Twilight Sins: Chapter 5
Twilight Sins (Kulikov Bratva Book 1)
âDo you think this is funny?â Luna fixes me with her bright blue eyes.
I suppress a laugh. Sergey didnât deserve her. What he deserved was a public beatdown, but he was so drunk that it wouldnât have been any fun. Thereâs no satisfaction in fighting someone who canât fight back. No matter how much the sloppy bastard deserved to have his head knocked in for a bit.
But Luna knows how to fight. Sheâs fiery.
I like it.
âSit down.â I pull out her chair and pat the seat. âLetâs keep talking.â
Sheâs uncomfortable with people looking at us, but theyâve been looking all night; she just didnât notice. No member of the Kulikov family canât be in here without word spreading and whispers being exchanged. My father made it well known that this was his turf. Itâs a small miracle no one walked over to our table and gave away my identity before Sergey stumbled in.
Luna sits down, but she crosses her arms stubbornly over her chest. âYou mean, âLetâs keep lying.â Thatâs what youâve been doing all night.â
âI didnât lie.â
Her mouth falls open. âYouâre kidding.â
âI didnât do that, either.â
âYou told me your name was Sergey!â
âNo, you thought my name was Sergey. I didnât tell you anything.â
âBut you let me believe it!â she hisses. âYou let me throw myself at a complete stranger.â
I canât stop the smile that curves across my mouth. âWere you throwing yourself at me, Luna?â
âNuh-uh, no,â she snaps, wagging a finger at me. âYou donât get to do that. Your bedroom voice is not going to get you out of this.â
âI wouldnât dare try to get out of this. Iâm having far too much fun.â
Her full lips pout into a frown, which is only making things more entertaining for me. When Luna walked up to my table, flustered and nervous, she was intriguing. But now, all fight and fire and accidental confessions, sheâs captivating.
She throws her napkin down on the table and flops back in her seat. Her legs are crossed. I trace the path of revealed skin from her knee to where her dress slit stops near her hip bone. I make a mental note to taste that spot later.
âIâm glad youâre having fun. But Iâm not. Which might have something to do with being lied to all night.â
âI didnât tell you my name. You should be thanking me for that. If I had, you wouldâve gone to dinner with that mudak your friend tried setting you up with. Speaking of which: Iâm not so sure sheâs really your friend.â
âYou think I should be grateful?â She snorts. âYeah fucking right. Kayla may have terrible taste, but at least she isnât a liar.â
Sheâs trying so hard to make me the villain here. Itâs funny because, in almost every other area of my life, I am the villain. Thereâs evidence everywhere you look. Hell, just take that poor bikerâs blood on the inside of my wrist if you need proof.
Not that sheâll ever learn about any of that. Luna is a distraction for tonight and tonight alone. In the morning, sheâll be nothing but a memory.
I lean forward. âYou were having a good time with me.â
âThatâs not a question.â
âIt wasnât meant to be. You were having a good time with me,â I repeat. âWhether I was here or not, you were going to be eating dinner with a stranger regardless.â
Her lips part. She wants to argue, but she canât. She knows Iâm right.
âThe only difference between you eating with the asshole I just threw on the sidewalk or me is that, with me, you enjoyed yourself.â As the waitress walks past, I tap my glass to let her know I want a refill. âAm I wrong?â
âThe difference is that I knew his name,â she snaps.
I hold out my hand. âIâm Yakov.â
She glares at my extended hand, but doesnât take it. So I quickly grab her hand and curl her fingers against my lips.
Luna stops breathing. For a second, her eyes are wide and she just stares at me. When I finally pull my kiss away, she comes to enough to remember sheâs mad at me and yanks her hand back.
âNow that thatâs out of the way⦠am I wrong?â
âWrong about what?â she asks, slightly dazed.
âWas I wrong in thinking you were having a good time with me?â
Luna is staring daggers into me, but itâs softened by the nervous twist of her lips. âNo.â
âThen itâs settled. Weâre finishing the date.â
Luna holds her stare for a few seconds before she blows a strand of hair off of her forehead. âAre you always this bossy?â
âAlways. Professionally so.â
âYouâre a boss?â She slides her bowl of stew closer and takes a bite. Iâve never seen someone eat resentfully before. Resentful, that is, until her full lips wrap around the spoon and she gets her first taste. Then her eyes flutter closed and I briefly lose my train of thought. The train derails completely when she lets out a soft moan. âWow. This is good.â
âI told you.â I knew sheâd like it. I just had no idea how much Iâd like watching her like it.
âOf course you did.â She rolls her eyes, but she canât help but smile. âYouâre right about everything, or so youâd like me to think. Iâm sure it helps in your line of work.â
âIt helps in every line of work. I recommend it.â
She snorts. âWhat kind of boss are you?â
Iâm not used to dating women who donât already know my story. Being in a family business, everyone knew I would carry on the torch. Itâs what I was bred for.
That doesnât mean itâs safe to go spouting off about it to every woman I meet. No matter how tempting.
âTell me what you do for work,â I say abruptly.
Luna drops her fork. âNo way. You donât get to dodge another question. Not after your lies before.â
âOmissions,â I correct. âI didnât lie to you. Even if I did, youâre the one who asked for pretty lies.â
âI was kidding! No one wants to be lied to.â
I shake my head. âThatâs not true.â
âOkay, then who? Who on Earth wants to be lied to?â she challenges.
âYou do. Right now.â I hold her gaze. âYou donât know it, but you want me to lie to you, Luna.â
Her smile falters. âWhy?â
âBecause a pretty lie doesnât ruin a nice evening the way an ugly truth can.â The waitress brings me a new drink and I tip my head in thanks. Then I turn back to Luna, who hasnât taken her eyes off of me. âIf you really want to know what I do, Iâll tell you. I wonât lie. But be prepared to hear an answer you wonât like.â
She chews on her bottom lip. Iâve never seen a mouth I want to taste more. âWhatâs the alternative?â
âYou tell me what you do, you donât bother asking me the same question in return, and we see where the night takes us.â
Thereâs a beat of hesitation. A second where Iâm sure this distraction is going to go up in flames.
Then Luna sighs and turns her attention to her stew. âIâm a saleswoman for an industrial plastics manufacturer.â
Good choice.
âAnd here I thought I was the bad guy. Next, youâll tell me you club baby seals.â
Laughter burns behind her eyes. The spark we had before is brighter than ever. Despite her better judgment, Luna is still here. Still having a good time. Iâll keep it that way as long as she doesnât try to overcomplicate things. As long as she doesnât need the truth.
âI didnât tap you for an environmentalist, Yakov.â She squints at me, scanning me from head to toe. âI donât see any âTree Huggerâ pins.â
âI donât lead with my soft, bleeding heart on a first date.â
She smirks. âAh. Well, if you must know, I work for a recycled industrial plastics manufacturer. I could give you the spiel on our sustainably-sourced polycarbonate, but I wouldnât want to bore you.â
âBore me? Itâs almost like youâre talking dirty.â
She leans her head back and laughs. âThatâs a first. My job isnât particularly sexy. People usually move on pretty quickly when I bring it up.â
My phone buzzes. I want to ignore it, but I donât have that luxury.
I pull it out and see Nikandrâs name on the screen. I actually forgot about him. He was supposed to meet me half an hour ago.
NIKANDR: I thought you had a date with me. Should I be jealous?
âNow, Iâm worried I really am boring you,â Luna says. She eyes my phone.
âUnfortunately for both of us, my brother doesnât know the meaning of boundaries.â
âSo you werenât lying about that. You really do have a brother.â
âI havenât lied about anything, remember?â
She smiles and holds up her hands in surrender. âSure, sure. We all have our dirty secrets, I suppose.â
More than you will ever know.
I text him back. Itâs a long story.
NIKANDR: Explain it to me later. You need to get the hell out of there. Now.
I tense up. Without being obvious, I scan the restaurant. Itâs the same crowd as it was when I arrived. Couples and small families at their intimately-lit tables. The only difference is that, when I first got here, it was light enough that I could see out to the sidewalk. Now, the interior of the restaurant is reflected against the inside of the glass. Nik is behind that glass somewhere, watching.
And if heâs this panickedâ¦
That means someone else must be watching, too.
âIs everything okay?â Luna looks over her shoulder and then back at me. âAre you looking for somebody?â
The real question is whether someone is looking for me. I ignore her question and tap Nikandrâs contact.
He answers immediately, skipping a greeting to give me the pertinent information. âGustev Bratva.â
âHow many?â
Luna is staring at me. Her brows are pinched together. I hoped to eke out a few more hours of distraction from our night together, but my ugly truths came knocking faster than I would have liked.
âFour,â he replies. âTheyâre two buildings down, parked in front of the deli. They came in two different cars, but shifted into one. I think theyâre planning something.â
I should have expected it. Akim Gustev never did know when to call it quits. Neither did his father. I should have killed them both at the same time. Total eradication.
âYou need to leave and take your girlfriend with you,â he concludes.
Luna is still watching me. She canât hear what Nik is saying, but her head is tilted like sheâs hoping she might pick up a few stray words.
I want to ask him if heâs sure the men staking out the restaurant saw us together. I never planned to take her back to my houseâa hotel wouldâve sufficed for the activities I had in mindâbut if Akim has his men after me, a hotel is out of the question. I also donât want to lead them back to wherever she is staying. I might as well hang a bullseye on her front door.
But I donât have to ask. Nikandr knows what I want to know.
âThe two of you might as well be the pretty display in the shop window,â he confirms. âI have a clear shot at your table. It didnât help that you made such a scene with the drunk dude. I know what she looks like and it wouldnât take me five minutes to figure out who she is and where she lives. She isnât safe.â
An hour ago, I didnât know Luna.
Now, Iâve put her life in danger just by inviting her to sit at my table.
âGet out of there,â Nik repeats. âGo through the back. Iâll meet you with the car.â
I hang up and Luna doesnât waste a second. âIs everything okay?â
The pretty lie is sitting on the tip of my tongue. Yes, itâs fine. Eat up.
But I havenât lied to her yet tonight and I wonât start now.
âDo I not seem okay?â
âYou seem tense. And evasive.â She leans forward and places her chin in the palm of her hand. âThatâs also not how anyone I know talks to their brother. It was cryptic and now, Iâm wondering if I shouldnât circle back to a few of those personal questions you avoided earlier.â
âIâd love to sit through your interrogation, but I have to leave.â
She sits tall. âOh. Okay. Wellâ¦â She looks over the table and our half-finished dinners. Thereâs no hiding her disappointment. âFamily comes first. I get thatâeven if my family is kind of a mess. Oh God, Iâm not going to reopen that can of worms. Um, I hope everything is okay with your brother andâ ââ
âWe have to leave.â
She blinks. âPardon?â
âYouâre coming with me.â
She watches the movement of my thumb like Iâm hypnotizing her. Maybe I am. When she looks up, sheâs dazed. âYou want me to leave with you? Where?â
âMy place.â
I have cameras, gates, motion sensors. Itâs tight security and the only place sheâll be safe for tonight. Until I can make sure sheâs not under threat and send her on her way first thing tomorrow morning. Distractions can last one night. Longer than that and they quickly become complications.
âI donâtââ She bites her bottom lip as she thinks. âI just met you. I just learned your real name. Going back to your house seems kind of crazy, doesnât it?â
âA lot of people would argue this entire night has been âkind of crazy.ââ
She blows out a breath. âWhich might be a sign that I should pack it in for the night. Cut the evening short before you reveal yourself to be a mass murderer.â
âOr take you home to introduce you to my grandmother.â
She laughs, which seems to put her even less at ease. âI donât know you, Yakov. You could hurt me.â
I have to repress a snort. She has no fucking idea.
âYeah, I could,â I say. âYou saw the way I dragged Sergey out of here. If I wanted you to come with me, you wouldnât be able to resist.â
She swallows. Her throat bobs. Itâs not the subtlest threat Iâve ever made, thatâs for fucking sure.
âBut Iâm giving you the choice,â I continue. âIâm asking you to come with me, Luna. Make things simple and just say yes.â
Luna does have a choice. If she chooses correctly, then weâll take this distraction back to my mansion. If she doesnât⦠then the ugly truth will be revealed. Iâll force her out of this restaurant and into my car if I have to. Anything to protect her from a danger she doesnât even know exists.
Her blue eyes are pensive. Iâd love to know what she thinks sheâs deciding. What she thinks is on the table right now. Whatever it is, itâs not nearly as dangerous as the reality of what awaits us outside this cozy restaurant.
Slowly, she stands up and reaches for my hand. âOkay. Letâs go.â
Without another word, I lead her through the back door of the restaurant.