SYNOPSIS:
Roman Avdonin has always lived life on the edge of reason—hiding an unstable woman while officials knock down his family’s door and a mafia war brews really doesn’t seem that crazy, all things considered.
But everything about Karine Yazov is a beautiful, dangerous lie. And they’ve not even learned the worst of it.
All she knows is how to survive, and put into the hands of a man who seems like her wildest dreams, why would she fight? His stare lights her on fire, he gives her the safety she craves, and Karine can’t stop herself from falling …
Even if she knows the monster chasing her will never let her go.
Promises like his shouldn’t be broken, but secrets like hers could get them all killed.
*
The Promise is book 2 in The Darkest Lies Trilogy. The Trilogy is standalone; the books should be read in order.
Amazon: https://geni.us/Promise
iTunes: https://apple.co/3eh0G1P
B&N: https://bit.ly/3t14xEh
Kobo: https://bit.ly/3c70Nu8
Google Play: https://bit.ly/3defegr
Excerpt:
His wasn’t as grand of an office as his father’s, but it was Roman’s, nonetheless. His place of business, and a space where he was the boss. To find his father standing on the opposite side of a desk was practically unheard of; something men in his position often took special care not to do lest it make someone think they were the lesser man in even something as simple as a conversation.He wasn’t accustomed to this reversal of roles, even though his father didn’t make note of it—he blamed that on the situation at hand, and nothing more. The only thing that concerned Demyan was the fact Karine Yazov happened to be sleeping in his son’s apartment, and he wanted to know why.
Roman pulled the rolled up notebook out of the back pocket of his sweats, and dropped it on the desk. Still, his father didn’t bat an eye. He wasn’t about to be sidetracked from his answers when he said, “Start talking.”
So, Roman decided to give him something.
Carefully, he removed the simple white T-shirt he had pulled on with the sweats earlier. Another time, he might have opted for the slacks and jacket, even jeans and leather to get dressed and start his day. The pain meant he went for comfort, and nothing else.
His father’s eyes roamed over the bruises that were hard to miss, still fresh, and tender to the touch. They had turned a deep purple color, the very edges a sickly yellowish-brown, and it was obvious that they were fairly new without him needing to say it. For that, he was thankful.
Demyan nodded once—as if to say, enough. Roman was then quick to hide the evidence that he had been beaten to damn near a pulp.
“That hurt?” he asked.
Maybe because he had nothing else to say.
“I’ve been better,” Roman replied with a chuckle.
A painful one, yes.
But also real.
“And you’ve been worse,” his father returned with a fleeting, easy smile.
That was true, too.
“Except those times I was high on coke, and didn’t feel a fucking thing.”
Roman would be a liar if he tried to say he hadn’t considered getting his hands on some snow as soon as he got into town, but that meant possibly putting Karine in one of two situations. One where he couldn’t be close to her—or where she was with him in a situation that might be even worse.
And really …
Did he need to be high right now?
The dull eight on his pain scale of one to ten said yes, but the rational, sober part of his brain that remembered sweating the coke out on a cell floor said no. He wanted to listen to that little, bitchy voice.
For now.
Demyan let out a testy sigh before sliding his hands into the pockets of his pants. “If you see your mother, you better keep those bruises out of her sight.”
Roman grunted in response and sat down in his leather swivel chair, suppressing a groan from the pain of the bruises. At least, the plush back of the chair cradled his sore muscles and bones that gave him a bit of comfortable pressure to take off the edge. The vodka was starting to hit, too. That shit made all the difference.
All the same, the pain taunted the edges of his mind and nerves. A constant reminder of how fucked up his life was.
Demyan remained standing, asking, “Let me guess—Maxim and you had a friendly chat?”
“He did this himself, too,” Roman said with a nod at his father’s widening stare. “Shit, yeah, he didn’t even bother handing me over to one of his men for it.”
“I did not expect that. You pissed him off, then.”
That obvious?
Roman kept the comment to himself.
Barely.
“You have no idea,” he muttered instead.
Finally, Demyan gave a shake of his head and decided to take a shot of the vodka on the desk. Roman wasn’t even sure how that bottle made its way into the office—it wasn’t the same one he’d been drinking out of, but liquor served a purpose everywhere. He watched his father closely because he’d asked Demyan there purposely.
For something he’d never done. Or rather, cared about, in a way. This wasn’t quite the same. He needed his father’s opinion. Now was the chance to come clean—about most of it at least.
He wasn’t sure how much about Karine’s disorder he was willing to share with even Demyan. Not now. It was too soon. Superficially—it would obviously look like a bad idea. Nobody else seemed to get Karine the way he did, and even he knew this was a mistake.
Roman took in a deep breath and continued to speak. His father wiped his vodka laden mouth with the back of his forearm.
“Maxim has been hiding his daughter from the world. She is…troubled, and has not received the proper care she needs.”
“What do you mean, troubled?”
Roman shrugged. That was as much as he was willing to tell.
“Let’s just say Maxim has no patience for a daughter like her. A girl who never fit the bill. Instead of nurturing her as a parent, he agreed to marry her off to Leonid’s son. Dima. You know Dima. We all know Dima here.”
Demyan grunted under his breath.
Yeah.
How could they forget?
“I still don’t get what any of this has to do with you.”
“I wanted to help her—or shit, just figure it out, what was wrong there because something clearly was,” Roman said, waiting for his father to comment on that. When he didn’t, he decided to continue, but he couldn’t meet Demyan’s gaze when he admitted, “And so, I kept digging.”
“And you found something you shouldn’t have?”
Roman let out a slow, aching exhale before saying, “As one does.”
“Jesus, son. Jesus Christ.”
That was enough to make Demyan roll his eyes, and rake a hand through his hair. The frustration was written in every action, but he had news for his father. That wasn’t even the best part of the story. Already, it wasn’t headed in a favorable direction for Roman.
“I stumbled on a plot against Maxim’s life. Leonid was directly involved. When I informed Maxim about it, he decided he was going to let me come home. Can’t remember if he used the words spare my life or not.”
“Spare your—what do you mean spare your fucking life?” his father asked, each word getting progressively louder until he was just roaring it. “For what?”
Roman’s throat bobbed with a swallow—that line he’d been walking just got a hell of a lot smaller. It didn’t matter that he was a grown man, he wasn’t so disassociated with his shitty behavior and lack of self-control that he didn’t know when he truly crossed a line. This was definitely that.
“What the fuck did you do, Roman?”
“I slept with Karine,” he said, the truth coming out easy even if it was hard.
Demyan stood like a statue, glaring at his son. The silence coated the room until he reached for the bottle of vodka again, the liquor sloshing against the glass. He tipped two shot glasses on the silver tray where the bottle had also been sitting over and poured them both a drink.
Roman took the shot and drank it, never once breaking his father’s heavy stare. Demyan did the same, but he thought that was more so his father could consider his next words. He was good at doing that—making sure not a single word was wasted when he wanted every one of them heard.
“So, to be clear, you fucked the young woman who has been promised to Dima?”
Roman didn’t bother defending himself, knowing he didn’t have one for that. His actions against Dima were always selfish, and he wouldn’t pretend otherwise. Those were the facts.
He did, however, correct his father with, “Was promised.”
“Is, Roman,” Demyan countered swiftly. “Until all parties agree otherwise in one way or another. When an arrangement is made for a marriage, it is not over until it’s over.”
Well, those were semantics.
Right?
Roman never did well with those.
ABOUT BETHANY-KRIS:
The author of too many novels to count, Bethany-Kris is a Canadian, lover of much, and mother to four sons, a glaring of cats, and a pack of dogs. A small town in Eastern Canada where she was born and raised is where she has always called home. With her boys under her feet, a snuggling cat, barking dogs, and a spouse calling over his shoulder, she is nearly always writing something … when she can find the time.
Website • Blog • Twitter • Facebook •
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please leave your comments below.