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  Cover

  Title Page

  From Russia with Fangs

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  Jacey Conrad and Gia Corona

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  Omnific Publishing

  Los Angeles

  Copyright Information

  From Russia with Fangs, Copyright © 2015 by Jacey Conrad and Gia Corona

  All Rights Reserved. Except as permitted under the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without prior written permission of the publisher.

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  Omnific Publishing

  1901 Avenue of the Stars, 2nd Floor

  Los Angeles, California 90067

  www.omnificpublishing.com

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  First Omnific eBook edition, November 2015

  First Omnific trade paperback edition, November 2015

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  The characters and events in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.

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  Library of Congress Cataloguing-in-Publication Data

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  Corona, Gia; Conrad, Jacey.

  From Russia with Fangs / Jacey Conrad and Gia Corona – 1st ed

  ISBN: 978-1-623422-25-7

  1. Paranormal Romance—Fiction. 2. Werewolf—Fiction. 3. Russian Mafia—Fiction. 4. Romance—Fiction. I. Title

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  Cover Design by Micha Stone and Amy Brokaw

  Interior Book Design by Coreen Montagna

  Dedication

  To those about to snark, we salute you.

  1

  Worst. Birthday. Ever.

  IF THE DJ PLAYED one more Russian bubble gum pop song, Irina Sudenko Volkov was going to stab him with a swizzle stick.

  Well, she would pay someone to stab him with a swizzle stick. Her father had people who did that sort of thing.

  Irina knew it was wrong to be in such a foul mood at a Sweet Sixteen party. Her distant cousin, pretty little Katya Bulgakov, hadn’t done anything to personally offend her, other than choosing a Minsk-born DJ who favored chirpy teen love songs. But somehow, the obnoxious warbling was the final atonal straw that broke the camel’s back, in terms of her extremely shitty day. She didn’t want to be here, in the cramped, over-gilded “ballroom” of the Black Swan Inn, sipping what passed for red wine and watching her husband talk yet another cocktail waitress out of her panties.

  Everyone had a special talent. And wasn’t she just the luckiest girl in the world to be married to Sergei, who was practically an idiot savant at negotiating the descent of cheap nylon undergarments.

  Irina’s father, Ilya, sat to her left, holding court with old friends, drinking and telling stories from their glory days ruling the streets of Seattle as the Alpha wolves of the Volk Organizatsiya—the established Russian supernatural organized crime syndicate that ran drugs, guns, and anything else they could get their hands on out of the city’s thriving port. Now, they were broken-down dogs, too old for the center fighting ring, but too proud to be shipped off to a “nice farm in the country.” But telling vodka-fueled, highly exaggerated tales of fights won, heists accomplished and women debauched made Papa happy, so Irina smiled and stayed silent, even as Papa got drunker and forgot that his own daughter might not want to hear the more graphic details of his exploits.

  As aloof and sheltered as her self-imposed exile made her appear, it was still better than sitting with the other wives in Sergei’s circle, the snickering, Prada-wearing hyena counterbalance to Ilya’s pack. It was only natural to avoid intermingling with that particular gathering of bitches. Their husbands worked for her husband. They were not Irina’s equals. It was natural and only right that they should resent her, shut her out, whisper about her—not even bothering to do it behind her back. Their disdain meant that she was doing her job as the aloof, unreachable tsarina.

  Besides, it wasn’t as if she were going to be close friends with any of them in the first place. Sergei had fucked each of them at least once. The next time someone reminded her that werewolves mated for life, she was going to claw their eyes out.

  Checking her watch would be rude. Yawning and smacking her head against the table until she was unconscious would also be frowned upon. She didn’t want to give the impression that she wasn’t enjoying herself, even if she considered this party to be the same circle of hell reserved for traitors and people who returned clothes after wearing them. But she didn’t want to insult Katya’s parents by causing a scene, if for no other reason than to avoid the inevitable knock-down-drag-out fight that would ensue with Sergei over “embarrassing him in front of his business associates.”

  No, she told herself, better to sit here and play dutiful daughter. Even if her father was currently slurring his way through a story about a naked flight attendant, a bottle of Stolichnaya and a fur hat. There was not enough therapy in the world to unsee that mental image.

  Normally, she would seek out her brother, Nikolai, for some snarky, non-psychologically scarring chat, but Nik was in Chicago on business with their oldest brother, Alexei. Nik’s voice mail hadn’t included a lot of details, just apologies for ditching her at this little soiree and grumbling about clearing up one of Alexei’s “mishaps,” which could range from a negotiation gone bad to a dead Waffle House employee. Their baby sister, Galina, recently returned after graduating with a degree in art history from USC, was supposed to be there already. Galina generally didn’t show up less than an hour into any event, but this was pretty late, even for her. If she missed the cake-cutting, Irina would really worry. Galina was rabid for buttercream frosting.

  If Nik had attended, maybe her father wouldn’t be in such a state. Without the steadying influence of his son-slash-legal advisor, Ilya tended to get a little wild around the old crowd. As Irina pondered the motivation for this delightful little bender, Ilya cupped her face in his hands, smearing her carefully applied scarlet lipstick across her cheek.

  “Babochka,” Ilya slurred. His normally distinguished face was bright red beneath his thick iron gray hair and bristly moustache. “I am not thinking. You shouldn’t be sitting here with the old men. You should go, enjoy the party.”

  “Who are you calling old?” Ilya’s oldest friend, Petyr, demanded, shaking his fist. “I am still in my prime!”

  Petyr—a lanky, elegant Alpha who classified his aftershave collection by its ability to attract lady barflies—had never been a very good influence on her father, Irina mused, rolling her wide tawny eyes.

  “It’s fine, Papa, really,” Irina said, smiling faintly as she dabbed the smeared lipstick on her cheek with a candy pink cocktail napkin.

  “No, no, you are young,” he said, patting her cheek. “My sweet little girl. You should be enjoying yourself. Go, meet a nice boy. Dance.”

  Irina’s brows rose. Surely, Papa remembered that she was married to the (weakest) son of what was once one of the Organizatsiya’s strongest families…because Ilya had owed his family money…lots of money. Surely, he wasn’t so deep in the bottle that he thought Irina was still a teenager. She was wearing the ridiculously tight, long-sleeved red bandage dress that Sergei had chosen especially for this party to show off the diamond collar…er, necklace, he’d given her for her last birthday. Papa couldn’t be so drunk that he thought he would let teenage Irina leave the house dressed like that. No one could be that drunk.

  Papa made a tsking sound with his tongue. “You can’t find someone to dance with? Oh, my little wallflower, always so shy. Here, Papa will help. Viktor!” he bellowed, slamming his open palm against the Barbie-pink tablec
loth. “Where are you? Viktor!”

  A tall man in a crisp black suit seemed to melt from the shadows of the ballroom, appearing at Ilya’s shoulder. Even Irina, who was well-accustomed to skulking henchmen, was startled by his sudden appearance at her side. She couldn’t help but stare.

  Since marrying, she’d lost touch with the Sudenko household staff and their comings and goings. Still, it was difficult to imagine that she’d been so distracted by some issue with Sergei that she hadn’t paid attention to him. “Viktor” was lean and leonine, in his late thirties, with a long, straight nose and cut-glass cheekbones that underscored eyes of electric blue. Unlike most of his colleagues, who favored ponytails and product for their thick dark mops, Viktor’s light hair was shorn close to the scalp. His face might have been too severe, if not for the full lips; lips quirked into a half-smile, as if Irina being humiliated by her father was the most entertaining thing he’d seen all evening.

  Rather than glare at him, Irina schooled her features into the indifferent mask she used to deal with her father’s associates. Her “Resting Statue Face.”

  “Really, Papa—”

  Papa ignored her, pouring himself another drink. “Viktor, you’re a good boy. You dance with my Irina. She spends too much time with her papa. She should be having fun like the rest of the girls.”

  Irina gaped at her father, mouth hanging open. Papa was that drunk. How could he suggest such a thing with Sergei standing just across the room? He would hit the roof if he saw Irina dancing with another man, possibly causing a party-wrecking scene and damaging his “working relationship” with Mr. Bulgakov. And the fallout when she got home would be nuclear.

  “Papa, I don’t think that’s a good idea,” she said.

  “I will dance with her,” Petyr insisted, pushing to his unsteady feet.

  Irina’s brain flashed to the last time she’d danced with Petyr. Her hands had smelled like Drakkar Noir and Grecian Formula for days. It was all she could do to keep from recoiling from her honorary uncle.

  “No, no, you stay here and drink,” Papa insisted. “Viktor, you dance with my little girl. I can trust you to keep your hands where they belong.”

  “Papa!” Irina exclaimed.

  “Such a good boy, Viktor,” Ilya told Petyr, patting Viktor’s cheek with his huge hands. “Smart, loyal. I’ve known him since he was a little malchik, running numbers for his father in Brighton Beach.”

  Irina couldn’t help but notice that Viktor hadn’t said a word during this entire exchange, even with the cheek-patting. It didn’t exactly show enthusiasm for her father’s proposal. He just stared down at her with those unreadable steely eyes, all traces of his smile gone.

  Wonderful.

  She couldn’t blame him for being hesitant, she supposed. She knew exactly how dangerous wives of the first circle could be: bored, unhappy trophy princesses who took out their frustrations by lashing out at the help and spending their husband’s money on expensive hooker shoes. Anything to get their husbands’ attention. And Irina knew she came across as one very unhappy princess, married to a pathetic, hot-headed Omega, a family disappointment whose name alone gave him a token position in the Organizatsiya. It was difficult to hide the seething, even behind her magazine-perfect makeup.

  Why would Viktor want to step into that mess, even with a gesture as simple as a dance? Considering her idiot husband’s well-known penchant for public scenes and over-the-top retribution, it would be quicker just to take a running start at a wood chipper in a desperate act of self-Fargo.

  But somehow, she couldn’t bear the idea of Viktor’s rejection, of hearing him give polite excuses and try to squirm out of touching her.

  Using her best “bored, spoiled bitch” voice, she said, “That’s a very tempting offer, but—” Irina glanced across the room, just in time to see Sergei disappear into the kitchen with the cocktail waitress, his fingers wound through the starched white sash of her apron.

  In that moment, hatred burned through Irina Volkov, searing up her spine like a blowtorch. It wasn’t enough that she pasted on a smile and played the role of the perfect little volk zhena, a simpering, sweet wolf-wife. It wasn’t enough that she pretended Sergei was just as smart and strong as the other wolves, even when she knew her family’s near-teenage chauffer, Yuri, had a better chance of successfully running the operation. It would never be enough.

  Irina was so very tired of this stupid game that her marriage had become. Sergei lashed out at her. She pretended not to feel it. He escalated. She retreated into her shell, giving up more and more of herself, never showing how much she hurt, never letting on to Papa how miserable she was. Sergei punished her for being a cold fish, an embarrassment. And the whole cycle started all over again. It wasn’t going to change. She could go on for years in this limbo. She glanced up at Viktor, and for a split second, she saw a flash of pity cross his face. Hired muscle, who, as far as she knew, didn’t have a last name, felt sorry for her. Well, fuck that.

  “I would love to,” she said, smiling serenely as she rose from her seat.

  Pity turned to surprise as Irina slipped her hand into his. Viktor inclined his head to Ilya and led her to the scarred maple dance floor. Adult couples filtered onto the floor as the DJ made a merciful switch from teen pop to a power ballad from a recent rom-com soundtrack. The birthday girl was dancing with some boy with Justin Bieber hair, while her father silently fumed at the bar.

  Viktor’s progress to the dance floor halted when Tatiana Smolensky, with her bottle-red hair and hateful green cat’s eyes, stepped into his path. Tatiana’s husband, Marko, was a mid-level hood who cleaned up messes for the Sudenkos, the sort of messes that affected the county’s tally of suspicious animal mauling-related deaths. (Werewolves made for convenient, if slightly sloppy, hit men.)

  Tatiana was yet another of Sergei’s conquests, but she’d been stupid enough to think she was in love with Sergei. In the “and there’s even more stupidity” category, she actually believed a couple of afternoon trysts in mid-priced hotels meant that Sergei loved her in return. And so she’d set her sights on Irina as the obstacle in her skanky epic romance.

  “Nice dress, Irina,” Tatiana simpered, her poisonous eyes narrowing when she spotted Irina’s necklace. Her smile brightened a notch, but there was little doubt that Tatiana would dearly love to snatch every strawberry blond strand of hair from Irina’s head. “I just couldn’t wear red for every single outfit, day in, day out, the same thing over and over. So repetitive. So predictable. I just couldn’t do it.”

  Irina smiled, so sweet that her teeth ached. “Yes, Tatiana, I’m well aware of your limitations.”

  It took a few seconds for the insult to register on Tatiana’s makeup spackled face. Viktor gave Irina’s arm a firm tug and pulled her out of range, just as Tatiana hissed, “Королева льда” at her. Ice Queen. The old taunt didn’t seem to matter much as Viktor pulled her into his arms. Tatiana couldn’t even come up with an original insult. She and the other hyenas called Galina the same thing.

  Irina couldn’t believe she was doing this. First, she agreed to dance with a man who was neither one of her brothers nor Sergei, something she had not done in nearly five years. And then she’d antagonized a whiny, loud-mouth twit with a grudge against her.

  The moment Sergei got word that she was “making a spectacle” of herself, he would be furious. But she couldn’t find it in herself to care as Viktor slid his hand around her waist and pulled her close, leaving a warm, tingling path across her back. She felt safe, protected in a way that she hadn’t felt in years, despite the round-the-clock security her father provided. And if the growing bulge against her belly was any indication, she wasn’t the only one to feel the tingles.

  Holy shit. She’d given Viktor a hard-on.

  Eyes darting up to his still-stoic face, Irina stifled a giggle. Surely, femme fatales who made big badass werewolves react like teenage boys didn’t giggle. Utter delight had her growing warm and wet against he
r panties. Irina shivered, swallowing carefully as her breasts brushed against his solid chest. He would smell it. If he was any kind of werewolf, Viktor would scent the arousal making her thighs slick and sticky. Hell, she was surprised that every wolf in the ballroom hadn’t perked up, sniffing the air. She glanced up at his face, expecting censure or a smirk, some sort of derision for her reacting like a leaky whore just because a nice-smelling Beta touched her.

  Viktor’s expression was impassive. His face might as well have been carved from stone. But his irises practically glowed glacial blue and he ran his nose along her hairline, inhaling her scent, like spicy tea and amber.

  To hide her hot, flushed cheeks, she bent her head until it nearly touched his collarbone…which was a mistake because it filled her nose with the woodsy, clean aroma of his cologne. It wasn’t quite scenting, an intimate exchange of pheromones that would be scandalous given the public setting, but it was as close as Irina had come in years. Sergei wasn’t much for affectionate gestures.

  Lust boiled through her, hot and frantic, making her clutch at his jacket with curled, sweaty fingers. This was possibly her worst idea since refusing Franny’s offer to whisk her away to the airport on her wedding day. Viktor folded his hand around hers. He frowned when the rough texture of her palms scraped against his and Irina wanted to snatch her hand back. No matter how much she spent on lotions, the latticework of tiny scars on her palms and fingertips always gave her away. But his mouth returned to its previous grim line as he led her in a simple, if inappropriately close, box step.

  The standard junior high stand-and-sway didn’t apply here, Irina supposed. While most of the men in the room swaggered and postured, everything about the way Viktor moved radiated barely restrained power, lithe and quiet capability. Irina had no doubt that Viktor was capable of backing up whatever threats he made. Hell, if those scary I Am Legend vampires broke into the hotel at this very moment, she was sure he would know exactly what to do and how to get her out of the room un-vampire-mauled.