The Promise (Darkest Lies Trilogy Book 2) by Bethany-Kris (fiction book recommendations .txt) đź“•
Read free book «The Promise (Darkest Lies Trilogy Book 2) by Bethany-Kris (fiction book recommendations .txt) 📕» - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- Author: Bethany-Kris
Read book online «The Promise (Darkest Lies Trilogy Book 2) by Bethany-Kris (fiction book recommendations .txt) 📕». Author - Bethany-Kris
“Five more minutes for the pancakes, guys.”
“Perfect,” Roman replied with a tight smile. “Thanks.”
Once she was gone again, Roman waited for his father to speak first.
“Maybe the outside will do her good,” Demyan finally said.
Fuck.
Really?
Roman honestly hadn’t expected Demyan to give him permission to use the property, deep within the Vermont wilderness, hundreds of acres of private, raw land only accessed by two roads. Both gated, and protected. Powered by gas and solar power generators, weekly trips to a nearby town would provide pretty much everything they needed as they might need it.
But it was precious to his family, and he knew that, too. A safe haven they had used for years when the times called for it. No one except family and his father’s most trusted men—those that Demyan chose to protect his wife, or himself, his kids—had knowledge or details of the place.
“The long walks and the lake,” his father said with a shrug, “always helped me.”
Right then felt like the proper time to give his father the other news.
“I’ve found someone—a doctor for her.”
“Oh?”
“Nothing a bit of bribery—or blackmail—can’t make work, I guess.”
Roman might be trying some attempt at being the good guy where Karine was concerned, but he still had to be who he was at the end of the day to make shit work. He could never be a saint.
Demyan pointed at his son. “And it’ll put some distance between the two of you.”
Roman hadn’t considered that.
Not yet.
It wasn’t that he’d assumed he would stay with Karine at the lodge in Vermont either. He just hadn’t considered the minor details because the overall picture had finally started to make sense to him when he had the idea in the first place.
“Karine won’t like that,” Roman admitted.
Quietly.
He didn’t want to say it, but he felt like he should. How would she cope alone? None of this was easy.
Demyan studied him before saying, “Something tells me you don’t like the idea of being far from her, either.”
Right on time once again, the waitress arrived with a beaming smile and a stack of pancakes to quiet the two men. He was grateful that his father seemed happy to let the woman serve them for a moment because it gave him a few seconds to gather his thoughts.
Roman knifed through three pancakes in the stack of six as the brunette left as fast as she came. He wasn’t hungry, but his body needed sustenance, and it gave him something to do with his hands. Both good things. He didn’t want to delve too deep into what exactly he felt for Karine.
He didn’t need to be told to know he already felt too much.
“Vermont does feel like the safest option for everyone,” Demyan eventually said, breaking the silence between them. “I agree there, Roman. Do you understand what I’m saying?”
He nodded, but said nothing.
Understanding he’d have to be separated from Karine for a long period of time in the process of everything worried him. A lot. But he’d been the one to suggest it—even if he hadn’t thought it through—and his father was up for the plan, and ready to remind him of why it was a good idea in the first place.
“It will also give you the opportunity to go about business in Brighton Beach without her in tow. If you’re being watched by Dima’s men, they won’t know where to look for her if she’s not with you. On the other side of that same coin, it may give us a bit of time if they come here expecting her with you, and she’s not. Either way, it works.”
“I don’t need to be convinced. It was my idea.”
In a sigh, Demyan murmured, “But you don’t like it.”
Roman could have just as easily brushed it off, and if he were a humble man, he’d admit he didn’t need to say anything because his father could already see it written on his face. For once, though, he didn’t want to be any kind of man except the one his father expected him to be, so all he said was, “You’re right—I don’t like it.”
“Is it ... a sense of responsibility? A duty for what might happen to her if not for your meddling?”
Roman said nothing because what he was really thinking about was the look of disappointment and sadness on Karine’s face when he was leaving the room this morning. That had very little to do with his sense of responsibility, or duty.
What was she going to say when he told her they would have to live apart for a while—would that push her back?
For once, Demyan didn’t seem to mind his son’s silence when it was clear he also wanted an answer. The two men ate their pancakes in silence, and eventually gulped down the remainder of their lukewarm coffee.
Roman wasn’t entirely sure how he was going to break the news of Maxim’s death to Karine, either. How complex and dark was the relationship with her father that she’d somehow manifested a whole identity to kill him?
What he knew to be true about Maxim’s relationship with his daughter certainly didn’t lend toward his final message for her. Because yeah, Roman hadn’t forgotten about that little detail from his father—he wanted Karine to know her father loved her.
What the fuck was he supposed to do? Wouldn’t it be a better idea to shield her from it now that nothing could be changed? That seemed cruel, too, but he really did believe the past should stay where it belonged.
“Your mother could join her in Vermont,” Demyan said without warning, breaking Roman from his thoughts.
He looked up, then, not quite sure he’d heard his father right. “Ma?”
“You know, she used to be a nurse. Sure, she worked mainly with kids and in the NICU, but she could help if Karine needed something.”
“I thought you wanted her far away from—”
“Seems our issue with Chicago, and Karine, might be around for a while. Your mother would appreciate knowing, in that case. It’ll keep her
Comments (0)