Page 8 of Ruthless Addiction
His voice was calm, frighteningly calm—steady in a way nothing in my world had ever been.
“Let me take you away from here. Away from him. Away from all of them.”
I tried to speak, but only a rasp escaped.
Fear crawled under my skin—was he one of my father’s men, sent to finish the job?
Or one of Dmitri’s soldiers, ordered to pull me back into chains the moment I could stand again?
I tried to move, to fight, to understand—but consciousness slipped away, dragging me back into suffocating darkness before I could choose.
The next time I opened my eyes, everything had changed.
The machines were gone.
The white lights were gone.
The smell of antiseptic replaced by sunlight and salt and the distant melody of waves.
I was no longer in New Jersey. No longer in Dmitri’s fortress of power or my father’s kingdom of nightmares.
I wasn’t even in the same world.
I was in Athens, Greece, in a room washed in warm sunlight, curtains fluttering like soft breaths against the sea breeze.
And beside me—wrapped in a hospital blanket far too big for his fragile body—was my son.
Vanya.
Alive. Premature. Tiny enough to fit inside my trembling arms.
His cries were weak, barely whispers—but they were real.
A miracle. My proof that I had survived. My proof that I had escaped.
For a fleeting, fragile moment—I was free.
For five years, I had lived tucked away in the northern wing of a sprawling estate—a palace of white marble and blooming jasmine perched high above the hills of Athens. It was a world untouched by the violence that had carved my past, a sanctuary built like a fortress, every archway and column whispering promises of safety.
My son, Vanya, now five, was my universe.
His dark curls—Dmitri’s curls—fell over bright, inquisitive eyes that mirrored the man whose love had nearly destroyed me. His laughter echoed through the halls like sunlight in human form, softening the loneliness that clung to me like a second skin.
No matter how gilded this exile was, it remained exile.
The estate belonged to Ruslan Baranov, the undisputed kingpin of Greece—a man whose power shaped the nation the way tides shaped the shore. No politician rose without his blessing; no law passed without brushing the edge of his influence. His legitimate empire—shipping fleets, olive orchards, real estate stretching from Santorini to Mykonos—was merely the curtain behind which his true dominion thrived.
Arms routes threaded through the Mediterranean.
Synthetic drug networks pulsed through the ports.
A stern portrait of Ruslan hung in the great hall: cold eyes, a jaw carved from stone, a presence even paint could not diminish. Men came to this estate to kneel to him under the guise of business. They brought gifts, loyalty, silence. The walls whispered reverence.
And yet—I had never seen him.
Not once in five years.
Not since that fleeting hospital moment, his face a blur through my fevered vision as I bled and clutched my premature son. His absence gnawed at me. Men like Ruslan did not give protection freely. No one sheltered a woman and her child for half a decade out of kindness alone. That truth hung over me every day like a blade waiting to drop.
Table of Contents
- Page 1
- Page 2
- Page 3
- Page 4
- Page 5
- Page 6
- Page 7
- Page 8 (reading here)
- Page 9
- Page 10
- Page 11
- Page 12
- Page 13
- Page 14
- Page 15
- Page 16
- Page 17
- Page 18
- Page 19
- Page 20
- Page 21
- Page 22
- Page 23
- Page 24
- Page 25
- Page 26
- Page 27
- Page 28
- Page 29
- Page 30
- Page 31
- Page 32
- Page 33
- Page 34
- Page 35
- Page 36
- Page 37
- Page 38
- Page 39
- Page 40
- Page 41
- Page 42
- Page 43
- Page 44
- Page 45
- Page 46
- Page 47
- Page 48
- Page 49
- Page 50
- Page 51
- Page 52
- Page 53
- Page 54
- Page 55
- Page 56
- Page 57
- Page 58
- Page 59
- Page 60
- Page 61
- Page 62
- Page 63
- Page 64
- Page 65
- Page 66
- Page 67
- Page 68
- Page 69
- Page 70
- Page 71
- Page 72
- Page 73
- Page 74
- Page 75
- Page 76
- Page 77
- Page 78
- Page 79
- Page 80
- Page 81
- Page 82
- Page 83
- Page 84
- Page 85
- Page 86
- Page 87
- Page 88
- Page 89
- Page 90
- Page 91
- Page 92
- Page 93
- Page 94
- Page 95
- Page 96
- Page 97
- Page 98
- Page 99
- Page 100
- Page 101
- Page 102
- Page 103
- Page 104
- Page 105
- Page 106
- Page 107
- Page 108
- Page 109
- Page 110
- Page 111
- Page 112
- Page 113
- Page 114
- Page 115
- Page 116
- Page 117
- Page 118
- Page 119
- Page 120
- Page 121
- Page 122
- Page 123
- Page 124
- Page 125
- Page 126
- Page 127
- Page 128
- Page 129
- Page 130
- Page 131
- Page 132
- Page 133
- Page 134
- Page 135
- Page 136
- Page 137
- Page 138
- Page 139
- Page 140
- Page 141
- Page 142
- Page 143
- Page 144