down at me. I opened my mouth to speak, but my throat was raw.
She ran out of the room. I heard voices, then several pairs of feet entering the room afterward. My hands had balled into fists when suddenly two men stood before me.
I traced the height of these males from their feet to their heads. I blinked, somehow knowing I’d seen them before. One man was blond with dark brown eyes. His stare was cold. He was built and looked like he could kill on the spot. But when I looked at the second male, my heart pounded.
Zaal Kostava.
“Kostava,” I managed to rasp out. He was huge, bigger than I’d imagined. I saw his picture in my head, one that Mistress had trained me to memorize. He looked exactly the same. The only difference was his long hair, which was tied back.
Kostava’s green eyes blazed with fury as he stared me down. His face was swollen and his lips were bloodied. I squeezed my eyes shut and remembered storming into the house but having no control of why I attacked. After that my memory was hazy. It never was; I remembered everything. But not this.
“Who are you working for?”
I opened my eyes, and the blond man was speaking to me in Russian.
“You’re Russian?” I managed a reply. His head tilted to the side, and as he stared I asked, “Where am I?” My mind was too slow, information not coming to me fast enough.
“You tell me,” the man bit back.
My focus drifted back to Kostava, and I spoke before I could stop myself. “I was sent for him.”
I tried to catch the reason why in my head. Then I remembered Zoya on the bed. “Zoya,” I gasped, trying to keep hold of the memory before it slipped away again.
This time Kostava slammed his hands on the arms of the chair I was in. “That’s the third time you’ve said her name. Where is she?” His harsh words dripped with venom. But I was just as mad as him.
Zoya was mine.
I owned her.
I had to save her. A dark-haired female huddled in the corner of a cell was the next memory to slam into my mind. I choked on a scream but managed to roar out, “Inessa!”
Kostava stepped back. The male beside him grabbed the hand that was about to plow into my face. I pulled at the ties and demanded, “Untie me … have to save them.” I inhaled and fought the razors slicing my throat apart, stealing my voice. “I have to save them.… From Mistress—”
Both males froze, then looked at each other. Bending down, the blond asked, “Who is Mistress?”
My teeth clenched as he questioned me rather than letting me go. Finally I calmed enough to snap, “The fucking … bitch Georgian … that controls me!”
“Georgian,” the blond pushed as Kostava began to pace.
“Mistress Arziani,” I replied, “the sister of the Master of the Blood Pit.”
The blond man’s eyes pulled down. When he stood, he asked, “Where did you get the number tattoo, 194?”
My muscles tensed, but I replied, “The Blood Pit. When the Night Wraiths stole me and my sister in the night and drove us to that hell.”
“Explain,” the blond pushed again.
Taking breath, I said, “I have to get back. I have to save them.” Feeling the fog lifting from my head minute by minute, I could see Inessa and Zoya, both trapped with Mistress, and shouted, “You need to fucking let me go!”
The blond cracked his knuckles and said, “Not until we know who you are and why you tried to kill Zaal.”
I dropped my head, and as I did I winced at the raw pain of my skin. The pain faded when I realized … “You removed the collar?”
Kostava stopped and looked down at me but otherwise gave nothing away. “The serum,” I said. “Mistress gave me too much. Loaded the pellets with too much poison to ensure I got the kill. My head…,” I trailed off, wincing at the dull ache.
The blond informed me, “We removed it. The serum was an obedience drug. We have a male who has been studying it. He’s developed a serum to counteract the effects. Sometimes it works; sometimes it doesn’t. With you, we were fortunate. It brought you back fairly quickly.” I stared at the blond; then I remembered something that Zoya had said: My brother, Zaal Kostava, is marrying a Tolstaia. My brother, the Lideri of the Kostava Clan, is marrying into the Volkov Bratva.
“The