Hot, humid air smacks into me when I step out of the twelve-seater jet thatâs just landed at a private airstrip in Hopeton, Florida. I gallop down the stairs, the two hoursâ sleep I managed during flight lightening my steps.
âNikolai, welcome to Florida,â croons a heavy-breasted female standing next to a shiny black sports car. âWe hope you are pleased with our selection.â The seductive purr of her voice reveals what she is referring to. It isnât the sports car.
Before Justine, this blonde would have been sucking my cock during commute to relieve boredom. Now, my cock isnât even twitching at the idea of having her lips wrapped around it. Iâm a breast manâthe rounder, the better. Although this blondeâs tits are barely contained in her tight cropped spaghetti-strap shirt, they look like clumps of silicon wrapped in overstretched skin. If I hadnât spent my weekend smothered by the best tits Iâve ever seen, her plump lips could have had me looking past her less desirable assets. Unfortunately for her, Iâve suddenly developed standards.
The blondeâs penciled brows stitch when I slide into the driverâs seat of the car and crank the ignition. She rattles on the door handle, soundlessly requesting for me to unlock the passenger door. She will need another visit to the plastic surgeon to smooth the heavy groove in her forehead when I plant my foot on the gas pedal, leaving her standing in a cloud of smoke in the middle of the tarmac.
I push the rental car to its absolute limit, loving the purr of its high horsepower engine as I weave through a seaside community. My resolve is the most determined itâs ever been. Iâve negotiated deals worth millions of dollars. Money laundering, drug shipments, and weapon exchanges have netted the Popov entity a very impressive capital of possessions and cash, but not one deal Iâve negotiated will trump the one Iâm going to seal today. If everything goes as planned, Iâll fly out of Hopeton richer than Iâve ever been.
As I glide the murky black car to a stop outside a manned gate, an armed guard emerges from his station. His pupils dilate to the size of saucers when I roll down the driverâs side window enough he can see my icy blue gaze. Iâm not a celebrity by any means, but in my field, Iâm notorious.
After parking my car in the spot requested by the guard, I peel out of the driverâs seat. I smile, amused when six men brandishing MP5s surround me. Most people would see their excessive tactics as wastefulâIâm one man, and Iâm not even carrying a pistol, for fuckâs sakeâbut I see it as smart. When youâre approached by a man whoâs never felt fear, youâre best to act cautiously.
âBrother,â I drawl out in a long, mocking roar when my guided tour of the Petretti compound has me walking past the man I stabbed in the neck last week.
When his eyes drop to his feet even more quickly than the blood drains from his face, I mutter, âWhat? Arenât we friends anymore? I thought we were family?â
With rumors of my birthright circulating faster than I would have liked, Iâve had men like that weasel confront me more than a dozen times the past three years. Usually, Iâd handle the situation with more constraint, but his constant referring to me as his brother irritated me. I donât have a drop of Popov blood running through my veins, but Iâm sure as fuck not a Petretti. The Petrettis are my rivals, and Iâd rather die than take on their name.
When the man Iâm mocking cowardly shuffles into a room on my right, my conceited laughter bellows through the dead quiet residence. Although Iâm chuckling at his fear, it also hides my shock at the size of the Petretti compound. When Col died, most of his monetary assets dwindled right alongside him, but this residence leaves no suspicion about the empire Dimitri is building. Iâm surprised. Dimitri has an eye for detailâclearly, as Justine caught his eyeâbut he isnât that smart. One glance into Justineâs eyes made the adrenaline in my blood surge so powerfully, I felt invincible; how could she not have had the same effect on Dimitri?
My tour of the Petretti compound is quick but long enough to gauge what their business is. There is a small shipment of powder in one room on my right, but it is only enough for domestic use by their crew. If they are planning on distributing coke, theyâd need more than a few bricks. It is the range of accents projecting from the padlocked rooms that leaves no doubt to my assumption. Theyâre pedaling the sex trafficking ring even more than Col did during his final years.
When we enter an office at the back of the compound, adrenaline thickens my blood. Dimitri is sitting behind a large wooden desk, his tapered gaze as smug as his fancy office. Dimitri has a lot of similarities to his father. Same dark, trimmed hair, elongated face, and icy blue eyes. He just lacks the aura of arrogance.
âNikolai, to what do I owe the pleasure?â
Dimitri stands from his chair before gesturing for the men surrounding me to stand down. They donât go farâonly to the corner of the room. Although I can respect Dimitriâs determination to show he isnât scared, Iâll never respect him. He lost any chance of gaining my respect when I discovered he stood by and watched an animal maul Justine and did nothing to help her. I thought I was a sick man. Iâve got nothing on Dimitri.
I take a seat in the chair Dimitri directs me to before shaking my head, denying his offer of a drink. Iâm not here for pleasantries. Iâm here on business.
After filling his crystal glass with three fingers of bourbon, Dimitri joins me on one of the four single chairs assembled around a wooden table. âIf this is regarding your exchange with Matthews Friday afternoon, it is being handled in-house. . .â
Dimitri words trail off when I shake my head. âThis has nothing to do with Matthews. I handled the situation. If he steps out of line again, Iâll handle it more thoroughly.â My tone ensures he canât misconstrue my admission. Matthews was lucky he was still breathing Friday night.
âThen what is this about?â Dimitri asks, sinking into his chair. âYou made it clear the last time we met our exchanges from thereon out would only pertain to business.â
âAnd that they will,â I reply, gliding my hand into the back pocket of my jeans.
My lips curl when Dimitriâs men step closer to me, mindful of my meekest movement. They should be on alert; if I wasnât spurred on by the desire to give Justine her life back, my meeting with Dimitri might have looked like the one I had with Sergei yesterday afternoon.
Dimitri tries to act unaffected when I slide a picture of Justine across the table, but I saw the quickest flare of his nostrils. He is reacting the exact way I did when I first laid my eyes on her. The thrill of the hunt is warming his veins and thickening his cock.
Even through a photo, Justineâs attractiveness is undeniable. Although she is sleeping, there is no doubt of her beauty. Her hair has fallen away from her shoulders, exposing every flawless feature of her face, and the drape of her clothes canât hide her alluring curves. I took this photo the first night I stayed in her apartment, knowing it would be one of many.
âHer debt,â I say, tapping my index finger on Justineâs photo. âI want it transferred to me.â
Dimitri shakes his head, adding to the manic tick in my jaw. âWhat debt? I donât even know who she is, let alone why she is indebted to us.â
I work my jaw side to side, struggling to contain my anger. I want to slit his throat for his stupidity in believing he can lie to me. I want to squeeze his neck until the blood drains from his face. But knowing the rules of our industry, I canât. If I killed Dimitri, Iâd be dead before I left the compound. Usually, that wouldnât bother me, but now Iâve got something Iâm willing to live for. Iâve got my woman waiting for me at home.
My eyes drift away from Dimitri when a deep voice at my side asks, âHow can you not remember her, Boss?â
A man in his mid-thirties licks his lips as his eyes drop to Justineâs photo, utterly oblivious to the murderous glare Dimitri is issuing him. âShe is a little older than I remember, and her tits are a little rounder, but man, her screams. . . Iâll never forget them. They would have only been hotter if they were done beneath the sheets. If that dog hadnât fucked her over, I sure would have.â
I glare at him, my blood so hot I can feel it reddening my face. I try to hold in my anger. I try to remember Iâm not here for revenge; Iâm here to have Justineâs debt transferred to me, but when the unnamed man leans over to secure Justineâs photo in his filthy motherfucking hands, I lose all sense of control.
A feral grunt roars through my lips as I yank my knife from my back pocket and pierce it through the skin of the man whose taunt maimed me more than any scar Iâve been given. The manâs eyes widen as his blood-curdling scream alerts his crew to his distress. I ram my knife down harder, stabbing his hand even further into the wooden table it is pinned to.
I donât even begin to let up when I feel the pinch of a rifle on my temple. I curl my hand around the manâs neck before drawing him to within an inch of my face. âWhat did she sound like? A wounded animal. Because that is what youâll sound like when I pull your stomach out of your throat.â My hot breath scorches his face, my Russian accent so pronounced my words are barely comprehensible.
âI didnât mean anything by it. I was playing, man, calm down,â he pleads, his words forced and laced with fear.
I tighten my grip, loving the throb of his pulse weakening under my hand. âYou are a pathetic piece of shit. The closest you would get to bedding a woman like that would be in your dreams. Now youâve lost any chance you had.â
I nudge my head to Justineâs photo resting next to his bloody hand. âDisrespecting her is as punishable as disrespecting me. Do you know what the penalty of disrespecting me entails?â
When the man briefly shakes his head, I snarl, âDeath.â
His bones creak when I firm my grip even more. Iâm moments from snapping his neck; the only reason I donât is that Dimitri warns, âIf you kill him, any chance of having Justineâs debt transferred to you will be null and void.â
My eyes stray to his, wishing it was his pulse fading from my touch. âI thought you didnât know who she was?â I growl, my words as lethal as the grim reaper. âYet you just called her by her name.â
Dimitriâs Adamâs apple bobs up and down. âHer brother repaid her debt years ago. We have no business with her anymore, so I had no reason to disclose old matters,â he replies, his tone more composed than the panic flaring in his eyes.
âSheâs still paying her debt. Every fucking day she lives with the guilt of what your father put her through!â
âOur father, Nikolai.
,â Dimitri corrects.
The man Iâm strangling falls to his knees when I abruptly stand from my chair, thrusting him out of my way in the process. My nostrils flare as my fists firm so tightly, my clipped nails pierce my palms. âI may have Colâs blood running through my veins, but he is my father. Just like you arenât a man.â
Red dots line my chest when I take a step closer to Dimitri. Iâm not in fear of my life. There are rules in our industry, ones not even someone as highly ranked as Dimitri can ignore.
âHow could you not protect her from him?â I ask, expressing the one question that hasnât left my mind since Justine disclosed the reason for her scars.
Iâve done some bad shit in my timeâstuff that will haunt my dreams for years to comeâbut youâve got to be completely fucked up to watch a woman you care about be mauled by a dog and do nothing.
Dimitriâs lips twitch, but not a word spills from his lips. I spit at his feet, my anger the strongest Iâve ever dealt with.
âYouâre a fucking coward,â I taunt without remorse.
A spark detonates in a set of eyes identical to mine in every way when the reason for my unexpected arrival dawns on Dimitri. âYou donât want Justineâs debt. You want her.â
âNo,â I deny, shaking my head. âI donât her. I already her. She is . And unlike you, no one will take her away from me. Family or not.â
Dimitriâs brows stitch as his face washes with confusion. He stares at me, his composure unreadable. After relieving his throat with a quick swallow, he gestures with his index finger for his men to leave the room. The armed guards stare at him in shock, certain they misread his gesture.
Strengthening his silent request with a throaty roar, Dimitri screams, âOut! Now!â His eyes drop to the man writhing on the ground with my knife still stabbed in his hand. âYou too.â
When his crew still fail to move, Dimitri sends a whiskey tumbler flying across the room. Shards of glass and whiskey raining down on his crew convince his men to jump into action. Four men leave without uttering a word, while a brute with a face full of tats removes the barrel of his gun from my temple to aid his colleague from the ground.
The man whimpers like a child when his assistant yanks my knife from his hand with as much brutality as I used putting it in there. The endorphins surging through my veins triple when his eyes bounce between Dimitri and me before he dumps my knife on the table wedged between us.
Dimitri waits for his crew to leave before he nudges his head to my knife, advising me to take it. It is a foolish move on his behalf, but smart at the same time. He knows I feed off fear, so he is doing everything in his power to act fearless.
His skills are impressive, but I donât need to see him shaking to know he is scared. I can feel it in my bones, smell it leeching from his pores, taste it on my tongue. There has only been one time heâs been more scared; it was when he thought Iâd come to collect my crown.
He had no cause for worry. I had no intention of claiming my birthright when we met for the first time three years ago. I was merely here to conduct business. There has only ever been one throne I want to possess. It isnât Dimitriâs.
After throwing down a three-finger serving of whiskey as if it is water, Dimitri locks his eyes with mine. âHow far are you willing to go to secure Justineâs debt?â
âThat is the equivalent of asking how fond you are of breathing,â I reply, my tone laced with arrogance.
It has been mere hours since Iâve killed, but the desire to watch the life snuffed from someoneâs eyes still runs rampant. Dimitri is the only man who can lessen the guilt Justine has been carrying the past four years, but that doesnât diminish my wish to kill him. If it werenât for him, Justineâs family wouldnât be in the predicament they are now. She wouldnât hate her body as if it was anything but perfect, and the spark I see hiding deep in her eyes could finally be set free.
âYou started all of this, Dimitri, and you are going to end itâwhether you want to or not.â