“No,” Fyodor says and his heavy eyes land on me. “Father, you’re lying. You’re lying.”

“Show him,” Vladimir barks. One of the guards moves out from behind Fyodor and shoves a red folder into his hands.

“Do you want to tell him or shall I?” Vladimir’s cold gaze pins me in place, stripping me bare as if the fabric around me doesn’t exist. I’m numb. I can’t think of anything to say and still, I cling to the hope that Vladimir knows nothing worthwhile.

Fyodor opens the folder slowly. Daniil leans over to read too as Vladimir starts to speak.

“Naomi here is a rat. Her real name is Naomi Yenin, daughter of Ana Yenin. Is that name familiar?” He glances at Fyodor, Daniil, and then Zasha, but only Fyodor half nods his head as he reads.

“Yenin?” Daniil asks, taking the file from Fyodor’s hands because his were trembling too much for the words to be clear.

“I remember the name,” Fyodor says tightly.

“Do you remember the night your brother died?” Vladimir said, turning and spitting in my direction.

I’m stunned. His brother? Fyodor had mentioned a brother the night he confessed everything to me, but I fail to see the connection to all of this. I need Fyodor to look at me. If he looks at me, maybe I will find my voice.

“Do you remember when he came to me, telling me that there was a family rising up quietly? That had more money and power than they let on, gaining loyalty like it was there’s to take?” Vladimir spoke slowly and his eyes never left his son. “Do you remember how many shipments we lost to them, how many men we lost when we were getting attacked nightly?”

Fyodor nods slowly, turning to meet his father’s gaze. Daniil takes over the file and the paper begins to crumple under the strength of his grip as he reads whatever is on the page.

“All of that, the destruction and the death, was all orchestrated by the Yenins so your brother, being the good son that he was, went to take care of it. Didn’t he?” Vladimir continues.

The connection begins to weave together within my own mind and iron tangs at the back of my tongue.

Oh no. Please, no.

“He killed them. He took men and he wiped out the entire Yenin family line as revenge for the bloodshed but not before one of them got a good shot off.” Vladimir’s mouth twists. “I held your brother as he died, and the only thing that made his sacrifice worth it was knowing the Yenins had been wiped out. He died, removing their stain from this world and avenging every man we lost in that war! Only one survived.”

Vladimir’s eyes narrow at me, and another ice-cold chill runs down my limbs. I already know how this story ends. I’ve heard it enough times.

“A girl. The youngest daughter crawled out of that wreck. Ana. The little wretch grew up and changed her name, married an American to hide who she was, and then she had her own daughter. A bitch she raised and trained, and then planted right under your very nose!”

Daniil’s head raises slowly and the dark shadow across his features deepens. I don’t know where to look. The only one that gives me eye contact is Zasha, but through my building tears, I can’t tell if he hates me or understands me.

“And now look what’s happened,” Vladimir snarls. “Your own child is in the hospital!”

“No!” I surge forward suddenly, causing all eyes to snap to me. “That wasn’t me! I would never hurt Dariya; I love her like she’s my own. I had nothing to do with that, nothing at all so don’t you dare say that! I would never hurt her!”

“But you would hurt me?” Fyodor’s face is as dark as thunder and his voice is so empty, so emotionless that he’s unrecognizable.

“N-no,” I stammer. “I would never, I didn’t!”

“Is he lying?” Fyodor snatches the file from Daniil’s hands and holds it up, causing papers and photographs to scatter down to the ground. Pictures, some grainy and some clear, depicting my past family and a few of me with my mother. The lie clings to my throat, waiting to be spoken despite the evidence in front of me.

“Tell me!” Fyodor yells deeply and I flinch, clutching at my robe.

“No! No…he’s not lying. Your father is telling the truth,” I say shakily. “But please, it’s not what you think. It’s not what you think at all, if you’d just let me explain!”

Something inside Fyodor snaps. I see it in his eyes, as the last flickering warmth in them snuffs out. The folder crumples to nothing in his hand and he slowly stalks forward.

“You came into my home. I allowed you into my life and I let you near my child. I trusted you with things I had never shared with anyone. I fell in love with you and all this time you were a snake, waiting in the grass to poison me.”

“No, I?—”

“You’re nothing but a lie. A lie wrapped up in this perfect parcel for me. I fell for you and you’re nothing but a ghost. What were you going to do, huh? Poison me in my sleep? Slit my throat? Weaken me so you could bring me to your bitch of a mother?” His voice gets angrier and angrier with every step closer.

I shrink back, utterly thoughtless. All I need to do is explain and maybe he will understand.