Page 74 of Bratva Daddy

Page List

Font Size:

The hand over my mouth wasn't gentle. Alexei's palm pressed hard enough to trap the scream before it formed, his body above mine tense as piano wire in the pre-dawn darkness.

"FBI," he whispered against my ear, and those three letters turned my blood to ice water. "They're surrounding the house."

I went completely still beneath him, suddenly aware of sounds I'd missed in sleep—car doors closing with deliberate quiet, footsteps on gravel trying for stealth but not quite achieving it. Multiple sets of footsteps. Multiple sides of the townhouse.

My heart hammered against my ribs hard enough that Alexei had to feel it through his chest. We were so close to taking down my father. But he must have moved first, played a card we hadn't seen coming.

"How many?" I managed against his palm when he eased the pressure slightly.

"Too many." His voice carried that flat tone that meant he was calculating odds, trajectories, acceptable losses. All the calculations were coming up red. "Eight vehicles that I can see. More agents than we can fight."

The Queens safe house had been secure for years, unknown to anyone outside Alexei's innermost circle. But somehow my father had found us. Somehow he'd convinced the FBI we were worth this kind of response.

"You need to cooperate," Alexei said urgently, pulling me from bed with movements too controlled for the situation. My robe appeared around my shoulders—the silk one he'd bought me, soft as water against my skin. His hands framed my face, forcing eye contact in the darkness. "Listen to me, Clara. Don't fight them. Don't resist. I'll fix this."

But I saw the truth in his gray eyes, visible even in the pre-dawn gloom. He couldn't fix this, not immediately. The FBI wasn't the bratva or the NYPD, weren't the local players he could leverage or threaten or buy. They were federal, untouchable by his usual methods, operating on a different level entirely.

"They think you kidnapped me," I said, understanding crystallizing like frost on glass.

"I did." No apology in it, just fact. "The paperwork's clear. You've been missing for weeks. Your father's been playing the concerned parent. They have every reason to—"

The front door exploded inward with a crack that made me scream despite myself. Wood splintered, the frame tearing away from the wall.

"FBI! Everyone on the ground!"

Flashlights turned the bedroom into a chaos of moving shadows and blinding light. I couldn't count the agents—too many, all in tactical gear, all with weapons drawn and voices sharp with adrenaline. They moved like water, flowing around furniture, covering all the angles.

Alexei raised his hands slowly, deliberately, stepping in front of me like a shield. Even now, even with federal agents pointing rifles at his chest, his first instinct was to protect me.

"She's here voluntarily," he said, voice carrying that calm authority that had commanded rooms full of killers. "Clara, tell them—"

"Alexei Volkov, you're under arrest for kidnapping and human trafficking."

The words hit like physical blows. Human trafficking. They thought he'd—what? Sold me? Used me?

An agent grabbed Alexei's wrists, forcing them behind his back. The click of handcuffs seemed impossibly loud. Another agent pushed him down to his knees, and something in my chest shattered at seeing him forced to kneel.

"No!" The scream tore from my throat. "I'm here voluntarily! This is my choice!"

I tried to move toward him, but hands caught my arms—not rough but firm, professional, treating me like a victim who didn't know she was a victim.

"Ms. Petrov, we're here to help you." The agent who spoke was female, maybe forty, with a sympathetic face and lying eyes. "Your father's been looking for you. He's been so worried."

"It's Albright!" I snarled, hating my father's name on her lips. "My name is Clara Albright, not Petrov. And I don't need help! I'm exactly where I want to be!"

I twisted in their grip, desperate to reach Alexei. He was still on his knees, an agent's hand on his shoulder keeping him down, but his eyes never left mine.

"Please, listen to me," I begged, words tumbling over each other in my desperation to make them understand. "I signed a contract. I chose this. I love him—"

"She's exhibiting signs of Stockholm syndrome," someone said behind me, clinical and dismissive. "Exactly what the father described."

Nothing I said would matter because they'd already written the story.

"That's not—I'm not—" I struggled harder, but there were too many hands, too many bodies between me and Alexei. "Please, you have to listen! My father is lying! He's involved with the Kozlovs, he's taking bribes, he's—"

"Get her out of here," someone ordered. "We need to process the scene."

They started pulling me toward the door, and panic made me wild. I kicked, twisted, bit at the hands holding me. Not to escape but to stay, to not be separated from the one person who'd ever truly seen me.