Iâm an absolute wreck of emotions.
Fortunately, the champagne helps me pass out. Otherwise, Iâd be tossing and turning all night. I canât remember the last time I slept in a bed that wasnât my own. Iâm up early the next morning, and I sneak into the bathroom to shower before he sees me with messy hair and no makeup. Itâs only when I get out, freshly cleaned, that I realize I donât have my armor.
No foundation to cover the scar. Nothing to darken my eyes. Nothing to make me look soft, pretty, and non-threatening.
My heart flutters in my chest.
I canât do this. I really canât do it.
He wants to get me pregnant.
No, he has to get me pregnant.
Otherwise, our marriage is for nothing, and this alliance falls apart.
I slip into the hallway. My heart is racing, almost in my throat. How could Dad do this to me? How could he have thrown me into this situation without any explanation or preparation and expected it to work out?
Thereâs too much pressure.
The entire world is hanging on my shoulders.
âPisik.â Tigranâs voice. I didnât even notice him approach. Iâm hunched over outside my bedroom door, freaking out so much I can barely breathe. âItâs okay, Iâm here now.â His voice is soothing and low. Big, strong arms wrap around my body, and he pulls me into his lap.
My ears are ringing, and my vision is mostly white. Dimly, Iâm aware that Iâm having another panic attack.
âItâs okay, kitten, itâs okay,â he says soothingly, over and over, gently stroking my cheek along my scar.
Calm returns slowly. My heart rate is still elevated, and Iâm sweating like crazy, but Tigranâs face comes into focus. His handsome mouth. His dark eyes.
âFancy meeting you here again,â I mumble, my tongue feeling ten sizes too big.
He smiles. I like that smile. It makes him look a lot less terrifying. âIâll always be around if you need me now. Did you get lost on your way from the shower?â
âJust thinking about all this.â I gesture to the sky and shiver. âItâs too much.â
âOne step at a time. Focus on that.â He helps me sit up, but his hands remain on my shoulders. He stares into my face, squeezing gently. âThis morning, itâs packing and saying goodbye. After that, itâs the drive down to Baltimore. One step at a time.â
âYeah, sure, thatâs super easy. I can do that.â I take a deep breath through my nose.
He smells good. Warm and spicy. I lick my lips, my stomach doing flips, my mouth trembling.
How does he make me feel this way? Both terrifying and overwhelmed, but also weirdly comforted?
âDoes this happen a lot? The panic attacks?â
I shake my head. âHasnât happened in years. But I guess my life has been pretty stable for a while now.â
âI knew a girlââ He hesitates, his eyes glancing over my shoulder as if heâs looking for someone. âShe had panic attacks too.â
âDo you still see her?â
He shakes his head. âSheâs gone now.â He pulls away suddenly, and his smile disappears. That stormy, terrifying glare descends instead. âTime for us to get moving. Damianâs waiting downstairs.â
âRight. Okay. Iâll get my things.â
âDonât get lost this time.â
Heâs not smiling, but was that a joke?
Doesnât matter. He walks away, and Iâm left to drag myself into my room, shove my stuff back into my old duffel bag, and find a way to put one foot in front of the other.
âIâm going to fucking kill him,â Evan snarls as he paces across my room. âIâm serious, Dash. Iâm going to murder him.â
âStop it,â I say, picking through my t-shirt drawer. âHow the hell do I have so many of these?â I mutter, tossing one into the leave pile. âI donât even go outside.â
âHe sprung a goddamn wedding on you. He did it on your birthday!â
âI have a feeling that was on purpose.â The look on Evanâs face makes me think that was a mistake. âIt was a good trick; you have to admit it. If it hadnât been my birthday, I doubt I wouldâve agreed to go anywhere.â
âFucking bastard,â he snarls and kicks a few pairs of shoes Iâd decided to leave behind.
âDonât take it out on my heels, please. It isnât their fault.â
âHow are you so calm right now? Iâd be going ballistic in your place.â
I stop sorting my clothes and look at him. Evanâs always been the emotional one, mostly because heâs allowed to be. Itâs safe for a man like him to have big feelings.
He can stomp and storm all he wants. My brotherâs six-foot-four and muscular enough to hold his own against nearly anyone. Whoâs going to tell him to shut his mouth?
But me? Iâm five-foot-nothing. Dad always says I got my motherâs height. If I barked and growled like him, someone would slap me down and make sure I stayed down.
They did it once already, and I donât need to go through it a second time.
âIâm losing my mind,â I tell him gently. âLast night was the first time I slept outside of the house in twelve years.â
He stops pacing and slumps a bit. âI hadnât thought about that.â
âNot only did I have to leave my little bubble, but I had to share a room with a stranger. With a random man Iâve never met before. Some guy Iâm allegedly married to.â I laugh lightly because itâs crazy. I donât even have a ring. But I saw the paperwork, and I know this is real.
âIâll kill him too if he touches you,â Evan says, his expression going hard again.
Thatâs sweet, but I really doubt it. Evanâs big and strong, but Tigran is terrifying.
Thatâs like an angry pit bull going up against a raging lion.
Theyâre both strong, but oneâs a born killer, and the otherâs just a dog.
âHe was fine. We slept in different rooms.â
That deflates him slightly. âJust because youâre married doesnât mean you have to do anything you donât want to do. You know that, right?â
I almost laugh in his face. This whole thing is something I donât want.
But I guess he doesnât know about the baby clause.
âThanks, big brother, but Iâll be okay. Tigran doesnât seem that bad.â
Evanâs mouth twitches, and he looks toward the door. Then he comes closer to me, his voice lowering. âHow much do you know about your new husband?â
âNothing,â I admit honestly.
âI did some digging last night after the wedding. Tigran Sarkissian is really bad news. Iâm not telling you this to scare youâ ââ
âGreat, thanks, youâre doing a fantastic job,â I say, trying not to sound shrill as panic rises. âHow bad are we talking here?â I remember Dadâs fear the night before, and the dots start to connect.
âFrom what I understand, heâs the Brotherhoodâs top enforcer. The guyâs absolutely brutal, Dasha. They say heâs killed at least a dozen of his own family members. Uncles, cousins, anyone who wouldnât accept his brotherâs control. Theyâre terrified of him down there.â
I wrap my arms around my knees and hug them to my chest. Earlier this morning, I was in his lap. He stroked my scar and spoke to me in that low, soothing baritone of his, and it actually worked. He brought me back from the brink of a serious panic attack.
Itâs hard to connect those gentle hands with the man Evanâs talking about.
But I know heâs right. I saw it in Dadâs eyes. That raw fear. Itâs even in the way Tigran carries himself, like he knows the world is terrified of him.
And he thinks it should be.
âWhat do you want me to do about it?â I ask finally, forcing myself to stay calm and centered. Iâm not going to have my second panic attack of the day before noon. I can at least save one for after dinner, as a little treat.
âNothing. I donât know. Iâm just pissed and trying to warn you. I donât want this for you.â
âI donât want it for me, either, but this marriage is important.â
âYouâre buying that shit too?â
I shake my head. âNo, not to me, but to everyone else. Theyâre not going to let me get out of it even if I beg. Itâs too late. Iâm trapped.â
The cage bars. The space heater turned to maximum. Sweat rolling down my skin. The knife blade rattling inches from my face.
Trapped all over again.
Evan grunts and sits down beside me. He wraps an arm around my shoulder and tugs me close. I let him give me an awkward, sideways hug. Weâve never been really physically affectionate, even if we are close. Thatâs just not his style.
I must really be screwed.
âWeâll find a way,â he says, but he canât really believe that. I sure as heck donât. Iâm a mentally broken hermit, not a moron. âAnd if we canât, maybe Iâllâ ââ
âYouâll what?â I ask gently, fighting tears. âMove to Baltimore so we can hang out once a week? Come kill my monster husband? Save me from the Armenians? Come on, Evan. We both know thatâs not happening. Canât we just enjoy this little time?â
He stiffens. His jaw works. I know itâs not easy for him, giving up like this. But Iâve learned over the years that itâs better to be soft and pliant.
You donât break if you can bend and twist.
âYeah, all right, Dash.â He pushes off the bed and gets up. âThis place is a dump, you know that?â
âIâm packing.â I throw an old shirt at him. He catches it, makes a face, and tosses it aside. âAre you going to help, or are you going to keep whining?â
âProbably both,â he grumbles. âWell, why donât you tell me about the hotel? What was it like going back out into the world?â
I smile to myself. Evanâs a good brother. He doesnât want to do this, and he sure as heck doesnât care about the hotel, but heâs trying.
Thatâs more than Dadâs done. Iâve barely seen him.
We talk about normal things while I fill a couple of suitcases. Iâm bringing everything I need for the next few weeks, and Evan promises to send some more stuff through the mail when I need it.
For a while, I can almost forget that my monster husband is waiting for me downstairs with his equally dangerous driver.
But the real world intrudes eventually.
Iâm folding the last of my sweaters when Dad appears in the door to my suite. He clears his throat, looking extremely awkward. Evan sits on my couch, glaring at him, arms crossed.
âTigran says you two need to leave soon,â Dad says hesitantly. âSomething about traveling while itâs still light out?â He looks at Evan, who just glares back and says nothing. âI know youâre both upset with meâ ââ
âUpset is an understatement,â Evan snarls, his hands rolled into white-knuckled fists. âYou sold your goddamn daughter.â
âShe was the only option,â Dad says, looking at me. I frown back at him, emotions welling up in my gut. âValentin made it clear that there was no other choice. I didnât want this.â
I believe him. For twelve years, Dad has indulged me. Heâs kept me safe, away from the Bratva, secluded from the men who frequently come to visit him, all because it makes me more comfortable.
The family talks. I know what they say. Iâve heard the house staff mumbling to each other.
Dashaâs crazy. Dashaâs a spinster. Dashaâs a freak.
It hasnât been easy for him, having a weirdo for a daughter, but he blames himself for what happened to me when I was just thirteen years old.
âI donât blame you,â I say gently.
Evan stares at me in outrage, and heâs right to feel that way.
I feel that way too.
But I canât do anything about it, and Iâve learned a dozen different times that itâs better to hang my head and get on with it than to spit and scream and rage.
âDashenka, my good little girl, I know this is hard, but the Armenians have made assurances. You will be safe and respected. You will be treated very, very well, I can promise you that.â
âYes, Papa.â I hate myself for saying that. Donât I want to stab him in the throat right now?
Maybe maim his stinking face the way I got sliced up.
Now, now, Dasha, thatâs not how a good girl thinks.
âWouldâve been nice to warn her before selling her off,â Evan says sharply. âYou owed her that much.â
âI donât owe anyone anything,â Dad snaps back, glaring at his son. âAnd you should be careful. Youâre not the one getting married.â
âYeah, just your shut-in daughter.â Evan shoves himself to his feet. He stares hard at Dad for a beat before turning to me, his face softening. âYouâve always got a home here, you know that, right?â
Tears choke me. Is this really happening? Am I seriously going to say goodbye to my brother, to my father, to the only home Iâve known for twelve long years? It feels like Iâm cutting off a limb.
âI know that.â I think about the deal Tigran offered, and suddenly it doesnât seem so crazy. Would he really buy me a house? One with big walls and a security system? I could come back here and see my brother whenever I wanted.
Maybe even my dad too. One day, anyway.
âGood luck.â Evan hugs me tightly. âText me if that bastard does anything,â he whispers before letting go.
I watch him leave with a terrible sinking feeling in my chest.
âFinish packing, Dashenka,â Dad says, glancing down at his feet. âIt really had to be this way.â
I turn my back on him. âI know, Papa.â I say it nice and sweetly. Like the good, obedient Dashenka Iâm supposed to be.
While inwardly seething that my life is over, and itâs his fault.