Dirty Damage: Chapter 21
Dirty Damage (Pavlov Bratva Book 1)
My uncleâs summons arrives an hour after Sutton leaves.
BORIS: Come see me immediately. We need to discuss your⦠engagement.
Boris is master of the passive-aggressive text. The ellipsis speaks volumes about the direction this conversation will go.
Which is exactly why he can wait.
I have a lot of work to catch up on. The last hour was lost to thoughts of Sutton. I was in fucking shambles after she stormed into my office, her dress hugging every line and swell of her body. She was all curves and attitude and a bristling fuck-you energy that made my blood sing.
Her perfume still lingers, taunting me.
âBoss?â
Vol stands in my doorway looking like heâs about to piss himself.
Not an unusual state for him when he enters my office.
âI have an update on the two intruders from the marina.â
I sigh. It feels like years since I knocked out the two men who trespassed near my yacht. So much has changed since then.
âAnd?â
âTheyâre not Martinek men.â
I arch an eyebrow, which is a sign for him to continue.
âWe did a deep diveâcredit searches, bank accounts, communicationsâand someone bought them. Itâs a ghost organization. Completely under the radar.â
âSo you came here to tell me you have nothing.â
He nods miserably. âBut weâre working onâ ââ
âWork harder,â I growl. âGet out.â
Vol trips over his own feet trying to retreat. The door clicks shut behind him, leaving me alone with Borisâs message flashing at the top of my notifications and the persistent memory of silk-wrapped curves Iâd like to map with my hands.
And my lips.
And myâ â
âFuck,â I spit, opening my laptop.
If I walk out of this office now, Iâll go to my penthouse.
Iâll find Sutton.
Iâll cross all the lines Iâve set for myself.
So I bury myself in work until I can think straight.
I let Uncle Boris stew until sunset. By then, his texts have evolved from passive-aggressive to outright hostile.
Good. An angry Boris is a careless Boris.
I leave the office and head to his waterfront mansion. Instead of taking my car to the front entrance, I sail my sloop right into his private marina.
I pass the collection of overpriced toys he calls a fleet. Toys bought and paid for with my fatherâs money.
Money that shouldâve been mine.
One day soon, itâll all be mine again.
As I disembark and walk down the dock, something catches my eye on the side of his favorite catamaran: the symbol of my new security system emblazoned in the shiny paint. The exact one he voted against at last weekâs board meeting.
Well, well. Isnât that interesting?
I creep closer for a better look when flashlight beams blind me from three directions.
âDonât move,â a voice barks. âYouâre trespassing on private property.â
I turn slowly, letting the light catch my scars. âActually, I was invited.â
âMr. Oleg!â The head of security lowers his gun so fast he nearly drops it. âI didnât realizeâ ââ
âObviously. Or youâd have brought better firepower.â I eye his pathetic little 9mm. âTell my uncle Iâm here.â
âNo need for that.â Borisâs voice slices through the darkness. âYou always did know how to make an entrance, Oleg.â
His hands are in his pockets, and I notice he hasnât moved to dismiss his men. Their weapons are lowered, but they are still surrounding me at the ready.
âI was just admiring your new security features.â I nod at the catamaran. âIâm surprised, considering your stance at the board meeting.â
He lifts a cigar, the end smoldering orange in the darkness. His hand shakes slightly, but he hides it well. âOne canât be too careful.â
âIndeed.â I step past his men like theyâre no more than garden statues. âBut it is curious that your private marina has better protection than Pavlov Industries and my marina combined. Your priorities seem⦠misaligned.â
His smile doesnât reach his eyes. âIâm a collector, nephew. Rare coins. Antiques. The kind of things that tempt even amateur thieves.â
âItâs a poor pakhan who puts his own personal safety and interests above those of his company and his Bratva.â
Borisâs face twitches. âWhat would you know about being pakhan?â
âEverything my father taught me.â
The air between us crackles. Old wounds and the grudges that predate them.
Boris recovers first, ever the politician. âBogdan was a good brother and father. Come inside and join me for a drink. Weâll toast to his memory. I just opened a bottle of whiskey.â
Heâs not lying. I can smell the liquor on his breath.
He leads me to his patioâa stone slab surrounded on all sides by statues of predators frozen mid-attack like theyâre about to lunge at us.
Never one for subtlety, my uncle.
He settles into a throne-like chair beneath a snarling lion and gestures to his bar cart. âHelp yourself.â
I pour myself three fingers of whiskey and claim a seat beneath an eagle with bared talons. The lights strung overhead cast deep shadows of my uncleâs lined face.
His eyes are empty sockets, dead and empty.
I take a sip and raise my glass to him. âVery nice.â
âIâm glad you approve.â He fingers his own glass, his eyes fixed on me. âYou usually have such discerning taste. I thought in all matters, but⦠after seeing your engagement announcement, I may have been wrong about that.â
I expected this, but my fingers still tighten around my crystal tumbler. âYou do not approve?â
âSutton.â He spits her name. âSlutton would be more appropriate, wouldnât it? Sheâs trash. I know it. You know it. The entire fucking company knows it.â
âDid you spend all day coming up with that nickname?â
âIs her pussy that magical?â His lips curl, and I want to rip them from his face. âDoes she have an enchanted throat that fried your brain? Thatâs the only explanation forâ ââ
âDonât say another word.â I swear I feel the crystal flex in my palm, and I set it aside before I stab a shard into my uncleâs carotid. âShe is young, beautiful, and will make an excellent mother. Thatâs all you need to know.â
âWhat about breeding? Class? Education?â Boris sneers. âI know a hundred women more suitableâ ââ
âMy choice is made. The announcement is public.â I lean forward, letting him look into my eyes and see the violence Iâm capable of. âSutton Palmer will be my wife. Sheâll be the mother of my children. If you ever disrespect her again, theyâll be fishing pieces of you out of your precious marina for weeks.â
âYou forget yourself, nephew. Iâm the pakhan.â
The breeze carries the scent of salt water and makes my uncle shiver. That, or something else has him shaking in his throne.
âIâm in charge,â he adds. âYou answer to me. Disobey my orders or lose control of your white trash woman and heads will roll.â
âBut whose head?â
âW-what?â he splutters.
âPower isnât about titles, uncle. Itâs about loyalty. And every man in this organization knows which of us would bleed beside them in a fight.â I unfurl a slow smile, flashing my canines as I stand. âIf youâre smart, youâll welcome my future wife with open arms. If youâre not⦠Well, like you said, one canât be too careful these days.â
I leave him there, trembling beneath his stone lion.
My phone is already in my hand as I walk away.
OLEG: Meet me at the Pavlov Boatyard in half an hour, princess. Itâs time we talked.