Authors: Annie Jocoby
Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Suspense, #Romance, #Romantic Suspense, #Mystery & Suspense
It was her turn to draw in a deep breath. “I’m pregnant,” she said. “It’s not yours, of course. That would be impossible, as we haven’t been intimate in years. But the father is a member of the Kazakov family. A married member of the Kazakov family. Needless to say, I would be erased if this man found out I was carrying his child.”
I groaned. “You want me to claim that I’m the father. Is that it?”
“Yes,” she said. “And you can never tell anybody that you’ve done this.” She pointed at Nikolai. “And you, Nikolai, I hope that I don’t have to tell you what might happen if you told anybody the truth about this baby.”
Nikolai went white and just nodded his head. I could only assume that Sophie had something on him, so I kept quiet.
“Okay, Sophie,” I said. “So, I guess you and I won’t be having sex tonight after all.” Thank God for that. I couldn’t stand to betray CJ like that, and I was glad that I wasn’t going to have to. “Obviously you need my help as much as I need yours. So, we’re on equal footing here.”
I actually was kind of loving this position. Sophie was as desperate as me, it turned out.
She leaned back. “Not so fast. This is actually why I didn’t object to Nikolai being here and listening to all of this. I need some insurance that you will actually do this for me.”
I looked at Nikolai. “I’m a man of my word, and if I tell you that I’ll do this, then I’ll do this. But I don’t know exactly why Nikolai would be an insurance policy for you.”
“It’s very simple.” She looked directly at Nikolai. “You know that you owe me, Nikolai. I also know that you have connections here with not just the Kazakov family, but also the Karensky family and several other ones. If Asher here does not keep his word about claiming this baby as his own, then I want you, Nikolai, to make sure that CJ is abducted again. And please make sure that she doesn’t make it out alive next time.”
I looked at Nikolai again. He wasn’t meeting my eyes.
“You owe her?” I said to him. “For what?”
“I’ll tell you later,” he said.
“Tell me now.”
He drew a breath. “A man from one of the Russian groups around here put a hit on me for some surveillance I was doing a few years back. Sophie managed to get the hit removed.”
I looked at Sophie. “How did you manage this, Sophie?” I asked her. “But I’m almost afraid to ask this question.”
“I talked to the
Pakhan
of the family,” she said. “He can be very persuadable.”
I rolled my eyes. I knew what kind of “persuasion” Sophie was capable of. She was a drop-dead beautiful woman. She could make anybody do anything at all.
I turned back to Nikolai. “We’ll talk about this later.” I couldn’t believe that Nikolai was more loyal to Sophie than to me. But, then again, I never actually saved his life. Sophie apparently did. I always had his back, though. Always.
Nikolai looked at me. “I’m sorry, Alexei. I don’t want that hit to be put back into place. And it will be, at Sophie’s word.”
In other words, Sophie had Nikolai by the balls.
I took a deep breath. “Okay. I will tell you right here in front of Nikolai that I will take responsibility for your child. And I won’t ever tell anybody the truth about this child’s real heritage, including CJ herself. But that is the only thing that I promise you. You and I still won’t be together. And I plan on trying to win CJ back, just so you know, once I find her. Now tell me where she is.”
Sophie looked stricken, but she knew that she had asked for enough. It was that important to her that I take responsibility for her child. She obviously didn’t want to ask for anything more.
“As you wish,” she finally said.
M
y breath was coming faster
and faster as I kneeled down on the grass, the blindfold on my eyes. I was making my peace with God, and I was happy that I was given the chance to do this. I had this chance because this man was taking a long time doing what I knew he was about to do. I couldn’t understand why he was taking so long, unless he was trying to toy with me.
He cocked the gun and I lowered my head.
Then, to my surprise, he picked me up off the ground and led me back in the opposite direction.
I was confused. He didn’t want to kill me? What did he want with me, then?
I didn’t say anything, though. He didn’t want me dead, at least not at that moment. I certainly didn’t want him to change his mind, so I chose not to open my mouth.
We walked and walked and walked with my blindfold still on. And then I heard the car door opening, and I was shoved inside.
I laid down on the leather seats, and tried not to make a move.
“Did I scare you?” the man asked me.
“Yes,” I admitted.
“I’m sorry for doing that. I needed to put that blindfold on you because you cannot know where it is I’m taking you. It is my house, and you cannot know where it is. I have to admit that I wanted to have some fun, too, which is why I put that fear into you.”
Fun. He thought it was fun to freak me out like that, to think that I was about to meet my maker. Now that I knew what kind of a sadistic creep I was dealing with, I almost felt a little bit calmed. It was as if I had a small window into this man’s psyche, so I knew better what kind of a person I was dealing with.
“You handled it well,” he said. “I thought that you would beg for your life. Most people in your situation would do that. Beg for their lives. But you didn’t. Why didn’t you?”
I didn’t quite know the answer to that, although I had a good idea on exactly why I didn’t beg. It was because I felt that I deserved it after what had happened to Nathaniel. That my dying in this manner would somehow be a just punishment for being responsible for the death of the precious little boy. Also, I was desperate to see him again. So, death wasn’t necessarily something that I didn’t welcome. It wasn’t something that I actively sought anymore, but, at the same time, it wasn’t something that I feared or didn’t want.
“I asked you a question,” he said. “You didn’t beg. Why didn’t you beg?”
As quietly as I could, I said, “because I deserved it. You killing me. I deserve that.”
He snorted. “And why do you say this?”
“You wouldn’t understand.”
“Try me.”
“I had a little brother,” I found myself saying to this man who I didn’t know, and who I had thought, up until a few minutes ago, would kill me in the field. “And he died because of me. I’ve come to terms with it, and I’m getting over it. But I don’t think that I will ever get over the guilt over that happening.”
The man was silent for awhile after I said this. Then he finally said “and this little brother. How were you responsible for his death?”
“I left him in a running car, and these guys stole it with him in it. It ended up at the bottom of the East River with my brother strapped into this car seat.” I had no idea why I was telling him all of this. I guess because he asked, and I somehow felt that it might endear him to me so that he really wouldn’t kill me or sell me or whatever it was that he wanted to do to me.
“Little one,” he said, “it sounds to me that those men were responsible for the death of your little brother, not you.”
“I was the proximate cause,” I said. “I put the whole thing into motion.”
“I understand that. But, morally, those two men were at fault, not you. I will put it this way – if you were on trial for the murder of your brother, no jury would ever convict you. If those two men were on trial, they would get the death penalty.”
“Actually they got life in prison,” I said. “And I know what you’re saying. But I still feel responsible.” This was getting surreal, though. I was talking to this man like he was somebody friendly towards me, and he decidedly wasn’t. After all, he was the sadistic bastard who led me to believe that I was going to die in that field.
But, yet, he held my life in his hands. He had all the power. So, I needed to appease him and try to determine how to play him. Maybe then I would have a chance.
Tentatively, I said “now, would you please tell me why you are taking me somewhere and what it is that you want with me?”
“You were at the wrong place at the wrong time,” he said. “And I bought you. I knew that I could get a better price for someone like you than those men could. They were holding you in horrible conditions, drugging you up. Yet I could tell that you were different than those other girls. I don’t think that they knew what they had with you. They just assumed that you were homeless because you were living on the streets. I knew differently.”
Wait. How did this man know about me? About my staying on the streets? And that I was “different” than the other homeless women?
“I don’t understand,” I said to him. “How do you know so much about me, and what do you mean by saying that you bought me?”
“Little one,” he said. “You ask too many questions. You need to stop asking questions. You forget that I’m the one with the gun. I’m also the one who can sedate you so that you stop asking these questions. You just need to know that you’re safe with me for the time being, and I’ll make sure that I find the best man for you. I’ll treat you special, because you are special. You can command top dollar on the open market.”
“Please tell me something,” I said to him. “You seem like a reasonable guy. I’m trying to find out how it was that I ended up with you. You seem to know things about me. You even seemed to know that I was abducted by those men. You know a lot about me. How do you know so much?”
I had no idea why it was that I thought that he would answer these questions for me. He just seemed to be a little bit friendly towards me earlier, so I thought that maybe he would give me information.
“I can’t tell you anything,” he said. “Now please be quiet unless you want to talk about something else.”
I sighed. There wasn’t anything else that I wanted to talk about.
Finally, the car stopped again. The car door opened, and I was being marched out of into the cold air once again. I heard a door open, and I walked into a place that seemed very different from the other place I was in. The floor felt like cold marble, and I could smell a floral scent. The man started speaking to somebody in Spanish, and I was soon being led up some stairs. I put my hand on the bannister of the staircase, and I had to conclude that I was in some kind of mansion. I went up about one hundred steps, my hand on the bannister the entire time.
Then I was pushed into a room and handcuffed to a bedpost. This bed was comfortable, extremely comfortable, and I was happy that I was no longer on a hard cot. “You’ll be happy here,” he said, and then I heard him leave.
Happy. What an odd thing to say. How could I possibly be happy in a place where I didn’t know where I was or what was wanted or expected of me? And he was talking about selling me. That sent chills throughout my spine.
Then I heard a voice. “Who’s here?” a woman asked.
I felt a little bit comforted to hear that there was somebody else there in the room. “My name is CJ. What’s yours?”
“Marisa,” she said. “I’ve been here for about a day.”
“What do you know?” I asked her.
“Not much. I’m freaking out, but I’m relieved that this guy who took me doesn’t seem to be a serial killer or anything like that. That was the first thing that I thought when I was kidnapped. I thought that he was going to rape me and kill me and throw my body in the river.”
“I didn’t think that. I guess because when I was kidnapped, I was chloroformed or something. I didn’t wake up until much later, and I was already in this dingy place with some woman who was speaking to me in a thick accent. They had given me morphine, so I wasn’t scared or anxious or anything. I just thought that I was dreaming.”
“What do you mean? You were taken by somebody else?”
“Yes,” I said. “I was taken by somebody else. Then this guy showed up and brought me here. We have to figure out a way out of here, because he told me that he was going to sell me.”
“Oh my God,” she said. “I was actually afraid about that. I’ve seen this type of thing in the movies.” And then she started to cry. “Is that what’s going to happen to us? Are we going to be sold to somebody? Are we going to be shot up with drugs and made to work in a whorehouse? My brother told me about this. He said that sometimes these guys do this. Get the girl addicted to drugs, so that she’ll do anything at all to keep getting the drugs. Anything at all, including working as a sex slave.”
“I don’t know,” I said. “But we have to figure out a way out of this place.”
“How? I’m handcuffed to this bed post, and so are you. And that guy has a gun. How are we supposed to get out of this?” She started to cry hysterically, and I had to admit, I felt like breaking down as well.
But I couldn’t. I had to have my wits about me so that I could try to figure something out. I thought about the people who cared about me. Well, person. Scarlett. I wished that I would rely upon Asher, but he had made it clear that he wanted nothing to do with me.
“Don’t worry,” I said. “We’re going to get out of this. You have to have a little bit of faith.”
“I don’t have faith,” she said. “My life has been shitty. I mean, I have a decent job as a banker, or had one. But I still have had a crappy life. I don’t know why bad things happen to me, except to say that I must have been bad in a previous life.”
I wanted to ask her why her life was shitty, but I wasn’t sure if I should pry. It would seem that, if she were a banker, her life wasn’t entirely shitty, but, then again, one’s profession or wealth didn’t necessarily mean happiness.
Of that, I was sure.
She volunteered the information to me. “My step-father molested me, and then my mother died. Now this. I don’t think that I can take much more. Why doesn’t God hear me? I don’t understand what I did wrong to deserve all of this.”
“God doesn’t play favorites, unfortunately,” I said. “I think He’s somewhat
laissez faire
about us and our lives. Otherwise, there wouldn’t be so much innocent suffering throughout the world.”
She started crying again, and I started to feel just a bit more freaked out. “Please stop crying,” I said to her. “Listen, I haven’t exactly had a charmed life, either. But I’ve lived among the homeless population for the past week, and I’ve come to appreciate what I have. We all have our tragedies. We just have to learn to get through them. We have to have mental toughness. That hasn’t always been easy for me, either. I lost somebody I love very much recently, and he’s gone because of my carelessness. I thought that this would break me, and it almost did. It
almost
did, but it didn’t, because I didn’t let it break me. I’m not going to let this break me, either.”
She seemed to calm down. “Who did you lose?”
“My little brother. I left him in a car while I ran into a store, and two men stole the car and ended up in a police chase. My little brother drowned when the car went into the river.” I was finding that, the more I came to terms with what happened, the easier it was to talk about this without overwhelming shame and guilt.
She gasped. “Oh my God, that sounds horrible. I’m so sorry.”
“It’s okay. Then I fell in love, and he dumped me. I’m still reeling from that, too. So, we all have something in our lives that we have to overcome. This is just one more thing to overcome.”
I had to admit to myself, though, that this particular dilemma was going to be much more difficult to overcome. Namely because I had no clue how I was going to do it. My abductor seemed to be friendly enough in the car, but I also saw that he was ruthless and sadistic. The stunt that he pulled with me, where he blindfolded my eyes and marched me into a field while he cocked his gun, showed just how sadistic he was. He was probably more than a bit psychotic as well. He certainly couldn’t be mentally normal if he was a white slave trader.
I met people like him in the mental hospital and in real life. Friendly, voluble and glib, they could be charming on the outside. But, inside, they had no souls. There was even a name for people like that – sociopaths. This man fit the sociopathic profile to a T.
I definitely didn’t think that I could appeal to his conscience. He probably didn’t have one. So, I would have to think about something else. Maybe try to make some kind of deal with him. I didn’t really know what to do. What I did know was that I didn’t want to be part of the herd of girls that he apparently was going to ship off to God-knew-where. The girls probably would be smuggled to a different country, to become property of some wealthy guy. If they were lucky.
So, I laid there and tried to think, even though the girl on the bed next to me, whose name I already had forgotten, was becoming increasingly hysterical.