Page 11
SANDY
I wait until Talia finishes feeding Angelina dinner and leaves to hand her off to Nanny Olga before I pull out the folder, the edges slightly bent from how tightly I've been holding it.
My fingers trace the worn corners, evidence of my anxiety and the physical manifestation of hope and desperation bound in manila.
Outside, rain taps against the windows, a quiet percussion to match my racing heartbeat. The estate seems too peaceful for the storm I’m about to unleash.
Lev sits at the kitchen table, hunched over his laptop, his eyes narrowed like he can smell trouble brewing.
His massive frame dwarfs the ornate chair, his muscles tense beneath his expensive button-down.
He doesn’t glance up, but I know he feels the shift in the room the second I step closer.
Years of surviving the Bratva have given him a sixth sense for approaching danger.
I say nothing. I just place the photos on the table, one by one, like cards in a game none of us want to play. Each image makes a soft whisper as it meets the polished wood surface.
Benjamin Petrov. Captured in grainy black-and-white, slipping a sleek black envelope into Isaak Kiril's greedy hands like it meant nothing.
Like he wasn't selling Dimitri's life for whatever backroom favors were scribbled in blood and signed in silence.
The fluorescent lighting of the parking lot highlighted the casual cruelty in their expressions.
Men conducting business and trading lives like commodities.
I watch Lev's face as he registers what he’s seeing. The slight tightening around his eyes and the almost imperceptible clench of his jaw are small signs that speak volumes.
Talia enters the kitchen, her footsteps faltering when she notices the tension. She crosses to the table, her face still soft from motherhood but quickly hardening as she leans over the images.
She stares down at them, her breath catching in her throat. “What is this?” she asks, her voice cracking like dry ice.
“Proof,” I whisper. “Or at least the start of it.” The words sour on my tongue, tangled with triumph and fear. I did something dangerous that I can’t take back.
Lev leans forward, picks up one of the photos, and turns it over as if the back might hold the answers.
His eyebrows snap together, and his silence says more than words.
I recognize the calculation in his eyes, the slow, methodical assessment of a new piece on the chessboard.
Aleksandr might be the pakhan of the Avilov family, but Lev is the shadow who makes problems disappear before they reach the pakhan's desk.
Talia's eyes dart between the images and my face. “Where the hell did you get these?” she blurts out. Her lips are in a tight, pale line, her knuckles white where she’s gripping the table's edge.
The protective fury of a sister is warring with the fear I know she carries daily and the knowledge that our lives are balanced on a knife's edge.
“I took them,” I answer quietly, the truth spilling from my lips before I can take it back. “A few nights ago.” I can’t bring myself to elaborate, to describe the cold car seat, how my muscles ached from crouching, or the spike of adrenaline when Kiril's gaze seemed to find me in the darkness.
Her hands shoot out, gripping my shoulders hard enough to sting. I can feel the tremor in her fingers. Her eyes blaze with frantic worry.
“Are you out of your mind? You can't be out there chasing Morozov's men like you're some kind of?—”
“I did what I had to do,” I snap, lifting my chin. “No one else was going to.” The baby flutters inside me, a small reminder of what I’m fighting for. I place a protective hand over my stomach, feeling the gentle curve that has become my anchor.
“You're pregnant!” she shouts, flinging her arms into the air. Her voice echoes against the high ceilings, startling a maid who appeared in the doorway only to retreat quickly. “And in case you forgot, these people aren’t just scary. They’ll kill you and dump your body in a shallow grave like garbage!
What happens if you get caught, huh? What happens to the baby? ”
Her words strike like lightning, fierce and undeniable. I know what men like Morozov and Kiril do to those who cross them. But fear has become a weakness I can’t entertain.
“I know the risk!” My voice rises, desperation finally slipping through the careful composure I have tried to maintain since Dimitri’s arrest. “But I'm not going to sit on my hands while Dimitri rots in a prison cell for something he didn't do. Or worse, he dies in there!”
The baby kicks again, this time stronger, as if sensing my distress. I take a deep breath, trying to calm my racing heart.
The kitchen falls into a thick silence while Talia's anger fills the room. Outside, the rain intensifies, drumming against the windows with renewed force.
Lev clears his throat, stepping in like the calm between two storms. “I'll look into it,” he says, his tone steady but threaded with quiet urgency. His eyes don’t leave the photos, calculating distances, angles, and implications.
“I've got a contact at City Records. If there's any trail, financial, digital, or even a sudden change in Kiril's phone activity, we'll track it.”
I nod, my heart still hammering against my ribs. Lev's quiet intensity is somehow more reassuring than any loud promises can be. He doesn’t waste words. When he says he’ll look into something, bodies move, money changes hands, and results follow.
“You can't keep doing this,” Talia whispers, pressing her fingers to her forehead like she can rub away the worry. “I won't let you put yourself in danger like this.”
“I don't have a choice,” I hiss, the words harsher than I mean them to be. “If there's even a chance this helps bring Dimitri home sooner, then I have to keep digging. I won't stop.”
My hand curls protectively over my belly again. This child deserves to know their father, to be held in Dimitri's strong arms, and to grow up with his fierce love protecting them. I won’t accept any other outcome.
Talia stares at me, recognizing the fight in my voice and sensing the fear behind it. She sees my resolve. Her expression softens slightly, as always, when she realizes arguing is pointless. She knows my stubborn streak better than anyone.
“You're my sister,” she sighs. “And I know that look. Once your mind's made up, there's no changing it. But for your sake, and for that baby, promise me you'll be careful. You're playing with fire, and fire doesn't care how noble you are.”
She doesn’t wait for an answer, turning on her heels and following Lev out of the kitchen. I stand there momentarily, her concern wrapping around my neck like a noose.
The grandfather clock in the hall chimes nine times, its deep resonance filling the empty kitchen. Time passes, and each second ticking away is another second Dimitri spends behind bars, surrounded by enemies with a target on his back.
I lower myself into a chair, suddenly exhausted. My fingers brush over the photos again, tracing the outlines of the men who think they can take everything from me.
A moment later, my phone buzzes in my pocket from an unknown number.
I stare at the screen, nerves twisting low in my stomach. In this world, unknown numbers rarely bring good news. They mean emergency drop phones, burners used once and discarded, and voices that need to stay unattached to names. But something in my gut tells me to answer.
“Hello?”
“Sandy.” Nick's voice comes through the line, low and cautious. “How are you holding up?”
I sink deeper into the chair, tugging my hoodie sleeves over my hands like makeshift armor. His familiar voice, with its distinctive timbre, is comforting and cautionary.
“As well as I can, all things considered.” I keep my voice neutral, aware that even here, in the fortress of the Avilov estate, walls have ears.
“Any word on Dimitri?” he asks.
I exhale slowly, the ache in my chest sharp and familiar. Two weeks without him feels like two years. “Nothing yet. Not anything that can get him out.”
I think of the parade of expensive lawyers, the bribes that went nowhere, and the threatening phone calls that did nothing but put us all on higher alert.
A pause hangs in the air, and then Nick speaks again, his voice steadier now. “It's a shame you can't get Russo to run his mouth. If he admitted even half of what he helped Petrov pull off, you could tear the whole damn case to pieces.”
Something shifts in me. A pulse of heat ignites my gut. I sit up straighter, my free hand moving unconsciously to the table’s edge, gripping it hard enough that my fingers turn red.
“You think he'll talk?” I ask breathlessly, hope and fear tangling in my throat.
“Off the record?” Nick lets out a dry laugh. “Get a couple drinks in him, stroke his ego a little and he won’t just talk, Sandy. He'll brag. He’s the type of guy that loves attention.”
My fingers tighten around the phone. Detective Louis Russo.
I thank Nick and tell him I'll be careful and keep him posted.
But I’m already moving before the call ends. Because I’m not going to stay safe. I’m going to blow this whole thing wide open.
Two hours later, I stand in front of my bathroom mirror, barely recognizing the woman staring back.
A wig of dark auburn waves frames my face, the color rich and vibrant against my skin.
My usually subtle makeup is traded for heavy eyeliner and red lipstick, transforming my features into a mask that’s sharper and more calculated.
A trench coat over a pencil skirt hugs my figure.
It hides my small baby bump, the fabric expensive enough to suggest success without flaunting wealth.
Sleek black boots give me the kind of confident click every seductress needs.
It’s the sound of a woman who knows exactly where she is going and what she wants when she gets there.
Table of Contents
- Page 1
- Page 2
- Page 3
- Page 4
- Page 5
- Page 6
- Page 7
- Page 8
- Page 9
- Page 10
- Page 11 (Reading here)
- 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