Everything was white and bright when Dani opened her eyes.
Pale sunlight from the windows kissed her face, but its warmth did not seep through in the cold room.
She’d desperately wanted everything to be a dream.
The thick sheets kept her in a warm cocoon, keeping her drowsy and almost lulling her back to sleep. Still, no matter how many times she woke up, she would not be escaping this nightmare.
Groggily, Dani sat up. The reality of her surroundings was like a cold slap in the face. She was stuck in this godforsaken tundra until—if her father managed to conjure ten million dollars in the next nine days. Her father would move mountains for her, but even meeting Alexei’s demand was stretching it.
The faint sound of keys jangling reached her ears. Within seconds, a light knock rapped on her door. Elena entered her room, her black dress a stark contrast to the whiteness of everything else around Dani.
“Good morning, Miss De Luca.” Elena’s steely grey eyes mirrored the hardness of her tone. “Breakfast will soon be served downstairs. In the meantime, would you prefer to shower or shall I fill up the tub for you?”
Dani eyed the set of keys around Elena’s waist. How many doors did those keys unlock? Perhaps one of those keys could help get her out of here...
Elena cleared her throat. Dani darted her eyes to meet Elena’s stony gaze once more.
“I’ll shower on my own, thank you.”
When Dani stepped out of the bathroom, a dress the shade of old rose was laid out on her bed. It had a similar cut as the grey dress she wore yesterday, long-sleeved and reaching down to her knees. It was made of lace with intricate detail, which was a little ostentatious for spending the day locked indoors.
Whoever chose Dani’s wardrobe for her captivity sure had a twisted sense of humor.
When Dani left her room and made her way down the winding staircase, Elena was already waiting at the foot of the stairs. Elena led Dani to the dining hall, which comprised of one long table with food served at the opposite end. The room was just as lavish but old as the rest of the manor, with faded gold in the gilded ceilings and threadbare tapestry on the floor.
Elena pulled up a chair for her. An assortment of bread, jams, bacon, sausages, and eggs cooked three ways were all presented before her. It looked enough to serve a small party, even though she and Elena were the only ones in the room.
Dani looked past all the empty seats in confusion. “Is anyone else joining us?”
“No. Master Alexei has already left last night.” The maid turned on her heel. “If you need anything, simply ring the bell.”
And with that, Dani was left with an entire banquet for which she had no appetite for. Slumping to her chair, Dani picked up a bread knife and sliced through a piece of croissant with a sigh.
The first course of action was reconnaissance.
After breakfast, Dani explored the interiors of the entire estate. She checked every room and every floor, acquainting herself with her surroundings as much as possible. All five bedrooms were on the second floor, while the ground floor housed two drawing rooms, a dining area, the library, and a large, empty ballroom.
The estate was much grander than she expected, but with only a handful of servants walking around, there was only so much upkeep to be done. The house, while still beautiful, was clearly past its golden days. It had probably been quite the piece of architecture a century ago, now sadly left to a husk of its former glory. Nothing more than a cold, barren, and uninviting house—one that she had to escape from soon.
With Alexei gone, Elena seemed to be the only one who knew English in the entire household. Most servants scattered away as soon as Dani opened her mouth, and she didn’t even bother with the guards roaming outside in the snowy grounds. The exterior of the estate she would worry about another day. Today, her priority was to know every inch of the interiors as much as possible.
Come evening, Dani waited until around ten o’clock before leaving her room again. By now the hallways were dark and empty, allowing her to move around a little more inconspicuously.
Tonight, the goal was to find a way to the back end of the house and find the kitchens, where hopefully there was a back exit to where the servants were coming and going. Securing an escape route was the most important. How to leave and how to stay uncaught were two other problems entirely.
Moonlight was like a bluish lamp that lit the deserted hallways. Outside, the specks of black that were Alexei’s guards remained standing in the snow, though there were relatively fewer of them roaming around at night.
With one hand on the marble banister, Dani descended the winding staircase to the foyer. She turned left to where the dining hall was, steering clear of the windows in case one of the guards outside saw her. She pressed close to the wall, thankful for the carpeted floor that muffled her footsteps.
Dani winced as the doors to the dining room creaked loudly, practically announcing her presence down the entire hall. It was difficult to scan the room without turning the lights on, but she eventually spotted the outline of another door at the opposite end of the room. Carefully, she pushed it open and discovered the kitchen.
Pots and pans glinted even in the darkness as Dani perused a large but empty kitchen. This house, with all of its many, spacious rooms, was clearly made for entertaining plenty of guests. It was almost a pity it had been reduced to a skeletal home in the middle of this cold wasteland.
On one end of the kitchen was a door that led downstairs. Dani was halfway down the steps in her curiosity when she heard female laughter down the hall. Probably the servants’ quarters. She doubled back and explored the rest of the kitchen until she stood in front of a set of metal double doors.
This had to be the way out. The hairs on her skin were already prickling from the outside cold that was emanating from the other side of the door. It was tempting to just push those doors and make a run for it, but Alexei’s guards, the cold night, and the endless stretch of woods… One of those things were sure to kill her in her current state, if not all three.
Dani stared at the metal doors long and hard, embedding the image of it in her mind and envisioning it would open for her safe exit soon. With a sigh, she turned around and headed back upstairs to her room.
On the third day, Dani was beginning to go insane.
With nothing to do and no one to talk to, she spent long hours wandering the halls or pacing in her chambers in silence. It left plenty of room for her to think, and soon she was overthinking and despairing over her entire situation.
Securing that escape route was useless if she didn’t figure out how to get away and find the nearest town. Perhaps she could take on the disguise of one of the maids and hop on one of the delivery trucks from this morning…? Even in the miracle she managed to steal a uniform, it would be difficult to camouflage herself among the scarce number of staff. The more she thought about escaping, the more impossible and ridiculous it now seemed.
It had only been three days, and yet she hadn’t heard a single word from or about her father. There was only a week left before the deadline, and she could only imagine the stress of having to come up with such a huge amount of money in such a short period of time. She wanted to believe in her dad, but she had to brace herself for the worst. Would she be able to set foot in her home again? Would she even stay alive after seven days?
Dani slumped to her bed and picked at the hem of her wine-colored dress for the day. In a few minutes’ time, Elena was scheduled to deliver afternoon tea.
For two days in a row, Elena would visit her room exactly four times a day: at 7 to wake her up, at 12 to announce lunch, tea at 3, then dinner at 7. Meals were always prepared by a chef, and despite Alexei’s belief that making her comfortable would make her more amenable, she didn’t enjoy the precise routine that Elena was enacting on a daily basis. If anything, it made her feel like a prisoner in a lavish cage.
Dani itched to be outdoors, even though the weather and the guards outside were far from welcoming. She longed for the sun, for the grass on her feet. She missed the crowded, noisy streets of New York. Never had she missed home this much.
A soft knock rapped at her door. Elena entered the room carrying a tray of tea at exactly 3 o’clock. Elena placed the tray on the breakfast table by the window and left without saying a word.
Dani buried her face to the pillows in frustration.
After dinner, Dani was just about ready to pull her hair out.
Everything was beginning to feel like torture in its own right. Being made to spend long hours doing nothing, unable to go outside, without even a single radio or television set to keep her distracted… Dani was practically watching paint dry while the days passed her by.
Dani chewed on her nail and stared at the clock. It was only nine in the evening. She would’ve still been enjoying the rest of her spring break partying with friends. Instead she was now on the other side of the world, kidnapped for ransom because her father had made an enemy of a few Russians.
A dry laugh escaped her lips. A kidnapping was so passé. This wasn’t supposed to happen in real life. The growing ache in her temple did not improve her mood, and with a sigh she rose from her bed and left the room.
All the lights were still on, and the chandelier in the foyer was still bright when she descended the staircase. There had been a library in this house, come to think of it. It had been a long time since she’d last read a book, but it was better than spending another minute with her thoughts.
She headed for the hallway that led to the library, where two mahogany double doors at the end of the corridor greeted her. The doors were massive, reaching all the way to the ceiling and heavy to push when she opened them.
Her mouth parted with amazement. Numerous shelves of books greeted her, tall and wide under a high ceiling with a wrought iron chandelier. To the far right of the room was the reading area, where cushioned, high backed chairs faced a fireplace. A narrow, winding staircase led up to a loft, where more books lined the walls. It was every book lover’s paradise, and though she wasn’t an avid reader, the idea of reading a book by the fireplace seemed enticing.
Except somebody else was sitting there before it.
Dani froze at the arm that appeared behind one of the high-backed chairs to lift a glass of whiskey. Was there another guest in this house?
“Good evening, Miss De Luca.”
Alexei turned to face her and snapped his book shut. His gaze fell on her wine-red dress. “That color suits you well.”
Her excitement deflated like a balloon. “What are you doing here?”
He swished his glass and looked around. “Well, I do own this house.”
“No, you said you wouldn’t return until after ten days.”
Alexei gave a shrug. “Would you like to take a seat?”
She eyed the chair before him like it were made of spikes.
“How about a drink then? I can ring for another glass.”
“No, thank you,” she said, settling down. Alexei wore a plain, partially unbuttoned shirt and slacks, like he was just winding down after a day at the office. Beneath his folded sleeves, intricate tattoos covered his forearms.
“How are you enjoying your stay here?” He took a sip of his drink.
Dani straightened a nonexistent crease on her lap. “It’s not half-bad for a cage, I’ll give you that.”
“Ah, no wonder you’ve resorted to the library,” he mused. “I take it you’re not much of a reader?”
“I was about to pick up the habit again,” she snapped. “Do you even have books in English?”
“At least half of the books in this room are, rest assured.” A smirk formed on his lips as he settled his liquor down. “I hear you’ve been doing a bit of exploring around.”
“What else am I supposed to do?”
“At night? In the kitchens?”
Her pulse escalated, but Dani schooled her face to stay neutral. “I was feeling hungry.”
“And left without a snack?”
She stared at him in disbelief, while also buying herself a good, full second to deflect. “Are you spying on me?”
Alexei leaned back, stretching his long legs before her. “I have eyes and ears in this household. I would know your every move.”
“Great. Do you watch me sleep too?”
His smirk grew. “If I feel like it.”
Dani didn’t know what bothered her more: the fact that he didn’t look angry she was snooping around, or the idea that there were hidden cameras in her room.
“I would appreciate it if you limited your escapades during the day.” He drummed his fingers on the armrest. “We wouldn’t want the guards spooked to see you lurking around at night.”
The warning was thinly veiled in his casual tone. Dani couldn’t help rise to the occasion, anger now brewing in her veins at the idea of a safe escape crumbling before her very eyes. “Is that what you’ve returned here for? To rub this all in my face?”
Alexei clasped his hands and gazed into the fire. “I understand your frustration. I can allow you to go outside, not that there’s much to see.”
Dani rolled her eyes. “Well that’s helpful.”
“Perhaps I’ll bring a friend along to keep you company. It should make the days pass by a little faster.”
A log cracked into the fire. Dani eyed the folds of her dress and played with it. “Have you heard from my father?”
That brief pause was enough to make her heart skip a beat. “I’m afraid not. He must be busy getting things in order. I figured I’d leave him be until our ten days is up.”
Dani gripped the sides of her chair. “I need to know what happens if my dad can’t give you the money.”
Alexei picked up his drink again while a fingertip traced the rim of his glass.
“He would be killed, and we would have to find a way to make money off of you somehow.” He eyed her long and hard. “I think you know what that means.”
A chill went down her spine.
“I don’t get to call the shots, unfortunately. Those are my father’s terms,” he said in her silence. “So let’s hope your father makes ends meet.”
Dani’s ears began to ring. She couldn’t have heard him right. Her father killed and ten million dollars’ worth of debt passed on to her… To be sold off or enslaved was a fate worse than death. Was she now just counting the days until the end of her life as she knew it?
“There, now. Your father’s one of the biggest money launderers in the East Coast.” His voice sounded like it was coming from the other end of a tunnel. “Let’s give him a little more credit, shall we?”
Dani swiftly rose from her chair. “I’m going to bed. Good night.”
She didn’t wait for his response and stormed out of the library. Bile was rising up her throat as she raced upstairs to her bedroom. Oh God, she was going to hurl her guts out.
Dani slammed the door hard behind her and fell against it. Her shaky knees gave way, and with deep breaths she fell to the floor, closing her eyes tight.
I need to get the fuck out of here.
Dani’s eyelids were heavy when she awoke on a cold Tuesday morning. The room felt chillier than usual, until she noticed snow falling outside her window.She was still in her clothes from last night after crying herself to sleep. The reminder of her possible fate loomed over her like a cloud more dismal than the one outside, but there were no more tears left for her to cry. Perhaps it was the grogginess that lingered in her body, but she found herself staring at the window for a long time until the snow grew thick on her windowsill.The sound of a car pulling over drifted from the outside. There were male voices speaking Russian. A dog barked.Dani walked over to the window. A big black dog was running through the snow. Nearby, Alexei was speaking to one of his guards. He looked up and caught her eye.Her impulse was to shirk away from the window, but she held his gaze as he gave her a nod. When she left the room and headed downstairs to the foyer, the main entrance doors were wide ope
As soon as they returned inside the house, Maksim walked ahead of her and with purpose, as if heading somewhere. Curious and with nothing left to do, Dani followed the dog as he led her down the long hallway past the foyer and to one of the rooms on the ground floor.Maksim squeezed past a slightly open door. Dani was about to follow when she spotted Alexei inside the room, standing by the window with his back facing hers. He had a phone to his ear.Past Alexei’s tall, suited stature, the window’s curtains were parted to show a view of the garden where she had just come from. She crept closer to the door, finding a handsomely decorated office inside. She hadn’t been inside this room before. How could she have missed it?“You have five days left, Mr. De Luca.”Dani’s spine went rigid.“Now it’s not my style to be persistent, but I figured a little reminder can go a long way.” Alexei slipped a hand in his pocket. “Last I checked, there’s only a little over three million dollars that’s be
Despite reading the same line over and over, Dani couldn’t absorb what she was reading. She’d finished Anna Karenina last night and had started on Crime and Punbishment as per Alexei’s recommendation, but for the life of her she couldn’t get past this current chapter.Her mind kept drifting to yesterday’s events when she’d done that preposterous finger errand. For a captor, Alexei was being a little too nice for comfort. It was one thing to feel lucky she wasn’t being tortured in some dirty cell with one of her fingers missing, but after yesterday, things just felt... weird. It continued to confound her no matter how many times she mulled it over, and now she was too distracted to read.Dani shut the book and tossed it aside on her bed. It was only eight in the evening and much too early to call it a night. Perhaps it was the seriousness of the book that made it difficult to concentrate. Maybe there was lighter material like a romance novel, though she highly doubted the likes of Alexe
Tufts of snow lined the windowsill as Alexei stood observing the expanse of the Nikolin estate. There was nothing but a stretch of white covering the gardens from the large marble fountain to the hedge maze beyond it. Even here in Moscow, snow had not ceased for the last few days. Last he heard, a snowstorm was brewing and heading north. Hopefully, it wouldn’t reach him when he flew back to Unezhma tonight.“So? How’s the De Luca deal going?”Alexei turned to face his father, who sat upright on the bed with his back against the headboard. Andrei Nikolin was a glimpse of what he would be in thirty years’ time, if he was riddled with illness and didn’t inherit his mother’s eyes.“Another two million was deposited yesterday.” Alexei clasped his hands behind his back. “They’re still roughly five million short.”“And what will you be doing when they fail to pay in two days’ time?”“Then I keep holding the daughter hostage.”“And Tommy De Luca will continue to take his sweet time knowing hi
The scrambled eggs on Dani’s plate had turned to mush from being poked around for too long.Well, not that it mattered anyway. She didn’t have the appetite to begin with the moment she woke up this morning. Today was supposed to be her last day in this house, and yet she felt like throwing up.Excitement should be thrumming in her veins. Instead, something cold was forming in the pit of her stomach, and it had nothing to do with the steady snowfall that hadn’t stopped since this morning.Dani’s fork clattered to her plate as she gave up and leaned back to her chair with a sigh. A breakfast good for three people was served, but she was the only one dining as usual. Come to think of it, not once had she seen Alexei come down for breakfast before. Perhaps he wasn’t a morning person.Her fingers danced around her glass of orange juice. Alexei had done everything to make sure her stay had been comfortable, and yet the thought of her father coming here to fetch her himself was unnerving. She
“Sir, this is Vankin with the De Luca entourage. We’ll be arriving in fifteen minutes.”Alexei rose from his chair and buttoned his suit. “Copy that. See you soon.”Alexei took the two-way radio with him on his way out of his private office. As expected, the snow had set back Tommy De Luca’s arrival by a few hours, but at least the man was finally here. Outside, snow continued falling harder than ever, marking the arrival of the snowstorm.Alexei ascended the winding staircase to the second floor, headed for Dani’s chambers. He was half-expecting an emotional reunion, with Dani storming down the steps to her father’s arms in sobs. Then again, with the exception of yesterday, she had only shed a single tear in front of him. That girl was surprisingly resilient, or put on a good show of it anyway.Alexei stopped in the middle of the corridor, finding Maksim by Dani’s door. The dog scratched repeatedly at the door, whining, and suspicion flared instantly in Alexei’s veins. He ran for the
He thought he’d been too late.He didn’t know how long Dani had been unconscious when he found her, and it took him and Maksim at least another half-hour before they finally found shelter in the middle of the woods.
Alexei awoke to a vacant bedside the following morning.It shook all grogginess from his body as he looked around the empty cabin. The white shirt
“Don’t forget: Paper on Rousseau’s Social Contract is due Friday. At least five hundred words, okay people? The appendix doesn’t count—and yes, Mr. Morello—I’m looking at you!” Laughter and the shuffling of books filled the room. Students rose from their seats on their way out of the auditorium, while Dani picked up her things and headed for the door with everyone else. Something in her pocket vibrated, and she pulled out her phone from her jeans at the new text. Lunch at Central in 20? She replied with a smile before slipping her books inside her sling bag. She squeezed into a crowded elevator and headed seven floors down to the main exit doors of the SIPA building, where she was met with the full throng of Columbia’s students scattered across camp
Despite the gun aimed at his face, Andrei Nikolin laughed. If there was anything Alexei remotely admired about his father, it was that the man never seemed to fear his own mortality. “You come back from the dead only to face me in the dark like a coward?” Andrei cast a sideways glance at the other man standing at the foot of his bed. “What a shame, Viktor, but I’m not surprised.” Viktor used the tip of his pistol to scratch his head. “It was either my boss or my best mate, and the answer’s obvious. No hard feelings, Mr. Nikolin.” Andrei scoffed. “I hold out this long and for what? For you two idiots to burn everything I’ve worked so hard for to the ground?” “It was us ‘idiots’ who’ve been keeping everything afloat.” Alexei shook his head. “You bark incoherent orders
Dani awoke with a jolt.The floor was cold and hard beneath her, and in the dark it was difficult to make sense of her surroundings.The back of her head throbbed with pain. She winced at the sore, damp spot on her head when she touched it, and blood came away at her fingertips.The sound of a gunshot echoed in her mind, and with it the flashback of Alexei bleeding on the ground. Dani sat up, eyes stinging with fresh tears at the reminder. No, no, no. All of this had to be one bad dream. Alexei couldn’t possibly be dead—A thin sliver of moonlight entered the window in a far corner of the room. Dani’s vision adjusted, where she found herself in an empty bedroom. It ha
The Nikolin estate was an hour’s drive from the city.Buildings from the bustling capital became sparser the farther they drove from the Kremlin, entering suburbia until more greenery dominated the landscape. Well, it was more white than green,
Dani remained wide awake past midnight.Perhaps it was the time difference, but even as fatigue from the jet lag left a heaviness in her body, she couldn’t fall asleep.
Not once in a million years did Dani think she would be on a plane back to Russia.It would’ve been over her dead body, and yet here she was now on a business class flight to Moscow, with Alexei quietly sleeping in the seat next to her.
Dani stepped out of the elevator doors and down the hallway towards her father’s room. Save for the nurses’ station at the center, most lights were already dim at half past ten in the evening. The nurses immediately recognized her, waiving the visiting hours rule with a nod. Her father had just woken up from a long coma. They could look the other way just this once.
It was still snowing when Dani woke up the following morning.Being nestled in the warm, thick sheets of a soft bed on a cold winter day, it was difficult to get up. It wasn’t until the smell of something delicious—pancakes—wafted to
When Dani moved in to Alexei’s apartment, he was already back in Moscow.It was a relief not having to deal with the awkwardness of moving her things in, which Marta was happy to help her with. In truth, she didn’t have much to bring with