I spend the next two weeks at home, recovering.
Or more accurately, trying to survive my mind.
Every day, I wake from a nightmare replaying the moment I fell, the exact moment the haunting sound of my leg breaking echoing in the air.
And every time, soothing hands wrap around me, pulling me close to a strong chest. A chest that Iâve grown so used to along with the compassion that comes with it.
A compassion I never believed Adrian to be capable of.
He didnât leave my side during the first couple of days, but then he had to go back to his work. I donât want to think about the fact that heâs going back to torture and kill people, that after caring for me, he went back to destruction.
But itâs not like I could stop him. Adrian made it clear that he enjoys what he does, and thereâs nothing I can do or say that will change his mind.
Not having him around is hard. Itâs even harder than I would like to admit.
Since I took Adrianâs hand and cried into his chest, something between us changed. The bridge I thought was ruined has been slowly building since that day. It might have something to do with his attentiveness or silent support, but heâs become a pillar in my life. He distracts me from my head and every vile emotion that comes with it.
But when heâs gone, all those emotions barge back in.
The walls close in on me as if intending to trap me in the confines of the dark box from my childhood. I keep stealing peeks at my ballet clothes, at the shoes and the leotards, and try not to break down all over again.
I deleted my Instagram account and all of my socials to get a reprieve from the outside world and the press.
Stephanie and Philippe have been calling and tried to visit, but I avoided their advances and changed my number. Theyâre associated with the world I canât go back to. Seeing them and talking to them would only bring that fact to the forefront of my head.
Besides, after my injury, the entire crew had to start anew and delay the opening. I bet Hannah is ecstatic to play Giselle instead of me.
I lean against my crutch, facing the closet, looking at all of my leotards, tutus, tights, and ballet shoes. I donât know how long I stand here, staring at the evidence of my ended career, but itâs long enough that my injury under the cast tingles.
Then I charge inside and bring every last piece of clothing down, tossing the hangers and the shoes. I try ripping the leotards with my hands and lose my balance, falling to the floor. I crawl to a drawer, yank it open, and grab the scissors. Then I cut through every piece of ballet clothing, destroying the muslin and tulle and everything I once considered beautiful.
I kill the remainder of the dream that was murdered for me.
Maybe this will help me get free. Maybe the walls of my apartment will stop closing in on me as if theyâre monsters. Every corner of this place reminds me of ballet, of dancing, of rehearsing on my own until I exhausted myself.
When I first got this place with my extravagant salary, I felt proud to have a place of my own, to have accomplished this with my skills. But now, it feels like my custom-made hell. One I canât escape.
I need to kill all the memories associated with ballet so I can live. So I can find another path for myself.
Even if the idea brings burning tears to my eyes.
Due to my injury, my contract was terminated with the New York City Ballet, and although I got a generous compensation wired to my bank account, I couldnât care less about it.
I have a small fortune thatâs able to sustain me for a long time, but it was never about the money for me.
Ballet was my defense mechanism against my screwed-up head. Now that I donât have it anymore, how am I going to stay sane?
The front door clicks open, but I donât stop ripping through the clothes. It isnât until a shadow falls over me that I finally look up. I figure itâs Adrian, but itâs daytime and he never shows up before nightfall.
Yan stares down at me with a softened expression. Itâs not exactly pity, but itâs something more subtle. I donât ask why he has the code to my apartment since Adrian mustâve given it to him in case of an emergency.
âDonât even try to stop me.â My voice is brittle. âI need to do this to get it out of my system.â
âWant me to help?â
My lips part. âWould you?â
âIf youâd like.â
âCan you bring them all down?â
He gives a curt nod and methodically knocks down every hanger, skirt, leotard, tutu, and shoe. He even pulls out the drawers with my glitter makeup and jewelry, surrounding me with them.
As he does that, I cut through everything in sight, slicing it all to shreds. Yan stands there watching me with his eternal cool.
By the time Iâve cut through most everything, I grow lethargic, my anger and grief slowly subsiding. Yan is still in his usual position, hands crossed in front of him.
âDo you think Iâm insane?â I murmur.
âI think youâre just in pain.â
I sniffle, even though there are no tears. I cried enough for a lifetime the day Adrian saved me from my own mind and hugged me. He held me like he wanted to protect me, like protecting me is his mission in life.
âCan you get rid of these?â I ask Yan.
âWill do.â
âThe awards, too. I want them gone.â
âIf you want.â
I pause, staring at the scissors in my hand. âWhere does Adrian go during the day?â
I hate to admit that I miss him and his words, no matter how few they are. Since the day at the hospital, heâs been the one person who can get me out of my head.
Itâs a strange change of dynamics. Before, the only time Adrian and I could get along was when he was fucking me or sexually punishing me. But during these past couple of weeks, his touch has never gone in that direction. Heâs only held me, made sure I ate, and helped me shower and change clothes. He sat with me underneath my wool blanket as I watched a mindless movie and then maneuvered my head on his lap so that I was more comfortable. His fingers stroked my hair back in a way that made me nearly purr like a kitten.
Iâve been feeding off that care like a starved animal whoâs never had affection.
âHe works,â Yan says.
âI know that, genius. Where? With whom?â
âHe mostly works at home with Kolya.â
I pause at that information. Aside from the first restaurant date, Adrian and I only ever meet here, so I never considered the notion that he has a separate home.
âHe doesnât go to do mafia things?â
Yan smiles at that. âHe does those mafia things at home. He doesnât go out unless absolutely necessary.â
For some reason, that makes me feel more at ease. At least heâs not in danger of being shot in the streets like all those mob bosses I read about.
And yes, I might have searched about the mafiaâs history in New York. But the articles are filled with stuff about the Italian mafia and their hits. Thereâs little to no information about the Bratva. Iâm not surprised, though. Taking Adrianâs secretive nature into account, I assume the rest of his organization is similar to him.
But I still havenât been able to get those images of assassinated mob people out of my head, and I recently started having nightmares about Adrian suffering from something similar.
Wait. Does that mean Iâm worried about him?
âMiss.â
I stare up at Yan. âYeah?â
âLet me help you up.â
âI can get up on my own.â I get on my good knee, pull my crutch over, and lean all my weight on it to stand. Yanâs body is turned toward me, ready to catch me if I fall, but I manage to stay upright, keeping my cast off the ground.
âWhat aboutâ¦her?â I whisper.
He raises a brow. âHer?â
âKristina Petrov.â I havenât talked to Adrian about his engagement since that night in the hospital, and part of the reason is because I wanted to live in this peace for a while. To not think about the fact that I took another womanâs fiancé.
âI believe he ended it.â
âYou believe? As in, youâre not sure?â
âItâs better if you ask him about it.â
âTell me, Yan. Whatâs going on?â
He runs a hand through his long hair. âYou didnât hear it from me.â
âCross my heart.â
He smiles again, and Iâm struck by how pretty he really is. If he hadnât chosen the mafia life, he wouldâve been a perfect model.
âSo?â I urge.
âRemember when I told you Boss is expected to marry Kristina?â
I nod.
âJust because he wants out of it doesnât mean he can. Not only is Igor, Kristinaâs father, a powerful member of the Bratva who will take no disrespect, but the Pakhan himself is also against ending the engagement.â
My heart shrinks and any semblance of peace I managed to feel the past couple of weeks crumbles. âSo, what? He will marry her?â
âI donât know. Heâs thinking of solutions to get out of it, but if he doesnât come up with a reason that will satisfy both Igor and the Pakhan, heâll be put in a bad position and might lose his power within the Bratva.â
My stomach churns and its contents nearly spill to the ground.
Either Adrian marries Kristina or heâll lose his power.
I know exactly which option he will choose. He lives for power, control, and patterns. Heâll never sacrifice his work for someone like me.
Besides, I shouldnât want him to. Itâs not like I love him or anything.
My chest squeezes as I softly thank Yan and hobble back to the bedroom. He brings in large bags from the kitchen and gets rid of the torn clothes and everything in the closet.
As I sit on the bed, the only thing I can think of is how Adrian will marry Kristina.
The beautiful Russian Kristina, who was basically made to be his wife.
A dark emotion simmers underneath my skin, one even I donât recognize, but thereâs one thing I do recognize.
I need to stop him from marrying her.
Another week goes by and I fall into a loathsome routine. My lack of purpose is eating away at my soul. Iâm so used to conditioning or rehearsing, and now that all of it is gone, I feel a hole eating away at my soul.
I try going out to the park and Yan accompanies me, sometimes with another guard named Boris. I hate it when Boris joins us, because Yan doesnât act as carefree as when itâs just me and him.
Then I go back home and start dabbling in cooking to occupy my time. Adrian doesnât like that, however, because my leg is still in the cast and he says I stand for too long.
But I need to do something; otherwise, Iâll go out of my mind waiting for him to come back.
Iâve become attuned to his footsteps. Theyâre heavier and more powerful than Yanâs, but still silent enough considering his build. Like right now.
His scent sometimes precedes him, or maybe Iâve gotten so used to him that I can smell him, even from a long distance away. I can get lost in that wood and leather scent, like itâs the only one Iâve ever smelled.
I scramble to my feet from my position in front of the TV and go to meet him. Adrian is removing his coat and hanging it by the entrance, revealing his white shirt and black pants. Not a day has passed where he hasnât looked breathtakingly beautiful in a rugged sort of way.
Dangerous, too.
But I guess some part of me yearns for that danger, or I wouldnât have fallen for him so easily. And I need that danger to make me forget about the black hole eating away at my soul.
Nowadays, I donât get to see him for long or touch him enough. Well, I donât touch him, anyway, since heâs the only one who does that. Even though he doesnât leave until after I wake up, he usually spends the entire night on his phone, typing away. Sometimes, he steps out to talk to Yan and Kolya. He barely sleeps by my side and heâs stopped initiating sex.
From the day he barged into my life until the evening of my accident, he never once spent a night without fucking me. And now that the sexual touch is gone, I feel an emptiness like nothing before. I went years without sex with other people, but it never had the impact these past twenty-one days have. Actually, itâs been twenty-five since that day he fucked me against the wall.
And no, Iâm not counting.
It doesnât help that heâs getting more attractive, too much for his own good. Or maybe Iâm just getting sexually frustrated.
Adrian releases a breath when he sees me in the entrance leaning my useless leg against my other one. âYou shouldnât put pressure on your injury, Lia.â
âItâs okay.â
He narrows his eyes.
âItâs fine. Jesus. Are you the vocabulary police?â
âOnly when it comes to that word.â He reaches me in two strides and picks me up, carrying me and the crutch in his arms. Itâs the closest Iâm able to get to him lately, and thatâs probably why I make it a habit to greet him at the door every day.
I wrap my arms around his neck and search his harsh but ethereal gray eyes and the light in them. There are exhaustion lines on his face, and it takes everything in me not to smooth the crease between his brows.
Yan refuses to divulge much about Adrianâs business, but I can tell heâs been overworking himself lately. If anything, coming here is taking more time and effort than he probably should give.
I want to ask about Kristina, but fear of his answer always stops me. What if Iâve been a mistress all along and I just donât know it yet?
Adrian sets me on the sofa and places the crutch by my side. âWait here. Iâll get dinner.â
âI ordered takeout. Itâs on the counter.â
He raises a brow. âAre you finally listening to me, Lenochka?â
I lift a shoulder. âI didnât like the scent of food when I was cooking.â
Adrian observes me for a second, and itâs intrusive, as if heâs peeling away the exterior and trying to peer at whatâs inside. I donât think Iâll ever get used to being the subject of his interest. It always feels odd, yet strangely endearing, for a cold man like him to care about me.
Heâs cold to the world, but not to me.
Then he strides into the kitchen. The TV is on, broadcasting some cooking show, but my entire attention is on his agile movements, on the easy and purposeful way he moves around the room, setting out the food with plates and utensils.
Soon after, I hobble to the table and he sits beside me with the containers between us. I ordered Lebanese because I had it in my teens, and itâs remained on my mind ever since. Since I can eat anythingâand thatâs not just limited to salad anymoreâIâve been stuffing myself like a pig. I donât even know where I got the sudden appetite from.
Adrian doesnât comment on my choice of cuisine, digging in without any fuss. Now that I think about it, heâs never mentioned disliking anything.
âIs there any food you donât eat?â I ask.
âNot really.â He stares at his phone thatâs lying on his lap.
âNot a fussy eater?â
âI didnât have that luxury when I was growing up.â
I recall what he said about his mother being a mistress who killed his stepmother. That she was a villain.
âWere you poor?â
He chews slowly and swallows. I think he uses that time to consider his reply before speaking it aloud. âNot really. My mother was a doctor, but she didnât like cooking, so I had to fix my own food.â
âIâm sorry.â
âIâm not. Itâs better that way.â His gaze slides from the phone to me. âAre you a fussy eater?â
âI hate seafood.â
âReally?â
âI canât stand it. I feel like Iâm eating the seaâs cockroaches.â
That makes a small smile crack on his beautiful face. I love it when Iâm the reason behind his smile. Could be because theyâre as rare as hell or that he looks lethally attractive.
âNo cockroaches. Noted.â
We fall into easy conversation about food and different cultures and Iâm impressed by how much Adrian knows. Heâs definitely more well-traveled than me.
After we finish eating, he takes the empty containers to the kitchen, disposing of them while still watching his phone. It finally rings and he picks up after a few seconds, his tone firm. âVolkov.â
He listens for a beat and his face relaxes as he answers with a thick Russian accent, âName a time and place, Don.â
Don?
As in, the Italian mafia?
âIâll see you then,â he says, hanging up.
When he returns to the living room, he appears less tense than he did earlier.
âYou have to go somewhere?â I ask.
âNot today.â He pauses. âBut starting tomorrow, I might not come over for a few days.â
âWhy?â My voice is spooked.
âBusiness.â
âAre you sure itâs not because of your fiancée?â
He frowns. âI told you sheâs no longer my fiancée.â
âIs it as easy as you make it seem?â
âWhy wouldnât it be?â
âTell me, Adrian. Am I your mistress?â
âWhy? What are you going to do about it?â
âI begged you not to put me in that position.â
His eyes darken, and I can see him wanting to put me in my place using his domineering power like the other times. I brace myself for it, but he just releases a long sigh. âYouâre not.â
âHow can I be sure?â
âYouâll have to trust me.â
âYeah, right.â I stand up abruptly and the world spins. A strong sense of nausea hits me and I clutch my stomach from the force of it.
Adrian is by my side in a second, grabbing me by the arm. âLia? What is itâ¦?â
âI think Iâm going to throw up,â I manage between gritted teeth.
Adrian lifts me in his arms and hurries to the bathroom, then carefully helps me lower myself in front of the toilet. I grab it and empty my dinner in violent heaves.
Strong hands stroke my back in soothing circles as my stomach releases ugly sounds.
By the time I finish, Adrian is crouching by my side and says with utter calm, âLetâs get you to the doctor.â
âWhy?â
âI think youâre pregnant.â