Twilight Sins: Chapter 70
Twilight Sins (Kulikov Bratva Book 1)
âWe canât stay here.â Mariya grabs Yakovâs laptop and my hand, tugging me towards the door.
Iâm not resisting, but it also feels like my legs arenât working. Yakov told me his world was dangerousâhe told me I was in dangerâbut I didnât understand it until those first shots rang out.
âWhere are we going?â
âUpstairs.â Mariya pokes her head through the door, looking around to make sure thereâs no one in the hallway.
Neither of us speak as we hurry up the stairs and down the hall towards my room. The house is bizarrely quiet. No staff milling around. The guards who were on the porch earlier are gone. Probably to take down the threat, I tell myself.
But inside, my stomach twists.
Mariya closes and locks the bedroom door the moment weâre inside. Then she moves to the windows. âThis is the best vantage point in the house. Thereâs a reason Yakov made it his room.â
The lawn spreads out below us. I can see black shapes advancing across the grass.
âGet away from the windows! Theyâll see you.â
She shakes her head. âTheyâre one-way. As long as we keep the lights off, they canât see in.â
Mariya props the laptop open in one arm and scans the property through the windows. The silly, troublemaking teenager Iâve come to know is gone. She is all business. All Bratva.
I, on the other hand, am shaking from head to toe. As the adult, I should be taking care of her. But Mariya grew up in this world and it shows.
âWhat are we going to do?â I ask.
âWeâre going to let the guards do their jobs. Theyâre trained for this.â
Shots fire over and over and over again. There are men dressed in all-black mowing down guards on every single security camera. There have to be three dozen men out there, at least.
Iâm not sure how you could ever be trained enough to face something like that.
Mariya stares down at the screen, her lower lip pinched between her teeth. Then the screen goes dark.
âShit.â Mariya quickly presses the spacebar again and again but the screen stays black. âThe cameras are off.â
âIs the computer dead?â
âMaybe.â She curses again. âOr⦠or maybe the guards shut down the alarm. Maybe the threat has been neutralized.â
Itâs hard to believe after what we just witnessed, but I canât help but hope sheâs right.
Then thereâs a loud bang from downstairs.
We both spin towards the door. My heart is thundering, my body perfectly still as we wait for something. Anything. More noises, loud voices, for someone to tear down the bedroom door.
Nothing.
I take a step closer to Mariya. âDo you think theyâre inside the house?â
âI think⦠The guards are searching the house to make sure they found all of the intruders. Iâm sure thatâs what it is.â
She drops the laptop on the bed and moves towards the door, but I grab her hand. âWhere are you going?â
âI need to know whatâs going on.â
âNo. No, you donât. We donât need to do that at all. We can stay here. Hide untilâ ââ
âUntil what? Yakov and Nik arenât here. Iâm the only one left.â
Are Yakov and Nikandr dead?
Mariya canât mean it that way. Thereâs no way Yakov and Nik are gone. Itâs impossible to imagine the two of them, broad and strong and confident, just⦠gone.
But why isnât Yakov answering his phone? Where are they?
If this was a planned attack, they could have been killed the moment they stepped off the property. Now, Akim is barging in here, knowing he wonât have to face Yakovâs wrath.
Iâd know. If something happened to Yakov, Iâd feel it, wouldnât I?
âIâm going to make sure everything is safe,â she says.
Itâs a bad idea. I feel it in my gut. But I also know I canât stop her.
So when Mariya opens the door, I force myself across the room and into the hallway after her. I owe Yakov that much.
Iâve lived in this mansion for months, but it seems different now. Possible threats loom everywhere. We pass door after door and I keep whipping around to make sure no one is creeping up behind us.
At the top of the stairs, Mariya stops and ducks down. The front door is hanging open, but the hum of cicadas is the only sound floating in from the lawn.
âThe guards on the porch are gone,â Mariya whispers.
âIs that normal? For them to leave their post?â
Her mouth twists to the side. Her non-answer is answer enough.
No. Itâs not normal at all.
She stands up. âIâm going to go out there and see whatâs going on.â
I grab her wrist and drag her back to the floor. âMariya! No. I canât let you do that.â
âYou donât get to âlet meâ do anything,â she says with a sad smile. âIâm going, Luna. You canât stop me.â
âMariya,â I rasp, âitâs not safe. I can feel it. Something is wrong. We should hide and wait for Yakov and Nikandr to get back here.â
She lays her hand over mine and squeezes. âIt might be too late for that.â
âNo.â I shake my head as tears well in my eyes. âTheyâre fine, Mariya. Theyâre coming back. Theyâll be here soon. I know it.â
I donât know it. Mariya is right: we canât sit and wait for help that might never come.
Iâm shaking, so she drapes her jacket over my shoulders. âYouâre pregnant, Luna. You should stay here.â
âAnd youâre a kid! I canât let you go fight alone.â
She shrugs casually. âIâve been in weapons training and Krav Maga classes since I was four.â
âI donât even know what that is.â
âExactly. No offense, but you should stay here. Youâd just distract me.â Mariya grins, almost hiding the anxiety burning in her eyes. âThe guards have probably handled the threat by now, anyway.â
I want to believe her.
I try to.
But as Mariya creeps down the stairs and through the front door of the mansion, every cell in my body is screaming that this is wrong. Yakov would never have let her go out there alone.
Yakov isnât here.
I grip the railing just for something to hold onto. For some way to keep myself from flying out the door behind Mariya and dragging her back inside.
âSheâll be fine,â I whisper to myself. âShe knows what sheâs doing.â
Just as Iâve almost convinced myself everything will be okayâ¦
Thatâs when the screaming starts.