The Cleaner (Chicago Bratva #7) Read Online Renee Rose

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Contemporary, Crime, Insta-Love, Mafia, Romance Tags Authors: Series: Chicago Bratva Series by Renee Rose
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Total pages in book: 64
Estimated words: 62543 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 313(@200wpm)___ 250(@250wpm)___ 208(@300wpm)
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Adrian tugs on a long-sleeved shirt and slacks, then brings a handled shopping bag over to me. “I bought you some clothes.” He pulls out an expensive-looking shirt and, instead of handing it to me, pulls it over my head.

I don’t know why it makes me swoon, but it does. I like it when he takes care of me. I set the sandwich down long enough to poke my arms through the sleeves, and then he holds out a pair of leggings for me to step into.

“Where did you find these?” I ask, my mouth full.

“Downstairs.”

“That was nice of you.”

“It was necessary,” he grunts. “Not nice.”

“Whatever.” I smirk into my sandwich.

“There’s a sweater, too. You can wear my jacket when we go out.”

“Where are we going?” I take another gigantic bite of sandwich.

I don’t really expect him to answer because he never does, but he surprises me. “To buy you a coat.”

Awww. We’re going shopping together? Things really have changed.

Misgiving splinters off the sapling of hope I’m nurturing, but I ignore it. I don’t want to question the future. The now is too beautiful to mar with it.

Adrian picks up the plates of food and arranges them at the table by the window, pulling out a chair for me. “Sit, Kit-Kat. I’ll sit with you.” He takes the opposite seat.

It’s such a simple thing, but it makes me impossibly happy. I’m in my fantasy world— Adrian and I are a couple. This is what it would be like if we were traveling together. We’d stay at luxury hotels and order room service. We’d sit across the table from one another and make each other smile.

I wrap myself in this feeling. The warmth and rightness. The centeredness.

Some part of me knows it won’t last, but I steadfastly ignore that niggling.

For this moment, I’m going to bask in the attention of the man I’ve fallen head over heels in love with.

Adrian

I can’t do it.

I’m walking away from this endeavor entirely. No Interpol. No personal vengeance.

Kat deserves to be made whole, and bringing down or killing her only parent would just further throw her off-balance.

After we eat, I make quick work of tying up loose ends while she’s in the bathroom brushing her hair and getting ready.

Then I take Kat out. I pretend it’s for her–because she needs to get out after being imprisoned for four days–but really it’s for me.

I’m savoring these last few hours with her.

I take her first to Meir Street to shop. We find her a beautiful red woolen coat, and I buy it for her, but she refuses to put it on.

“I don’t want to take off your jacket.” She hugs herself as if to keep me from removing it. “It smells like you, and it makes me feel safe.”

My body liquifies into warm syrup.

“Oh.” She blinks up at me, arrested. “Are you cold, though?” She’s ridiculously cute.

“No.” A lump crowds my throat. “I’m from Russia–this isn’t cold to me. You keep it on, malyshka.”

After Meir Street, we head to the diamond district where I buy her a pink diamond stud to replace the little gold hoop she wears in her nose.

We sit down in a quaint restaurant for dinner. All the while, I memorize Kat’s face. Her smile. Her exuberance that lights up and dims in a chaotic pattern.

I order coffee and dessert, then send a text from her phone–the one I put back together while she was in the bathroom. I set the phone down on the seat beside me.

“I have to step out to make a call. You stay here.” It’s an order but a mild one. She searches my face as I stand. I tap the table. “Don’t leave, malyshka.”

“I won’t,” she promises, and I believe her.

That, more than anything, is what makes my chest fissure from the pain as I walk away, never to see Leon Poval’s daughter again.

13

Kat

I sit in the window booth of the restaurant for a solid fifteen minutes before I get restless. I drank my coffee and ate the chocolate cake, and Adrian still hasn’t returned.

It’s rude.

I cling to my indignation for another ten minutes before the tendrils of misgiving creep in.

Adrian left me here.

No, no, he didn’t. Surely not. He told me to stay.

Oh God! He totally left me!

A phone rings at our table, and I jump. I look under the table. In the shopping bag. Finally, I spot it in Adrian’s seat.

I suck in a hard breath when I realize it’s mine.

He left me my phone.

Maybe it’s him!

I snatch up the phone and swipe before I see who’s calling.

My dad.

“H-hello? Papa?”

“Kateryna,” my dad snaps. “Are you all right?”

My eyes fill with tears although I’m not even sure what I’m crying over. “Yes.” I don’t sound convincing.

“Where are you? Put him on the phone.”

I look around, as if expecting to find Adrian nearby, but of course, he’s nowhere to be found.


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