it and get out.â
âListen to me, babyââ
âGet out of my house!â
That scream might as well be a bullet for how much it hurts me. I stand there helpless, shaking my head.
Breathing hard, trembling all over, she says, âYou were supposed to kill me, werenât you? Thatâs why Max said you betrayed him. You were supposed to come here and find out if I knew where David hid the money or where he went, then kill me, just like Viktor. But insteadâ¦â
She laughs. Itâs the worst sound Iâve ever heard.
âInstead, you decided to do things differently. You decided to have a little fun first. So you fucked me. Made me fall in love with you. Gave me a ring and told me a million pretty lies.â
I say firmly, âNo, Natalie. No.â
âWhen were you going to start asking me questions about him? Working it into the conversation in subtle ways?â
My voice grows louder. âI wasnât. This is real. I fell in love with you.â
She gazes at me in anguish, her eyes bright with tears. âSure. Just like David did. Now get the fuck out of my house, Kazimir.â
She says my given name like a curse.
Though my stomach is sloshing, my blood is boiling, and I can hardly breathe from the pain, I keep my voice steady and hold her gaze. âYou donât want me to leave. You love me. Youâre mine.â
Her inhalation is a soft, broken sob. âYouâre sick! Look what youâve done to me! Look!â
She gestures to her face. Itâs red now, instead of white. Her eyes are wild. Veins stand out in her neck. Her expression is the equivalent of a building on fire, burning to the ground.
âI can make it up to you.â
âYou can go to hell! Max threatened my parents! My parents, Kage! What if he has someone there right now? What if another Viktor is in Scottsdale knocking on my parentsâ door as we speak?â
âNo. Viktor worked alone, like I do. Heâd have planned to come here first, then go there.â
She stares at me in disbelief. âYou actually think that should make me feel better, donât you?â
When I donât answer, she bolts.
She runs out of the living room and into the kitchen, headed for the back door. I grab her before she can get there and crush her to me, holding her tightly against my chest as she struggles to get away.
âLet me go!â
âStop for a minute! Listen to me!â
âFuck off!â
âI love you! I didnât meanââ
âYou didnât mean anything, you lying son of a bitch!â
She squirms in my arms, shoving against me, desperate for release.
I wonât give it to her.
I kiss her instead.
She refuses to open her mouth for me, twisting her head away. I fist a hand into her hair and hold her head steady, then kiss her again.
This time she lets me thrust my tongue into her mouth. She lets me taste her, hold her, as we breathe hard through our noses, our bodies pressed together tight.
Then I feel the cold muzzle of my handgun pressed against my temple.
She pulled it out of the back of my waistband and stuck it against my skull.
I feel a flash of admiration for my brave, clever girl, but itâs quickly swallowed by despair.
âBack the fuck up,â she says quietly against my mouth.
When I open my eyes, sheâs looking straight into them. So I can see clearly that in her own, thereâs no shred of warmth, love, or mercy left.
My soul is in ashes. Thereâs nothing inside of me. Iâm a rotted, empty shell.
I slide to my knees at her feet and bow my head. âDo it, then. Without you, Iâm dead anyway.â
Thereâs a long, tense silence. Then she whispers raggedly, âI should.â
She digs the muzzle of the gun into the top of my head.
But something in her voice ignites a tiny spark of hope in my chest. I raise my head and gaze up at her, this woman I adore who Iâve just wrecked.
As she points the gun an inch from my forehead, her finger on the trigger, I stare into her eyes.
âI love you. Thatâs not a lie. I love you more than anything. More than I want my next breath. Iâll give anything for you to forgive me, and that includes my life.â
I lean forward so the gun rests between my brows. I raise my hands and rest them on her hips.
My heart in my voice, I say, âKill me if it will take away your pain, love. If it will give you even a little peace, pull the trigger and end me.â
She swallows, hard. Her hands shake. She moistens her lips. With her free hand, she swipes angrily at her watering eyes.
After a long, breathless moment, she exhales heavily and lowers the gun to her side.
Groaning, I throw my arms around her waist and bury my face into her belly. I hold her tightly until she sighs.
âGet off your knees, gangster. I canât deal with you like this.â
I stand. When I try to take her face in my hands, she pulls away, shaking her head. She holds out my weapon.
âJust take this damn thing, will you?â
I shove the gun under the waistband of my jeans at the small of my back, then reach for her again. But again she withdraws, turning her back to me and wrapping her arms around her body. She goes to the sink and leans against it, looking down.
Her voice very quiet, she says, âWhat now?â
The relief I feel that sheâs not screaming for me to leave is so overwhelming, I almost sink to my knees again. âI put Viktor in the car, but I have toâ¦â I hesitate, not wanting to traumatize her any more.
She says, âGet rid of the body. I get it. Go ahead.â
I shouldâve known sheâd rally, my Valkyrie queen.
âIâll be back within the hour.â
She turns her head, speaking over her shoulder. âWhere will you take him?â
âThe lake.â
She pauses. âIs that where you wouldâve taken me? If you hadnât fallen for me, I mean.â
Oh fuck.
âNo more lies, gangster,â she says softly.
Itâs a moment before I can get it out. âYes.â
She turns her head away. Looking at the closed blinds over the sink, she says, âThank you for being honest.â
It sounds like Fuck off and die, but we donât have time to argue.
âDonât answer the door or the phone while Iâm gone. Donât go outside. When I get back, Iâll clean up the rest of it. Then weâll make a plan.â
âA plan?â
âWhen Viktor doesnât check in, Max will send someone else.â
âI see. A plan. That makes sense.â
Sheâs unnaturally calm, especially considering how hysterical she was only minutes ago. Shock is setting in.
I take a step toward her, my heart aching. âBabyââ
âJust go, Kage. I need a minute to process. When you get back, weâll talk. I promise.â
I want to hold her. I want to kiss her. I want this awful distance between us to be gone. But for the moment, Iâm grateful itâs a truce.
I could be lying in a pool of my own blood right now.
And I have to move fast, because the clock is ticking.
I leave without another word.
When I return an hour later, her house is in total shambles, and sheâs gone.