The Marriage (Darkest Lies Trilogy Book 3) by Bethany-Kris (animal farm read .txt) đź“•
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- Author: Bethany-Kris
Read book online «The Marriage (Darkest Lies Trilogy Book 3) by Bethany-Kris (animal farm read .txt) 📕». Author - Bethany-Kris
Back him up against a wall.
Let lingering anger spill between them.
Forget who they were.
He’d been too young. Threw the first punch, too. Demyan kicked his ass that day—rightfully so. On the wet grass, he’d beat a lesson into Roman with three punches to the mouth that left him swollen and bloody.
Roman had been high that day, too.
He didn’t like who coke made him be.
He also wished he wasn’t aware.
“Get out of my sight before I get Pavel to drag you out,” Demyan demanded, jerking a pointed finger at the door. “That is the last time you speak like that in front of your mother.”
Roman didn’t move a muscle, but his gaze darted to his mother. Claire had turned her face to the side, but he didn’t miss the swipe of her sleeve under her eyes to wipe away tears she didn’t want him to see.
Just like that, the tunnel vision his rage had created vanished, leaving him loosening his stance and glancing away.
He shouldn’t be doing this here.
“Sorry, Ma. I didn’t mean to just—”
“Why don’t you tell him what you know?” she said, offering the words to his father like Demyan would know exactly what she was talking about.
The change of topic didn’t give him a chance to breathe.
Roman searched his father’s face for a clue. Demyan gritted his teeth and shook his head. In that moment, Roman realized he still hadn’t become a better son to his father. He had tried to—in the months that he spent in Chicago.
It didn’t last.
Demyan sat down again, picking up his napkin to tap the corners of his mouth before tossing it to the table. Something he would never do carelessly, yet didn’t think twice.
“Maxim is still alive.”
Roman thought the ground was shaking under his feet until he realized it was just his fast-tapping foot, and he had to cross his arms over his chest to stop the nervous tic. His parents could clearly see the effect this news had on him, as much as he tried to hide it.
“The body they found in the fire wasn’t him. Leonid is missing. Dima is pretending to be the boss and keeping his father’s absence hush-hush. I don’t have proof. Nobody has proof. But that is the only explanation.”
Roman could feel his feet moving. He was headed to the door before his brain had even arrived at the decision to leave.
“Don’t go anywhere, Roman. Don’t do anything that’ll jeopardize the bratva or the girl’s safety. You need to be here. Little Odessa is the safest place for you. And you know she’s where she needs to be.”
His father was right.
But she had to know.
Not even the devil would keep him from Karine now.
*
When Roman got there it was the middle of the night.
They made a big show about how it was unauthorized access, and it didn’t matter if he was her husband.
Blah fucking blah.
He was ready to shoot up the place if they kept him from her a minute longer—in fact, it did take him showing his gun, on top of Sylvia and another floor manager getting on the phone, to get him through the first set of doors.
He had to see Karine.
He had to tell her everything he knew about her father and hadn’t had the balls so far to come clean about.
One of the women at the front desk was there the day Roman checked her in—she was the one who agreed to show him to Karine’s room herself after the initial uproar.
That solved the problem because he really didn’t want to have to kill anybody tonight. Probably wouldn’t be very conducive to his purpose in being there.
He didn’t ask anything about Karine or if she’d made any progress as the young woman led him through the bottom floor to a rear wing where Karine was housed. He wanted to witness it for himself.
There was a part of him that expected the worst—that nothing had changed and, in fact, had deteriorated. That his parents were right when they warned him of the consequences of admitting Karine to this facility without her consent. That he was destined to have a wife who would hate him forever.
He didn’t expect her to even want to speak to him, but he wanted her to see that he came for her. Just like he promised he would.
The woman showed him to the door, and he knocked before stepping in after she had swiped the badge the security guard had given her earlier to unlock it.
It was the middle of the night, but the light was switched on. Karine wasn’t in bed, but the sheets left spilled half on, and half off the mattress said she had been there. At some point.
He might have panicked had he not noticed the bathroom door was open. There she stood at the sink, staring at herself in the mirror. Angling his body toward her, taking that first step, he hadn’t been ready for the tears he saw falling on her cheeks or how she stared so hatefully at her reflection, disgusted at what she was seeing.
Didn’t she know?
She was the most beautiful thing he’d ever seen.
His next breath ached.
In the best way.
“You’re always beautiful, babe. Even when you cry.”
Karine’s gaze darted to where she could see him standing behind her in the mirror. Just as fast, she closed her eyes. Those seconds crawled by. One too many.
“It’s just in my head. This is not real,” she said in a mutter.
That was a knife in his heart.
“It’s not just in your head, Karine,” he replied.
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