The Russian had broken into my house and was spying on me, like some psycho!
I shot upright, drawing a breath to scream, but he cut me off: “Cover yourself, Natalie.” His voice was rough, his brows drawn tight. “We need to talk.” With a vile curse in Russian, he strode off.
Cover myself? Talk?
Night-stalker-serial-killers didn’t say shit like that!
I was so confounded, I couldn’t manage a scream. My mouth moved, but no words came out. I scrambled from the tub, reaching for a towel, and secured it around me. Even in the midst of this turmoil, I hissed in a breath as the terry cloth rubbed my ni**les.
Casting around for a weapon, I plucked off the cover of the toilet tank, hefting it over my shoulder in a batter’s pose. From the safety of the bathroom, I called, “I don’t know what you’re doing in my house. But you need to leave now. Or I’ll call the cops!”
“I was sent here by your father,” he replied from my bedroom.
I swayed, and my makeshift weapon faltered. Considering his Russian accent—and the timing—I knew he had to be talking about my biological father. Still I said, “My dad died six years ago.”
“You know that’s not the one I’m referring to.”
In a rush, I demanded, “What do you know about him? Who are you? Why did you break into my house?”
“Break in?” Scoffing sound. “Your key was under a plastic rock. For anyone to find,” he added in a chiding tone. “Your father is a very important—and wealthy—man. He’s assigned me to be your new bodyguard.”
“Bodyguard! Why would I need one?”
“Anyone in a family with a ten-figure net worth”—I gasped at that—“needs protection.”
“You’re saying he’s a . . . billionaire?” Was I getting punked? Maybe that was in rubles or something.
“Correct. His name is Pavel Kovalev. He just learned of your existence a short while ago, through the investigator you hired.”
I now knew my father’s name.
I’d initially wanted to learn about my birth parents because I possessed an overdeveloped sense of curiosity. Then it had occurred to me that I might have gotten my sense of curiosity from my parents.
After that, I’d imagined a man and a woman in their forties, mired in endless wondering about the child they’d given up to a Russian orphanage twenty-four years ago. The thought had pushed me to take on yet another job, to keep digging relentlessly. I’d searched not just for my sake, but for theirs.
But he’d never known I existed? Then I frowned. “My investigator? Zironoff? He hasn’t returned my e-mails or calls.”
“He was made aware that we would be handling this internally going forward.”
“Oh.” Thanks for the heads-up, dickwad. At least I hadn’t gotten ripped off again. No, I’d . . . succeeded.
After six years of searching.
I tottered from shock—and residual tequila. I returned the tank cover to its spot before it dropped on my head like a cartoon anvil. “If you’re my bodyguard, then why were you spying on me in the bath?” I snagged my pink robe, hastily swapping it for the towel. “Huh?”
Silence. When I didn’t hear anything, I had a weird surge of panic that this man—a new source of answers, an alleviator of curiosity—had vanished as quickly as he’d appeared. “Are you there?”
Trying not to think of how short my silk robe was—and what he’d just caught me doing—I poked my head out of the bathroom; no sign of him. So I cautiously padded toward my room. “You didn’t answer my question. Hey, why are you in my closet?”
He emerged from the walk-in. “Where is your luggage?”
“What does that have to do with anything?” I didn’t have real luggage. I’d packed for school in laundry baskets and boxes.
He raked his eyes over me in my robe, lingering on choice parts of me. Seeming to shake himself, he snagged my sizable book bag, dumping library books on the floor. The History of Sexuality, The Boundaries of Eros, A Thorn in the Flesh.
“What the hell, Russian?!” If he’d noticed the titles—my general field was the history of women and gender—they didn’t faze him.
When he tossed the empty bag to me, I barely caught it. “Pack necessities only. Everything else will be provided for you.”