The hollowness of his voice terrifies me. I look at the black box with its pretty white ribbon and take an involuntary step back.
Mal sets it on the big marble island and lays his hand on top. “It’s a dress.”
Now I’m confused. “A dress? For me?”
“Yes.”
“Oh. Then why are you being so strange?”
“Because I didn’t buy it.”
My stomach twists into a knot. Something unpleasant crawls down my spine, a feeling like a centipede is slithering along my skin, its tiny insect legs cold and prickly.
“Who bought it?”
“Pakhan.”
The only sound that breaks the following silence is the whirr of the microwave. We stare at each other until the timer bell rings, then Mal says, “He’s invited us to dinner. We leave in ten minutes.”
“Now? It’s got to be one o’clock in the morning.”
“The time is immaterial.”
I’m sensing all kinds of weirdness coming off him. It makes my already frazzled nerves fray even more. “This isn’t good, is it?”
He hesitates. “It’s unexpected.”
He’s hedging his answers. There’s something he doesn’t want me to know, and it freaks me out. “Did you tell him about me?”
“No.”
“How did he find out?”
He hesitates again. “Any one of a million ways. He’s the most powerful man in Russia.”
My breath shallow, my heartbeat zooming, and my palms startingto sweat, I look at the box as if it’s full of snakes. “But… but if he sent that dress, he knew about me before we got here.”
“Yes.”
Oh, god. Has he been watching us? And if he has been… why?
I can think of a few reasons off the top of my head, none of them good. Adrenaline floods my system, leaving me shaking.
Mal walks over to me and takes my face in his hands. “You’re not in danger.”
“Are you sure? Because it sounds like you’re only saying that to convince yourself.”
“This is a chess move. A power play. He wants me to know he knows about you, that’s all. I never would’ve brought you to the city if I thought you wouldn’t be safe.”
I lick my lips and try to swallow. My mouth is as dry as a desert. Fear has leached all the moisture from my body. I close my eyes and inhale a shaky breath.
“Look at me,malyutka.”
When I gaze up into his eyes, he says vehemently, “Any man who even looks at you wrong will die. Any man, including him. If I sense any hint of a threat, if anything whatsoever happens that displeases me, I will make him unalive. Do you understand me?”
Trembling, I say, “Not really.”
“But do you trust me?”