Chapter 12
Chapter 12
Chapter Twelve Sephie
“Well, you look like you’ve had an exciting morning,” I said.
Ivan walked into the kitchen, eyebrow raised, and his intense gaze burning holes in my soul as usual.
“I see your brush with death didn’t help you develop a sense of humor,” I mumbled under my breath.
Viktor and Andrei both choked back laughter, as they had both heard me.
Misha broke the tension in the room by asking Ivan what happened. He started to respond in Russian,
but Misha stopped him. “Net. In English,” he said, motioning toward me. Ivan once again raised an
eyebrow and stared at me but, nonetheless, continued his explanation in English.
“I got tip that Anthony was at a warehouse 3 miles from here. Too close, so I wanted to check it out
myself. We get bad information always right now on where that little f*cker is. If information is bad this
time, I take it out on my
source.”
While Ivan was talking, Andrei was making coffee for everyone. He sat a coffee cup down in front of me
and I signed “thank you” to him. He winked and went about giving everyone else their coffee.
Ivan continued, “when we got to the warehouse, there was activity, but not enough that I suspected
Anthony was there. At least not at that moment. There was maybe 10 guys there. I sent Stephen back
here to take Boss home. I wanted a closer look, so I moved my position. I was 25 yards from
warehouse doors, watching. Trucks come in, men unload, trucks leave. Everything was quiet for maybe
an hour, then boom.”
“Holy shit,” I said, under my breath. “Are you okay?”
Ivan looked at me, somewhat surprised. It was like he wasn’t used to people inquiring about his well-
being, and he didn’t know what to say. He nodded his head, saying “da” as he took his jacket off. When
he turned his back to hang his jacket by the door, we all noticed a huge gash on the back of his
shoulder.
“Your definition of fine and mine are clearly different,” I said. Misha went to inspect the gash.
“Looks bad, you might need stitches,” Misha told Ivan.
“Net. No hospital.”
“At least let me clean it up for you so it won’t get infected. I should have bandages that can cover it,” I
said standing up from the barstool to go take a closer look at his injury. I quickly went to my bathroom
and came back with a well- stocked first aid kit. They all raised their eyebrows when they saw my
medical supplies.
“What? I’m clumsy. I get hurt a lot.”
I looked at Ivan and motioned to him, “come here. Take your shirt off.”
He stayed where he was, without moving for a few seconds. Like he was torn between following my
orders and not
allowing me to help him.
“Or you can be stubborn and not let me help, in which case that gash gets infected, and you end up
useless to anyone because you’re laying in bed with a fever for days, maybe weeks.”
Misha chuckled and kicked Ivan in the butt, effectively making him take a few steps toward me.
“I like her. She’s feisty,” Misha said.
Ivan mumbled something in Russian, under his breath, but still stood in front of me and pulled his shirt
over his head. His entire upper body was covered in tattoos. I glanced at them as he took his shirt off
but tried not to stare. He looked at me with his intense gaze and turned around. The gash looked even
worse without his shirt.
“Oh boy.” I said. “Misha was right. You might really need stitches.”
“Net. No hospitals,” he said as he turned around to face me again. He towered over me and leaned
down to add. © 2024 Nôv/el/Dram/a.Org.
“unless you can do it, princess.”
I held his intense gaze and fired back, “actually, I can stitch it up, as*hole. It just isn’t going to look as
pretty as what you’ll get if a doctor does it. And I have nothing to numb the area, so it’s gonna hurt like
a son of a b*tch, which I will enjoy, but you will not.”
The other three men couldn’t contain their laughter this time and all three started laughing quietly at our
exchange.
“Do it,” was all Ivan said as he turned around again. I looked to Viktor, who simply nodded his head.
Hopping up on the cabinet so I could better reach his shoulder, I started to clean the wound.
When I got to the antiseptic, I said, “this is definitely going to burn. Please don’t murder me.”
Ivan simply grunted. His arms were crossed on his sizeable chest. When I put the antiseptic on his
gash, he didn’t move a muscle. He showed no signs of discomfort. I knew he was tough, but that’s
seriously impressive. Antiseptic on open wounds usually feels like you’re being burned by battery acid.
When I got everything as clean and disinfected as possible, I hesitated to start the stitches. “This is
going to hurt. I don’t have anything to numb the area. I might have some whiskey in the cabinet. Do you
want that? It’ll take the edge
off, anyway.”
“Where,” he asked. I pointed over his shoulder to the cabinet the whiskey was in. He grabbed the bottle
and downed a sizeable amount in one gulp.
I looked at him, my eyebrow raised, “maybe you should drink more. I’d like to stay alive in this process.
You’re a big dude. I’m guessing that wasn’t enough.”
Without a word, he swallowed almost half the bottle. When he was done, he stood in front of me again
and said, “do
it.”
I stitched him up as best I could. It was not pretty, but it would heal better than if he had no stitches at
all. After I was done ensuring he would have a b*dass scar from this experience, I bandaged the area
to protect the stitches.
“All done. Sorry I don’t have a lollipop or anything to give you for being a good boy. But I do appreciate
you not murdering this princess in that process.”
Finally. It happened. He laughed. It was small, but I heard it. When he turned to look at me, he had a
small twinkle in his eye instead of looking like he was burning holes in my soul. Apparently, whiskey
was the key to this man’s softer
side.