LOGIN
This airport is an insane asylum. Crazy idiots zooming in every direction with no regard for human life or social decency.
I squeeze my little sister’s wrist even tighter as we navigate around a couple sharing a very public, very graphic goodbye kiss.
“You don’t have to hold onto me,” Elise complains, yanking her arm away.
“I just don’t want us to get separated. Remember Silver Dollar City?”
“I was six,” Elise groans.
“And on a leash,” I remind her. “Yet you still escaped like fricking Houdini. I don’t want a repeat of that. We’re already running late.”
I check the boarding pass for the millionth time. We have less than ninety minutes until our flight boards, and we haven’t even been through security yet.
“We’re not late. It’s the Oklahoma City airport, Belle. Not Atlanta. We’ll be fine.”
“When have you ever been at the Atlanta airport?”
Elise rolls her eyes, the fourteen-year-old’s Bat Signal for even the most minor inconvenience, slight, or annoyance. I’ve seen it countless times since she moved in with me two months ago, but I can’t seem to build up any immunity. It irks me every time.
“You know about the Eiffel Tower and you’ve never been to Paris, right?” she snarks.
I let out an anguished sigh. “Just stick close to me, okay? I don’t have time to look for you. I have to keep an eye out for Roger.”
“Wait. What?”
I keep walking for a few seconds before I glance back and realize Elise isn’t with me anymore. She’s screeched to a halt in the middle of the airport, blocking a businessman in a suit and tie from getting by.
I whirl around and tug her out of the way, apologizing to the man as we go. He grumbles something bitter about "kids these days” and stomps past us.
“Maybe we should rethink that leash,” I mutter. "Come on, Elise. We just talked about—”
“We’re flying with Roger?” she asks, her top lip curling in disgust. “Roger, as in the guy who made you work late and then tried to slide his hand up your skirt?”
I inhale sharply. “How do you know—”
“The walls at your place are thin,” she says dismissively. “I heard you talking to Georgia."
I drag a hand down my face. “I should have had coffee this morning.”
Flying makes me nervous, so I didn’t figure my body needed the extra caffeine-induced anxiety on top of the flying anxiety. But after a night of shitty sleep and now, the threat that my half-sister will say something damning in front of my admittedly super pervy boss… safe to say I need the world’s largest latte. Or maybe an IV of espresso, I’m not sure.
"I don't want to travel with that creep,” she says with finality.
"Me neither. That's why I'm being paid to do it."
Elise's eyes bug out of her head. "He's paying you to travel with him?!"
"Yes. Because it's my job. He's my boss."
"Oh. Right." Elise frowns and then shakes her head. "Still, I wouldn't have come with you if I knew he was going to be here. You should really report him to… someone. I don't know. That's sexual harassment."
I gawk at Elise, wondering when she got old enough to say things like "sexual harassment." When I left home, she was nine years old and into mermaids.
Lots has changed since then.
"You're coming with me because there's no way I'm leaving you alone in the apartment for a week," I tell her. "I’m pretty sure it's illegal."
"I can take care of myself!"
"Not according to the law. So you're coming with me and you're going to be nice to Roger and you're going to—"
"You’re not my mom!”
Elise isn’t quite yelling, but her voice is raised and people are taking notice. If I was her mom, I’d grab her hand and drag her after me, kicking and screaming. No one would give us a second look.
But she’s right—I’m not her mom. I’m her sister. Yet I’m the one here dealing with her angst. As if I don’t have enough of my own.
I take a deep breath and open my mouth, a whole host of regrettable things sitting on the tip of my tongue, when my phone rings.
I glance down and see Roger’s stupid face smiling back at me. He looks so professional in his company headshot. Nothing like the red-faced mouth breather with tentacle-like arms that the rest of the women in the office have long since learned to avoid.
“Hey, Roger,” I answer, turning away from Elise. “Sorry we’re late. We aren’t through security yet, but—”
“What?” he yells. There’s aggressive music thumping in the background. It sounds like he’s in some kind of club. “Sorry, I can’t hear you. This club is really loud.”
“Since when does the airport have a club?”
He laughs. “They don’t. I’m not at the airport. I’m in Aruba!”
“Aruba? What are you talking about?” I shake my head, trying to decide if I’m still sleeping. If so, this is a weird anxiety dream. “We’re leaving for New York in eighty minutes. Zhukova Incorporated? The audit?”
“I didn’t forget,” he says, way too cheekily. “You’re going on your own. You don’t need me, right? Isn’t that what you said?”
Memories of that traumatic late night at the office butt their way into my already-panicked thoughts.
“If you want to move up in this company, you’ll need a recommendation,” Roger had told me, his hand sliding up my thigh. “I can be an asset for you.”
I’d swiveled away from his touch. “I don’t need you.”
Those words are coming back to haunt me now.
“I’ve never done an audit on my own before,” I mumble.
I hate how inexperienced I sound. I’ve been a fighter my whole life. God knows I’ve overcome plenty. But this feels cruel and unusual.
Roger laughs cruelly. “First time for everything. Good luck!”
He hangs up. I stare at my phone, trying to decide if I should call back and beg him to come with me.
Then Elise sidles up next to me. “Was that Roger?”
I run through the facts in my head real quick.
I need this job.
I need to watch Elise.
Elise hates Roger.
Roger isn’t coming with us anymore.
In one way—at the very most—this is a blessing. Georgia is always telling me I need to focus more on the positive. Maybe today is the day to start.
“Roger isn’t coming with us anymore. We’re on our own.” I pivot and start walking towards security. “Keep up.”
The truck hits my passenger side door at full speed, sending my little Ferrari spinning like a fucking top.I don’t know how many times the vehicle spins, but when I open my eyes, the road is gone and all I see is the cloudless blue sky.For a moment, I think I might be dead. Maybe this is the transition to heaven.But then I realize if heaven and hell are real, I’m almost certainly heading down. Plus, I can still hear Arslan’s muffled voice roaring through my speaker phone.“Nikolai! What the fuck happened? Are you there? Hello? Nikolai!”I blink a few times and then take in my surroundings. My car ended up ramped on top of another vehicle along the side of the road, the hood angled up towards the sky. All my windows are shattered and smoke is pouring out from under the hood.But I’m alive, and I’m not injured. Not as far as I can tell, anyway.I unclip my seatbelt with a groan and reach for my phone where it fell in the backseat. Twisting around sends a sharp pain lancing down my ne
"He's the exception," she admits. "But only because he was fucking clueless.""‘Was’?" I ask, not missing her use of the past tense."My brother never wanted to lead. He never knew how to. He could puff out his chest with the best of them, but when it came to the moments that truly mattered, he folded. Even before he became don, he came to me for advice. He swore I'd be his second-in-command.""And were you?"She nods. "Secretly. Because unlike so many men in this world, I don't need the recognition. Spare me the gold busts and towering statues. I'm fine with creeping behind the scenes and wielding the real power."We're still driving way too fast, but the roads are widening and the traffic is thinning out. We're moving out of the city now. I want to ask where we're going, but I know she won't tell me. Part of me doesn't even want to know."The thirst for power must run in the family," I say. "Your brother killed your parents so he could inherit the Bratva, right?""Giorgos?" Xena lau
“No,” Elise says from the back. Her voice sounds weak. “That’s me. I got the carsick genes.”Xena glances over at me, but I keep my eyes straight ahead. It feels like she’s trying to see through my skull into my thoughts. And for some reason, I suddenly don’t want her to know what I’m thinking.“It’s been a busy day,” I explain. “I just saw Nikolai an hour ago and everything was fine. When did he find out about—”“I was actually tailing you this morning,” Xena blurts suddenly.“You were?” I try to keep my voice even and calm, even though my heart is racing.“I thought something was wrong when you went to the hospital.”“The hospital?” Elise asks from the backseat. “I thought you two were going out for breakfast.”I didn’t want to lie to Elise, but there was no reason to bring up the pregnancy to her until I knew it was really happening. Then there was no time to talk about it before Xena called and we rushed out the door.This is really not how I want her to find out I’m having a baby
“Why are you calling? I’ve just heard your brother is dead. Shouldn’t you be mourning?”“You know as well as I do that there’s no time for mourning. Not in the lives we lead.”I sigh. “What is this about, Xena?”“This is a warning. Not that you deserve it,” she snipes. “You know, I was already in my wedding dress when you called it off. I was ready to walk down the aisle. You don’t think you could have given me some more forewarning?”“You knew I didn’t want to get married. Don’t act surprised.”“But I am. It’s not like you to let your emotions take the wheel,” she says. She pauses, then adds, “Is she worth all of this?”I grit my teeth together as I see red in my vision. “Don’t talk about her. Ever.”She chuckles. “Fine. Then I’ll be brief: Giorgos’s second-in-command has taken over. They’re working with the Battiato mafia. Prepare for war.”Before I can say anything, Xena hangs up the phone.49BELLEIt’s been hours, but I’m still riding high from the doctor’s appointment, scrolling
“Any reason in particular?” Andrews asks.I fold my hands over my desk. “Personal business and a doctor appointment. Any reason in particular you’re here?”Half the city’s detectives are on my payroll, but they don’t usually show up to my office unless there’s a good reason. I expected to hear from Andrews after Arslan set fire to one of the Greek holdings last week.But considering the timing of their arrival, my guess is this visit has something to do with the two men I shot in front of my house two nights ago.Andrews tilts his head to his younger colleague, and Detective Howard shifts forward. “Have you spoken to Giorgos Simatou recently?”“We spoke on the phone a few days ago.”“And that’s the last time you talked to him?”I frown and start to reach for my office phone. “What is this about? Should I call Giorgos and have him confirm when we spoke?”“That would be pretty difficult,” Howard says.“And why is that?”Andrews sighs and quirks his mouth into a grimace. It’s his “level
“The last time you surprised me, we went to Iceland. This is slightly less exciting.”“We need to know what’s going on. If I’m going to make plans to protect you and Elise and the baby, I need to know if there is a baby.”I bite my lip. I could fight him and refuse to be seen by the doctor. Then I could slip away and meet up with Xena.But I want to talk to a doctor, too. I want to know if the fantasy I lived in for the past twenty-four hours could become real life.So I nod. “Okay.”He jumps out of the car, comes around to my side, and pulls the door open. “Good. Then let’s go see our baby.”I guess I shouldn’t be surprised that Nikolai pulled strings here, but I still do a double-take when we don’t even pause in the waiting room.As soon as we walk in, a nurse is waiting to escort us into the back. She takes my weight and my blood pressure, and then she leads us into the ultrasound room. The lights are dim and large screens hang on the walls.“Lie back on the table and the ultrasoun







