Home > Her Russian Surrender (50 Loving States #10)(7)

Her Russian Surrender (50 Loving States #10)(7)
Author: Theodora Taylor

Maybe because it was cold and he was warm. Actually, make that hot, throwing off heat like a furnace as his lips took easy possession of hers.

Yeah, that had to be it.

Luckily her Prius pulled up in front of them at that moment with a whisper of tires coming to a stop underneath the low hum of its electric engine.

“Okay, okay…” she said, pushing away from him. Though only their lips had been touching, it somehow felt like she was ungluing herself from him, and she had to resist the urge to come right on back for another hot kiss.

“You spit great game and your kissing business is on lock, but here’s my car.” She seemed to be pointing this little factoid out to both herself and him. “So, I’ll be going now. Take your jacket, please.”

She held it out to him, this time with insistence.

He stared at her for what felt like eons, before he finally reached out and took the jacket from her.

“I will see you again,” he said, his eyes so hooded now, they almost seemed sleepy.

“No, you probably won’t,” she answered, heading for the car as quickly as her strappy heels would let her. She mentally made a decision to double the number of grant applications she’d been planning to write away for this year, because she wouldn’t be attending any more of these charity events, especially if there was any chance of him being there.

“I will see you again,” he repeated to her retreating back, not like it was a request or even a desire, but something that was inevitably going to happen. Whether she liked it or not.

Sam didn’t answer this time, just took the keys from the valet and got into her Prius. She didn’t even bother to crank up the heat before pulling forward out of the carport, insanely wishing she had one of those superhero cars that turned into a high-speed jet with the push of a button.

Sam risked a peek into her rearview mirror and yes, there he was… staring after her. Though she should have been relieved by her successful exit, she had an uneasy suspicion that she hadn’t truly escaped.

It was more like he’d decided to let her go. For now.

5

Here was all Sam wanted by the time she got home to her cozy two-bedroom cottage (conveniently located directly behind Ruth’s House Indiana): lots of love from her dog, who she could already hear on the other side of the door, panting in excitement over Sam’s arrival. She’d let the sweet girl get in a few licks before she settled down with the next two things on her list: a HUGE glass of wine and an old episode of Veronica Mars.

She’d recently splurged, downloading all three seasons to the Apple TV device Josie bought her for Christmas, and she’d been enjoying re-watching her favorite television show from back in the day—this time without any commercial interruptions. Maybe tonight she’d watch the one where Veronica kisses the good guy cop (who eventually went on to play Schmidt in New Girl) at the school dance after taking down members of the Russian mafia.

Sam thought of Marco, the real life good guy cop she was sort of, kind of, maybe seeing a little bit. He’d also kissed her. A few days ago on the their third takeout date after work. And it had been nice. Really nice. It hadn’t set her on fire like the kiss with Mount Nik, but in all fairness, she’d been wearing her jacket and distracted by the prospect of having to get up early to lead a Mindfulness Class at Ruth’s House.

She put her key into the lock. Yeah, that episode of Veronica Mars would help her put what happened with that super intense Russian hockey player in perspective.

But just as she was about to turn the lock, her phone went off, the screen lighting up with a 3-1-7 number.

“Hello?” she said tentatively, thinking the Russian might have tracked her down somehow, despite not knowing her name.

“Sam from the party, is that you?”

It was a child’s voice. A boy’s voice. The one she’d met earlier. And he sounded scared.

“Hi!” she said, trying to hide her alarm. “Is everything okay?”

“No!” he answered. “Some bad men are here. Knocking on the door. Telling Papa to let them in.”

Sam’s heart went tight with fear for the boy. “And is he…?”

“No, he’s yelling for them to go away! But I don’t think they’re going away. They’re yelling about some money for drugs. I think he was supposed to sell them but he used them instead. They are Russian, like us.”

She hadn’t known the little boy was Russian. Just like Nikolai Rustanov, she thought to herself. But he’d claimed not to know any children when she’d asked him about it. Had he been lying or was this a case of coincidence? Like how all black people didn’t know each other, and neither did all Russians?

It didn’t matter, Sam decided. There was a way bigger matter at hand.

“Okay, listen to me carefully…” She paused realizing she still didn’t know his name, even though he knew hers.

“Pavel,” he supplied on the other side of the line. “My name’s Pavel.”

Wow, he hadn’t been kidding about the Russian stuff.

“Okay, Pavel, I need you to go somewhere and hide. Somewhere good, not under a bed or in a closet. Like in a cabinet if there’s one you can fit into. Stay there until I come for you.”

There came the sound of a lot of shuffling, and then Pavel whispered, “Okay, I’m hiding.”

“Good, good, Pavel,” she said, allowing herself a little breath of relief. “Now just give me your address and I’ll get there as quickly as I can.”

“Just you. No police!” Pavel said. “Papa will be very angry if you bring police.”

“Fine, no police,” Sam lied, knowing full well she was going to be calling Marco as soon as she got off the phone. But she didn’t want Pavel to freak out about the possibility of police coming to his home, especially before he let her know where he was.

“Pavel, I need your address. I can’t help you if I don’t have it.”

Silence, and in the background she heard the muffled sounds of a door crashing open and angry voices, speaking in a hard language she guessed to be Russian.

“They’re here,” Pavel whispered. “They’re inside.”

SAM KNEW IT WOULD BE BAD even before she decided to go in on her own. The house she was now parked in front of looked even more neglected than Pavel, with peeling paint and boarded up windows, all telling Sam that the little boy’s current residence might not exactly be “on the books,” with a proper lease agreement and all that. It also explained why Pavel didn’t seem to have much access to water for a bath or a shower. No, Citizens Energy Group wasn’t running water through this place for sure.

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