Blood of My Monster: Chapter 10
Blood of My Monster: A Dark Mafia Romance (Monster Trilogy Book 1)
Blood drips all around me.
In the silence, the sound heightens to a terrifying crescendo.
Darkness expands for as far as my vision can see. Fog condenses and floats in a seamless motion, mixing with the blood and flowing beneath and above me.
A droplet of hot liquid falls on my cheek, then another follows, and anotherâ¦
I cautiously lift my head, despite the claustrophobic sensation expanding in my chest.
Thereâs something wrong with this situation, but that doesnât stop me from trying to gauge whatâs going on.
Sure enough, in the midst of the smoky darkness, bodies hang from the sky, their eyes bulging, tongues grotesquely hanging out of their mouths, and their clothes soaked with blood.
Iâd recognize each and every one of their faces, even if I were old and gray and on my deathbed.
My family.
Tears fill my eyes, and I jump up, desperately trying to reach out and free their corpses, but a strong gust of wind interrupts me.
âYouâre a failure, Aleksandra!â The booming voice comes from overhead as if theyâre all speaking at the same time.
âA failure.â
âNothing but trouble.â
âYou shouldnât have been spared.â
âWhy do you get to live and we donât?â
They mix, mash, and turn into a puddle of terrifying shrieks. Their blood soaks my shirt and clings to my skin, my eyelids, and my mouth. Everywhere.
I swallow the metallic taste, nearly drowning in all the blood and yelling.
I put my hands to my ears and scream.
My eyes snap open and clash with an old ceiling. No bodies hang from there, and no blood soaks me.
My concentration is groggy, and my head pulses with pain, but I focus on my surroundings. Iâm on a bed in a small room. An old fireplace stocked with wood gives the place a vintage, cozy vibe.
What am I doing here�
I rack my brain for the last thing I did, but I still canât put my finger on it.
We were on a mission andâ
Damn. The mission!
I lunge forward and pain explodes through my upper shoulder. Holy shit.
Just when I think Iâll die from the sizzling burn, the door opens. I back up against the headboard, my senses on high alert, and reach for my calf knife. Only, Iâm not wearing a boot, andâ¦did my breasts just bounce with my movement?
I look down andâ¦what theâ¦? Iâm dressed in a cotton nightgown with spaghetti straps and a deep V-neck that reveals half of my breasts. Thereâs no sign of my chest bandage.
Please tell me this is a continuation of my nightmare.
âYouâre finally awake.â
I startle at the welcoming female sound and lift the blanket to cover myself. An old woman with a kind face and white hair gathered in a bun approaches me.
Sheâs holding a tray with thin, wrinkly hands on which some blue veins peek through.
My eyes track her every movement while simultaneously searching my surroundings for a weapon I can use to escape.
She seems oblivious to my hyperaware mode as she continues her serene approach. âMy name is Nadia, and Iâm the nurse whoâs been taking care of you.â
A thick accent coats her wordsâsomething more rural and different from the cityâs accents. She sounds like the villagers Papa and my uncles used to take us to visit during the summer.
Nadia stops by my bed, places her tray on the nightstand, and gives zero shits about my attempts to resist. Easily, she flings my good arm from beneath the sheet and hooks the blood pressure cuff to it. Then she shoves a thermometer under my armpit.
Her expression remains kind through the whole ordeal, like a patient mother whoâs dealing with a petulant child. âYouâre lucky the villagers led you to our house in time. My husband and I are a retired doctor and nurse, but that didnât last too long once you showed up at our doorstep.â
âSorry,â I whisper, feeling a sense of guilt at disturbing their peace.
Nadia merely ignores my lame attempt at an apology and removes the cuff. âNormal blood pressure, good. And instead of being sorry, focus on getting better. Scars donât look so good on young ladies.â She fetches the thermometer from my armpit and stares at it with efficient calm. âYouâre still a tad hotter than normal. Iâll inject you with another dose of antibiotics.â
âUh, can we not do that? Iâm sure itâll be fine in a bit.â
She narrows her eyes. âWhen you reached our doorstep, you were dying. My husband and I didnât go through all the trouble to save you so youâd have complications now. Besides, are you seriously afraid of a needle when you were shot by a gun?â
My shoulders hunch. Itâs an irrational fear that Iâve been trying to overcome, but itâs simply not going away. And yes, I do prefer a gunshot wound over a needle.
While Iâm thinking of what to tell her, Nadia has already prepared the injection.
âWait, wait!â I slide back in the bed and wince when pain explodes in my upper shoulder. âArenât there any pills?â
âInjections are faster and more efficient.â She holds the needle that glistens with a transparent liquid high. âIâll give you a painkiller after this.â
âIâm really fine. I donât need both.â She touches my forearm and pulls. The motion isnât even harsh, but I scream with pain.
âYou were saying?â Her tone and face remain the same except for the raising of her brows.
The door bangs open, and the pain dulls to the background when Iâm met with familiar icy blue eyes.
Captain Kirill.
Heâs dressed in casual pants, his black army boots, and a heavy coat thatâs covered with snow. He removes the hat, revealing the entirety of his face, and heâs wearingâ¦glasses.
My heart thuds behind my rib cage as this unusual image of him sinks in.
He looks regal, all muscle and destructive energy tucked neatly behind the casualwear. The glasses give him the appearance of an intelligent accountant who might or might not be hiding some dangerous tendencies.
âOh, you came back,â Nadia says after inspecting the newcomer. âYour wife is apparently scared of needles, so how about you help me keep her in place before she opens her stitches?â
He starts to walk inside, and Iâm too stunned to talk or think, so I keep staring, dumbfounded.
âDid you buy what I asked for?â Nadia asks him.
Captain Kirill opens his coat and gives her a bag of medicine, then removes the piece of clothing and throws it on a chair opposite the fire.
Heâs dressed in a black button-down and a sweater that fails to leash the intensity dripping off him.
âGood, good. I thought you were going to be killed by the storm.â Nadia nods. âNow, get over here.â
I canât believe my ears or my eyes, because the captain actually follows her instructions and allows himself to be ordered around.
Something niggles at the back of my head, and I canât figure out what, no matter how much I think about it.
As he approaches me, looking bigger than a god and just as deadly, the reason behind my frozen state rushes back to me.
Did Nadia just call me hisâ¦wife?
There must be some sort of misunderstanding, because what the fuck?
My thoughts whither and vanish as he sits beside me on the mattress and wraps his arm around my waist.
The heavy weight of his hand settles on my hip, large and imposing, and effectively steals my breath.
His fingers splay out on the fabric, and even though our skin is separated by the nightgown, he might as well be touching me naked. Heâs never touched me this way, and the novelty of it throws me off.
âCaptâ¦â
I trail off when my eyes clash with the warning in his harsh ones. The intensity behind them rivals the pain in my shoulder.
âItâs only a needle.â His voice carries like warmth in the harsh winter. Deep and firm, but not as authoritative as Iâm used to. Jesus. Is this an imposter or something?
âThatâs what Iâve been telling her,â Nadia supplies from beside me, but Iâm too focused on the captainâs face to pay attention to her.
His free hand strokes my cheek so gently and lovingly, I think Iâm going to melt. âYou can do this, Solnyshko.â
No.
Nope.
I must be dreaming or elseâ¦or elseâ¦Captain Kirill just called me his sun. A term of endearment thatâs only used between lovers.
My jaw is about to hit the ground when he strokes my chin, subtly closing my parted lips.
The motion is fast and straightforward, but he might as well have provoked a war in my chest. The place where he touched me tingles and heats, leaving me gasping due to something a lot different than pain.
A prick swerves my attention to my arm that Nadia has successfully gotten a needle into. The sight fills my throat with nausea.
âLook at me, Solnyshko.â
As if hypnotized, I turn my head in his direction. For some reason, his icy eyes arenât so savage anymore, but theyâre still dangerous. Heâs successfully hidden his nature behind the black-framed glasses, but not enough to fool me.
âItâs going to be okay,â he says in that fake softness that wrenches a shiver out of me.
Whatâ¦is this? How am I supposed to stare at the captain and not think of him as my captain?
The space between my legs warms and tingles. Itâs uncomfortable enough that I want to push him away and go hide somewhere.
âWeâre all done.â Nadia interrupts the moment, and I blink once as I break contact with his hypnotizing eyes.
Nadia hands over my painkillers and a glass of water. âThese will dull the pain. If youâre tired, sleep. My husband will be here to see you shortly.â
âThank you, Nadia, and not only for this, but also for taking us in when we had nowhere to go,â the captain says in that weird tone. He sounds like the most eloquent gentleman, whoâs impossible to resist.
âAt least one of you has manners,â she says without changing her expression.
âT-thank you,â I blurt.
âExcuse my wife.â The captain tightens his hold on my waist. âSheâs not usually this way, but the gunshot has flipped our world upside down.â
âI understand.â Her gaze softens before she directs it at me. âYouâre lucky to have such a devoted husband, young lady. Not many would carry another person all that distance during a snowstorm.â
My lips are parted again because they said those words. Again.
Wife. Husband.
What the hell is going on? Have I perhaps woken up in an alternate reality where the captain is my husband?
âDinner will be ready in an hour,â Nadia announces, then leaves the room.
The moment the door closes, I feel the shift in energy and the intense scrutiny someoneâs keeping on me.
I donât dare look up at him as if Iâve done something wrong. The fact that he still has his arm around my waist doesnât help, though.
He lifts my chin with an index finger and leans forward, so I have no choice but to be trapped in those punishing eyes.
My lips are a breath away from his, and I canât help staring at his mouth. Itâs clamped in a line, the lower lip fuller than the upper one, and his strong jaw is set.
If he inches closer, the tiny space that separates us will be gone, and Iâll get to taste those lipsâ
What theâ¦
No.
âWhat are you doing, Captain?â I whisper so low, I wouldnât be surprised if he canât hear me, and for a moment, I think he doesnât.
Or I wish he doesnât.
Just then, his thumb and forefinger squeeze my chin until I wince.
âThatâs what Iâd like to ask, Lipovsky. What the fuck did you think you were doing back there? Did I or did I not tell you not to put yourself in danger?â
âIâ¦had no other choice. He was smart enough not to have fallen for a stick or a rifle. It smelled like a trap, even to me.â
âThis fuckingââ He cuts himself off and breathes evenly. âYou defied direct orders, and youâll be punished for it.â
âCome on! I got us the guyâ¦â
I trail off when he glares at me with his scrutinizing eyes. Jeez. Itâs impossible to keep staring at him and not suffer an injury of some sort.
âIâm sorry,â I murmur. âAnd itâs not like I wanted to get shot on purpose. It hurts, you know.â
He releases a long breath, and Iâm not sure if itâs in frustration or resignation, but considering that he releases my chin and waist, Iâd go with the second.
The loss of his touch leaves me inexplicably empty as he stands up and walks to the window. His movements are light and inaudible, despite his massive build. At first glance, heâs no different than a giant cat lurking in the middle of the night, waiting for prey to pounce on.
For some reason, I feel like that prey.
When he opens the curtains, Iâm blinded by a white fog.
I canât see anything beyond the heavy snow thatâs blazing outside.
In a moment, this small room feels like a haven against the exterior world.
My hurt shoulder is less tense, and the pain dulls to a throbbing ache. I grab the blanket and pull it up to my chest, my heart beating loudly.
Even my ears feel like theyâre on fire as I stare at the rippling muscles of his back.
âCaptainâ¦â
âCall me Kirill. The old couple will find it weird that you address your supposed husband as Captain. Theyâre too old-fashioned and need clear labels.â
I try to speak, but the words get stuck in the back of my throat, so I breathe deeply first. âDid you⦠Why did you dress me as a woman?â
âWe wouldnât have been able to fool them if you were in your man look. You scream soldier, even now.â He glances at me, and I swallow. âIf you prefer being a man, youâll have to wait until weâre out of here.â
âYouâ¦arenât going to ask why I did this?â
âItâs none of my business.â
âBut itâs against the military rules.â
âRight. That.â He seems to be deep in thought. âI donât give a fuck. People should be allowed to be whoever they want to be, so if you prefer being a man, be a man.â
âItâs not that I donât want to be a woman, itâs that I canât. Iâ¦â
âYou donât have to explain yourself to me, Aleksander.â
âItâs Aleksandra.â My face and neck heat as I say the words.
I never thought I would be introducing myself, and to Captain Kirill, no less.
Kirill.
Thatâs what he told me to call him. Just Kirill.
A small twitch lifts his lips. Itâs not exactly a smile but something close. âI know.â
âYou do?â
âYou said that when you were almost unconscious. Itâs Aleksandra, not Aleksander.â
âOh.â I bite my lower lip, and his attention follows the motion, slowly raising my temperature.
I release my lip in a jerk and clear my throat. âI-is that when you found out I was a woman?â
âNo.â
âThenâ¦when did you?â
âWhen I first saw you being assaulted by your ex-teammates.â
âWhat?â
âWhat?â he repeats coolly with unbelievable calm.
âYouâ¦knew from the beginning?â
âWas I not supposed to?â
âNo. And, seriously, can you stop talking as if this is a trivial matter?â
He turns around and faces me while crossing his arms. âIâm all ears.â
Itâs kind of hard to look him in the eye for too long, let alone talk to his face, but I manage to control my abnormal reaction. âIâ¦have to look like a man despite myself, soâ¦uh, can you please keep it a secret?â
âAs I said, itâs none of my business.â
A heavy weight lifts off my chest, but the relief is short-lived. Iâm hit by all the times I was trying to toughen up, speak and act like a man.
The captain mustâve thought me laughable.
Still, I murmur, âThank you.â
He lifts a shoulder as if there isnât anything to be thankful for. But for me, there is. Plenty.
âWhen can we leave this place?â I ask.
âNot in the near future.â He points a thumb behind him. âThereâs a snowstorm that will last for a few days. Itâs dangerous to even go into town in this weather.â
âHow about the base? Have you been able to get in touch?â
âNegative. Thereâs no reception due to the storm. Until we find an opportunity to leave, the couple outside needs to believe our husband and wife story. They donât trust soldiers around here, and Nadia already asked me why we donât have rings.â
âWhat did you tell her?â
âWe were robbed, and then when we struggled and ran away, we were shot at. Thankfully, we got far enough to escape capture.â
âThey mustâve picked up that we donât have a rural accent. Did they ask you why we were so far out from the city?â
He raises a brow. âThey did. I told them we were lovers of nature and were celebrating our second anniversary.â
I can feel the heat rising in my cheeks.
âThatâs good acting.â He motions at my face. âLooking horrified when I gave you a pet name wasnât.â
Shit.
âItâs just that⦠Iâm not used to that.â
He walks toward me, his purposeful strides eating the distance in no time. When he stops in front of me, I cease breathing, utterly taken aback by how close he is.
Kirill lifts my chin with his forefinger and says in a low tone, âThen get used to it, Solnyshko.â