Blood of My Monster: Chapter 5
Blood of My Monster: A Dark Mafia Romance (Monster Trilogy Book 1)
âYou made it to special ops?â
I nod, kicking at a few pebbles, then slowly, almost sheepishly, raise my head to stare at Uncle Albert.
Heâs older than my late father, has bushy brows and a round face and a big nose, as well as pointy ears. My cousins and I used to call him the fat elf in our ignorant younger years.
Uncle Albert just laughed it off and even asked Papa and my other uncle not to reprimand us.
He was the mediator of the family, the account keeper, and the peace that maintained the bridge between my third volatile uncle and my hotheaded Papa.
Now, thereâs only he and I to protect the other two remaining members of our family. And, hopefully, find my brother one day.
Small hands reach out for my face, grabbing at air. âSashaâ¦Sashaâ¦â
I scoop my youngest cousin, Mike, from Uncleâs clutches. Heâs four years old and the only survivor of Uncle Albertâs children. In fact, heâs my only cousin who stayed alive.
Mike was lucky enough to be hidden away by his mother in the cupboard at the time of the massacre. The cost of that sacrifice was her life, but he, at least, didnât witness all the blood. He doesnât remember her, either, since he was only a few months old at the time.
Iâd give my life to protect the innocence that shines in his light eyes. They translate everything beautiful and pure. Whenever I look at him, Iâm reminded of the laughter, adventures, and mischievousness his elder siblings and I used to take for granted.
It wasnât until I lost them about four years ago that I realized just how privileged we were.
Mikeâs fair hair has grown, becoming longer and wilder, nearly eating up his small face. âYou need a haircut, Mishka.â
He giggles and then pats my cheek. âMan, Sasha.â
âAm I?â I use my manly voice, and he breaks into a fit of giggles as he hugs me tighter.
âYou are!â
âMy little bear is so old now, he can even tell what I sound like.â
âYup! Babushka says Iâm gonna be a big boy and help ya.â
âYou will?â
He rolls his eyes with so much attitude for a four-year-old. âOf course! You canât do it on your own, Sasha. Youâre no Superman.â
âAnd you are?â
âIâm gonna be. And Iâm also gonna stop Babushka from crying every night.â
My heart squeezes, and I raise my head to gauge Uncle Albertâs reaction. Heâs leaning against the wall of the old, deserted warehouse we agreed to meet in.
It took me a few hours of hitchhiking to get here, but itâs located far enough from the heart of Saint Petersburg that no one could follow or locate me.
Our communications are done strictly through an encrypted phone from my uncleâs end and a burner from mine. I couldâve gotten one like his, but the chances of it being confiscated in the military are a lot higher than Iâm willing to risk.
Gloomy silence creeps through the air of the small shed as the icy merciless winter air slips in from the cracks in the walls. The strong wind blows and whistles in a violent symphony.
Four years ago, we lost our family, our social standing, and our business. We had to stay in hiding and constantly moved from one nook of Russia to the next. Two years ago, we were found by mercenaries sent by our enemies, and once they heard I was still alive, they nearly managed to kill me if it werenât for Uncle.
Since my father was the head of the family, Iâm the only heir alive. The only one whoâs able to gather his contacts and rebuild our business from scratch. Uncle and Babushka said itâll be dangerous if they learned Iâm still alive, so they faked my death and I had to live as a man since. With a fake name and background.
A few months after that incident, I joined the army to find out who ordered the hit.
Uncle still has some contacts in there and heâs also trying to rebuild our network, but itâs hard when our last name is blacklisted in Russia.
âIs it true about Babushka?â I ask my uncle.
He throws up a dismissive hand. âThatâs not important right now. The fact that you leveled up does.â
âDidnât you say the higher I climb in rank, the better?â
He nods solemnly as he pushes off the wall with difficulty and squeezes my shoulder the way my father used to do to my older brother. The memory makes my stomach coil, and my breathing deepens and hardens.
âIâm proud of you, Sasha.â Uncle Albertâs voice rings in the hollowness of my rib cage. âI knew you had the spirit of a warrior.â
âI will do anything for our family.â And I mean every word. I was too young and weak to stop the previous attack that robbed us of everything.
This time, itâll be different.
This time, I have the chance to accomplish something else.
âI know.â He pats my shoulder once more before he releases me. âPromise me youâll be careful and not reveal your gender or identity. Youâre only safe when youâre someone else, Sasha.â
I nod.
âDonât get close to anyone whoâs prone to uncovering your real gender.â
Another nod.
âI know you must feel lonely, but if you make any friends and they figure out who you actually are, none of us will be safe. I can disappear easily, but not with your grandmother and Mike. Theyâd slow me down and weâd eventually be in danger.â
âThat wonât happen. I promise.â
The stress of the past couple of years, ever since we fell from grace, covers his features. I stop and stare at the lines in the corners of his eyes and notice that he appears to have aged a decade or more since everything went down.
Ever since I enlisted, Iâve avoided visiting in order to prevent being followed. Uncle, however, is shackled by family mattersâBabushkaâs health and temper, Mikeâs needs and livelihood, and all other measures he has to take to keep them well hidden and looked after.
I have no clue what I wouldâve done without him.
Letting Mike play with the zipper of my coat, I lean in farther to whisper, âHave you found out anything about Anton?â
A sheen of sadness covers his features before he shakes his head. âIâm sorry, Sasha.â
My heart squeezes, but I force a smile. âIâm sure weâll find him. Maybe he left the country or the continent. Or maybe heâs laying low, knowing that weâre being searched for.â
âI suggest you take the worst into account, too.â
I shake my head vehemently. âNo. We didnât find his body, which means heâs alive somewhere. I just know it.â
My brother wouldnât abandon me. If he were dead, we wouldâve found his corpse, but we didnât. Iâm sure he escaped and is biding his time for revenge like Uncle Albert and I.
Maybe he was badly injured and has to undergo medical care. Whatever the reason is, Iâm sure Anton is out there. Somewhere.
Heâs five years older than me, so heâs twenty-five now. Probably doing everything in his power to survive like the four of us.
Sometimes, I hurt, wondering how he couldâve abandoned us. Itâs been almost four years, and my uncleâs top-notch contacts havenât been able to find a trace of him.
Even if Anton was injured, it wouldnât have taken him years to get better, right?
Short of Mikeâs idle chattering and cheerful sounds, another cloud of gloomy silence overtakes the warehouse
I stroke his hair, greedily feeding off his bright energy. Itâs hard to believe that I was once like himâcarefree, cheerful, and utterly unaware of the disaster that was brewing in the background. Those times feel like forever ago.
âWeâll have to limit these meetings now that youâre in special ops,â Uncle Albert announces.
My fingers come to a halt in Mikeâs hair, and his father must pick up on the change in my demeanor since he elaborates, âItâs not safe.â
âBut I can at least see you and Mike once in a while, right?â
âNo, Sasha. Leaving the base to meet your supposedly dead family members will only warrant attention. Thatâs the last thing we need.â
My chin trembles, and I hate having the sudden urge to cry. The wound thatâs been pulsing beneath my flesh for four years gnaws and rips at the surface.
Itâs like Iâm in the middle of that blood all over again. Iâm losing the remnants of my family, and thereâs nothing I can do about it.
âMaybe once every few months?â I try in a voice so weak, Iâm surprised he hears it.
My uncle shakes his head again. âNot while youâre in the Special Forces. They have stricter rules and stronger intelligence. Iâm just glad we can still bribe the medical examiner and give you some privileges, but everything else is dark waters we shouldnât tread near.â
âThen when can I see you guys?â
âA year, or a few. Depends on whether or not you can find the one who ordered the hit within the army.â
The pain in my chest grows and inflates. âHe was a commandant, no? I wonât be able to get close to him unless Iâm promoted several times. That will take years, if not decades.â
âIs that time not worth it?â
âItâs not about time, itâs about not seeing you again.â
âA small sacrifice to make.â
âDoesâ¦Babushka know about my future estrangement from the family?â
âShe suggested this.â
âOh.â My feet falter, and it takes everything in me to remain standing. Iâve never been my grandmotherâs favorite grandchild, but she loves me. In her own strict, somewhat patriarchal way.
Itâs no secret that she prefers boys. Girls are a liabilityâa means that could bring disaster and dishonor to their familyâas my estranged aunt did when she eloped.
Iâve always felt like Babushka dislikes me for being saved by four of my male cousins, who all died. Her eyes tell me she wishes weâd traded places. But when I spoke to Uncle Albert about this, he said I was thinking too much.
However, heâs an expert conflict avoider. Of course heâd try to build a bridge between her and me. As he did with Papa and my third uncle.
âYouâre still one of us. Even if the world knows you by a different name, gender, and appearance, Iâll always remember you as my Sashenka.â
âUncleâ¦â
âSay your name out loud, so youâll never forget it.â
My lips tremble. Itâs been so long that it feels foreign on my tongue. âAleksandra Ivanova.â
âSashaâ¦Sashaâ¦â Mike chants in my arms, and I smile.
When Uncle Albert attempts to take him away, he throws a fit and refuses to leave. He even announces that heâs not on speaking terms with his father.
I kiss his forehead and smooth his golden mane of hair. âWeâll meet again, Mishka.â
âBut when?â
âWhen youâre older and stronger and you become Superman.â
âOkay!â He grins, his eyes dripping with an endearing innocence.
The thought that I wonât witness him growing up or hear his adorable laughter in the near future fills me with heavy desperation.
He goes to his fatherâs arms without much protest this time, and I grab onto his coat for a bit too long before I kiss his cheek and finally let go.
âIf thereâs anything urgent, send me the usual code,â Uncle Albert tells me.
âAnd how will you reach me if thereâs something urgent from your side?â
âI have enough friends to get to you. Donât worry.â
I release a resigned breath as he pulls on his and Mikeâs hoods, then they step out into the freezing air. My cousin continues waving and throwing kisses at me for as long as he can see me.
The moment they disappear into the distance, I slide to the ground, pull my knees to my chest, and finally let the tears loose.
After Iâve bid my uncle and cousin farewell, a crippling sense of loneliness grabs hold of me. It gets so bad that I find it hard to breathe or think.
To avoid being questioned, I donât go back to base right away. Iâm on the edge right now and I might crack too easily under pressure.
Usually, Iâd be doing muscle-strengthening exercises during my day off, but today, I took a break and was so excited to see my uncle and Mike. I feel even more accomplished since I rose in rank.
Turns out, this promotion is more of a curse than a blessing.
Itâs been a week since I joined the Special Forces, and while itâs more intense than in my previous unit, Iâve learned to push myself and gradually remove my mental cage.
The moment I get comfortable at a certain pace, Captain Kirill completely overthrows it. Not only that, but he also has Viktor as the supervisor in charge, and heâs nothing short of a stoic, unbendable rock.
The other soldiers are used to him and his ways, so Iâm the only one who has to adapt. Even the new recruits have integrated better than I have.
Absentmindedly, I roam the snowy streets for a few hours. The cold freezes my tears, but I still walk and walk. My feet come to a halt in front of a beautiful lace dress at the front of a shop. The creamy color gives it an elegant edge and the lace adds a beautiful feminine touch.
My heart swells. Will there ever be a day where Iâll wear a dress again?
I internally shake my head. Even if I do get the chance, would I know how to move in a dress anymore?
Itâs been years since I wore one.
I begrudgingly step away from the shop and disappear in the herd of people. Once Iâm calmer and have better control of my emotions, I head back to base.
I walk in with my back straight and my strides wide. It weirdly gives me confidence that I so desperately need in my current state.
The moment I step foot into the dormitory, large boots appear in front of me. I know who they belong to before looking up, and I straighten further before saluting.
âWhere were you off to, Lipovsky?â Viktorâs gruff voice sounds heightened in the silence.
âI went out for a stroll.â I technically did, so itâs not a lie.
âIs a stroll more important than training, soldier?â
âNo, but itâs my day off.â
âWhat did you just say?â
My spine jerks, and I realize that maybe I fucked up and shouldnât have answered that way. Not that Iâm lying, and I shouldnât be expected to be available for training on my days off, but someone as rigid as Viktor wouldnât understand. He has his set views and opinions, and heâs like an unmovable mountain.
He reminds me of Babushka in some ways.
âLeave the newbie alone, Viktor.â A different voice comes from behind me before its owner stops beside me.
The newcomer is another member of the unit. He looks a few years older than me, is built like a wall, and has angular yet weirdly welcoming features.
âYou.â Viktor points at him. âStay out of it, Maksim.â
âNo can do. Youâre bullying the poor man.â Maksim grabs me by the shoulder and basically drags me out back.
I donât resist, not even when I feel the murderous energy radiating from Viktor.
âAre you sure that was a good idea?â I whisper as we go outside. Instantly, my nose starts running and needles of cold penetrate my skin.
Iâd rather stay in the semblance of warmth inside, but I doubt Maksim would hear that request. He seems like the type who sweeps you off your feet for some sort of adventure.
âNever mind! You donât know this, but Viktor is like a mountain you occasionally have to climb or simply jump over so that he stops being a pain in the ass, especially when we have an excuse such as a day off⦠Jesus, you feel so small, newbie.â
I go rigid, but then I force myself to relax again. âMy name is Aleksander.â
âIâm Maksim. I noticed you being all stiff and alone this past week, and we donât do that shit in this unit.â He tilts his chin forward. âHow about some fun?â
We come to halt in front of a field forâ¦football.
The soldiers are divided into two teams of eleven players. Concentration and contempt shine on their faces as if theyâre on the battlefield.
A flat-out war is taking place. Not only do they tackle and hit each other, but they basically step on one another on the artificial turf.
Maksim, showing little to no care about the brutal play, strolls into the middle of an attack and steals the ball. Then he tactfully slips from the clutches of a few angry players.
âYou and you. Out.â He points at two soldiers. âLipovsky and I will be subbing in.â
At the mention of my name, almost everyoneâs attention turns to me. I might not get as much shit from these guys as I did with Matvey and his goons, but they havenât warmed up to me either. They keep me at armâs length and barely address me at the meal table.
In fact, Maksim is the first one whoâs ever talked to me.
âItâs okay,â I say, conscious of the unpleasant energy. âI can watch.â
âNonsense.â Still holding the ball, Maksim comes to fetch me by dragging me in a half chokehold that kind of cuts off my air, but Iâve come to know that guys generally handle each other with roughness.
In theory, I can fight the dragging, but in reality, I canât. And maybe, just maybe, I donât want to.
Despite my motherâs protests, I played football with my cousins and my brother all the time when we were growing up. Itâs one of those games that holds a special place in my heart.
âGive back the ball, motherfucker!â someone shouts from the distance.
âThatâs Yuri,â Maksim tells me. âThe true motherfucker in this unit. Donât sleep near him, Aleksander, or youâll suffer a slow death. He snores like a dying pig.â
Some soldiers laugh and point at Yuri, who glares at each and every one of them.
âReady, bitches?â Maksim stands in the middle of the field, thenâno surprise hereâthrows the ball in our teamâs direction instead of the middle.
Apparently, thereâs no formation in this thing. Iâm not sure if Iâm supposed to play defense, midfield, or offense. Turns out, everyone plays all spots at once.
All twenty-two soldiers are wherever the ball is.
No fouls are counted, no matter how many hits are exchanged. Cards? Forget about that. Fair play? No way in hell. In fact, the referee is egging the teams on and calling them names for not scoring.
To say itâs chaos is an understatement.
This should be labeled combat football instead of the regular type.
Still, we keep losing the ball to the more aggressive players of the other team. Theyâre also bulkier, which makes it unnerving to even look at them, let alone try to fight them for the ball.
At one of our aimless attacks, I stay back and tell Maksim to do the same. He raises his hands and shouts, âBut weâre missing all the fun!â
âTrust me,â I mouth, not taking my eye off the ball. âIâll be right-wing, and you take the left. Whoever has the ball, the other runs forward, got it?â
âWell, all right. This plan better be worth missing the action for.â
âIt will be,â I say with confidence.
As expected, a player from the other team steals possession of the ball, and he comes running in our direction.
Naturally, everyone else follows him like a herd. Maksim takes the one with the ball by surprise and steals it.
âLipovsky!â he shouts, but Iâm already running toward the goal. When he passes the ball, Iâm there to catch it.
The other team runs at a frightening speed toward me. I donât wait to have the best shot and, instead, go in blind.
A couple of bodies slam into me, and Iâm about to be knocked off my feet, but then Iâm not.
The ones who attacked me are my teammates, and theyâre holding me up, cheering at the top of their lungs.
I scored.
Holy shit. I scored.
Maksim shakes me by the shoulders, then headlocks me. âI knew youâd fit right in, Aleksander.â
I smile for the first time since I said goodbye to Uncle Albert and Mike.
âYou can call me Sasha,â I tell him.
âCall me Maks.â He grabs me by the shoulder and faces the others. âI accept sacrifices for bringing in a scorer for the team.â
They give him shit about that statement, and he just calls them names, then theyâre all flipping each other off.
Some soldiers slap me on the back, others welcome me aboard, and even the members of the other team give me a thumbs-up.
Does this mean I broke the ice with them?
Do Iâ¦finally belong here?
My smile falters when my gaze clashes with an icy one. Sometimes, itâs like Iâm staring at a piece of the Arctic Ocean.
Captain Kirill.
For the past week, heâs mostly ignored my existence. Viktor was the one who oversaw my individual training while he gave the orders from afar.
For a second, I think maybe heâs watching the game, but his arms are crossed, and his glare falls on me.
Frighteningly so.
My heart nearly beats out of my rib cage. I think thereâs a problem with me. Otherwise, why would I feel like heâs peeling my skin apart and revealing each and every one of my secrets?
And for some reason, I think he might be well capable of that.
The reality of the situation hits me then. Captain Kirill may be what makes me stronger, but heâs also dangerous.
The type of danger that will swallow me alive if I donât keep my cards close to my chest.