Read My Russian Nightmare Online
Authors: Danielle Sibarium
Chapter 3
Noise filters into my subconscious. The noise turns into voices. Men’s voices. They’re talking, but I don’t recognize who’s speaking, nor do I understand what they’re saying. Sharp pain slices through the right side of my head. My entire body hurts and every muscle is sore.
I moan as if that will make it better. It doesn’t. I open my eyes, pushing away the seductive slumber teasing my lids. A dim light fills the darkened room. Where the fuck am I? I move to sit up, but I can’t. I’m lying on my side with my arms and legs tied together. I’m tied to the bed, and there isn’t enough slack on either end for me to sit up.
My instinct is to scream, but I stop myself just short of doing it. What good will screaming do if whoever tied me up is the only one to hear me? I turn my pounding head from left to right, making the pain worse, trying frantically to place where I am and who I’m with. There’s a door to the side with a little bit of light streaming in. I see a man’s shadow just outside it. My heart picks up speed and almost jumps out of my mouth.
Who is he, and what the hell does he want with me?
Memories flood through my mind. My heart slams against my chest. Sammy. The hospital. The men. They took me. They drugged me. What the hell else did they do to me?
I should scream. Draw attention to myself. If I’m loud enough, maybe someone will hear. Someone that’s not part of this elaborate scheme. But if I scream, it will alert them. They’ll know I’m awake, and it might encourage them to pick up where they left off. Especially the blond one. I dry heave at the memory of him hitting and threatening me. I open my mouth then close it, deciding not to say anything.
I swallow hard, hoping it will help me breathe easier, but it doesn’t. The dryness of my mouth and throat cause me to cough. Whether I like it or not, I just alerted the man outside the door.
“Kiera,” he calls as his form blocks the light in the doorway.
I feel my insides tremble and shake as he takes a step into the room. I’m not sure, but I think it’s Dima. I hope it’s him. He’s the nicest of them all. I give myself a silent warning not to be fooled. He’s no better. He’s the one that grabbed me and wouldn’t let go. That makes him just as bad as the blond and the old man.
“I don’t want to hurt you, so you need to cooperate, okay?” he says, advancing.
I don’t respond. Instead, I answer with a cough.
“I’ll give you some water. But you need to promise not to try anything.” He leans down and switches on a lamp beside the bed.
I was right. It’s who I hoped for. He’s standing beside the bed, and I’m not sure whether to agree or tell him to go fuck himself.
“I’m going to untie one of your hands. But if you fight, if you try anything, I’ll have to tie you back up.”
“And if I listen?” I ask, my throat scratchy.
“Then maybe we untie the other hand, too.”
Isn’t he fucking generous?
I don’t respond. Instead, I nod to show him I understood his warning. Warning. Threat. At this point, they are one and the same. I almost want to ask, since I’m already tied up, what happens if I do fight back, just to be a smart ass. But I’m pretty sure I already know the answer to that, and I doubt he’ll admire me for my snark, even in such a desperate situation.
Dima releases my left hand, my weaker hand, from its restraint, and takes a step back. I circle my wrist to loosen it up. It’s sore and stiff. I wonder how long I’ve been here and how long my hands have been tied. I look around the windowless room, and I have no idea if it’s day or night.
“Are you ready for me to release the other one?”
I stare at him, but he makes no move, just looks back at me with his cold, dark eyes.
“Yes.” I feel like a damn dog begging for a bone.
Once both hands are free, I manage to turn myself onto my back. There is enough slack in my left foot binding to allow me to do that. My body aches. Every damn joint is crying out from being still for too long. Slowly, Dima’s hands help lift me to a sitting position.
“Thank you,” I say, despite the fact that I want to punch him in his perfectly straight nose.
He reaches for a bottle of water from the night table, opens it, and holds it to my mouth until I take it from him. I take a sip and soon realize how parched I am. My mouth feels like it’s been stuffed with a bag of cotton balls. I down the rest of the bottle in a few large gulps.
“Better?” he asks.
“Yes.”
Dima’s lips curl slightly at the corners. I wouldn’t quite call it a smile, but it has friendly implications.
“Sammy is stable,” he informs me before turning toward the door.
Hearing my brother’s name, I perk up. My heart speeds up and skips a beat. I’m desperate to know more. “Wait!”
He stops. I don’t know what to say or what to ask. I stare at him blankly, a million thoughts running through my head. As if he knows, like he can read my thoughts, my reaction, he continues.
“Let me get some food for you, and then I tell you what I know.”
I must be crazy. The second he leaves the room, panic settles into my brain. I don’t want to be alone. My teeth chatter and my body trembles with fear. I should be more frightened when he’s near, not when he leaves me alone. But I am frightened. I’m cold and scared out of my mind that someone will come back in here and it won’t be him.
“I’ll just be a minute,” he calls from the other room.
I don’t hear anyone else with him, and I pray that we’re alone. Although the implications of that are terrifying as well. I look around the windowless room and realize that even if I gain his trust and he frees me, I have little hope of escaping.
The only possible thing I could use as a weapon is the lamp beside my bed. I’m not sure how realistic that option is. There are screws or nails that have been inserted into the base. I wonder if it’s been secured to the table itself. Shit. I’ll have to test it and see.
I’m still looking around, examining the room, when I spot Dima standing in front of the door, holding a dish and another bottle of water. My eyes meet his, and something stirs inside me. For reasons I can’t explain, I’m filled with a sense of guilt. Maybe it’s because he’s shown kindness, the tiniest bit of compassion, and I’m searching for a weapon to use against him. There’s just something about the way he’s looking at me that has me thrown off kilter.
“Eat,” he says as he approaches the bed with a buttered bagel.
“Why?”
“So you can regain some of your strength.”
“Isn’t it better for you if I’m weak and unable to fight or struggle against you?”
He arches an eyebrow as a sarcastic grin forms on his full lips. “Depends on what you have in mind.”
Heat surges through my body from my head to my toes. My face is especially hot which, with my pale skin, means it’s a bright shade of red. I’m embarrassed, mortified at the implications of his words.
“I’m sorry,” he says, placing the dish on the night table and sitting on the edge of the bed. “I don’t want to hurt you.”
“You said that already.” I’m shocked that I’m comfortable enough to snap back at him. “And yet you held me trapped in your arms, and now I wake up tied to this bed, and you still look me in the eye and claim you don’t want to hurt me.”
“I don’t.” His eyes drop to the floor, his words dripping with emotion. “So don’t put me in a position where I have to.”
“You’re not in charge, are you? You have no say about anything. You just take your orders like a good soldier.”
Anger flashes in his dark eyes. His jaw tenses and his hands ball up into fists as he stands. “You have a lot to say for someone with very few options,” he growls. His voice is cold, emotionless.
“I’m sorry,” I say as I swallow down the fear racing through me.
“Eat!” He lifts the bagel off the dish and hands it to me.
I take the food in my hand and look it over. I turn it around in my hands and look between it and the man watching me with hawk-like intensity.
“If I wanted to kill you, I would’ve done it already.”
I nod. He has a point. But poison isn’t the only thing I’m worried about. They stuffed pills down my throat. I don’t remember much of anything after it.
“No. I didn’t rape you.”
He’s reading my thoughts again. I wonder how he does that. How can he possibly anticipate what I’m thinking? Unless he’s so experienced in kidnapping that he can predict what’s wrong based on what his other victims have told him.
“Kiera.” This dark-haired man that I want to be an angel but fear is the devil bends down and strokes my cheek with his thumb. I feel a strange sensation where he touches me and assume it’s nothing more than the friction of his calloused finger against my smooth skin. Either way, it unnerves me because it almost feels nice, and I’m looking forward to that kind of gentle contact again.
I see something soft and kind in his eyes as he examines my face. He confuses me so much. He’s mean one minute and kind the next. Cold and unfeeling in one breath, yet warm and compassionate at the same time.
Tears burn and prick my eyes.
I turn away. I hate him. I hate this man that wouldn’t let me escape. This man that helped drag me away from the only person left in my life. The one person that means everything to me. I hate him for hurting my brother and holding me hostage, bullying me with threats of violence. I hate him for showing kindness. I’d rather he stay the monster I already know he is in my mind.
“I know you have questions. We don’t have much time before we have company. Eat.”
Company. I know who’s coming, and my stomach churns with thoughts of the other men. My other abductors. I know that as much as I dislike this man, I’d much rather be his prisoner than theirs.
I bite into the bagel and take my time chewing. As I swallow my first bite, my stomach growls and reminds me how hungry I am. I don’t know the last time I ate. I take another bite and barely chew it all before taking the next. The last meal I remember is breakfast before getting the call about Sammy. It was hours before I left school for the hospital. How long is that? A day? More?
“How long was I…” I worry about finishing the sentence and pause between bites. I don’t want to offend or anger him. I don’t want to give him a reason to “hurt” me. I search for a safe word that won’t imply that he’s the bad guy, even though we both know he is. “Sleeping?”
“Two days. You’d come around every now and then. But after a short time, you’d just give in and collapse.”
“Give in?” Shit, I have no recollection of anything after passing out in the van.
“To the pills and shit they’ve been forcing down your throat.”
“That at least explains the awful headache.”
“I told you. No one raped you.” His eyes are locked on mine until he continues. Then they dart away as he looks off into the distance behind me. “They’d much prefer to see the fear and terror in your eyes as you beg them not to.”
His words send a deep chill straight to my bones. I need to get away from him.
“Is there a bathroom I can use?”
He stares at me long and hard, like he’s contemplating my question. I don’t understand why, It’s not a hard one.
He takes a deep breath. “Will you behave?”
I nod.
“Okay.”
He releases my feet and offers me a hand to help me stand. I don’t take it. I can do it on my own. My legs are so weak and wobbly, they give up and I go right down. Instead of hitting the floor, strong arms catch me. I fight the urge to nuzzle my face against his hard chest and hold on to him. I shudder under his touch, and every muscle in my body is taut and tense until he lets go.
Dima walks me to a corner of the room on the other side of the bed, the side my back was to. There is no door. It’s been removed or never put on to begin with. “If you need me, I’ll be right here,” he says, turning so that his back is to the door. Another windowless room. Nowhere to go from here, just back into the other room.
Once I’m done, he leads me back to the bed.
“Do you have to restrain me?”
His eyes drop, and if I didn’t know better, I’d think he doesn’t want to do this. “For now.”
I accept that, because I don’t have any choice other than to accept it, and because there is a promise in his words. A promise that if I don’t try anything, I might be able to earn his trust enough to regain some of my freedom. And when someone gives you an inch, you reach for the yard.
Baby steps.
That’s what I need to take right now. Little, tiny baby steps.
Once I’m back in bed, I pick up what’s left of the bagel and start eating again. He doesn’t say anything. Instead, Dima stands beside the bed and watches me intently. I feel his eyes burning through my skin. It’s like he’s branding me, claiming me for his own, and it makes my stomach tumble.
I meet his dark brown eyes. It’s hard to breathe and I’m not sure why. I don’t know if this sudden tension and energy between us is a good thing or not. It’s just that no one has ever looked at me like that, like I’m all there is.
If anyone has, I never noticed. And here, this man that I should despise with every beat of my heart just made it skip a beat.