Total pages in book: 91
Estimated words: 90498 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 452(@200wpm)___ 362(@250wpm)___ 302(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 90498 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 452(@200wpm)___ 362(@250wpm)___ 302(@300wpm)
Viktor steps closer, asking, “How can I help?”
“I need him lying on the floor.”
Viktor places a hand on Mazur’s chest, then grins at him. “Going down.”
With a simple move, Viktor swipes Mazur’s legs from under him. Mazur falls back, hitting the ground hard, letting out a grunt from the force, followed by a groan.
I move closer and step on his right arm. “Feel free to scream.” Bringing my foot up, I stomp on his forearm until he’s howling from the pain. Only when I’m sure it’s broken, do I step back, asking, “Did Lara scream like that?”
Jesus, did she?
Intense rage clouds my vision, my insides starting to tremble as I imagine the woman I love lying on a cold floor while screaming with pain.
Swinging around, I kick Mazur right in the gut, earning an agonizing grunt from him. I watch as he struggles to breathe, and it gives me no satisfaction.
“Enough,” he wails as he rolls onto his side, cradling his broken arm against his chest. “Enough.”
“I’m only getting started,” I grind the words out through clenched teeth.
I gesture for Emre and Viktor to help the man onto his knees. Walking to the table against the left wall, I pick up a cat-o-nine tail whip with metal spikes.
“I really don’t have a taste for torturing people. Viktor, do you mind?”
“Thank God. I thought you were going to make me watch.”
Letting out a humorless chuckle, I hand the whip to him. “Don’t leave any skin on his back.”
I check the time on my wristwatch as Viktor cracks the whip over Mazur’s back. Mazur starts to crawl, trying to move away. Soon his sobs fill the air, and I watch as he begs for mercy, crawling on the floor like the fucking dog he is.
I wasn’t lying when I said I have no taste for torture. I’d much rather shoot the man. But he needs to pay for what he did to Lara. For all the suffering he caused her.
I remember how she used to cower. How she used to flinch. The suffocating fear in her eyes.
Her on her knees, begging for her life.
How many times did she beg Mazur like that?
Viktor actually gets to work up a sweat. By the time Mazur passes out, his back is a bloody mess.
Viktor drops the whip to the floor. “Now I’m ready for bed.”
“Thank you,” I murmur, moving closer to shake his hand. “Don’t hesitate to call me whenever you need something.”
He lifts his chin before leaving the freezer. I turn to look at Emre, who seems to be half-asleep where he’s leaning back against the wall, his arms crossed over his chest.
“You can go home,” I say. “I’ll finish up here.”
“I’m staying,” he mutters before yawning. “I’ll get us some tea.”
Just after Emre leaves, Mazur begins to stir. I’m surprised he’s coming too so quickly.
Crouching next to him, I tilt my head. “Not feeling too great, are you?”
He groans pain etched with deep lines on his face.
“This is how Lara felt every time you whipped her.”
Rising to my feet, I pull a bullet out of my pocket. I grab a knife from the table and start carving his name onto it. “I hear you like carving the names of your victims onto bullets.” I crouch next to him again, smiling, “This bullet is for you.”
Emre returns with the tea just as I carve the last letter, and I take a moment to drink some before loading the bullet into the revolver I took from the vault in my office.
Mazur somehow manages to move onto his knees, and tilting his head back, he looks at me. He seems to have realized he’s shit out of luck, and his time is up. There’s raw fear in his eyes, the kind you get when you’re terrified because you have no fucking idea what comes after death.
I lock eyes with him. “While you rot in the ground, Lara will become a queen. I will take your business apart and wipe out every last man who worked for you. There will be nothing left of your life. But Lara? She will know only happiness, and after this day, you’ll be forgotten.”
Lifting my arm, I train the barrel on his head.
An intense tremor shudders through my body. I remember my parents laughing while they fixed the store, while they baked, while they danced at night right before we would go home.
Then I remember their blood and how my grandmother wept. The devastating loss that I never healed from.
“Baba, Anne, sonunda intikamımı alıyorum. Huzur bul ve bana gururla bak,” I murmur, intense relief filling my chest as I pull the trigger. (Dad, Mom, I'm finally getting my revenge. Find peace and look at me with pride.)
My arm lowers as I stare at Mazur’s half-open eyes, where he’s lying on the floor, blood pooling around his head.