Read The Score Online

Authors: Bethany-Kris

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Crime, #Suspense

The Score (6 page)

BOOK: The Score
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A lump lodged painfully in Anton’s throat. “We’ll make it work, like I said. My son … It doesn’t matter, Ivan, he’s
my
boy. She wouldn’t keep him from me, because he’s all of me and she knows it. Even if whatever this is between her and I right now keeps up like it is, then we’ll figure something else out for him.”

“You’re taking this well,” Ivan said frankly. “As good as can be expected for you, I guess.”

“I’m breaking apart inside,” Anton admitted. “That woman is my whole life and has been since I was eighteen. I’ve never loved anybody like I love her. I’ve broken every damn rule for her and would again in a heartbeat. I’m supposed to just accept that I stepped out on her because I drank too much liquor? Like fuck. Something doesn’t feel right here.”

Ivan hummed noncommittally. “If all else fails, you could pull rank, Anton. She’s your wife and he’s your son. Divorce isn’t an acceptable route if you don’t want it to be. I know you’ve always been a little cleaner cut than others is our business, especially where Viviana is concerned, but you’re more than capable of playing dirty if you need to.”

“Jesus. That’s …”

“It was just a suggestion. An option you can use if you want. I’m not saying I would, but I’m not you, either.”

“Even if … It doesn’t matter how much I love her, I still couldn’t do that.” Anton felt his molars practically crack beneath his jaw as he grinded his teeth. The thought of forcing a reconciliation on his wife just because he said so didn’t quite feel right for him. “This isn’t twenty or thirty years ago, Ivan. She has choices. I won’t take them from her because I fucked up. She’s not a piece of property.”

“Others wouldn’t feel that way.”

Anton scowled, the action causing his aching head to pound harder. “They’re not me.”

“What about Natalie, have you tried talking to her?” Ivan asked.

“Absolutely not,” Anton growled, glaring at his friend. “The last thing I need is to be near that woman again, Ivan.”

“She’ll be in the club tonight working.”

Anton flinched, disgust filling him to the brim. This whole situation was horrible, and he felt dirty with ten grimy fingers pointing straight at his guilty chest.

“Well, aside from firing her, there’s not much I can—”

Anton didn’t get to finish his sentence. A loud bang and shouted orders rang out in the downstairs of the club. The tinkling sounds of canisters popping along the empty floor echoed up to their spot. There was no denying what was happening downstairs.

“Fuck,” Ivan muttered.

Instantly, Anton was off his office chair, ignoring the gun he knew was in the desk, and the information of a shipment, never mind the laptop he should have tried to somehow destroy. No, instead, the only thing he could think of was the little boy on the floor with wide blue eyes and terrified, reaching for his father.

“Papa?” Demyan cried.

“Shhh, little man,” Anton whispered.

In his arms, he held his son tighter and turned his back to the door of the office. It seemed like only milliseconds, but his mind was running a million miles a minute. Anton couldn’t begin to understand why the officials would be raiding his club. His guys certainly hadn’t been given any indication and they’d all been pretty quiet.

Demyan’s shaking increased as the shouts down below became louder. “It’s okay, Demyan, it’s okay. Papa’s here.”

The sounds of a dozen or more pairs of boots pounding up the metal staircase ratcheted up Anton’s nerves to a breaking point.

“Anton …” Ivan started to say. “Anton, give me your son!”

The hardest thing Anton ever had to do, next to walking out of his house that morning knowing his wife’s heart was breaking, was hand his trembling, scared, and crying son off to another man. It was safer for Demyan, though.

No doubt, they weren’t there for Ivan.

Anton watched Ivan curl a fighting Demyan into his chest as he got to his knees on the floor and automatically put his hands behind his head. The less threatening he seemed at their entrance, the less likely they were to cause him harm, never mind his son seeing it.

“Demyan, it’s okay,” Anton repeated when the first kick to the door landed with a solid thump. The second and third only followed louder, harder. “Hide his face, Ivan!”

When the door finally broke, it wasn’t a second before Anton found himself face down on the floor, his son’s cries overtaking all other sounds. Cuffs tightened around his wrists to an almost painful point, but Anton refused to show it. A boot landed hard between his shoulder blades, keeping him pinned to the floor even though he wasn’t fighting.


Papa
!”

“Anton Daniil Avdonin, you’re under arrest for the murder of Sonny Carducci, Tatiana Belov, Sergei Belov …”

Anton tuned the words out and focused on his son, instead.

***

“Vine!”

Frantically, Viviana turned in every direction she could look searching for the familiar voice calling for her. FBI agents had swarmed her home less than an hour earlier when she was getting ready to leave for the bookstore. Everything they held dear in their home, from photographs, to knickknacks, to their son’s toys, were thrown about and strewn so carelessly.

There was nothing clean or nice about this search.

Viviana felt intruded on in the worst way.

“Sasha, I’m in the kitchen,” Viviana called back.

“Ma’am, I’m sorry, but you’re not permitted inside during—”


Zatknis', idi na khuy
,” Sasha spat. “Get out of my way, you fucking fool, so I can take my grandson in to his mother!”

Despite the seriousness of the situation, Viviana snorted. In all her years of knowing her mother-in-law, Viviana hadn’t once heard Sasha tell someone to shut up so venomously, never mind the colorful words she used to do it with.

When a furious Sasha rounded the corner to enter the kitchen with a confused, frightened looking Demyan, Viviana’s heart broke a little more. From what she understood, thanks to the very short call with Ivan, her son had been there to see his father arrested. The team that went in on them at the club hadn’t been particularly nice about it, either.

“Ma!” Demyan wailed and reached with grabbing hands for Viviana.

“I’m sorry, Vine. I would have gotten him here sooner, but the traffic is awful and they’ve got roadblocks set up down the street,” Sasha said as she gave her daughter-in-law an awkward, one-armed hug.

“It’s okay, really.”

“Here, take him. I think he’s hungry, tired, and in desperate need of a nap.”

Viviana hadn’t been able to go to the club to pick Demyan up because of the goddamn agents searching her house. No way would it be acceptable for them to be inside the residence without her or Anton’s presence.

Demyan calmed the moment he could bury his tiny head into his mother’s neck. As was his favorite thing to do when he was overwhelmed, he grasped tightly to the free strands of his mother’s hair and turned silent.

“What about Anton?” Viviana asked, keeping her tone calm for her son’s sake.

“Ivan will be with him as much as he can. Arraignment will be in a day or so. The best we can hope for is a bond.”

“On murder charges,” Viviana said dimly.

With everything that had happened over the last night and day, Viviana didn’t want to see her husband behind bars. They had too much that needed to be said, whether it was from anger, or not. And no matter what, she loved Anton.

Always. Even if it fucking hurt.

“What am I going to do?”

Sasha nodded, sadness coloring up her familiar blue eyes. “Faith, Vine. You have to find it, sweetheart. I know you don’t pray, but you should now.”

Chapter Six

 

“Did you want me to be there for supper tonight?” Anton asked.

Viviana sighed into the phone as her son ran past the front counter of her bookstore. “Sure,” she replied after a long moment.

“Vine, if you don’t want me there …”

“No,” she rushed to say. “It’s not that, Anton. I’m just tired today is all and not in the mood to argue, all right?”

“All right, baby. Whatever you need.”

The rush of sadness that flooded her veins from the comforting sentiment didn’t help the ache burrowing deep in her chest. It had been two weeks since the arrest that literally turned their world and life upside down. The prosecuting attorney on the case had studiously argued Anton’s flight risk at his arraignment, but Ivan was just as strong in the courtroom.

Without a passport, no real means to leave the country as their bank accounts had been frozen, and Anton’s lack of leaving the state unless he needed to, flight risk was a bit of an exaggeration. As far as they knew.

Luckily, the judge agreed. For an eight-hundred-thousand dollar bond.

Anton was also forced to wear an ankle bracelet, just to keep track of him, apparently.

Any and all interview attempts with Viviana ended horribly. She all out refused to speak about her husband or any of his possible dealings with the officials. She wasn’t required to anyway, being his wife. That didn’t mean they were making it easy on her, though. Beyond that, there were reporters showing up outside their home, at her bookstore, and hell, even when she went to the grocery store. High profile was an understatement. Anton’s upcoming trial was being called the one to watch.

The stress was seriously eating away at Viviana one day at a time.

She was still refusing to allow Anton to come back home, too, and it killed her more and more. Anton insisted repeatedly that even though he couldn’t remember all the events of that night, there was no way he had slept with the woman. Natalie. Just thinking about it made Viviana sick to her stomach.

She loved her husband, but forgiveness was not as easy as it would seem.

“Come to dinner,” Viviana finally said. “We should talk, and we could put Demyan to bed. He’ll like that.”

“Okay. Five good?”

“Perfect, Anton.”

“I’ll see you at five, then, baby.”

“Five,” she agreed.

After hanging up the phone, Viviana rested up on the stool and willed away the heaviness settling in her stomach. Like a dead weight, it had been there for days it seemed. She was so tired, too, but that wasn’t anything new. The slight cramping she seemed to be experiencing was worrisome, also, but because she’d also had a similar issue early in Demyan’s pregnancy, Viviana assumed this was the same thing. It would pass.

At least the morning sickness had yet to begin.

“Ma,” Demyan said, making another round around the counter. “Is Papa coming?”

Just his speed alone made Viviana dizzy.

“Demyan, take a break for a moment, okay?”

Damn it, all of the sudden, Viviana didn’t feel so well. The ache in her back increased. She’d been ignoring it for most of the morning, given the fact that she toted around a two-and-a-half-year-old on her hip for the greater part of her days. Especially when he was feeling clingy.

“Ma?” Demyan asked.

Demyan had come to stand in front of Viviana, looking up at her with his little brow furrowed. When had he gotten so close?

Thirsty, Viviana tried to stand from the stool only to find her vision swimming with colors and her head pounding. Something was wrong. So, so wrong. Dread filled up Viviana’s heart. When she stood, shakily and swaying, the ache turned into a cramp so severe it caused her to double over with a groan. Again, Demyan called her name, but he didn’t sound so close the second time, and his voice was unsure.

While her mouth felt dry and parched, Viviana’s jean covered thighs felt sticky, warm, and wet.

Oh, God.

Reaching for the cell phone she’d tossed to the counter earlier was useless. The light-headedness and spinning vision kept her focus from staying still. The ground felt like it was swaying under her feet.

“Demyan …” Even her voice was faint, the realization of what might be happening to her body and her baby was catching up and slamming down on her like a wrecking ball. “Demyan, call Papa.”

At his young age, Demyan could recite the most important phone numbers he needed to know off by heart. He was also able to dial them, too.

“Ma?”

A wave of pain washed over Viviana from her head to her toes. The force of the feeling had bile rising in her throat and air gasping out of her lungs. Terrified, she clutched at her midsection and shook her head.

Why? What had she done to deserve this?

“Call Papa,” Viviana repeated through clenched teeth. “Now, Demyan!”

She didn’t have to tell him again, though, because he already had.

“Papa, Ma’s got a booboo.”

Not her baby—
Anton’s
baby.

Another cramping pain stabbed through her womb with killing force. Viviana clasped her hands to the counter like it was a lifeline, and cried.

***

Besides the soft beeps, the room Viviana woke up to was quiet with dimmed lighting and an antiseptic smell. The sheets wrapped tight around her midsection and lower half were scratchy and thin. Nothing like the soft, comforting sheets of her own bed. Immediately, she knew she was in the hospital.

Blinking away the hazy aftereffects of waking up, Viviana smacked the dryness from her mouth. Even though her body was weak and tired, it was also tender and sore all over. When she tried to move her hand to wipe at her eyes, a stinging pain followed the action, making her yelp.

“Viviana … hey, baby. Careful, you’ve got an IV in that hand.”

Anton’s soothing, familiar dark tenor sent Viviana spinning into a fresh round of tears.

“I’m sorry,” she whispered, her voice cracking on every single word. “I’m so sorry, Anton. I didn’t mean to—”

“No, no, no,” he chanted. “God, Vine, just
no
.”

Anton’s concerned features colored Viviana’s vision when she turned her head. Tears spilled further at the pain and sadness etching lines into his strong face. Quiet, hiccupping sobs bubbled up from her chest and fell into the room as everything caught up to her all at once.

She’d done him so wrong, she knew. The baby he’d pleaded with her for over and over again. The one he wanted so badly for them and their son. She
lost
his child. What use was she to him if she couldn’t even care well enough for his baby to carry it?

What was wrong with her?

Viviana was empty. The heaviness that plagued her all week was gone, but so was something else, too.

“I’m sorry,” Viviana repeated.

She didn’t know what else to say.

“Vine, listen to me. It’s not your fault,” Anton insisted firmly. “It isn’t, baby. Things happen, that’s all.”

“But, I—”

“But nothing. God, I love you so fucking much, you don’t even know. I wish you would have told me something was wrong so you didn’t have to do that alone. And Demyan, he just …” Anton trailed off, sucking in a harsh breath before rubbing a hand over his drawn face. “He’s going to stay with Sasha for a little while.”

“No, I want him with
me
,” Viviana said.

Especially now, she needed and wanted her son.

“Vine, stop. It’s only for a couple of days, enough to get you settled and then we’ll bring him home. I’ll stay with him at Mom’s, so he will have one of us at least. They’ve got the club on lockdown and there’s no real timeline of when we’ll be permitted to open it up again, so I need a place to sleep, too.”

What? He wasn’t coming home, either?

Before Viviana could ask, the door to her hospital room opened. An older man wearing blue scrubs and holding a chart in his hand gave a small knock on the door before Anton waved him in. He was introduced as the doctor who had been on call when Viviana was brought in through the emergency room, and he simply wanted to check on her before she was granted release.

Viviana felt distant from the man as he talked. Things were explained the best they could be. She’d been dehydrated and anemic. It wasn’t uncommon and usually the anemia wouldn’t be caught until the first round of blood work, but Viviana had been too early for that, yet. One in three pregnancies ended in miscarriage, though most women were so early in the pregnancy that they wouldn’t even realize and instead, mistake it for their period. She’d also just come off birth control, and some studies showed that could possibly cause an early termination, too, while other studies disagreed. There were too many variables to be sure about anything.

As Anton told her, the doctor said the same: things happen. Sometimes the reasons are clear, and sometimes, they’re not. It could have been her body’s way of reacting to the sudden stresses in her life, or maybe it was nature’s way of terminating an unhealthy pregnancy. The anemia and dehydration hadn’t helped, but it certainly wasn’t the only cause.

The dizziness and fainting, however, could have been her mind’s way of reacting to the shock. As if it had been trying to protect her because she was already overwhelmed enough. And while it might have seemed like she bled a great deal, the
D&C
the hospital preformed to be sure everything was gone …

Viviana didn’t want to hear any more after that.

Nothing, the doctor told her. Over and over.

You did nothing to cause this, sweetheart
.

The worst part? Viviana didn’t believe him.

***

“Why won’t you stay?” Viviana dared to ask.

Anton froze at the door of their home, letting the jacket he was putting on slide off his arm. “Excuse me?”

A week earlier, she’d been released from the hospital. Demyan had been home with her for a couple of days, but he was doing well and with him closer, Viviana felt better for a moment. Anton came like he always did, to have breakfast with Demyan, take him with him for most of the day, and then he spent a great deal of the night with him, too.

But, then he left.

He kept leaving. Every fucking time.

The conversations between Anton and Viviana were short, without any real depth. He didn’t push her to talk, he didn’t question her about her day, and beyond their son, he didn’t have much to say, either, it seemed.

Had she done this? Had losing his child pushed him away?

“You keep leaving. Why?”

“I …” Anton struggled for words, his gaze darting from hers to the wall. “You asked me to leave you be, Vine. You asked me to
leave
, so I did. You wanted time to think. I’m only doing what you wanted from me. If you want something different, you need to tell me that, too.”

“That was before, though.” She couldn’t even say before what. It was already real enough and she didn’t want to confirm it further by repeating it constantly. Their communication skills were seriously lacking lately. “You won’t even come close enough to touch me. I didn’t mean to hurt you, Anton. I’m sorry I lost—”

“Stop saying that!” Anton threw his hands up into the air, frustration writing heavy lines over the action. "Stop apologizing for something that was completely out of our control. I keep fucking telling you that it’s not your fault. I never thought it was. Why can’t you hear me when I tell you this? I’m trying to listen for you every day, to speak to you somehow, but you hear nothing from me.

“You want to play the blame game, baby? How about the fact that the morning you told me you were pregnant, you also had to ask me to leave our home. I did that. Or when you needed me, you didn’t feel like you could tell me. Then, we’ve got the arrest, this fucking trial, and everything else that just kept slamming you down over and over. That was all me, Viviana. I did that to you. So no, don’t tell me you’re sorry. But I wish just once, you’d let me apologize to
you
.”

Tears betrayed Viviana, falling down trembling cheeks to land on her dry lips. The hands she’d hidden from his view by wrapping them into her chest were shaking. The heart that beat only for the man across from her was breaking apart all over again.

Why would he possibly blame himself?

“Anton, you didn’t do anything.”

“Didn’t I?” he asked sharply. “It doesn’t matter how many times I tell you I didn’t touch that girl willingly, you don’t believe me. And what’s fucking worse, I don’t blame you. Because if it were me in your spot, I’d have done the same. Just when I thought maybe we would work it out, I turn around and get myself arrested. What have I done for you, really, Vine?

“Hurt you, baby. Over and over. I’m scared of hurting you, Vine, of pushing you away more than I already have. All I seem to do lately is hurt you, and you’ve hurt enough. You’re my whole world—you and that boy. I breathe for you. My heart beats, and breaks, and bleeds only for you. I can’t keep hurting you, so I let you push me away. It’s easier than watching you struggle to love me.”

BOOK: The Score
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