Chapter 7 Dead Men Don’t Text #2

The burn tore down my throat—sharp, raw, revolting. I hate vodka. Always have, unless it’s masked in some overpriced cocktail. But tonight? I didn’t care. Tonight, anything went.

The night blurred in layers of sound and light.

We danced. We drank. The music swallowed us.

The club was trash, but it didn’t matter.

That was the beauty of it—I didn’t have to smile, didn’t have to pretend, didn’t have to be anyone but a girl with a glass in her hand and a few hours of forgetfulness ahead.

Guys came up to us—some cute, most forgettable. One tried to put his hand on my lower back while dancing, and I let it linger for a beat longer than I should have. Not because I wanted to. But because I didn’t want to care.

Because Maksym had been ignoring me. I know, I know.

The whole point of coming here was to forget him, drink something questionable, and make at least one bad decision that didn’t involve him.

Unfortunately my drunken brain had other plans and kept dragging me right back to him.

I hated that I missed the heat in his eyes when he looked at me.

Missed his sarcasm. Missed the fucked-up little games we played.

So I danced harder. Drank more. Let the bass crack through my ribs and tried to drown the ache beneath it.

That was when Valeria’s favorite scumbag appeared. The owner. He leaned into her space, murmuring something against her ear. She giggled, eyes sparkling.

“I’ve got something new,” he said, pulling out a small ziplock. Pills. “First hit’s free.”

Valeria was already reaching for it.

He handed it over like it was candy.

She turned to me, eyes wide. “Want some?”

I shook my head. “I’m good with alcohol tonight.”

Valeria was a master when it came to drugs. I, on the other hand, wasn’t. There was no way in hell I was swallowing some shady pill from men who named clubs after themselves.

With a casual shrug, she downed the pill and dragged me right back to the dance floor.

But it didn’t take long before I noticed something was wrong.

She started missing the beat. Her arms weren’t swinging so much as drooping.

Her smile faded. Her steps slowed. It wasn’t like Valeria.

Even high out of her mind, she could still stand.

Still move. Still fake sober like it was a talent.

When I leaned in and asked if she was okay, she nodded too hard, too fast, like her head wasn’t fully attached.

Her pupils were blown.

“Lera?”

She giggled. Drooped against me. Her body was hot—too hot.

Then two men appeared.

I didn’t recognize them. They hadn’t been watching us. I would’ve noticed. They just materialized. One said something to Valeria. She barely reacted. And then, without ceremony, they lifted her up like she weighed nothing.

“Hey!” I shouted, voice sharp and ragged. “What the fuck are you doing? Put her down!”

They didn’t even blink. Just kept walking.

I lunged after them, nearly tripping in my heels. My heart was a drumline in my chest, erratic, terrified. I shoved bodies aside, screamed after them.

“She’s not okay! She needs help!”

They were already halfway up a back staircase. I chased them, grabbing at the metal railing to steady myself. The music faded behind us, replaced by the creak of steps and the pounding in my head.

The staircase was narrow and poorly lit, the walls sweating with condensation and old smoke.

My heels slipped on the worn steps, my pulse screaming in my ears.

Every instinct I had was firing at once—this was wrong, this was dangerous—but I couldn’t stop.

Valeria was limp in their arms, her head lolling against one man’s shoulder, her red dress riding up as they dragged her higher.

“Stop!” I screamed. “Let her go!”

They didn’t even turn around.

The door at the top of the stairs swung open into a private room that felt cut off from reality. Thick curtains. A pool table at the center. Low lights that didn’t reach the corners. The smell hit me first—alcohol, sweat, something metallic underneath.

The moment I crossed the threshold, a hand came out of nowhere.

Fingers closed around my throat—hard. It wasn’t a hold, it was a shove, brutal and fast.

The owner threw me to the floor like I was weightless. I landed hard, shoulder first, skidding awkwardly across the concrete. My head smacked against it with a dull thud—enough to spark stars behind my eyes. It hurt like hell, but at least nothing felt broken.

My breath choked out of my lungs in a pitiful wheeze. I coughed, gagged, tried to suck in air. A ringing flooded my ears.

By the time I blinked my vision back, the bastard was looming over me. His grin was sharp and slick with cruelty.

“Well, darling,” he said, crouching beside me like he was about to whisper something sweet, “you said no to the drugs. So now you get to enjoy the show.”

My fingers scrabbled uselessly against the floor.

They dragged Valeria onto the pool table like she was a sack of meat. One of them knocked balls out of the way with a careless sweep of his hand. Her head lolled. Her limbs were boneless.

“Don’t touch her,” I rasped. “Please. Please, she’s not… she’s not even awake.”

He laughed. “I know exactly who you are,” he said, leaning closer until his face was inches from mine. His breath reeked of whiskey and something chemical. “And do you know how stupid you have to be to come here, princess?”

My stomach was turning. The world kept tilting sideways. My hands were trembling.

“My brother worked for your father,” he said. “He served that pig like a dog. And your father had him killed.”

He smiled, and there was nothing kind about it.

“Now it’s your turn to lose something.”

He stood and nodded toward the men by the table. “You’re going to watch every second. And then, when it’s over, you’ll get your turn. And after that? I’ll sell what’s left of you.”

Valeria moaned softly. Her head twitched, barely moving, like some distant part of her was registering the chaos around her.

“Lera,” I screamed, my voice tearing from my throat, raw and broken.

Tears streaked down my cheeks, hot and wild, blurring my vision.

“Lera, get up. Stand up. Run, please—run.” I tried to crawl toward her, dragging my body forward inch by inch, my palms slipping uselessly against the grimy floor.

I barely made it a few feet before a heavy boot came down on my wrist, pinning me in place.

Pain splintered through my arm. I gasped, choked, but still sobbed her name. “Lera—please—you have to run.”

The men circled her like jackals around a carcass, drunk on cruelty. One of them yanked up her dress with a sickening casualness, his fingers digging into her thighs with ruthless force. Another grabbed at her legs, tearing through her stockings as if peeling away the last defense she had left.

My pulse thundered in my ears. I was shaking so hard it felt like my bones might splinter.

One bastard pinched her cheeks together and spit into her mouth, “Open your pretty mouth, bitch. Swallow it like candy.” Then he fumbled with his zipper, pulled out his half-hard dick, and dragged it across her cheek, smearing pre-cum across her skin.

He laughed, low and cruel, stroking himself against her face as if she were a goddamn napkin.

My stomach clenched, acid rising like bile.

I tried to move—to throw myself forward, to crawl—but the bastard standing on my wrist didn’t budge.

His full weight pressed down like stone, and I screamed from the pain, the bones beneath his boot screaming louder.

I clawed at his leg, tried to shove him off, but he didn’t flinch.

He was a statue, carved from rot and malice.

I sobbed, broken, helpless. I wanted to scream.

I wanted to kill. But all I could do was watch.

And when I thought they had her—when one of them lined himself up between her thighs, fingers shoving the fabric of her panties aside like it was nothing—

A thunderous crash.

The door flew open, hard enough to rattle the walls.

If ads affect your reading experience, click here to remove ads on this page.