Inked Adonis: Chapter 15
Inked Adonis (Litvinov Bratva Book 1)
Trust is the sharpest blade ever crafted, and last night, Nova sliced me open without even trying.
I canât stop replaying it: her small fingers curling into my shirt, her cheek burning against my chest, the way she instinctively sought comfort from meâme, of all fucking peopleâduring her nightmare.
Like Iâm someone who knows how to be gentle.
Like Iâm worthy of that kind of blind faith.
âDonât expect anything from me,â Iâd warned her.
Shouldâve warned myself instead.
The memory of her vulnerability haunts me as I stare unseeing at quarterly reports. My coffeeâs gone cold, my phoneâs been buzzing with ignored messages for hours, and all I can think about is how easily she burrowed past my defenses.
Which means sheâs either genuine in a way Iâve never encountered, or sheâs the most dangerous player Iâve ever faced.
My ex-wife wrote the book on using innocence as a weapon. Iâd rather cut off my own hand than be played for a fool again.
âYou look like shit,â Myles observes from my office doorway. âTime to make a decision about the girl?â
I grunt noncommittally as I grab my coat and head for the elevator. But heâs right: I need answers. Need to know if Iâm seeing clearly or if Iâm just seeing what I want to see.
That means itâs time to pay Kat a visit.
Iâve planned this lunch like the tactical strike it is. Avec isnât just Chicagoâs hottest restaurantâitâs our old battleground, where Kat and I used to wage war between courses. Back when I was stupid enough to mistake her hunger for love.
My driver brings me to the front door of the restaurant, a gleaming facade of black glass and ornate gold. Chicago wind sneaks in the doors after me as I stride in.
The hostess recognizes me at once and hurries to usher me in. I choose my position with military precision: corner table, back to the wall, perfect sightline to the entrance. A general preparing for his enemyâs approach.
I sit and check my watch. 12:47 PM. Katerina will arrive at 1:15 exactly, because being fashionably late is part of her armor.
Around me, the lunch crowd swells, their chatter a dull roar that does nothing to drown out the thundering in my chest. Not nerves. Anticipation. For once, Iâm not the one walking into an ambush.
She is.
When Katerina appears in the doorway, time stretches like pulled taffy. Sheâs wearing that red dressâthe one that used to make my mouth water, my hands itch to touch. The one she knows makes her look like sin itself.
But somethingâs different now. Because all I see is calculation in every pleat and seam. The desperate display of a woman whoâs lost her power and knows it.
She hasnât spotted me yet. I let myself savor these last seconds before the battle begins.
Kat weaponizes her walk as she approaches, each click of her heels a bullet aimed at my libido. Her signature perfume hits firstâthat cloying vanilla-jasmine blend she wore throughout our marriage. The scent memory punches straight to my gut, but instead of desire, it triggers revulsion. All I can think about is Novaâs clean scent, like sunshine warming fresh-cut grass. Like something real.
âMiss me?â Kat purrs as she comes to a stop at the edge of the table.
I gaze up at her. âOnly when I run out of nightmares.â
She frowns as she lowers herself gracefully into the empty seat. Male eyes flick in her direction from every corner of the room. I can only pity the poor bastards. I remember when her charms used to work on me.
âYouâre looking well,â she murmurs, reaching across the table with manicured talons. âSuccess agrees with you.â
âAnd yet youâre doing your best to bring that to a grinding halt.â
Her frown flashes again. Just for an instant, her lip curdles. âOh, Sammy, what conspiracies have you talked yourself into now, hm?â
I let her fingers hover inches from mine, savoring her growing uncertainty. âYou tell me. Howâs the Andropov deal working out?â
Her laugh shatters like cheap crystal. âI have no idea what youâre talking about, darling.â
The âdarlingâ is her tellâhas been since I first met her. But sheâs always been good at lying, at making men see what they want to see. I watch her eyes, those amber pools that used to drown me. Now, I just see shallow waters hiding sharp rocks.
âReally?â I keep my voice casual, bored even. âBecause their sudden interest in Litvinovâs European holdings seems suspiciously well-informed.â
She takes a deliberate sip of water, but I catch the slight tremor in her hand. âIf youâre having trouble keeping your clients happy, thatâs hardly my concern.â
Her shoulders are too straight, her smile too sharp. Sheâs trying to find her footing, to figure out my angle. I can practically see her running calculations behind those cold eyes.
âSpeaking of things that are yours, I found something.â I let the words hang between us like bait.
Her perfectly shaped brows draw together. âOh? And what would that be?â
Instead of answering, I reach for my phone. The way her fingers tighten around her water glass is subtleâyouâd miss it if you werenât looking for it.
But I am. I always am.
I slide my phone across the white tablecloth like Iâm dealing the winning hand in poker. The video plays: Rufus sprawled across my leather couch like he owns the place, his giant head resting on Novaâs lap while she scratches behind his ears.
I study Katâs face, cataloging what isnât there. No worried mother demanding her fur babyâs return. No questions about her dog walkerâs safety. Not even a flicker of concern that her eight-thousand-dollar purebred is essentially being held hostage.
Just that familiar curl of her lip, the one that always preceded her cruelest cuts.
âKeep the stupid mutt.â She tosses her hair back, all pretense of seduction gone. âIt always preferred your closet anyway. Probably sensed a kindred spiritâanother dumb beast who canât let go of the past.â
The words are meant to wound, but they reveal so much more than she intends. Because a woman who actually cared about her dog wouldnât say that. Wouldnât react like this.
âYou shouldâve told me you were bringing me here to waste my time,â she spits. âThe martinis taste like piss anyway.â
Then sheâs gone. Her stilettos stab the floor like daggers as she storms out.
But as she departs, truth hits me with the force of a knockout punchâtwo devastating blows in rapid succession.
One: Katâs complete lack of concern about Nova. No rage about a stolen employee, no hints of a plan gone wrong.
Which means Nova almost certainly isnât working for her. Probably never was.
Two: The stark difference between them. Nova knows where Rufus likes to be scratched. She sings to him when she thinks no oneâs listening. Compared to Kat, who just dismissed him like last seasonâs handbag, sheâs a fucking saint.
The relief hits so hard my knees nearly buckle. I grip the edge of the table, steadying myself against the weight of what Iâm feeling. What this means.
The restaurant air suddenly feels thick, unbreathable. I throw enough cash on the table to cover both bills and a generous tipânot because Kat deserves the courtesy, but because I refuse to let her affect even this small detail of my life.
Back at the office, I close the door and boot up my computer. As soon as I cue it up, security footage plays on my monitor in crisp high-def, like some twisted reality show where Iâm both producer and captive audience.
It shows Nova curled up on my couch, reading aloud to Rufus from what looks like a dog training manual. Her laugh when he licks her face makes something in my chest squeeze painfully tight.
But watching her like thisâit triggers something darker. A little boy sitting in his fatherâs study, forced to watch grainy footage of his mother taking money, signing away her rights, walking away without a backward glance.
âLook,â my father would say as he jabbed the screen and made me watch, his breath hot with vodka when it fanned against my neck. âLook at what women do when you trust them.â
The memory hits like acid in my throat when Myles appears in my doorway, tablet in hand.
He closes the door behind him, his expression carefully neutral. Heâs been with me long enough to read my moods, to know when to tread carefully.
âGot those background reports you wanted,â he says, sliding the tablet onto my desk. âNothing unusual in the financials. But thereâs something about the timing of when Hopeâs Helpers started servicing Katâs accounts that feels off.â
I look up from Novaâs lounging form on the screen. âExplain.â
âThey took her on as a client right after your divorce was finalized. Could be coincidence, butâ¦â He lets the word hang.
âBut you donât believe in coincidences.â
âI believe in being thorough,â he corrects. âMy vote is that we should expand surveillance on Hopeâs Helpers. Dig deeper into their connection with Katerina.â
On screen, Novaâs curled up with Rufus, both of them dozing. Her face is peaceful, unguarded. Beautiful in a way that makes my chest ache.
Mylesâs offer makes me physically ill. Because I suddenly see myself becoming exactly what I swore Iâd never beâa man who cages what he claims to protect. Who turns trust into a weapon, love into evidence.
Nova doesnât deserve this. Doesnât deserve to be watched, recorded, reduced to pixels on a screen that can be rewound and analyzed for betrayal.
And yet what kind of fool would I be to put my faith in her?
I go back and forth, back and forth, wrestling with thoughts I canât tame. To trust or not to trust? Thatâs always had a very fucking obvious answer in my life: never, ever do it.
But now⦠With herâ¦
Fuck. I donât know.
âDo what you like,â I tell Myles. âLet me know what you find.â
He gives me a curious look, but then he shrugs and ambles out without another word.
I close the surveillance window with a sharp click. The ghost of Novaâs peaceful expression lingers, an accusation more damning than any evidence my father ever collected.
Trust is a fucking blade, alright. The question is: whoâs it going to cut worse?