Dirty Grovel: Chapter 55
Dirty Grovel (Pavlov Bratva Book 2)
The setting sun streaks across the sky like a vengeful comet.
I see vermillion splattered along the edge of the horizon. Scarlet. Crimson. Garnet and more. Each new shade I see, I imagine to be the blood of a different Martinek brother.
Look at me⦠Oriana had predicted it early on.
âYou strut around like youâre the top dog,â she said to me once. âBut deep down, youâre a poet, Oleg Pavlov.â
She turned out to be rightâI am a poet.
And blood is the medium I choose to paint in.
âWeâre coming up on them, brother,â Artem says from my right shoulder. âItâs open water, so theyâre going to see us coming.â
âLet them.â I glance back over my shoulder to the four men standing at my back, just in front of enough firepower to blow up Moby fucking Dick. âYou boys ready? We canât afford mistakes.â
All four stand at attention, their eyes homed in on the horizon, at the tiny dot in the distance thatâs getting bigger and bigger with each passing second.
The music hits us first. The mudaks have cranked up the rap so loud that the echoes send ripples across the water. I can practically see the sea life racing for their earmuffs.
Just another reason to kill them all.
âRifle!â I call, throwing my palm out.
The cool metal lands against my hand.
I raise it and squint down the laser scope. Through it, I can make out figures hunched over a table on the bow of the yacht.
As far as I can see, no one has noticed that thereâs a speedboat slicing through the water towards them.
If theyâre truly this blind, they deserve to die.
âWhatâs the status?â I ask Artem, whoâs got his binoculars out.
âI can see both brothers,â he informs me and the crew. âAnd four others. All look sloshed off their asses. Theyâre fucking clueless.â
âNot for long,â I say, taking aim. âSoon, theyâll be brainless.â
With four quick squeezes of the trigger, I shoot four holes into the boatâs hull, removing any chance of a quick getaway.
âWeâve been spotted,â Artem declares as their vessel lurches to a side.
The men jump to their feet unsteadily, their bodies turning in our direction. Weâre close enough now that I can see the vacant, slack-jawed expressions on their faces turn to shock.
Then fury.
They start scrambling around, trying to get to their guns. But Iâm already one step ahead of them.
If they want firepower, Iâll give them firepower.
I hand off the rifle and pick up the pièce de résistance, the finishing touch of my little revenge cruise: an industrial flamethrower.
Their fury fades.
Their fear comes in like the last tide theyâll ever see.
Thereâll be no final words for any of them. But at least their bodies will serve the oceanâitâs all part of the circle of life, after all.
The poetry continues, it seems.
With one final smirk, I unleash the flamethrower. Fire, wild and pure, bursts forth with a fury, reaching twice the distance as a normal flamethrower and with twice the power. The men scramble, darting for cover as though they can escape my wrath.
But as heat bites down around us with dripping jaws, I hear their screams.
Then I smell itâfamiliar and punctuated with memory of lossâburning flesh.
I can see my sins dancing across the waterâs surface, dark in the shadow of that sleek yacht thatâs now alive with fire. But I donât feel possessed by them anymore.
Itâs taken almost two decades, but at last, I realizeâfire cleanses all sins.
As the flames swallow my enemies whole, I recognize a shift in my soul. Before Sutton, violence was business. Cold, calculated, a means to victory. It was a move on a chessboard, each one drawing me closer and closer to the top spot, making a king out of me.
But now, itâs different.
Thereâs a primal need to this violence. A personal vendetta that requires an answer.
I donât care about business or power or politics.
The only thing that matters anymore is Sutton.
The need to destroy anyone who threatens her burns hotter than any explosion any man could engineer.
With sweat dripping down the sides of my face, I hand the flamethrower over to one of my men. Then I stand back to admire my handiwork.
The fire still curls around the other yacht, as black, wispy tentacles reach for the sky. Heat still rains down on us like confetti at Satanâs parade.
Artem steps to my side. âJust got word from your sniper. Itâs done.â He holds up his phone, displaying a picture of Matvey Martinek on a tiled floor, his head angled to the side, his eyes staring unseeing into the camera, a bullet wound puncturing his forehead in a neat red circle.
âItâs done,â I murmur with finality. Itâs finally fucking over. âMove out,â I order, raising my hand.
Our work is complete. And thanks to my tech, no one will ever know we were here.
I have no desire to linger. No desire to revel in this victory. The only thing I want now is to get home as fast as I can.
Because I have a woman who needs me.
And promises to keep.