10 Days to Ruin (Ozerov Bratva Book 1)
10 Days to Ruin: Chapter 4

It’s a fucking pity I’ll never have that again.

I mourn the loss even as I stride away down the hall and leave the bathroom behind me—not looking back, not ever looking back, because looking back is the act of a fucking ssyklo. A pussy. A coward.

That doesn’t mean I don’t listen, though.

I hear the door close behind me. I hear my footsteps echo off the ceiling like a pulsing, thudding heartbeat. I hear the murmurs of the people I pass.

I hear it all.

But I never, ever look back.

The voice snarling in my head sounds like my father’s—though, to be fair, everything sounds like my father’s voice these days. Yakov Ozerov’s ghost has been especially loud lately, ever since this arrangement with the Greeks started taking shape. I can almost smell the reek of cognac on his breath as he reminds me what matters: Power. Control. Empire.

Love is for children and fools. I am neither.

My phone vibrates in my pocket. Feliks. “The package is secured,” he says in Russian when I answer. “But it’s getting anxious about the delivery time.”

Code for: the Serbian spy he caught snooping around an Ozerov warehouse earlier tonight is starting to panic.

“Keep it fresh,” I reply. “I’m on my way.”

I replace a side exit and slip out into the December night. The cold bites through my suit jacket, but I barely feel it. St. Petersburg winters were far worse than anything New York can throw at me.

Still. Something about tonight’s chill makes me long for what I left in my wake just now. Soft skin under my hands. Green eyes watching me like I might be worth saving.

She smelled like peaches. It’s just now hit me that that’s what that sweetness was. Ripe summer peaches, sweet ones, the kind that leave juice dribbling down your chin when you sink your teeth in. Peaches. Fucking pea⁠—

So you’re a fucking poet now? Forget her, Yakov bellows. She’s nothing. A distraction. Remember what happened the last time you let yourself get distracted?

As a matter of fact, Father, I do remember.

The scars on my back remember, too.

My car waits at the curb, Klaus at attention behind the wheel. He doesn’t speak as I slide into the back seat, just pulls smoothly into traffic.

Good man. He knows when I need silence.

As we drive, the city flows past my window in rivers of neon and shadow. Ten minutes to the abandoned restaurant where Feliks is holding our guest. Ten minutes to get my head in order. Ten minutes to forget the way that little ptichka whispered, “Or else what?” like she wasn’t afraid of me at all.

I wonder if she’s aware of how easily little birds like her get their wings broken.

It could’ve gone that way, after all. I could’ve clipped her feathers the moment I realized she’d overheard my conversation on the phone with Feliks. A quick twist of the neck and it would’ve been bye-bye, birdy. Another unfortunate mess easily swept under yet another bloodstained rug.

Wouldn’t be the first time.

Won’t be the last.

But one look at those wide green eyes told me what she truly was. Not a threat, not a spy, but a dove snared in the wrong trap.

So I did what I shouldn’t have done: played with my food. I gave myself this little indulgence.

And why not? I deserve it. I fucking deserve one goddamn moment for myself before I hurl the last of my humanity into the gaping maw of this Bratva that always wants more, more, more from me.

It took my mother. It took my childhood. And now, it’s taking my freedom.

Because once I return to the gala from this little errand, I’m going to meet the woman I have to marry.

That’s the only reason I’ve bothered attending this bullshit dog-and-pony show in the first place. Fuck knows I don’t usually make an appearance. Invites for these kinds of social torture sessions stuff my inbox on the regular. Everybody—civilian and criminal alike—wants Sasha Ozerov to darken the door of their little soirees. I’m a curioso, an oddity, a man who lives so far outside of the ridiculous lines into which they’ve boxed themselves that all they can do is gawk and whisper behind their hands.

There he goes, they tell themselves. Don’t get too close or he might bite.

They’re right—I might. And normally, that threat is enough to keep the gawkers at bay.

It wasn’t enough for the reporter, though. That little bird flew close enough for me to snatch her out of the air and make a meal of her.

And fuck, what a meal it was. Her moans are still echoing in my head. She couldn’t even spit out the word Please—that’s how badly she wanted, needed me.

Fuck me if I didn’t feel the exact same.

It was a lifetime’s worth of impulse all distilled into one moment. Because I don’t bend, I don’t break, I don’t waver, ever.

Except for once.

Except for tonight.

But as I said—that’s behind me now. And I am no ssyklo.

The car stops. Klaus opens my door. The restaurant’s broken sign casts sickly purple shadows across the cracked pavement.

Time to go to work.

Inside, the restaurant reeks of mildew, rust, and spoiled meat. Empty plates still sit on some tables, coated in years of dust, like the diners just got up and walked away mid-meal. The leather booths are cracked and peeling. Rats scatter at my approach.

Feliks emerges from the shadows with an unlit cigarette dangling from his lips. His scarred face twists into what passes for a smile. “He’s in the kitchen. Been crying about his family for the last hour.”

I grimace. They always cry about their families.

“Any complications?” I ask, shrugging off my jacket and handing it to him. No point in getting blood on good Italian wool.

“Nyet. Clean grab. No witnesses.” Feliks follows me through the swinging doors. “Though he did try to swallow something when we caught him. Some kind of data chip.”

I roll up my sleeves. “And?”

“Made him cough it up. Literally.” He holds up a small plastic bag containing a bloody micro SD card. “Haven’t checked what’s on it yet.”

“Give it to Roza. She’ll have a field day.”

The spy is zip-tied to a steel prep table, face mashed like a fucking eggplant and caked with dried blood. Remarkably, he’s still conscious.

Young, too—younger than I expected. No doubt fresh out of whatever shithole the Serbs train their operatives in these days. Still soft with baby fat at the edges. His left eye swells shut; the right darts like a trapped roach.

The good eye widens when he sees me. “Y-y-y…”

“Yes,” I agree. “Me. As always, I’m touched by my reputation.” I grab a chair, spin it around, straddle it backwards. Feliks hands me a crowbar. The cold steel sings in my grip. “Let’s talk.”

The boy—because that’s what he is, really; not a man, not even close—tries to look brave. “I have n-nothing to say to you.”

Something tickles at the back of my mind. A flash of green eyes, defiant words: Or else what?

I shove the memory away. Focus on the job.

“Everyone says that in the beginning,” I inform him sadly. My voice stays flat. Detached. A scalpel, not a sledgehammer. “But eventually, they all talk. The only question is how much it has to hurt first.”

Many men say things like that. Few mean it. The Serbian boy knows that I do, because when he looks into my eyes as I speak, he flinches.

But that’s just because he wasn’t raised like I was. I don’t flinch. I haven’t flinched since the night my father held my fingers over the stove burner for tracking mud on his Persian rug. “Pain is a language,” he’d said, flames licking my skin. “Learn it.”

This kid in front of me has no idea just how fluent I am. He doesn’t know how deep the old scars go or how thick the callus is that’s grown over them.

It’s not his fault. But ignorance won’t save him.

“Let’s try questions. What’s on the data chip?” I ask.

He whimpers but shakes his head, snot bubbling over split lips.

I sigh.

I stand.

I swing.

The crowbar cracks his kneecap—a wet snap of bone and tendon. His scream carves the room.

Ariel’s face flickers in the aftermath—green eyes blown wide, lips bitten raw. I wrench my attention back to the present and grind my boot into the kid’s shattered knee. He howls.

“Second opportunity. I cannot promise a third.”

“F-fu-fuck you!”

Another swing. Ribs cave like rotten timber.

Her gasp against my mouth. The hitch in her breath when I slid inside her.

I drop the crowbar. It clatters, loud as a gunshot.

Feliks raises an eyebrow but says nothing.

The spy wheezes, pink foam on his chin. Lung puncture. He’ll drown in his own blood soon.

I crouch to eye level. “Last chance to die useful.”

In response, he spits. A weak arc of blood and saliva grazes my cheek.

I exhale and wipe it off. “Poor choice.”

My knife replaces his throat before he blinks. Steel parts flesh—a hot, red smile. He gurgles. Twitches. Stills.

And just like that, another little bird dies.

In the corner, I hear the rasp of gears and the burble of flame as Feliks finally lights his cigarette. “Messy,” he comments.

“Efficient,” I correct.

But my hands stutter as I clean the blade. Her fingers, trembling as I bandaged her cut. The way she laughed—reckless, bright, a lit match in a oil well.

I sheathe the knife, and with it, I put away those distractions.

Blood cools sticky between my fingers as I light a cigarette of my own off Feliks’s flame. At our feet, the corpse leaks onto linoleum.

For a moment, I’m twelve again—watching my father gut a traitor in our kitchen. Mother scrubbed crimson from grout for days.

“Folks at the gala are whining,” Feliks informs me, smoke curling around his jagged face. “They’re asking when you’ll make your rounds.”

They. The vultures. The ones who’ll clap like seals when I complete my deal with the Greeks tonight. They won’t quite understand what it means, what will change, but they’ll still applaud and cheer like the good little puppets they are.

I drag the smoke into my lungs until they burn. “Tell them to hold their standing ovation until after I sign my life away.”

He snorts. “Don’t sound too eager, brattan.” He taps the ash off his cigarette. “Heard your bride-to-be’s got fangs.”

“Don’t they all.” The ember between my fingers pulses like a dying star. “The first Makris girl did, too. Look how it served her.”

Something flickers behind his milky eye. “Leander is running out of spares.”

My pulse hiccups. Green eyes. Nips at her lower lip when she’s seething. Orgasms like a wildfire catching. And when she moans, it’s⁠—

The cigarette snaps between my fingers. I grimace, then drop it and crush it beneath my heel. “I don’t keep track of their litter. As far as I’m concerned, one is as good as the next.”

I start rolling my sleeves back down, smoothing my hair back in place. I walk a fine line between the shadow and the sunlight, and the civilians at the gala can only handle so much darkness before they shrink away in fear. Best to keep things buttoned-up.

Even when I’m reassembled, though, and Feliks has helped me back into my suit jacket, I feel filthy.

I need a shower. A scalding one. To strip this stink of fear sweat and cheap cologne.

“Leander’s probably throwing a fit,” I remark.

“Oh, let the old bastard get his panties in a twist. He’s just a diva; always wants to be wined and dined and 69’d.” Feliks barks a laugh. “The Greeks do love their pretty lies. Flowers. Champagne. A virgin bride.”

“Put a bow on my head then,” I mutter. “Though I’m no fucking virgin.”

The farthest thing from it. But tonight felt different. Tonight, fucking into her, feeling her clench and pulse around me, took a thing from me that I’ve never given to anyone before.

“Sasha…”

Feliks catches my arm as I turn. For a moment, we’re not pakhan and soldat. We’re just two feral boys who clawed their way out of hell.

“Last chance to run, brother,” he tells me. “There’s no going back after this.”

Once again, she flickers behind my eyelids. Biting back moans. Clutching my shoulders. Wracking me. Ruining me.

But sentiment is a ssyklo’s indulgence.

I shake him off. “You know as well as I do we were never going back.”

Fee sighs at the truth of it. Then he jerks his chin toward the cooling body sagging in its zip-ties. “Burn it all down?”

I glance around. The place is worthless—just another lifeless husk in a city full of them. “No. Dump the body, scrub the kitchen, but leave the building as it was.”

He nods, grimly satisfied. That’s a funny quirk of this best friend of mine: he’ll gut strangers like landed fish, but he’s strangely tender with how he handles the bodies. Maybe he’s trying to pay some kind of atonement. Maybe he’s just a neat freak. I don’t ask and he hasn’t volunteered the information.

Either way, I turn my back on him and step out into the night once again.

Klaus conveys me back to the gala, the second trip as silent as the first, and when I emerge from the car, it’s like I never left.

As I step out, I leave behind Sasha Ozerov, pakhan of the Ozerov Bratva, man who breaks shins with crowbars and rinses blood from beneath his fingernails.

Here, I’m a cold, chiseled bastard in a Brioni suit and a bloodless tie. Here, I am a titan. Here, I am⁠—

“Mr. Ozerov!” greets a spineless Greek crony whose name I forget. He’s wearing a headset and clutching a clipboard. “Mr. Makris has been waiting for you. He urgently requests your presence.”

“I bet he does,” I mutter. “Lead the way.”

In front of us, the Met glows like a poisoned jewel. Silk and diamonds and rotting hearts. The flash of paparazzi bulbs taking my picture casts it all in an eerie, fluorescent glow.

The clock strikes midnight right as I re-enter the ballroom. As promised, Leander Makris is waiting by the ice sculpture with a girl in white.

His daughter. My noose.

Her back is to me. Chestnut curls bound hastily into braids. Slender neck. Smells like peaches.

Then she turns.

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