Blood of My Monster: Chapter 3
Blood of My Monster: A Dark Mafia Romance (Monster Trilogy Book 1)
Cold sweat covers my skin as I sit on the hard surface of the military bed.
Deafening silence surrounds me, and I jump up, my feet making no sound on the floor.
The images from the nightmare redden my vision and play in slow motion in the dark corners of my subconscious.
Everyone and everything I cut from my life have been slowly returning to my immediate presence. Not in person, but as ghosts and shadows.
I stare down at the cuts and marks slithering over my skin, serving as a constant reminder of what happened before I got here.
The reason I escaped it all.
Itâs also the reason I have this fucked-up need to return and rule it all. Every last bit of it.
No one can control me if Iâm the leader. No one can deny or order me to do anything. In fact, itâll be the other way around.
But thatâs neither for here nor for now.
I throw on some pants and a T-shirt, then slip out of the room and into the empty training camp. The soldiers were granted a night out, so they all fucked off to get drunk and get some pussy while they could. Including my own men, who usually follow me like wannabe shadows.
All the better. The empty darkness gives me the needed space that allows me to run and push myself to my physical limits. Itâs a sure way to recharge and erase the gory events from the nightmare earlier.
Or more like a memory.
Despite the bright moonlight in the middle of the sky, itâs freezing. The cold air hits me deeper in my bones with every passing minute, but Iâve always found solace in the freezing weather.
Something about harsh natural circumstances allows me to blend with them and see myself as part of the ecosystem.
Iâm an entity of destruction with no qualms about stomping on everything in my path.
My choices are unlimited, and everything I do will be labeled as a natural disaster.
I didnât choose to be this way, but it happened, and instead of fighting it, I embraced it. Fully.
Without any questioning.
Either that or I wouldâve been collateral damage in a bigger and more dangerous game.
A groaning sound reaches me from the other end of the track, and I stop.
It comes again as a low âUghâ in a very familiar voice.
I follow it discreetly, without making a noise. The night serves as my camouflage and the silence is my cover.
Sure enough, when I reach the source of the noise, I find a dark figure doing push-ups against the soil.
Only, itâs not all dark.
The arms that peek through the T-shirt are pasty-white in the night, and his face is red with exertion.
His movements are disoriented, uncoordinated, and his limbs shake uncontrollably.
â109, 110, 111, 112â¦â With each whispered number, he grows weaker, his rhythm, breathing, and impatience all spiking up until heâs a myriad of turbulent energy.
I lean against a pillar, legs and arms crossed. âYouâre doing it all wrong.â
Lipovsky lifts his head to look at me, then stumbles and falls sideways, his frail muscles finally giving up on him.
For a second, he observes me from his position on the ground as if Iâm some twisted form of salvation that got thrown in his path.
He did it a week ago, too, when he askedâbeggedâme to take him as part of my team with his nonexistent skills.
That was a bold move. And heâs an insolent little fucker, considering the way heâs staring at me without a hint of a salute.
This guy either has a death wish, or he simply shouldnât be in the militaryâas I previously tried to convince him.
It could be because of my stare or, although itâs a very slim chance, that he realized his insolence because he finally stands with great difficulty and salutes. âCaptain.â
He looks rough at best in unflattering cargo pants and an oversized T-shirt thatâs soaked in sweat at the front and the back.
âIf this is your way of proving yourself, then you might as well give up. My men do 200 in a steady rhythm without blinking an eye. No limbs shaking, no groaning or whining or looking like an amateur.â
Lipovskyâs eyes widen, appearing alarmed for a moment before he remembers to school his expression. âIâm improving compared to my previous record, and I only compare my achievements to myself, sir.â
No clue whether I should laugh or smack him upside the head.
Iâve met a lot of types in my years in the special ops, but heâs the only one whoâs had this infuriating habit of talking back, even to a superior.
âThatâs a foolish way of saying youâll never improve. The past you isnât a measurement of success, and if you only do self-comparison, the world will move by you before you know it.â I straighten. âOn the ground, Private.â
His eyes study me for a while, probably wondering if what he heard is correct.
âOn. The. Ground,â I repeat. âContinue what you were doing.â
Heâs about to object. I can see it in his deep hazel eyes, a curious mixture of earth and forest. And since itâs freezing winter here, they seem to be stuck in a different universe at an alternative time with nontraditional customs.
A protest lurks on the tip of his tongue, but he has the self-preservation mentality to slowly lower himself to the ground for push-ups.
âOne,â I count and he goes down. âTwo.â
âHow many am I supposed to do?â
âUntil I stop counting. Three.â
He remains in the same stance, but thereâs a slight curve in his back.
âFour. Five. Six.â
âSir, may I speak?â
âYou already are.â
He glares at the ground. I see it because Iâm in a bilateral position, where I can watch the entirety of him and his slim, bony body that shouldnât have been accepted into the military in the first place.
âMy limit is 120, sir, and I already finished that. Iâve been adding ten a day for six days, so I canât go anymore.â He strains with every word and his ass curves up.
I jam my boot on his back and push it down so that heâs straight. âYour desire to join my team should be the deciding factor on whether or not you can go more. Seven.â
It takes a moment, only a few seconds of heavy breathing and half groans and grunts, before he lowers himself farther.
I count faster and keep my boot on his back, then on his ass when he starts getting sloppy.
His face goes redder at that one and Iâm tempted to keep it there just to fuck with his head. However, heâs smart enough to slightly raise his back and draw my attention to it.
Once I switch my boot to his spine, he doesnât raise his ass again. Not even once.
Heâs on the verge of collapsing, though.
Good. Heâs obviously never pushed himself to physical exhaustion where he no longer feels his limbs, and thatâs exactly why Iâm doing this.
He needs to realize that limits are only invented in his mind and could only serve as a self-made cage.
Iâm twenty-eight now, so I can understand that, but a long time ago, when I was younger than him and had to deal with my fatherâs games, I was as oblivious as this kid.
âSir, I canât take it anymore.â His voice and limbs tremble.
âThirty-five.â
âSirâ¦â
âThirty-six.â
âIâmââ
âThirty-seven.â
âI canâtâ¦â His voice chokes and he falls over, going limp all of a sudden.
Did he justâ¦faint?
I tap his sweaty face once, then pause. That day, when I saw those soldiers cornering him, I heard sideways remarks. Things like:
Heâs so girly.
A weakling.
I bet he takes it in the ass.
A sodomite.
Usually, I wouldâve walked away from such a scene, and in view of how persistent this shit has become since I saved him, I probably shouldâve let him be.
But I didnât.
I wonder why. It probably had to do with the desperation on his face, and the way he intended to take the beating, no matter how brutal it got.
Now, Iâm thinking about those soldiersâ words again. More specifically, the girly part.
His skin is so soft, itâs almost like butter beneath my fingers, and thatâsâ¦fucked up.
Not because of the feminine part, but the fact that someone as delicate as he is, is hell-bent on joining the army. Itâs a place for brutes and outcasts like myself.
People who only know how to kill and need a license to do it freely and with a justified cause.
This is a nest for the orphans, the poor, and men who usually have no place to turn back to. Those who protect society are the very ones who were rejected by it.
Iâm ninety-nine percent sure Lipovsky is a woman. The only reason I keep addressing him as a he is because thatâs the gender he chooses to display on the outside. In fact, heâs making a lot of effort to avoid standing out.
He starts wheezing, his breathing morphing into an irregular rhythm. I grab him by a fistful in his shirt and turn him over so that heâs lying on his back.
My boots are on either side of his waist, and I pause again at the sight of his face under the bright moonlight. Delicate, gentle features, small nose and mouth, soft facial curves.
Am I really the only one who sees the signs?
Iâm about to release him when I sense something taut on his chest, right beneath the oversized T-shirt. I let his head fall to the ground and reach toward it.
A smaller hand grabs my wrist, halting me in my tracks. Lipovskyâs eyes shine in the darkness, resembling a feral injured animal. Iâm almost sure heâll start to snarl and hiss any moment now.
Like a powerless kitten.
He shakes his head once, whether in warning or suppliance, Iâm not sure. This little fucker has the audacity to touch me.
I jerk my wrist from his hand and stand to my full height, but I donât change my position, so Iâm glaring down at him. âDo you or do you not know that you fainted, sunshine?â
A red hue creeps up his neck. No shit. It splashes over the pale skin and spreads until it fully covers his ears.
Is heâ¦blushing?
âI told you that I couldnât take it anymore, sir,â he all but announces as if this is some sort of amateur training that he gets to quit whenever he wishes.
âSay that again.â My voice has turned chilly, deadly almost, with no hint of coolness whatsoever.
Any smidge of red disappears from his face, and he meets my gaze with his weary one.
âCat got your tongue?â
He purses his lips but has enough self-restraint to stop from talking and unavoidably earning himself a disciplinary punishment.
âYouâll continue to do this training every day and youâll also add a muscle-building routine. Every night. Every morning. If I find out youâve missed any, you can kiss the military goodbye, because I couldâand wouldâget you discharged, Private.â
An expression of pure panic covers his features and his voice comes out a bit weak, apprehensive even. âIâ¦canât leave.â
âWhy not?â
âI just canât. Itâs not safe for me out there.â
âItâs not safe for you here either, if you remain at this level.â
He sits up, desperation coating him like an aura. âPlease, sir, donât have me discharged.â
âBegging is rather pointless. So instead of indulging in futile things, how about you do as you are told?â
He inches closer and grabs the threads of my boots in a fist as his eyes shine under the silver light.
Iâm not sure if itâs desperation, a last resort, or something in between.
âSir, Iââ
âCaptain.â
Lipovskyâs words die in his throat as a new presence materializes in the silence. I donât have to look back to know who it is.
âA word,â he insists in his gruff voice.
I crane my head to catch a glimpse of my longtime companion, my bodyguard since we were kids and the man who would offer his life for mine on a platter.
Viktor.
Heâs built like a giant, has more muscles than he needs, and heâs been my right hand both before and in the army.
Needless to say, he enlisted just because I did. In fact, most of the men in my unit are the same as Viktor and have a similar level of infuriatingly persistent loyalty.
Part of their annoying behavior is cutting in without reading the atmosphere. The live example is how Viktor interrupted whatever Lipovsky was about to confess.
He slides back on the ground and then pushes to a standing position and watches Viktor peculiarly. As if heâs seen him before.
If discomfort could be observed on someoneâs face, Lipovskyâs is emanating it in waves.
The view is worth watching, but not enough to have Viktor take interest in him, or worse, put him on some sort of shit list.
âRemember what I told you,â I say, then turn around and head toward my guard.
Viktor throws one last glance at the private before he falls in step beside me.
âWho was that?â he asks with a note of doubt, suspicion, and every other synonym in the thesaurus.
Being distrustful is both his strongest and his weakest point.
âNo one you should worry about.â I glance at him. âWhat are you doing in camp? Shouldnât you be drinking or making sure the others arenât drinking too much?â
âToo late. The fools are wasted.â
âNo surprise there. Theyâre celebrating being out of your dictatorial reign, Vitök.â
âAre you sure that shouldnât be reversed to you, Captain?â
Heâs staring ahead, having not a care in the world after he threw out the statement as if itâs a given.
âYou must be tired of living.â I speak in my usual somber tone, but that doesnât affect Viktor one bit.
âSpeaking of living.â He moves in front of me and stops, forcing me to do the same. âYour father is demanding your immediate return to the States. Apparently, things arenât the best.â
âWhen have they ever been?â
âHe said itâs an order.â
My jaw clenches.
The reminder of my so-called home and my father always brings a bitter fucking taste to my mouth.
Itâs too early to go back to that blood pit.
Not that there isnât blood here, but here, itâs on my terms and with my methods.
âLet me guess, youâre going to ignore him again,â Viktor says, his brows drawn and that usual calculation passing through his gaze.
âYou guessed correctly. Give yourself a pat on the back.â
âKirill, no. He will not let this slide.â
âHe canât do shit to me here.â
âButââ
âThis discussion is over, Viktor.â I brush past him. âLetâs bring the men back before someone gets in trouble.â
Theyâre the only people who matter. Everyone else, my family included, doesnât.