Inked Adonis: Chapter 8
Inked Adonis (Litvinov Bratva Book 1)
âWhat in the name of The Little Mermaid happened to you?â
Myles gawks at me, his eyes roaming up and down my ruined Brioni suit and then over my shoulder, following the trail of muddy footprints streaking across my mansionâs Italian marble floors.
My housekeeper is going to weep when she sees the mess. Good thing I pay her enough to afford therapy.
I toss my waterlogged phone at him. âIâm gonna need you to do a full reboot.â
Then I keep walking, forcing Myles to follow me. We stride through the atrium and into the west-facing living room, steadfastly ignoring the steely-eyed gazes of my ancestors glaring at us from their oil portraits on the walls. Those motherfuckers always give me the creeps.
In the living room, though, floor-to-ceiling windows frame a view of the sculpted gardens below. A bit less jarring of a sight than scowling old Russian aristocrats. On a normal day, I find the view peaceful. Even my black, shriveled soul doesnât despise the sight of life blooming on the rose bushes.
But today is very fucking far from ânormal.â
It was a strange day even before that dog hit me like a fucking Chevy with the brakes cut. Iâd been on my way home from a meeting that left me unsettled in a way I rarely feel.
Angelo Boyko⦠there isnât a damn thing I trust about the bastard, up to and including his very name. There are three types of men who try to take down the Bratva: idiots, federal agents, and the dead.
Boyko might be all three. His âchanceâ meeting with me this morning reeked of the federal government sticking its nose where it doesnât belong. But, undercover fed or not, his offer was interesting: help him destroy the Andropovs, and certain⦠activities⦠of mine would stay buried.
Tempting offer for a man in my position. Iâm no foolâI cover my tracks, leave no evidence, and when I bury a body, it stays there until it rots away to nothingness. But in my line of business, you can never say no to a good insurance policy.
The question is: what will this one cost me?
Myles tips my phone sideways and murky water dribbles from the charging port. âYou decide to go for a fully-clothed swim in Lake Michigan or something?â
I snort. âIt wasnât âor something.ââ
He pauses, face suddenly stricken. âAre you screwing with me right now?â
âIt was against my will,â I explain, stripping off my jacket and tossing it into a corner like the six-thousand-dollar rag it now is. âI was pushed.â
âI fuckinâ told you, man!â he roars immediately. âI knew it! I said it. I said it a million goddamn times and you did not goddamn listen. You shouldnât be messing around with these shady-ass federal spooks, brother. Even if they claim theyâre taking down the Andropovs. Sometimes, the enemy of your enemy is just your enemy.â
I peel off my shirt, and a scent hits meâlake water mixed with something sweeter. Novaâs shampoo. My cock twitches, remembering how she tasted, how she felt wrapped around me less than an hour ago. My lips still tingle with her juices, my ears with the heat of her thighs wrapped around my head. The marks I left on her will be darkening to purple by now.
Good.
âBoyko is legit,â I say, forcing thoughts of Nova aside.
âYou have no idea who he is!â Myles cries out. âKGB, FBI, Andropov plantâtake your pick of people who want to destroy you. He could be any of them.â
âYou think I was born yesterday? I know how to handle men like him.â
Myles drops into a leather armchair, running a frustrated hand through his crew cut. âFine. Letâs say this guyâs the real deal. Letâs say he really is some clandestine government agent from a three-letter agency and he really is going after the Andropovsâ arms ring. Whatâs stopping him from coming for us next?â
I fix him with a look thatâs made grown men piss themselves. âMy businesses are clean. Let him dig.â
Thatâs bullshit and we both know it. Nothing about the Litvinov Group is clean, but Iâve spent years building a facade that would make the FBI weep with frustration. They can look all they want. Theyâll never find whatâs buried beneath the surface.
That is, unless someone leads him straight to it.
My jaw clenches. The suspect list there is long and growing. Katerina. My brother. My own fucking father, whoâd sell me out the second he found a way to put Ilya in charge. Any one of them might point a finger in my direction, if the price was right.
Some things you learn the hard way: blood isnât thicker than water. It just leaves a bigger stain.
Myles sinks deeper into his chair. âI still donât like it. I donât like feds, and no matter what you say, I know you donât, either.â
âThey can be useful. Sometimes.â
If things go the way I hope they do, Angelo Boyko will become very useful to me. Our lunch at a Ukrainian restaurant in Rogers Park was supposed to be the most exciting part of my day. But I couldâve never guessed what the rest of the afternoon would hold.
I drape my damp jacket over the back of a barstool, and Myles screws up his face. âWeâll circle back to the lecture. Returning to my first question: why the hell are you sopping wet? Who pushed you?â
âRemember the Great Dane and his little dog-walker from a couple weeks ago?â
Myles chuckles. âThe one that wanted to jump your bones? How could I forget?â
Itâs a point of hilarity in this confusing clusterfuck of a day that his description works equally well for both the woman and the dog. Probably a good thing that Myles doesnât know about Novaâs voice memo.
I stare at him, waiting for him to make the connection.
Finally, the lightbulb goes off. âYouâre kidding.â Then his grin withers into a frown. âMaybe I should get eyes on this chick. Make sure sheâs not a spy.â
âYou really are getting more and more paranoid with age, Hagerty.â
âYou pay me to be paranoid.â Myles plants his hands on his knees. âItâs a little convenient that this woman just miraculously shows up in your life not once, but twice, in the last couple weeks, donât you think? Smells like a setup.â
âShe canât make the dog sit, but she can order him to hump on command?â I shake my head. âTake your tinfoil hat off, man.â
âIt couldâve been orchestrated! Maybe she sprayed you with some sort of pheromone that gets the dogs going. Catnip by Calvin Klein, or whatever.â
I canât stop myself from laughing, ignoring the dirty look Myles throws my way.
âStranger shit has happened!â he insists.
âNothing as strange as you.â
âYouâve got enemies everywhere, Sam.â He wags a scolding finger in my direction. âYou canât afford to trust a stranger.â
âLetâs talk about all of the people that have betrayed me already, shall we?â I start counting them off one by one. âMy wife. My brother. My father as soon as he figures out how to disinherit me. With family like that, who needs to worry about strangers?â
He canât argue with my extremely valid points, but it doesnât stop his jaw from clenching. âI just donât like the timing of this. What do you really know about this woman?â
âI know that sheâs uncomplicated. Straightforward.â
Nova said something during one of our first text conversations that has stuck with me. Dogs who bark the loudest and bite the hardest are the ones who have been hurt the most.
Those are the words of someone who has been hurt before. I saw proof in the deep scar circling her wrist, in the silvery line across her hip that I traced while I was buried inside her, making her cry out my name like a prayer.
The sight of that awoke something dark and primitive in my chest. It made part of meâthe part that makes good men cross the street when they see me comingâwant to hunt down everyone whoâs ever hurt her and paint Chicagoâs streets red with their regrets.
âYouâve met the woman exactly twice,â Myles reminds me. âAnd judging from that look in your eye right now, youâve banged her at least once.â
That was a secret I planned to keep, but Myles is my head of security for a reason. He has a way of seeing to the truth of things.
âWhat else were we going to do after getting out of our wet clothes?â I ask innocently.
Myles frowns. âWhere were you?â
âHer place. Rogers Park.â
Myles nearly gives himself whiplash springing to his feet. âRogers Park? As in, the same neighborhood where you met the fed?!â
âPurely coincidental.â
âYou know damn well we canât afford to believe in coincidences.â He purses up his lips. âJust let me run a background check on this woman. Just to be safe.â
It wouldnât hurt. And yet, I find myself reluctant all the same. âDonât bother. Itâs a waste of resources.â
âFuck me sideways,â he mutters in disbelief. âYou actually like the girl.â
âDonât be ridiculous.â I turn my back on him and stalk to the bar in the corner of the living room. If Iâm going to have this conversation, Iâd like to be at least halfway drunk. âWeâve texted a bit for the last few weeks. Thatâs it. Sheâs not a threat.â
âI bet you thought that about Katerina, too.â
I pour myself a bit more whiskey than I mean to. And my voice, when it emerges, is angrier than I meant for it to be. âI was eighteen when I met Katerina. She wasnât always Satan in Louboutins.â
âI was around back then, in case you forgot. I was also the only one of the three of us not blinded by some early boobs and a gift for makeup. Trust me, brother: she always had horns and a pitchfork.â
I take a sip of whiskey. The burning liquid scorches on the way down, but it anchors me back into the moment.
Myles stands and leans against the bar, wearing his âintervention face.â âLet me ask you this: are you planning on seeing this woman again?â
Iâm tempted to say no, if only to bring this inquisition to a speedy conclusion. But lying would be the cowardâs way out.
âMost likely.â
âYou want a relationship with her?â
I grit my teeth. âYou know I donât do relationships. Not anymore.â
âThatâs what I thought. But that was before you became penpals with a dog-walker from Rogerâs Park. If youâre going to see her again, you need toâ ââ
âI donât need to do anything,â I snarl, surprising both of us with the intensity of my reaction. âIâll see Nova for as long as I care to. Just because sheâs not like the vapid actresses and anorexic models I used to date doesnât mean this is any different. I donât intendâ ââ
Whatever I may or may not have intended is left unsaid as the glass tumbler in my hand shatters. Shards dripping blood and whiskey rain down on the marble. Truth be told, I barely feel the sting. Itâs a dim signal, lost amidst the surging bellow of possessive rage burning through my veins.
The blood leaking from the cuts is worth more than the liquor it mingles with. Iâve bled for empire, for family, for revenge. But bleeding for her? Thatâs new. Thatâs dangerous.
My body loathes the idea of Nova being just another woman I fuck and forget. Sheâs already crawled under my skin.
And thatâs exactly why I need to stay the hell away from her.
I reduce my voice to a growl. âCareful, old friend. There are lines even you shouldnât cross.â
Myles merely folds his arms across his chest and sighs. Most men are put off by my anger when I let it out of its cage. Myles Hagerty is my best friend because he couldnât possibly care less.
Usually, thatâs a good thing.
Today, itâs highly annoying.
âThose other women may have been âvapid and uninteresting,ââ he says quietly, âbut they understood the game. They signed NDAs without batting their fake lashes before you took them anywhere. Is she ready for that?â
âThatâs exactly my pointâI donât plan on taking Nova anywhere. Sheâs not arm candy. Sheâs not some trophy girlfriend. Sheâs a distraction, nothing more.â
But even as I say those words, I remember how she arched beneath me, how she mewled, how she moaned, how she melted. She came for me practically on command.
Fucking hell, I want to hear those sounds come out of her lips again.
Myles harrumphs, and I blink out of my thoughts to find him watching me with flattened lips, as if he can sense what Iâm only now realizing.
When it comes to Nova Pierce, I havenât yet had my fill.