to get it back to me by tomorrow.”
“Good.” It’s a deal I worked on for several months before leaving Moscow, and I want to make sure it goes through. “What about the tax credit bill?”
“Progressing as hoped.” My brother tilts his head. “Why the late-night call? All this could’ve waited until tomorrow.”
I shrug. “Just having some trouble sleeping.”
Valery’s gaze sharpens. “Something to do with Slava?”
“No.” At least not in the way he thinks. “Where’s Konstantin?” I want his team to do a deeper dive on Chloe Emmons, with a specific focus on the past month.
I need to know what she did and where she went while she was off the grid.
“Berlin,” Valery answers. “Acquiring more servers.”
“Again?”
It’s his turn to shrug. In my absence, my brothers have divided up the responsibilities according to their interests and strengths, with technology falling squarely into Konstantin’s domain. Not that it had ever been otherwise; even when we were in elementary school, our older brother could run circles around the nation’s top programmers. The main difference now is Valery stays out of Konstantin’s business, letting him do as he will, whereas when I headed up the family organization, I oversaw everything, Konstantin’s dark web ventures included.
“Fine,” I say. “I’ll get in touch with him there. Now fill me in on the rest of it.”
And Valery does. By the time we end the call, I feel like I’m back in the loop—or at least as much in the loop as I can be while being half a world away. So much of our business takes place in person, at the galas and opera houses and high-end restaurants frequented by the power brokers of Eastern Europe. You can’t subtly bribe a politician over email, can’t intimidate a supplier into giving you a discount over Skype. It’s all about rubbing elbows with the right people, being in the right place at the right time—and not leaving traces, digital or otherwise, if you have to cross a line to get things done.
Shutting down my laptop, I throw off the robe and stride over to the window, where a half-moon caught partially behind a cloud provides just enough illumination to make out the tops of the trees on the mountainside. I’m still tense, every muscle in my body coiled tight. The call distracted me, as hoped, but now that it’s over, I’m thinking about Chloe again. Wanting her again.
Fuck.
Maybe I shouldn’t have let her leave the table. I enjoyed her nervousness, the wariness in her pretty brown eyes. She reminded me of a wild hare, ready to flee at the first sign of danger, and I wanted to chase her if she did.
But I didn’t. I let her go. She looked tired, and not the kind of tired one gets from undersleeping for a night or two. It was exhaustion, deep-seated and total. Her clothes were loose on her, as if she’s recently lost weight, and her delicate features were sharper than in the pictures, her eyes ringed by deep shadows. Whatever happened to her has brought her to the brink of a collapse, and at that moment, when she stood up from her seat, so fragile and brave, I felt a strange urge to comfort her… to protect her from whatever demons had etched those signs of strain into her face.
No, that’s idiotic. I hardly know the girl. I didn’t want to push her to the breaking point, that’s all.
Walking over to my closet, I pull on a pair of running shorts and sneakers and head out of the room. Maybe it’s just as well that I let her be tonight. Tomorrow, I’ll get in touch with Konstantin and begin the process of uncovering her secrets. In the meantime, it doesn’t hurt to let her rest, get her bearings… acclimate to the idea that I want her.
No matter what my cock thinks, there’s no rush.
After all, she’s here now, and she’s not going anywhere.
13
Chloe
“No!”
I land on all fours, panting, my entire body trembling and covered in sweat. It’s dark and I’m naked, and I have no idea where I am or what’s happening. Then I register the feel of the hardwood floor under my palms and the faint moonlight pouring in through the wall-sized window, and it all clicks into place.
I’m in my room at the Molotov estate, and none of what I saw is real.
It was another nightmare.
Wincing, I push up to my knees—which immediately scream in protest. I must’ve bruised them when I threw myself off the