Total pages in book: 76
Estimated words: 74765 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 374(@200wpm)___ 299(@250wpm)___ 249(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 74765 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 374(@200wpm)___ 299(@250wpm)___ 249(@300wpm)
“You don’t belong to anyone,” I say, rising too. “I know Elizabeth’s family. Her brothers.”
She stops, turns to me. “I told you. I’m Elizabeth. If you say I’m Mara, he’ll be even angrier and then he’ll punish you. You need to go now. Before he sees,” she says as she takes a seat on the chair she’d been instructed to sit on before. I realize what I’ve just done, wondering if I’ve put her in even more danger than before.
More footsteps sound on the other side of the door. I look from it to her. She’s humming a tune, a strange, creepy little lullaby.
“Sweetheart,” I say, walking to her. I wipe the few drops of blood that got on her face off. “What did they do to you?”
The door opens then, and I spin around.
Two soldiers enter followed by Felix and another man. A big man. He’s in a suit that barely contains him. He looks a little older than Cristiano. He has blond hair and blue eyes that are so pale they’re almost eerie to look at.
They take in the woman lying on the floor. Felix’s eyes land on the lamp, then me.
“What did you do?” he asks through clenched teeth.
The man beside him laughs outright. He pats Felix on the shoulder and Felix looks so small next to him. “You have trouble, Felix,” he says with an accent that I’m pretty sure is Russian.
“No trouble I can’t handle,” Felix spits, eyes on me.
The man, what was his name? Petrov? Yes. Petrov’s eyes land on Mara who is still sitting in her chair. He smiles at her. “Do you like my gift, little doll?” he asks her, his tone different when talking to her.
It makes my stomach turn.
“I’m too old for teddy bears,” she tells him outright.
Felix mutters a curse and takes one step toward Mara, but Petrov catches him by the shoulder.
“What would you like then, little doll? What would make you happy?”
She just stares at him, her face expressionless.
“Tell me what gift you’d like,” he says.
“A gift?” she asks him, standing.
He nods, appraising her. “Name it. It will be yours.”
“I can have anything I want?”
I stand by and watch this, unsure what the hell is going on.
“Anything.”
“Don’t let him punish her.” She points to Felix.
My gaze snaps to Mara as Petrov’s lands on me. He walks toward her. I go to move between them, but someone grabs my arm to hold me back.
He’s a fucking giant. He towers over her.
“That’s what you want? You can have anything. That’s what you ask for?”
She nods.
“And you’ll be my good little doll if I give you what you want?”
She nods again.
“No, Ma—”
Mara’s gaze snaps to me, quieting me, and I see not a little girl in her eyes but someone much older. A survivor. One so brutally damaged, so broken, I’m not sure she can be unbroken.
She looks back up at Petrov. “Will you give me that?” she asks, her tone suddenly sweet.
He smiles dotingly, nods once, turns to face Felix, his hand wrapping possessively around the back of Mara’s neck.
I want to kill him. I want to lunge at him. Because men like him deserve to die.
“This is Grigori’s wife?” Petrov asks although I’m pretty sure he knows.
Felix nods.
Petrov looks at me, appraises me, nods. “Felix won’t touch a hair on her head, will you, Felix?”
Felix shifts his gaze to me, hate in his eyes, and I hear the wording, the exact and deliberate formation of Petrov’s sentence.
“I will not touch a hair on her head,” Felix repeats, eyes narrowing, a wicked little grin twisting his lips.
“Then we shall take our leave,” Petrov says. “Come,” he tells Mara.
Mara turns to me. She gives me a strange, crooked smile and something inside me constricts because I know what will happen to her. I think she does too. And there won’t be a thing I can do to stop it.
I watch him walk her out of the room. Felix keeps a smile pasted on his face as they disappear. He then turns to walk toward me.
“How could you do that? Let him take her? She’s a little girl. Just a little girl.”
“She’s not your problem. In fact, you have much bigger problems to worry about, Cousin.” He nods to the man who has hold of me. The soldier starts to walk me out of the room.
“You promised not to hurt me! Let me go!”
“I will keep my promise. Just like I kept my promise to let your husband know Marcus Rinaldi’s location.”
I stop. “You did that?”
He nods.
“You set him up?”
This time he smiles. “I always keep my promises, Cousin.”
We step out into the hallway just as another door opens and another woman, one I vaguely recognize from the boat is escorted out.
“Let me go!” I fight the guard now, knowing Felix sent Cristiano to his death. Knowing I’ll join him soon.