Chapter 471
King of the Underworld
King of the Underworld Sephie I slid my arm through Viktorâs as we walked around the pool. I stopped to inspect the rose bushes at the edge of the gardens as we passed, noticing the tiniest of little buds starting to appear. It was a sign of warmer days ahead, which made me quite happy to see.
âIâm going to be counting down the days to when I can stop wearing a coat outside now,â I said as we continued toward the woods, Viktor laughed quietly. âYou would struggle to live in Russia during the winter,â he said.
âYou are not wrong there. I wouldnât have survived, I wouldâve frozen to death. I know it. I was not cut out to be that hardy,â I said.
He squeezed his arm around my hand. âI think youâre more Russian than you give yourself credit for, Sephie. Youâve survived more than most people 1 know. Youâre hardier than you think,â he said, looking down at me. The look of pride on his face was unmistakable. I couldnât help but grin at him.
We walked in comfortable silence for a while, before my curiosity got the better of me. âHow does Ilya like working for Vitaliy?â
A wide smile stretched across his face. âHeâs very happy. He gets along well with the other guys, even though theyâre much older than he is. Aleksei is catching up his training, which makes them both happy. Ilya is happy to learn more, Aleksei is happy to teach more. Vitaliy is happy to be rid of his little flowers.â
âAnd once again, we saved the world,â I said, wistfully. âSo how likely do you think it is that heâll call the girl from the fundraiser last night?â I asked. I tried to sound innocent, but he knew this was likely going to make an appearance on the whiteboard.
âHeâll call. Ilya struggles to be single. I think itâs the baby in him. Iâm not that way. Sasha is not that way.
I think Ilya likes having someone to fuss over him,â he said.
âAs long as he reciprocates,â I said. âNobody likes a selfish dude.â
âOh, he does. I think that was part of the problem with the last girl. The one that almost broke him. He kept giving, thinking it would fix everything. She kept taking.â he said.
âMy offer still stands. Iâll happily kick her a ss,â I said, âI donât think you need to worry about her. You have enough to worry about without fighting Ilyaâs battles for him, too. He got away from her. Thatâs what matters.â
I scoffed. âYouâre so reasonable. Itâs soooo boring.â I said as dramatically as possible, getting a belly laugh out of him.
âI think both Ilya and Sasha would agree with you on that one. Iâve always been the serious one,â he said. We came out of the woods and walked to my favorite spot by the lake.
âI can believe that. Youâre the oldest and always have been. Makes sense that youâd naturally fall into the father figure role for everyone. Youâre so good at it. Youâve had plenty of practice. Remind me to thank Ilya for being irresponsible when you were kids,â I said, grinning at him.
He laughed. âIt probably has something to do with it. It doesnât explain how youâre so good at taking care of all of us, though. You were an only child. Arenât only children supposed to be spoiled and bratty?â
âI fail to see why you phrased that like a question, Papa Bear. Have you met me? Have you not seen how I refuse to use my own legs to walk as much as possible? Are you unsure of what spoiled and bratty really mean? Itâs a translation problem, isnât it?â
He reached out and pushed me over gently. âI know what it means. Maybe you are a little bratty, but I would not call you spoiled. Youâre so thoughtful is what I mean. Even when I was being an assho le, you were more concerned with how it affected the other guys than you were with how it affected you.
Even though I know youâre struggling with it more than they are.â
I was quiet for a moment, trying to think of how I wanted to respond. I was surprised he actually admitted he was an as shole. âYou have more history with them than you do me. Iâm your bossâs girlfriend. Theyâre your brothers. Iâm also the reason things got so weird. Literally. From the very beginning. Itâs all because of me. If you need someone to be mad at, it should be me. They havenât done anything wrong.â
He reached over and pulled my left hand out of my pocket. âYouâre more than his girlfriend, Sephie,â he said. He held my hand up to look at the ring âAnd youâre more than that to the rest of us, too. This should be a constant reminder to you of that fact.â
I stayed quiet, looking at my ring, but still thinking about how Iâd been the catalyst for their lives to change so completely.
âYouâre still worried that me asking to have my demon taken away was a rejection of you in some way.
It wasnât. Itâs not gone forever, either,â he said. He looked out at the lake, watching the reflection of the cl ouds in the water. He inhaled deeply, then continued. âI have always been the serious one. Abways responsible. Iâve always made sure everyone is taken care of. Itâs just how I am. My mother used to worry about me when I was younger. She was worried I would eventually decide that Iâd missed out on my childhood because I never was a normal kid. I never got into the normal troublesome situations that kids do when theyâre young. I took school seriously, I took the military seriously, I took my marriage seriously. This decision wasnât any different, with one exception.â He looked over at me. I could see him struggling to keep it together long enough to finish his thought. âThis time, I chose me. I donât want anymore responsibility. What I have already is plenty. Iâm not ready to be able to take on thoughts and feelings of everyone else too. I just went about it in the most as shole way possible and for that, Iâm very sorry.â
I scooted over closer to him, not only because I was slightly cold sitting there, but so I could lean against him. âI know youâve struggled with everything extra thatâs been happening for a while. It was always your choice as to what would happen. I respect that. Everyone else respects that, as well. The biggest issue is we know youâre not comfortable around us. Itâs like a constant reminder for the rest of us that you chose a different path. I donât care that you did. You did what was right for you and I respect the choice you made. I just want you to feel comfortable around us again. I can barely contain my emotions on a good day, which means I can barely contain when my eyes change. Now you have to look at Ivan and Adrik too. I donât want to be the reason youâre having PTSD flashbacks because I canât keep it together. Iâve already condemned the rest of them to always having to endure whatever it is I feel at any given time. I donât want you to feel uncomfortable around me, or any of us, as well.â
âYou havenât condemned anyone, Sephie. They love that theyâre so connected to you. Seriously. They talk about it all the time,â he said, smiling Sweetly at me. âAnd honestly, what you did last night at the fundraiser for that girl made me realize what a complete as shole Iâve been this whole time. I was so focused on the demon that I forgot youâre still you. Youâre so incredibly good that you even convinced a demon to help you be even better.â He paused, looking at me very seriously. âThatâs exactly the reason why Iâm not ready yet. I still focus on the bad too much. There was too much of a chance that my demon wouldâve won.â
âYouâre still incredibly reasonable, for the record. I think thatâs a very mature decision to make. I can tell you that I donât think it wouldâve happened, but I also donât live in your head. I support your decision. I always have. It will happen when youâre ready. Or maybe not at all. Itâs always going to be your choice.
In every lifetime,â I said. âAnd as for the girl last night, I know what sheâs going through. She just needs someone to believe her. You guys were that for me. Maybe Ilya can help her with that, too.â
He put his arm around my shoulders, pulling me closer and kissing the top of my head. âYou do so much for everyone else without a second thought. Iâm so sorry I doubted you.â
âYou had your reasons. I just want you to feel comfortable again. For your sake, just as much as ours.
Did Kostya fix you again?â I asked.
âHe did. What Stephen did helped tremendously. I was going to ask him to do it again, actually. As much as I didnât want it to happen the first time, I do recognize how helpful it was. I donât think it got everything the first time, though. You were right, too. I was choosing pain over all of you. I see that now,â he said, squeezing my shoulders.
âYouâve been carrying it around for so long that itâs become a part of you. It can be scary to let it go. We all knew you werenât really mad, for the record. You were scared. Itâs okay to be scared, but I want you to try and remember that you donât have to face it alone. Weâre all here for you and we all love you.â
He didnât say anything, he just held me a little tighter, leaning his head on mine. I heard his breath catch a few times and I knew he was trying to hold back the tears. Even with as irritated with him as Iâd been, I still wanted things to go back to normal between all of us. I could learn to deal with him not being as connected as the rest of the guys, as long as we could find ways to make him feel more comfortable around all of us. We needed each other.