Disbelief (Smirnov Bratva Book 2)

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Disbelief (Smirnov Bratva Book 2) Page 1

by T. L Smith




  Table of Contents

  Prologue

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Disbelief

  Book 2

  T.L Smith

  Copyright 2016 TL Smith

  All Rights Reserved

  This book is a work of fiction. Any references to real events, real people, and real places are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the Author’s imagination and any resemblance to persons, living or dead, actual events, organizations or places is entirely coincidental.

  All rights are reserved. This book is intended for the purchaser of this e-book ONLY. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping, or by any information storage retrieval system, without the express written permission of the Author. All songs, song titles and lyrics contained in this book are the property of the respective songwriters and copyright holders.

  WARNING

  This e-book contains sexually explicit scenes and adult language and may be considered offensive to some readers. This e-book is intended for adults ONLY. Please store your files wisely, where they cannot be accessed by under-aged readers.

  Cover – Romantic Book Affairs

  Formatting - Angels-Indie-formatting

  Editing by Swish Design & Editing

  Proofread – KMS Editing

  Cover image – by Wander Aguiar

  Dictionary

  Pakhan – Mob Boss

  Bratva – Russian Mafia

  Noun – Inability or refusal to accept if something is true or real.

  What if I was to tell you, you’re all evil?

  In some shape or form, you are.

  What If I was to tell you, I was the worst kind of evil?

  Would you believe me?

  I did not believe that there wasn’t anyone who didn’t contain evil.

  I was proved wrong, and it stumped me.

  I became obsessed with her, someone of pure goodness.

  And couldn’t get enough.

  I needed to see her insides because that’s what I do. Tearing people apart, I have to prove my point. I wanted to split her apart, to find any trace of bad.

  It was wrong of me to think like that.

  Though if death is all you know, is it so wrong?

  My name is Death. Her name is Pollie.

  And I want to see her insides.

  Just to understand if she is as pure as she makes out to be.

  Prologue

  My first hooker, I was sixteen. I fucked her three times, and on the fourth time, she wanted to introduce me to something new, something different.

  She was my first fuck. My brother paid for her, sent her to my room, and she fucked me. I’m not going to bullshit you into thinking I’m a sex god, I was far from it. My family didn’t talk about sex, and I wasn’t around anyone else to discuss it. I went to school, never spoke to anyone, then came home to watch my brother cremate the dead. That was my life. I didn’t even notice girls. He seemed to realize this fact, and so he sent her to me—paid her to fuck me.

  It lasted seconds. She told me I was her best—she bullshitted me. So I hired her for a second time and lasted longer that time. I was proud, and I was getting the hang of it. Then the third time, I fucked her for at least fifteen minutes straight, slamming into her again and again.

  She sat at the end of my bed that night. We didn’t speak, we never spoke. Well, no, let me rephrase that, I never did.

  This time, she wished to speak. “I want to try something new,” she said as she lit a cigarette and placed it between her lips.

  I watched her mouth as she pulled it away then blew it out causing the smoke to circle and her mouth to form an O. I’d almost forgotten what she had said until she started again.

  “You learn fast, and I know you’re clean.” She looked around my pitch black room. “Well, cleaner than your brother.” She laughed and then walked to the window, flicked the cigarette outside and stepped back to me. Her lips touched the back of my ear. “We’re going to try blood play.”

  I shivered, I was excited. The sound of those words intrigued me—too much.

  I wanted to ask my brother later that night if he knew what it was. I didn’t understand it, any of it. But the idea alone, I was more than interested in. She came to me, stripped, and stood in front of me completely naked. Then she pulled a small bag from her purse. She laid it down and opened it up like it was some kind of toolkit. And that was exactly what it was. I didn’t know at that moment, but she was about to fuck me over. Make me more twisted than I already was. She would change my idea of sex and passion at the age of sixteen. She did, she fucked me completely.

  Then from that day on, I never fucked just for the thrill of getting my cock wet. I was in it for the excitement, the high that came along with it. Let’s face it, hookers would let you do anything as long as you paid them enough, and I always had plenty of money. My family was loaded in it.

  Not once in my life have I fucked someone that I haven’t paid.

  Not once have I fucked someone that was just for the pleasure of them.

  It was for all the wrong reasons and the vile thrills I’d get from it.

  I wasn’t ordinary, my life was definitely not conventional.

  I was fucked, and I relished in it. Loved it. I was as twisted as a pretzel, and burnt as a marshmallow cooked over a bonfire. And anyone that got too close would end up the same way.

  Chapter 1

  Death

  It was never that I didn’t like girls—hell yes I did. I liked their bodies, but not their minds. Except Pollie’s. I became possessive and didn’t want to let her go. And I knew from that moment that I was fucked. So I did the only thing I knew, I wanted to kill her. Well, a part of me wanted to kill her. I didn’t want to be stuck under some spell. I didn’t want to become one of those men.

  I was not one of them.

  I didn’t have a mother figure or even a woman that featured in my life. I had nothing but violence and death.

  I was given that name when I was sixteen. From the moment I knew that I enjoyed taking a life and that I loved playing with that life once it was extinguished. I wanted to do bad things, I wanted to slice and dice someone, and I didn’t want an audience. So I isolated myself, only coming out when I had to.

  Pulling myself from my thoughts, I feel the smile tug my lips, and the shock written over Elina and Kazier’s face. I did warn him, I know I did. If I had those types of feelings for a woman, I would slit her throat, because that’s what I assumed love would be—my own death.

  I don’t want death—I haven’t finished handing out my own deaths. I relish in death and delivering it gives me a sense of achievement and wonder. I admire death in all its forms, whether given or received.

  The knife is digging deeper and I can feel Pollie begin to shake underneath it. I’m about to
cut her, I can feel my hand wanting, no needing, to go deeper into her white, tender skin. I desire, by my hand, to watch her life extinguish and the blood drip from her wound.

  Why did she have to be it?

  Why did I have to choose her?

  The moment I saw her I knew. I knew that I wanted her, it was instant.

  She’s opposite of everything I am.

  Not one thing between us matches, not one. Her sweet voice, to my rough. Her kind nature to my tough exterior.

  She can’t see me, and for that I am thankful. She shouldn’t see someone like me, someone so utterly damaged. The moment, if she could see me, she’d run the other way. Instead of coming to me.

  Her hands start to tremble, the same small hands I like to have in my own. Her hands are always warm, always comforting. Maybe that’s the reason I want her all the time? Because she’s the opposite of everything I know or have encountered. There’s not a bad bone in her body.

  A part of me wants to lift the knife, the other is glad she’ll see me for what I am. The moment she started playing her violin, I felt it, like it slammed into my chest all at once.

  Perfection.

  And someone with so much perfection shouldn’t be allowed on this earth. This earth is full of so much evil, I thrive in it. It keeps me placid, peaceful. The good, well I haven’t encountered much if any of it.

  Maybe that’s why I want to kill her. So I can see what her insides look like, to check if they’re as clean as she is on the outside.

  I can hear voices yelling, but none of it registers. None of it seems real. The only real thing in this life is the knife I’m holding to her neck.

  I want them to stop screaming at me.

  No, I want someone to stop me. I know I do.

  But that won’t prevent me from what I’m about to do. Not unless I’m dead.

  This is the first life I can feel struggling in my hands. One I know I shouldn’t take, but I still very much want to.

  I can hear my father in my head, taunting me.

  “Do it! You won’t be a man ‘til you’ve done it. Are you a girl? Are you?” he screamed the last part.

  After my first kill—the blood lust didn’t stop it only got worse. The more and more he put in front of me the more I craved it and wanted it more and more.

  I like what I do, but I love the after part. The watching of someone who was living only a few hours before come apart on my table. Like they don’t know, but their eyes tell me differently. Their eyes are always open, staring out into space. I always feel that their stare is penetrating me. Maybe it is. Maybe they know, somehow, somewhere, that I’m about to lose myself as I tear them limb from limb.

  Her violin echoes when it drops to the floor, the sweet melody she was playing earlier halted. Now only silence fills my head. Nothing but damn silence. I can’t stand it and must have some kind of noise around me. I prefer music, music that will make my ears bleed and my heart scream.

  A shot rings out, it whizzes through the air then hits me straight in the chest.

  A small smile tugs at my lips, probably the first one in a long time.

  I need that, I need to be stopped.

  A scream, and I know that voice—it’s Pollie.

  Oh, Pollie, why must you be you?

  My head hits the floor hard, my body dropping backward. I watch her stand, her long hair falls around her shoulders, and that’s the last thing I see before the blackness encases me.

  Chapter 2

  Pollie

  Their hands touch me, grabbing at my neck. My hands push them away, and I manage to sit up on the floor where I landed. Elina’s trying to see if I’m injured, her hand runs along my neck, wiping away the blood I can feel as it oozes from the wound.

  She warned me, maybe I should have listened. She said her people were bad. That they were not to be trusted. I didn’t feel that way with Death. He was quiet and reserved. Every time I was in his presence, he would grab my hand. His large, strong hands would encase mine, wrapping them up like I was a child. I kind of liked it, not because I couldn’t see, but because he felt the need to hold them every time we were together. Even when we were sitting, he had to hold them.

  The last man I was with used me. He took my disability and played me like I play the strings of my violin. I didn’t see it coming, he was always so caring and nice. It was all an act. I remember the day I found out that he’d taken all my savings. Every last cent that my parents had left to me when they died. I’d mistakenly told him about my money, and he’s used that information to steal from me.

  It is hard to think that someone who shared the same bed as you—the same person who would touch your body and whisper sweet nothings in your ear—would take advantage of you. But I didn’t let it consume me, or let it anger me. I never wanted to be someone that holds anger so that you lose yourself. If you do that you become a person you’re not familiar with, someone who’s not you.

  So I shook it off and worked harder. Blocked him from my mind. Stopped all access of his thoughts in my mind. He could no longer enter the house I owned, and he could no longer have the car I’d bought him. Instead, I sold it and replenished a small amount of the funds he’d stolen. To say he wasn’t happy was an understatement. He would come to my house and bang on the door all night, hoping I’d let him back in.

  Why would I do that? So he could use me again? I may be a nice person, but I have my limits and I’m not stupid.

  “You’re bleeding,” Elina says, placing a cloth to my neck.

  Touching where the blood is coming from, I realize the cut isn’t deep. I could feel his hesitation when he held the knife to my neck. I could feel his heavy panting as he breathed down over me.

  I want to hate this man, and I don’t want anything more to do with him. He scares me, there’s no doubt about that, though he excites me as well. I’ve never met a person more closed off than Death, he doesn’t even tell people his given name. Hell, you’re lucky to even get a few words uttered at you.

  “I’m fine,” I say reaching for Elina, my hand making contact with her shoulder. I feel her slump.

  “I want to keep you around. You’re the only true friend I’ve ever had. But I don’t think I can…” I can hear the crack in her voice, the disappointment. I listen as legs run past me, and I strain to hear as Kazier starts swearing at Death, the cursing becoming louder and louder.

  I can hear the thump to Death’s chest as Kazier tries to revive him. I crawl my way over following the noise, and as soon as my hand makes contact I know it’s Death. His large hand lays lifelessly on the cold tiled floor. I can’t hear him breathing. My hands start to skirt upward, wanting to touch him—to make sure he’s still alive. I don’t want him dead. It’d be the last thing I’d ever want from him.

  “Death…” My voice is harsh, my mouth and eyes are now dry compared to the wetness that was covering them only moments before. I’m now worried, my hands are shaking, my voice is hostile. I start to shake him and hear Kazier swearing at him. Then I listen to the front door being pushed open, footsteps echo in the hall then come to stop near me. I feel a hand touch my shoulder.

  “Miss, I’m going to pick you up.”

  I don’t answer in return, I can hardly speak now.

  Is he dead?

  Did I do this to him without even knowing?

  I know it’s not my fault, and that I didn’t put the knife in his hand. But what I have come to understand is that he’s not like most people—he’s very different. Unlike anyone I’ve ever met.

  His mind works opposite to most. Where we think safety, he thinks destruction. Where we think good, he thinks of only evil. I don’t know why. I don’t understand why. A part of me really wants to understand, but then a part of me on the inside screams to run. Run as fast as I can and as far as I can away from him, but I’m not listening to that last part right now.

  Right now, hands wrap around my waist, and I’m lifted into the air as if I weigh nothing. It reminds me of the gunfir
e at the club when I was at with Elina. How Death carried me out like I weighed not a thing. The hands hold me place me on a table, then those same hands start to wrap my neck, but I don’t know why.

  I can’t feel the blood that was dripping down my neck anymore. So I reach down and touch my shirt and feel the stickiness of the blood that’s semi-dried—it’s more than I remember.

  “It looks like you don’t need stitches. Did you hit your head at all, Miss?” the stranger asks me. I listen as I hear the “oomph” of men lifting something heavy. Then heavy footsteps walk altogether.

  They must be carrying him.

  “Is he okay?” That doesn’t sound like my voice. I don’t even recognize that voice.

  “He isn’t responding. He is breathing now, though.” Kazier’s strong voice booms close to my ear. “I need to go with him.” This time his voice isn’t directed at me.

  I hear Elina’s response, and try to get down from the table.

  A hand stops me—Elina’s. “Where do you think you’re going?”

  “I want to make sure he’s okay.”

  “No. You don’t need to be around him anymore. He can’t be trusted.”

  I shake my head slowly from left to right, even though I know she’s right. He can’t be trusted. Doesn’t mean I want him to die, though. I need to make sure he’s going to be all right.

  “I’m going to drive you home.” Elina hands me my stick as I climb down, my hands still shaking. “Will you be okay? Do you want me to stay with you?”

  “No, I think I just need some sleep.” She guides me to her car, not speaking as we slide in. The silence is not something I’m wanting, I don’t crave the quiet. Never have. I always need something, anything, and keep it loud. The silence scares me, kind of like the dark scares most people. Still, nothing is said on the drive. The calm is crushing me.

  “You sure you don’t want me to stay?”

  I reach for the door handle, pulling it open to get out. I stop but don’t turn to face her. She might see some cracks if I did. “You just got engaged, spend it with Kazier. I’ll be fine.”

  Her hand touches my shoulder, and she squeezes softly. “I’m sorry, Pollie. So sorry.”

 

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