Twilight Sins: Chapter 68
Twilight Sins (Kulikov Bratva Book 1)
âI am trying to make things better with your brother,â I hiss as Mariya unlocks his office door. âBreaking into his office and snooping isnât the way. Believe me, Iâve tried.â
Mariya pushes the door open and waves me inside. âIâll tell him I acted alone.â
âAnd when he finds out that I was with you?â
âPlay the pregnancy card. He canât be mad at you when youâre carrying his baby.â
I think Mariya severely underestimates her brotherâs ability to hold a grudge. But Iâm curious enough about the world I might be bringing a child into that I step into the cool dark of Yakovâs office.
Mariya slams the door closed and flips on the lights. âSo I usually find new and interesting things in the bottom right drawer of the desk or the top drawer of the filing cabinet.â
ââUsuallyâ?â I echo, eyebrows raised. âYou do this often?â
âOnly when thereâs something I want to know.â She grins. âWhich is, admittedly, kinda often.â
âHow?â
She holds up the little silver key she used to unlock the door. The smirk on her face looks so much like Yakovâs that a pang of loneliness thrums through my chest. âMy mom kept a spare office key hidden between the pages of The Feminine Mystique in the library. The men in my family arenât super into second wave feminism, I guess.â
âThatâs actually pretty smart.â
âYeah, apparently, she was cool at some point. Fuck knows what happened.â
I can guess what happened. Her husband died.
Yakovâs mom was married to the leader of a Bratva and he was assassinated in front of her and her children. That could mess anyone up.
The realization that Iâm dangerously close to being in that same position is not lost on me. But I push the thought aside. I have more than enough to worry about without adding future hypotheticals to the list.
Mariya starts digging through drawers, stopping only to glance up at me. âAre you planning to help?â
âI feel weird about this.â
âDo you want to know whatâs happening or not?â
I bite my lower lip. âYeah, but I⦠I want Yakov to want to tell me.â
âKeep dreaming,â she snorts. âThe men in this family donât tell us women anything. If we want answers, we have to do the digging ourselves.â
âArenât you worried Yakov will find out you were in here and be mad?â
âYakov expects me to do reckless shit like this. Everyone does. Iâm just keeping up with expectations.â
I tentatively open the top drawer of the filing cabinet and flip through a sea of manila folders. âHave you always been reckless?â
âMy mom has called me a âhandfulâ since I was a little kid, if thatâs what you mean. But she usually said it like it was funny. I kind of felt like she was proud of me for going after what I wanted. I guess I got to be too much for her the last few years,â she says sadly. Before I can say anything, Mariya turns the question around on me. âAre you close with your family?â
âNo. My dad was never in the picture and my mom and brother live far away. We donât talk much.â
âWhatâs âmuchâ?â
âWell, as a super random example, I could literally be kidnapped and impregnated by the leader of a Bratva and my mother would have no idea. So⦠thatâs how often we talk.â
Mariya snorts. âYouâre way more fun than I thought youâd be when we first met. As far as sisters-in-law go, I could do a lot worse.â
âWow!â I exclaim. âThatâs a big step up from âthe bitch your brother is fucking.â Iâm honored.â
âThatâs what you get for talking to me when Iâm jet-lagged and havenât had coffee,â she jokes. âPlus, Yakov was being a jerk. I was in a bad mood.â
âWell, as nice as it is that you think of me as family, Yakov and I are not engaged.â
Weâre not even talking. Marriage feels firmly off the table right now.
âYouâre pregnant with his baby, Loon. Do you really think youâre going to have a choice?â
Goosebumps spread across my arms, but Mariya doesnât notice. She keeps digging through drawers, oblivious to the new anxiety she just dropped on my already overflowing plate.
Marrying Yakov doesnât scare me. Maybe it should, but it doesnât. The thought of him feeling like he has no choice but to marry me, though? Terrifying. The only thing worse than not being with Yakov would be being with him when heâd rather be with someone else.
Mariya slaps a folder on the desk, breaking me out of my dark thoughts. âHere we go!â
She opens the folder and spreads the pages out across the desk. There are overhead satellite images of city streets covered with crisscrossing arrows and hatch marks all over. Scribbled notes fill the margins.
âWhat is all of this?â
Mariya frowns, turning her head as she twists the maps around. âClearly, theyâre planning something. But I canât read Yakovâs handwriting. And I have no idea where this is. Is this in the city?â
She sorts through a few more maps until I see something familiar. I snatch one of the maps off the desk and study it. âI know this place.â
âHow?â
I point to a large fountain in the shape of a four-leaf clover on the corner. âI remember that fountain. There was one just like it outside of this buffet I used to go to after work.â
âA buffet? No, Luna. Just⦠no.â
âDonât be a snob. They had good mac ânâ cheese. It was called⦠ah, shoot, what was it⦠Henriettaâs!â
Mariya is looking it up on her phone almost as soon as the name is out of my mouth. âHenriettaâs closed down early last year. Oh my gosh, Luna!â
I tense. âWhat?â
âIt says here they closed because of an ebola outbreak at the salad bar. Someone sneezed blood on the Caesar and then, boom, itâs The Walking Dead everywhere you look.â
I smack her arm. âThat is not funny.â
She snorts and taps around on her phone some more. âIt closed down because buffets are gross and they went bankrupt, but it looks like itâs being reopened as a club. The Rouge Lounge.â
She pulls up an article about the club, mumbling as she reads. I bounce on my toes behind her, trying to read over her shoulder.
âThe restaurant was bought and renovated over the last year into a club. This article says itâs going to be âthe hottest spot in L.A.,â but they say that about every new club. Oh, the opening night is tonight, actually.â
âSo Yakov and Nik are at a club opening?â I ask. âThat doesnât sound like them.â
âClubbing also doesnât require detailed maps.â Mariya shakes her head, reading more. Suddenly, she gasps. âHoly shit!â
Part of me expects it to be another prank, but she whips her phone towards me. She taps on the screen, zooming in on a picture of a husky man with ice blonde hair. Heâs standing next to a red neon sign that reads âThe Rouge Lounge.â âThatâs the new owner. Akim Gustev.â
âDo you know him?â
âHeâs the son of the man who killed my father,â she grits out. âThis article says heâll be standing outside the front doors of his new club tonight to personally welcome guests.â
I may not have grown up in this world, but even I can put two and two together. The secrecy, the maps, the connection to Akim.
Itâs an ambush.
âHe wouldnât,â I breathe.
âThe only reason Yakov or Nik would go near Akim is to kill him. Thereâs no other reason theyâd be there tonight.â
âBut itâs going to be packed. There will be hundreds of people there!â
Mariya chews on the corner of her mouth. âIf anyone can carry out a hit in the middle of a crowded club and get away with it, itâs my brothers. They know what theyâre doing.â
Mariyaâs confidence in them is sweet, but it does nothing to ease the dread churning in my stomach.
Iâm worried about what it would mean for me and the baby if something happened to Yakov. But more than that⦠Iâm worried about Yakov. I donât want that night in the kitchen to be the last time I ever see him.
Iâm trying to get a grip on the panic spiraling inside of me when an alarm beeps on the desk behind Mariya. She spins around to where Yakovâs computer is sitting open. It was locked when we tried it earlier, but now, the screen is filled with a grid of security footage. Shots of the gardens, the front porch, the driveway, and the security shack.
âWhatâs happening?â I ask.
Mariya bends over the computer. âThe alarm is going off. That only happens if someone in the guard shack hits the button.â
âIs it a mistake?â
âIt could be, but Iâve never seen it happen. But I donât see anything on theââ She inhales sharply.
âWhat?â
Mariya doesnât move. Doesnât breathe.
I lean around her and see men moving on the screen. Theyâre walking across the lawn. It looks like Yakovâs guards on patrol.
Then a man in all black pulls a large gun out of his jacket and fires at the guard shack. Each blast of the gun glares bright in the cameraâs grayscale night vision mode, but I can still make out the husky man with ice-blonde hair standing behind the shooter.
My legs buckle and I grip the edge of the desk for support. âIs thatâ ââ
âI have to call Yakov.â Mariya pulls out her phone and slaps it to her ear. She bounces from one foot to the other, cursing under her breath. âPick up, Yakov. Pick up, pick up, fucking pick up!â
âWhy is he here?â I rasp. âHis club is opening. He said in the article heâd be waiting at the doors. He saidâ ââ
âI donât need your voicemail, Yakov. I need you!â Mariya yells into the phone. âAkim Gustev isnât at The Rouge Lounge like he said. Heâs here. At our house. It was a trap!â
For a second, Iâm terrified for Yakov and Nik.
Then I see the men in dark coats making their way across the front lawn towards the mansion, guns at the ready. And it hits me.
Yakov and Nik arenât in a trap.
We are.