The ghost of my wife haunts every corner of this fucking compound.
It’s been three days since she took Sofiya and vanished. For every second of those three days, I’ve been sick with a disease that doesn’t have a name.
It’s fitting that I’m discovering the limits of power when it matters most. I can strangle a city with my bare hands, make men with guns tremble at the sound of my voice.
But I can’t conjure my daughter’s laughter or my wife’s skin beneath my fingers.
I canceled the hit on Grigor Petrov the moment I realized Rowan had found the plans. Not because I suddenly developed a conscience, but because her absence is a more effective torture than anything my enemies could devise. I would burn every bridge, betray every alliance, dismantle my entire empire if it meant feeling Sofiya’s weight in my arms again.
But here’s the ugly truth no one tells you about love: It makes you pathetic. It makes you weak. It makes you stare at a tracking necklace discarded on a nightstand and wonder how your happiness ever became so fucking fragile.
The security system announces a car at the front gate just as I’m pouring my third whiskey of the morning. Cameras show a sleek black Suburban with government plates, which means either the FBI has finally decided to end this charade, or?—
“Agent Carver to see you, sir,” my security chief announces through the intercom.
—or something much worse is coming.
“Send him to my study.” My voice betrays nothing of the storm brewing beneath my skin. “And remind our men: no recordings, no surveillance. This meeting never happened.”
The study feels emptier than usual and somehow fuller at the same time. Rowan’s absence lingers, embedded in the walls like a bloodstain that won’t wash out. I don’t sit behind the desk. That position telegraphs defensiveness. Instead, I stand by the window, back to the door, whiskey in hand.
Let the fed come to me.
“Mr. Akopov.” Carver’s voice announces his arrival. “Thank you for seeing me without an appointment.”
I turn slowly, assessing. He’s alone, no backup visible. Interesting. His suit is higher quality than normal government issue. Someone must be angling for a promotion.
“Cut the pleasantries, Carver,” I say. “We both know this isn’t a social call.”
He smirks and takes a seat, uninvited, in the leather chair across from my desk. “You’re right. This is business. The kind that could end your entire operation—or save it.”
I remain standing, jaw clenched tight enough to crack teeth. “I’m listening.”
“The Bureau has built a RICO case against the Akopov organization.” He opens his briefcase, removing a thick file and waving it around like the tease that it is. “Not the Solovyovs this time.You.”
“My wife’s cooperation bought us immunity,” I remind him.
“Herlimitedcooperation bought youtime.” He spreads photographs across my desk. “Time we’ve used well.”
I don’t approach the desk. I’ll never give him the fucking satisfaction of seeing me react to whatever evidence he’s amassed.
“We have shipping manifests tying Akopov Industries to weapons trafficking across three continents. We have bank records linking your shell companies to money laundering operations in six countries. We have witness testimony—” He smiles here, the gleeful joy of a man getting one up on someone far more powerful than him. “—from one Mr. Nikolai Barkov, who’s been quite forthcoming since we offered him a deal.”
Barkov. The snake I should have decapitated instead of merely defanging. Mercy never gets rewarded in this fucking world, does it?
“Barkov’s credibility is nonexistent,” I spit. “He has a personal vendetta against me. And that’s in addition to being a rat-faced fuck.”
“Perhaps.” Carver shrugs. “But his testimony, combined with our other evidence, is enough for an indictment. Judges don’t look down kindly on men like you, Vince. My prosecutors are licking their fucking chops at the thought of dragging you into a courtroom. And they wrote the book just so they could throw it at your smug fucking face. We’re talking thirty years minimum. Seizure of all assets—including those trust funds you so carefully, so thoughtfully, solovinglyestablished for your wife and daughter.”
My blood turns to ice. Those trusts were buried under layers of legal protection, invisible even to the most determined investigation. Unless…
“I see I have your attention now.” Carver’s smile widens. “Yes, we know about those, too. You’ve been very thorough in protecting your family’s future. Pity it won’t matter when you’re behind bars.”
Every instinct in my body screams for violence. The whiskey glass in my hand would make an effective weapon—shattered against his temple, driven into his jugular, boom, lights out. I could end this threat in seconds.
But that would only make a bad thing worse.
“What do you want?” I ask.