Chapter 6: The Lakeside Confessions
The tense drive to Victor’s private, underground doctor passed in a hazy, agonizing silence.
Shock set in heavily. The broke waitress who once dreamed of holding a literature degree now sat bleeding beside a ruthless man who had just killed to protect her.
“Three fractured ribs, a mild concussion, and significant blood loss,” the underground doctor reported to Victor an hour later, wrapping white gauze around Anya’s arm. “She desperately needs complete rest for at least two weeks. No translation work. Nothing stressful.”
Victor nodded curtly. “She will have it.”
Recovery did not take place in Anya’s tiny apartment. Instead, Victor drove them to a secluded, guarded lakeside property he claimed belonged to a distant relative. The intense isolation provided necessary safety, but it also forced a constant, intimate proximity between the captive and her protector.
On the third morning, Victor walked into her bedroom holding a silver breakfast tray.
“The local police officially found Dmitri’s body,” Victor informed her quietly, setting the tray on her lap. “The official report says it was gang violence. Technically accurate, if not complete.”
Anya’s hands trembled slightly as she reached for her hot tea.
The terrifying reality of her situation crystallized with brutal clarity. She was now a direct witness to a murder. She was the recipient of blood money. She was dependent on a violent criminal’s protection.
“My organization is incredibly vulnerable while I am hiding out here handling this situation,” Victor admitted, sitting on the edge of her bed.
“Why are you telling me this?” Anya asked, pulling the heavy blanket up to her chin.
“Because Dmitri’s betrayal has created massive opportunities for my rivals to move against my interests in the city,” Victor confessed, his voice dropping into a rare vulnerability. “They are closing in from all sides.”
Anya stared at him. The unshakable boss was showing her a weakness he would never show his own men.
“Your legitimate businesses,” Anya suggested hesitantly. “The import companies, the restaurants, the art gallery… they are still untouched. Perhaps it’s time to transition entirely to legal enterprises.”
Victor’s bitter laughter held no humor.
“Anya, my legitimate businesses exist strictly to launder the dirty money from the others,” Victor explained bluntly. “Without the criminal enterprises feeding them, everything instantly collapses. Including the protection I provide for you, and your mother’s expensive medical care.”
The harsh, inescapable truth hung heavily between them.
Both silently acknowledged the toxic, inescapable dependency their relationship had carefully cultivated. Anya’s single moral compromise for five thousand dollars had grown into a dark lifestyle she could no longer easily escape.